AGENDA January 2026

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Impressive finds at Achlada, Florina

Impressive finds at Achlada, Florina

Over 200 burials have been discovered during a rescue excavation in its sixth year at the archaeological site of Achlada, Florina, which is becoming one of the most important in Macedonia.
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens: Will it open in February 2020?

National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens: Will it open in February 2020?

The transitional administration of EMST, Dimitris Antonakakis and Syrago Tsiara, presented the minister with the problems it is facing.
Workshop on the Archaeology of Pilgrimage in Ancient Italy

Workshop on the Archaeology of Pilgrimage in Ancient Italy

The subject of ancient pilgrimage is attracting increasing interest and this workshop aims to contribute to the on-going discussion.
Tímea Karkiss: Mosaic Harmony

Tímea Karkiss: Mosaic Harmony

The exhibition features a wide selection of mosaic artworks of Tímea Karkiss from the past 15 years.
Political Thought and Practice in the Ottoman Empire

Political Thought and Practice in the Ottoman Empire

This volume aims to explore Ottoman political thought and seeks answers to questions such as those: Did Ottoman political thinkers precede policy-makers in proposing reform, or did political writers feel surpassed by developments with which they did not agree?
Yiorgis Yerolymbos “Mare Liberum”

Yiorgis Yerolymbos “Mare Liberum”

Skoufa Gallery presents Yiorgis Yerolymbos’ solo photography exhibition.
William & Mary Fall Lecture Series

William & Mary Fall Lecture Series

Three lectures will take place at the Department of Classical Studies at William & Mary this fall.
Zoe Skiadaressis: Angels and Landscape

Zoe Skiadaressis: Angels and Landscape

Being taught by Yannis Moralis and Spyros Papaloukas, Zoe Skiadaressis incorporates in her work forms of tradition, urban and folklore.
Discovery of rare Roman cattle bones sheds new light on ancient farming

Discovery of rare Roman cattle bones sheds new light on ancient farming

The “incredibly rare” discovery of Roman cattle bones by archaeologists has shed new light on how ancient farmers butchered and sold meat.
Common carp aquaculture in Neolithic China

Common carp aquaculture in Neolithic China

An international team of researchers analyzed fish bones excavated from the Early Neolithic Jiahu site in Henan Province, China.
Tel Aviv University researchers discover evidence of biblical kingdom in Arava Desert

Tel Aviv University researchers discover evidence of biblical kingdom in Arava Desert

Findings also suggest pharaoh's influence on Edom turned kingdom into copper powerhouse, say TAU researchers.
Becoming familiar with the Velika Castle

Becoming familiar with the Velika Castle

Research on the Castle of Velika still has a long way to go, since only the finds in 0.74 of an acre out of 3 have been unearthed and studied.
Unveiling of ‘Calpeia’

Unveiling of ‘Calpeia’

Her remains had been found and excavated, by archaeologists working with the Gibraltar National Museum, from a cave burial near Europa Point in 1996.
Rare 10 million-year-old fossil unearths new view of human evolution

Rare 10 million-year-old fossil unearths new view of human evolution

New study of an ape-like pelvis suggests human ancestors might not have been built like modern African apes.
Northern France was already inhabited more than 650,000 years ago

Northern France was already inhabited more than 650,000 years ago

The first evidence of human occupation in northern France has been put back by 150,000 years.
Peristera shipwreck off Alonnisos opens to the public next summer

Peristera shipwreck off Alonnisos opens to the public next summer

A total of four underwater museums will be created in Magnesia that will highlight the archaeological sites in different areas.
Coins for the Gods, Coins for the Merchants

Coins for the Gods, Coins for the Merchants

The conference focuses on different aspects of coins to examine the phenomenon of sacred/profane coinage.
Online GIS database for Egypt’s Theban Necropolis relaunched

Online GIS database for Egypt’s Theban Necropolis relaunched

The OLGIS-TN is not merely a tomb finder, but a powerful reference tool for studying the Theban necropolis using maps of very high resolution.
Roman bronze cauldron unearthed in central Norway burial cairn

Roman bronze cauldron unearthed in central Norway burial cairn

Sometime around 150-300 CE a person died at the place now called Gylland in the Gaula River valley, in southern Trondelag county...
The sex of the ‘Lovers of Modena’ has been classified as male

The sex of the ‘Lovers of Modena’ has been classified as male

Scientists detected a particular protein isoform on both of them. 
The enigma of Βronze Αge tin

The enigma of Βronze Αge tin

Researchers use methods of the natural sciences to uncover geographic origin of archaeological tin artifacts from the Mediterranean.
Ancient Australia was home to strange marsupial giants

Ancient Australia was home to strange marsupial giants

Extinct palorchestid marsupials likely filled a niche no longer occupied in modern Australia.
UCL Lyceum Seminar

UCL Lyceum Seminar

The UCL Department of Greek and Latin is pleased to announce that the Lyceum Classics Community Seminar will continue to run in the 2019-20 academic year.
Repatriation of an inscribed pediment of a funerary stele to Cyprus

Repatriation of an inscribed pediment of a funerary stele to Cyprus

The carved pediment is very similar to another Cypriot funerary pedimental stele from the village of Tremetoushia (Larnaka District), now in the British Museum.
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