Excavations at the Overfield Tavern Museum revealed a treasure trove of objects, including jewelry, dishware, a bottle cork, a smoking pipe and early American currency
Researchers Have Identified the Names of Five Million Victims Murdered in the Holocaust
Led by Israel’s Yad Vashem, the initiative has been underway since the 1950s. But it recently got a boost from artificial intelligence, which is helping humans search through the records
New research sheds light on a cross-shaped pit found at Aguada Fénix, a monumental complex discovered several years ago
The intaglio was likely set in a signet ring and used to stamp correspondence at Bremenium, a military outpost located roughly 25 miles north of Hadrian’s Wall
The Netherlands Will Return a Looted 3,500-Year-Old Stone Bust to Egypt
The repatriation coincided with the lavish opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum, which is finally welcoming visitors after years of delays
Fifty years after the freighter disappeared into the depths of Lake Superior, the mystery of its demise—and the mournful ballad it inspired—still haunt the popular imagination
Many of David Drake’s large vessels featured his signature and inscriptions, even though he created them during a time when literacy among enslaved laborers was illegal
The two letters survived the past century inside a Schweppes-brand bottle, which Debra Brown found on Wharton Beach in early October
800-Year-Old Tower Partially Collapses Near Rome’s Colosseum, Killing a Worker Trapped Inside
Octav Stroici, a 66-year-old Romanian man, was restoring the Torre dei Conti when the accident occurred on November 3. Several other workers were successfully rescued from the medieval structure
Archaeologists Unearth More Than 100 Projectiles From an Iconic Battlefield in Scotland
The Battle of Culloden marked the end of the Jacobite rising of 1745 and was the last pitched battle fought on British soil
Ix Ch’ak Ch’een reigned over the city of Cobá in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. Historians didn’t know her name before they began translating a series of inscriptions discovered in 2024
These Creepy Dolls Are on the Loose, Haunting the Halls of a Minnesota Museum This Halloween
To mark its seventh annual Creepy Doll Contest, the History Center of Olmsted County is inviting its vintage toy dolls to act as “amateur curators” and roam freely through its collections
Based on 3D modeling and testing on a moai replica, researchers think that small groups of people may have used ropes to “walk” the large statues across the island
Helena Bonham Carter provides an English-language tour of the Rijksmuseum’s miniature masterpiece, which stands at about six and a half feet tall
Discovered in southern England, the collection features dozens of gold and silver coins dating to the 15th and 16th centuries—including several inscribed with the initials of Henry VIII’s wives
The show features more than 50 paintings, manuscripts, textiles and other artworks created in Western Europe between the 13th and 15th centuries
An anchor, basket handles, jars and other artifacts were found among the cargoes at the three sites, the oldest of which dates to the 11th century B.C.E.
Released this week, “The Land of Sweet Forever” includes stories the author wrote in the years before her debut novel became an instant classic in 1960
Archaeologists Discover 3,500-Year-Old Egyptian Military Fortress in the Sinai Desert
Excavations are shedding light on what life was like at the ancient site, which may have once housed hundreds of soldiers at a time
You Can See the Parthenon Without Scaffolding for the First Time in Decades
The temporary structures will return next month—but in the meantime, visitors will enjoy rare unobstructed views of the ancient hilltop temple in Athens
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