thumb|Legio excavations Legio was a Roman military camp south of Tel Megiddo in the Roman province of Galilee.
thumb|Legio excavations Legio was a Roman military camp south of Tel Megiddo in the Roman province of Galilee.
==History== Following the Bar Kokhba revolt (132-136 CE), Legio VI Ferrata was stationed at Legio near Caparcotna. The approximate location of the camp of the Legio VI Ferrata was known from the persistence of its name in the form Lajjun by which a Palestinian village was known. It was close to the ancient town of Rimmon, perhaps the Hadad-rimmon of , which in the 3rd century was renamed Maximianopolis by Diocletian in honor of his co-emperor Maximian. Both places were within a single episcopal see, generally called Maximianopolis, but in one list of such sees the name Legionum (genitive plural of the Latin word Legio) is used, where the Greek original has "Maximianopolis".
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).