Māori May Have Reached Antarctica 1,000 Years Before Europeans
New research draws on oral histories and other traditional records often ignored by Western scholars
France Is Sending the Statue of Liberty’s ‘Little Sister’ on a Trip to the U.S.
The bronze replica, set to go on view at Ellis Island in July, weighs 992 pounds and stands more than 9 feet tall
Robert E. Lee’s Former Home Reopens With Renewed Focus on the Enslaved
Built by George Washington’s adopted son, Arlington House recently underwent a three-year “rehabilitation” project
Eleven Endangered Historic Places That Tell Complex American Stories
The National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 2021 list includes Mississippi hotel, Navajo trading post and California railroad tunnels
Dazzling Illusion Creates Gaping Canyon Beneath the Eiffel Tower
Street artist and photographer JR unveiled his latest large-scale installation last month
The Highway That Sparked the Demise of an Iconic Black Street in New Orleans
Claiborne Avenue was a center of commerce and culture—until a federal interstate cut it off from the rest of the city in the 1960s
Stunning Tiffany Stained Glass Debuts After 100 Years of Obscurity
The enormous, luminescent landscape spent nearly a century in Providence before its 2018 acquisition by the Art Institute of Chicago
Submerged Italian Village Briefly Resurfaces After 70 Years Underwater
Construction work revealed the foundations of Curon, a historic alpine town, for the first time since 1950
Tower of London Reveals Newest Raven’s Mythical Name
The public voted to call the bird Branwen in honor of a Celtic goddess
‘Dracula’s Castle’ Is Now Offering Visitors Free Covid-19 Vaccinations
Bran Castle’s connections to the vampire may be as mythic as the monster himself, but the site remains a popular Romanian attraction
Scholars Are One Step Closer to Solving the Mystery of an Enormous Chalk Figure
A new analysis of the 180-foot-tall Cerne Abbas Giant dates the English landmark to between 700 and 1100 A.D.
World’s Longest Pedestrian Suspension Bridge Opens in Portugal
The 1,693-foot overpass hangs 570 feet above a roaring river and wobbles as people walk across it
Why Proposed Renovations to Greece’s Acropolis Are So Controversial
Scholars voiced concern about planned aesthetic changes and a lack of adequate accessibility measures for people with disabilities
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
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
How Los Angeles Plans to Preserve the City’s Black Cultural Heritage
Just 3 percent of L.A.’s historic landmarks commemorate African American history. A new three-year project hopes to change that
Why Egypt Paraded 22 Ancient Pharaohs Through the Streets of Cairo
Officials organized the lavish, made-for-TV event in hopes of revitalizing the country’s tourism industry
You Can Now Explore the Louvre’s Entire Collection Online
A new digital database features 480,000 works from the Paris museum’s holdings
Take a Virtual Tour of Feminist Icon Gloria Steinem’s Historic Manhattan Apartment
In honor of her 87th birthday, the speaker and activist is (digitally) welcoming visitors into her home
Step Into the Pages of ‘Goodnight Moon’ With This Enchanting Exhibition
On view at Fort Makers in NYC, the show features 14 artists’ reimagined interpretations of objects from the beloved children’s book
Page 30 of 117