AGENDA August 2025

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Winged Gods and walking griffons

Winged Gods and walking griffons

A unique plate with a depiction of winged Scythian gods in surrounding of griffons found at the barrow cemetery Devitsa V.
Getty Museum acquires Caillebotte’s  Young Man at His Window

Getty Museum acquires Caillebotte’s Young Man at His Window

Getty is successful bidder on 19th-century masterpiece of modern urban realism.
Ancient archaeological find in Wanuskewin Heritage Park

Ancient archaeological find in Wanuskewin Heritage Park

The find unlocks fascinating information about the Northern Plains Indigenous Peoples who gathered on the land for over 6,400 years.
Justinianic plague was nothing like flu

Justinianic plague was nothing like flu

‘Plague sceptics’ are wrong to underestimate the devastating impact that bubonic plague had in the 6th– 8th centuries CE, argues a new study based on ancient texts and recent genetic discoveries.
Re(dis)covering Chora: The Byzantine name of the Rose

Re(dis)covering Chora: The Byzantine name of the Rose

The symposium will take place between November 25 and 26, 2021 in Athens, at the amphitheater of the War Museum.
Walls of buildings in Athens to become works of art

Walls of buildings in Athens to become works of art

"The goal is for the city to be filled with beautiful colours and to be an outdoor exhibition of murals" announced the Municipality of Athens in a press release.
Archaeologists discover salt workers’ residences at underwater Maya site

Archaeologists discover salt workers’ residences at underwater Maya site

New findings on the organization of the salt industry to supply basic dietary commodity to inland cities during the Classic Maya civilization.
Archaeologists reveal Hellenistic fortress destroyed by the Hasmoneans

Archaeologists reveal Hellenistic fortress destroyed by the Hasmoneans

“The building’s devastation is probably related to the region’s conquest by the Hasmonean leader John Hyrcanus in around 112 BCE,” said Israel Antiquities Authority archaeologists.
Annual Meeting of the Classical Association of Canada

Annual Meeting of the Classical Association of Canada

This is the formal call for papers for the Annual Conference of the Classical Association of Canada, which will be held in May 2022.
Genetic Changes in Bronze Age Southern Iberia

Genetic Changes in Bronze Age Southern Iberia

DNA from 136 ancient Iberians reveals genomic and social transformations during the Copper Age to Bronze Age transition in southwestern Europe.
African and Asian Interactions with the Ancient Mediterranean

African and Asian Interactions with the Ancient Mediterranean

The call for abstracts for the 26th Annual Classics Graduate Student Colloquium at the University of Virginia is now open.
Were the ancient Maya an agricultural cautionary tale?

Were the ancient Maya an agricultural cautionary tale?

New survey shows that some Maya kingdoms had sustainable agricultural practices and high food yields for centuries.
“Details” with a woman’s scent

“Details” with a woman’s scent

The Ephorate of Antiquities of Ioannina continues the digital exhibition "Details" with two posts on its Facebook page.
11th International CoMuseum Conference

11th International CoMuseum Conference

On December 1-3, the Benaki Museum, the U.S. Embassy in Greece, and the British Council will present the 11th International CoMuseum Conference: (Re)Positioning the Museum of Tomorrow.
The issue of the return of the Parthenon Sculptures raised by K. Mitsotakis

The issue of the return of the Parthenon Sculptures raised by K. Mitsotakis

The Prime Minister pointed out that the United Kingdom should enter into a bona fide dialogue with Greece.
Easternmost Roman aqueduct discovered in Armenia

Easternmost Roman aqueduct discovered in Armenia

Archaeologists find evidence of failed Roman imperialism / Published in "Archäologischer Anzeiger" journal.
Egyptian antiquities recovered in Safaga seaport

Egyptian antiquities recovered in Safaga seaport

The artifacts that were going to be smuggled out of Egypt have been seized by the archaeological unit in the port.  
AGON : 11th International Archaeological Film Festival

AGON : 11th International Archaeological Film Festival

In the 25 years of its course, AGON has evolved into an institution not only of pan-Hellenic but also of international scope.
Benin has had looted art works repatriated from France

Benin has had looted art works repatriated from France

A landmark repatriation in the long struggle of African countries to recover looted artifacts.
DNA analysis confirms 2,000-year-old sustainable fishing practices

DNA analysis confirms 2,000-year-old sustainable fishing practices

Ancient Indigenous fishing practices can be used to inform sustainable management and conservation today, according to a new study from Simon Fraser University.
The spread of Transeurasian languages was due to agriculture

The spread of Transeurasian languages was due to agriculture

A new study in the journal Nature traces the common ancestry and primary dispersals of Transeurasian languages back to the first farmers moving across Northeast Asia in the Early Neolithic.
Death, Power, and Apotheosis in Ancient Egypt

Death, Power, and Apotheosis in Ancient Egypt

A book exploring how certain dead in ancient Egypt became gods.
Ancient Olympia as it was 2,000 years ago

Ancient Olympia as it was 2,000 years ago

A digital restoration of 27 monuments of Ancient Olympia, including the Stadium, the temples of Zeus and Hera, the workshop of Pheidias.
Earth’s first continents appeared 3.3 billion years ago

Earth’s first continents appeared 3.3 billion years ago

At least 700 million years earlier than the theory prevailing to date regarding their appearance.
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