AGENDA August 2025

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Swiss archaeologists uncover rare Celtic remains

Swiss archaeologists uncover rare Celtic remains

Archaeologists from canton Lucerne have uncovered rare Celtic remains on a construction site in the city of Egolzwil about 35 kilometres from the city of Lucerne.
The Importance and Symbolism of Warfare in the South-Eastern Aegean during the LHIII period

The Importance and Symbolism of Warfare in the South-Eastern Aegean during the LHIII period

The 1st meeting of the Mycenaean Seminar this year presents a lecture by Dr. Merkourios Georgiadis.
Three sections of mosaic floors were repatriated from Germany

Three sections of mosaic floors were repatriated from Germany

Two of the mosaics come from Delos and the third from Hadrian’s Library in Athens and they had been removed from the sites in the 1960s.
Bodies preserved in salt for over 2,000 years

Bodies preserved in salt for over 2,000 years

Since 1993, several bodies and body parts have been accidentally discovered in a salt mine near the village of Hamzehlu in north-western Iran.
Ad for Assistant Professor (Ancient Greek & Latin Literature)

Ad for Assistant Professor (Ancient Greek & Latin Literature)

The Department of Classics in the College of Arts & Sciences at the University of Cincinnati invites applications for a tenure-track position in Ancient Greek and Latin language and literature.
Call for Papers for a new Journal

Call for Papers for a new Journal

KSIO is a scientific journal set up by the History Students’ Club „Ostrogorsky” founded at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade.
W. Benson Harer Egyptology Scholar in Residence

W. Benson Harer Egyptology Scholar in Residence

The W. Benson Harer Egyptology Scholar in Residence seeks to expand the study of Ancient Egypt at CSUSB and in the Inland Empire.
Pompeii was destroyed two months later than previously thought

Pompeii was destroyed two months later than previously thought

A recent discovery in Pompeii changes the date of the volcanic eruption that destroyed the ancient city by two months.
Excavations at the South Palestra in Eretria

Excavations at the South Palestra in Eretria

From August 23 to September 7, 2018, the Swiss School of Archaeology in Greece (ESAG) conducted excavations in the South Palestra in Eretria.
The Night Watch will be publicly restored

The Night Watch will be publicly restored

The Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam announced that members of the public will be invited to watch the restoration of Rembrandt’s most celebrated masterpiece next year.
World Heritage Sites threatened by rising sea levels

World Heritage Sites threatened by rising sea levels

The Venetian Lagoon, the Old City of Dubrovnik and the ruins of Carthage will increasingly be at risk by storm surges and increasing coastal erosion due to sea-level rise.
58 shipwrecks have been located in the Fournoi archipelago

58 shipwrecks have been located in the Fournoi archipelago

Between the 7th and 29th of September, the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities completed the fourth season of underwater archaeological research.
3rd International Conference “Roman and Late Antique Thrace” (RaLATh)

3rd International Conference “Roman and Late Antique Thrace” (RaLATh)

The National Archaeological Institute with Museum at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, and İstanbul Unıversıty host the 3rd International Conference "Roman and Late Antique Thrace" (RaLATh) in Komotini, Greece, (18-21 October 2018).
Oldest evidence for animals found by UCR researchers

Oldest evidence for animals found by UCR researchers

Researchers at the University of California, Riverside, have found the oldest clue yet of animal life, dating back at least 100 million years before the famous Cambrian explosion of animal fossils.
Georadar detects a Viking ship in Norway

Georadar detects a Viking ship in Norway

Archaeologists armed with a motorized high resolution georadar have found a Viking ship and a large number of burial mounds and longhouses in Østfold County in Norway.
€1.18 million for the self-destructed work by Banksy

€1.18 million for the self-destructed work by Banksy

The woman who last week bought the work by enigmatic artist Banksy valued at 1.18 million Euros and which self-destructed immediately after it was auctioned in London, has confirmed she will pay Sotheby’s auction house the price for the work.
Exhibition by Dimitris Alithinos at the Lemesos Achaeological Museum

Exhibition by Dimitris Alithinos at the Lemesos Achaeological Museum

In this exhibition Alithinos creates within an archaeological museum where time does not exist – or where there is a multitude of times, conventionally determined.
Extensive trade in fish between Egypt and Canaan 3,500 years ago

Extensive trade in fish between Egypt and Canaan 3,500 years ago

The dorade was caught in the Bardawil lagoon on the northern Sinai coast and then transported from Egypt to sites in the southern Levant.
Parasites from medieval latrines unlock secrets of human history

Parasites from medieval latrines unlock secrets of human history

A radical new approach combining archaeology, genetics and microscopy can reveal long-forgotten secrets of human diet, sanitation and movement from studying parasites in ancient poo.
Important finds from prehistoric Akrotiri, Thera

Important finds from prehistoric Akrotiri, Thera

Inside a building, known as the “House of Benches,” amphoras and small rectangular clay larnakes were found.
12th Celtic Conference in Classics

12th Celtic Conference in Classics

Suggestions are invited, from potential convenors, for themes to form panels at the 12th edition of the Celtic Conference in Classics.
Women in Power in the Ancient World and the Ancient Imaginary

Women in Power in the Ancient World and the Ancient Imaginary

A panel sponsored by the Women’s Classical Caucus for the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Classical Studies in Washington, DC organized by Serena S. Witzke and T.H.M. Gellar-Goad.  
Did the ancestors of mammals live underground?

Did the ancestors of mammals live underground?

It is an ancient system and has hardly changed in the course of evolution.
‘Vampire burial’ reveals efforts to prevent child’s return from grave

‘Vampire burial’ reveals efforts to prevent child’s return from grave

The discovery of a 10-year-old's body at an ancient Roman site in Italy suggests measures were taken to prevent the child, possibly infected with malaria, from rising from the dead and spreading disease to the living.
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