actually yes it is. all you would need is the Roman ledger for the "Census for Taxation of the Populous for the Region of Judea" that the Emperor Augustus issued.
All self-declared "Great Civilizations" made records of their actions no matter how minuscule so as future generations would know just how great they were.
The Sumerians, the, Babylonians, the Akkadians, the Egyptians, and the Greeks did it, and even we in the good ol' US of A do it...ever see our nation's tax code?
the Roman Empire kept ledgers of the soldiers, in every legion, their date of entry, date of exit/retirement/death, salary and where the were stationed, so a census tax register for the income of the empire is a keeper document.
now where you would find it is a whole different matter...Vatican vault...warehouse on an old military installation in Nevada...ice cave in Antarctica...or on a shelf in a display in some museum in Italy.
conspiracy theories aside, the real question is; why hasn't it been brought to the public's attention?
actually yes it is. all you would need is the Roman ledger for the "Census for Taxation of the Populous for the Region of Judea" that the Emperor Augustus issued.
All self-declared "Great Civilizations" made records of their actions no matter how minuscule so as future generations would know just how great they were.
The Sumerians, the, Babylonians, the Akkadians, the Egyptians, and the Greeks did it, and even we in the good ol' US of A do it...ever see our nation's tax code?
the Roman Empire kept ledgers of the soldiers, in every legion, their date of entry, date of exit/retirement/death, salary and where the were stationed, so a census tax register for the income of the empire is a keeper document.
now where you would find it is a whole different matter...Vatican vault...warehouse on an old military installation in Nevada...ice cave in Antarctica...or on a shelf in a display in some museum in Italy.
conspiracy theories aside, the real question is; why hasn't it been brought to the public's attention?