The Spanish-Egyptian archaeological mission working at the Temple of Millions of Years of King Thutmose III, at Al-Deir Al-Bahari on Luxor's west bank, uncovered a Third Intermediate Period tomb at the temple’s southern enclosure wall.
It is thought that such a massive villa served as the country home of a rich and politically prominent noble family, probably of the Curiosolitae people.
During the last campaign at the site of Barranco León in Orce, Granada the research team found remains of stone carving along with cutting and fracturing marks on the bones of animals that lived in the area.
It focuses on the Egyptian and Near Eastern material from the archaic Greek sanctuaries and on the re-evaluation of the Egyptian cross-cultural interactivity with the Aegean world.
This conference will be held on the 28th, 29th and 30th of June 2017, at the National Library of Wales, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, Wales, UK. Conference Organiser: Geoff Lee.
On the 5th-6th of June 2017 the Department of Ancient History at Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, Poland, will be organising an international conference titled “Spartacus- History and Tradition”.
The Gemäldegalerie and the Kupferstichkabinett will stage a studio exhibition displaying their holdings of Bosch's own work, as well as copies made from it and artworks inspired by it.
Discovered in the “Borgring”, the ring fortress near Køge in Denmark, a 1,000-year-old toolbox is the first direct evidence of life in the Viking castle.
A lavishly illustrated medieval book which once belonged to King Henry VIII was not created for the royal elite but was actually a tool for teaching, new digitally enhanced photography has confirmed.
A new study by geneticists at the University of California, Davis, shows why the traces of our closest relatives are slowly being removed by natural selection.
The long searched for causeway of Sarenput I has been discovered by a joint mission from the University of Birmingham and the Egypt Exploration Society at Qubbet el-Hawa.
This image comes from a postcard released in France in relevance to the local (there) Lascaux cave archaeological site. From a first glance, there is just a beautiful and somehow naive picture of an imaginary past. But is it just that?