How D.C.’s Newly Unveiled WWI Memorial Commemorates the Global Conflict
The space’s central feature, a 60-foot-long wall of remembrance, remains unfinished
Why the Cape Town Fire Is a Devastating Loss for South African Cultural Heritage
The inferno destroyed much of the University of Cape Town’s special collections, including rare books, films, photographs and records
U.S. Authorities Return 523 Smuggled Pre-Hispanic Artifacts to Mexico
Investigators seized the cache of illegally imported objects in 2016
Site of Julius Caesar’s Assassination Will Be Transformed Into Open-Air Museum
Rome’s “Area Sacra,” a sunken square home to the ruins of four ancient temples, doubles as a sanctuary for stray cats
Trove of 2,000-Year-Old Bronze Mirrors Found in Ancient Chinese Cemetery
The well-preserved artifacts bear inscriptions such as “Eternal Joy,” “Family Wealth” and “Long Memory”
100,000-Year-Old Fossilized Footprints Track Neanderthals’ Trip to Spanish Coast
Some of the imprints appear to have been left by a child “jumping irregularly as though dancing,” researchers say
Pottery Shard May Be ‘Missing Link’ in the Alphabet’s Development
An inscription found on a 3,500-year-old vessel suggests that a standardized script arrived in Canaan earlier than previously thought
Why Did Cahokia, One of North America’s Largest Pre-Hispanic Cities, Collapse?
A new study challenges the theory that resource exploitation led to the Mississippian metropolis’ demise
Archaeologists Unearth Sprawling Roman Ruins Unlike Any Found in the U.K.
An ancient complex in Yorkshire may have been a luxury villa, a religious sanctuary or a mixture of both
Why Were These Ancient Adults Buried in Jars on the Island of Corsica?
Researchers are unsure of the unusual funerary practice’s purpose but point out that such burials were typically reserved for children
Were These Ancient Mesoamerican Cities Friends Before They Became Foes?
Ruins found in the Maya metropolis of Tikal appear to be an outpost of the distant Teotihuacán
Why Was This Mummified 17th-Century Bishop Buried With a Fetus?
The stillborn baby was likely the grandson of Peder Winstrup, whose well-preserved remains have been the subject of much study
17th-Century Coins Found in a Fruit Grove May Solve a 300-Year-Old Pirate Mystery
Amateur historian Jim Bailey was mystified by the Arabic writing on the discovered loot
Trove of Treasures, From Gold Skull Ring to Tudor Coins, Unearthed in Wales
The macabre jewelry is a unique example of “memento mori” art, which aimed to remind viewers of their mortality
Hundreds of Centuries-Old Trees Felled to Rebuild Notre-Dame’s Iconic Spire
French authorities cut down some 1,000 historic oaks as part of the Paris cathedral’s ambitious reconstruction process
Archaeologists in Egypt Discover 3,000-Year-Old ‘Lost Golden City’
Hailed as one of the country’s most significant finds in a century, the site dates to a time of political, religious and artistic change
How Prince Philip Modernized—and Fought to Preserve—the Monarchy
The U.K.’s longest-serving royal consort died Friday at age 99
Vandals Deface ‘Irreplaceable’ Native American Rock Carvings in Georgia
The unknown criminals painted the 1,000-year-old petroglyphs in bright colors and scratched their surfaces beyond recognition
Virtual Tour Restores Baalbek’s Stunning Roman Temples to Their Former Glory
The free online experience allows users to toggle between views of the ancient Lebanese city today and as it appeared in 215 A.D.
Activist Group Will Return Stolen Confederate Monument—After Converting It Into a Toilet
“White Lies Matter” had pledged to deliver the stone chair intact if the United Daughters of the Confederacy displayed a specific banner
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