AGENDA August 2025

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Nea Paphos and Western Cyprus

Nea Paphos and Western Cyprus

International colloquium organized within the framework of Pafos, European Capital of Culture 2017.
Rubens painting thought to be a copy is an original

Rubens painting thought to be a copy is an original

An original portrait of the first Duke of Buckingham by Peter Paul Rubens, thought to have been a copy, has been found in Glasgow.
Ancient petrified salamander reveals its last meal

Ancient petrified salamander reveals its last meal

A new study on an exceptionally preserved salamander from the Eocene of France reveals that its soft organs are conserved under its skin and bones.
Wood sculptures and other artefacts found at pre-Columbian site

Wood sculptures and other artefacts found at pre-Columbian site

Archaeologists in Peru have discovered four wood sculptures among other artefacts at the pre-Columbian city of Chan Chan.
Restored Palmyra statue went on display in Damascus

Restored Palmyra statue went on display in Damascus

A statue from Palmyra, badly damaged by the IS, has been restored and it went on display in Damascus on Sunday.
Lisvori: Highlighting the identity of southern Lesbos

Lisvori: Highlighting the identity of southern Lesbos

Archaeological research at Lisvori, Lesbos conducted by the University of Crete and headed by Associate Professor of Prehistoric Archaeology Nena Galanidou, was successfully completed after six consecutive years.
Morbidity and mortality of leprosy in the Middle Ages

Morbidity and mortality of leprosy in the Middle Ages

During the Middle Ages, nearly everyone in Europe was exposed to the disfiguring, painful and ostracizing disease of leprosy. But did contracting the disease necessarily increase a person’s chances of dying?
The Magic of Iznik Ceramics

The Magic of Iznik Ceramics

“The Magic of Iznik Ceramics” focuses on ceramics of the Ottoman period and specifically on those made in the town of Iznik in Asia Minor in the 16th century.
Second church found in the ancient city of Adramyttion in Turkey

Second church found in the ancient city of Adramyttion in Turkey

Archaeologists in Turkey have discovered an ancient church at the site of the ancient city of Adramyttion dating back 1,200 years.
Ancient grave with human sacrifices found in Peru

Ancient grave with human sacrifices found in Peru

Archaeologists in Peru have discovered two tombs, one with victims of human sacrifice and one with a member of an elite, and a metallurgy workshop, possibly dating back over 1,000 years.
Toys recovered from tombs in ancient Greek city of Parion

Toys recovered from tombs in ancient Greek city of Parion

2,000-year-old tombs in the ancient Greek city of Parion (Turkey) have revealed children’s toys made of clay.
Bones reveal social differences between the people buried in dolmens and those in caves

Bones reveal social differences between the people buried in dolmens and those in caves

While male adults predominated in the dolmens, children and women were more common in the caves.
Prehistoric squid was last meal of newborn ichthyosaur 200 million years ago

Prehistoric squid was last meal of newborn ichthyosaur 200 million years ago

Smallest and youngest specimen of Ichthyosaurus communis on record identified and an additional surprise found preserved in its stomach.
Meet the hominin species that gave us genital herpes

Meet the hominin species that gave us genital herpes

In a study published in the journal Virus Evolution, researchers suggest that P. boisei most likely contracted HSV2 through scavenging ancestral chimp meat where savannah met forest – the infection seeping in via bites or open sores.
The Parthenon Marbles through the eyes of Rodin

The Parthenon Marbles through the eyes of Rodin

Auguste Rodin’s love for the Parthenon Marbles will be the theme of a big exhibition opening next April at the British Museum.
An Akhenaten of gypsum has been revealed in Tell el Amarna’s Great Aten Temple

An Akhenaten of gypsum has been revealed in Tell el Amarna’s Great Aten Temple

The Mission of the University of Cambridge at Tell el Amarna (Minya governorate, Egypt) revealed the head of a statue depicting Pharaoh Akhenaten.
Scandinavia’s earliest farmers exchanged terminology with Indo-Europeans

Scandinavia’s earliest farmers exchanged terminology with Indo-Europeans

5,000 years ago, the Yamnaya culture migrated into Europe from the Caspian steppe. In addition to innovations such as the wagon and dairy production, they brought a new language – Indo-European – that replaced most local languages the following millennia.
Μodern humans emerged more than 300,000 years ago

Μodern humans emerged more than 300,000 years ago

Results from a study of ancient DNA show that the 2000-year-old remains of a boy found at Ballito Bay in KwaZulu-Natal during the 1960s, helped to rewrite human history.
Christian Dior at the Denver Art Museum

Christian Dior at the Denver Art Museum

The 70-year history of the Christian Dior House of Haute Couture will be revived in a retrospective exhibition to be organized in November 2018 at the Denver Art Museum.
Rock art and infant pot burials of the site at Vathy, Astypalaia

Rock art and infant pot burials of the site at Vathy, Astypalaia

Since 2011 Andreas Vlachopoulos has been directing archaeological fieldwork at the site of Vathy on Astypalaia.
MONEY: Tangible symbols in ancient Greece

MONEY: Tangible symbols in ancient Greece

Exhibition organized by the Museum of Cycladic Art and the Alpha Bank Numismatic Collection.
Thouria: The ancient orchestra has been “lit up”

Thouria: The ancient orchestra has been “lit up”

At the highest point of the hill where the ancient city of Thouria lies, inside an olive grove where in 2016 Dr Xeni Arapoyanni discovered the remains of an ancient theatre she had spent years searching for, this year the orchestra was also brought to light.
Finland’s wetlands are an internationally significant archaeological repository

Finland’s wetlands are an internationally significant archaeological repository

Dissertation focuses particularly on Stone Age wooden fishing structure remains.
Isotopic analyses link the lives of Late Neolithic individuals to burial location in Spain

Isotopic analyses link the lives of Late Neolithic individuals to burial location in Spain

An isotopic analysis of megalithic graves and caves in Spain may suggest the existence of a degree of differentiation in the lifeways of people buried in these different funerary sites.
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