The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the Smithsonian’s museums of Asian art, will release their entire collections online Jan. 1, 2015.
The Classics Postgraduate Conference: "Training and Research in Material Culture Related to the Ancient World" (StAGE 2015) will take place on March 20th-21st 2015 at the University of St Andrews.
Two Cypriot heads were sold by Sotheby's despite the fact that The Walk of Truth (WoT) had demanded the withdrawal of these antiquities until their provenance had been determined.
To address the seismic behavior of the Acropolis monuments, the Acropolis Restoration Service (YSMA) integrates innovations stemming from academic research in the restoration studies.
Smart agricultural practices and an extensive grain-trade network enabled the Romans to thrive in the water-limited environment of the Mediterranean, a new study shows.
Lecture by Prof. Jim Coulton in the framework of the Lecture series "Gazes of the city: between architectural and archaeological approaches"at the National Hellenic Research Foundation (NHRF).
A 7,500-year-old underwater water well that has been partially excavated from a site on Israel’s Mediterranean coast near Haifa will give important insights into the Neolithic society that once lived there.
The Department of Classics and Ancient History at Durham University is seeking outstanding candidates to apply for Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowships.
The exhibition explores one of the most important issues that puzzled and continues to concern humans; the fate of the immortal soul after the death of the mortal body.
The know-how of cultivating mastic on the island of Chios (East Aegean) has been inscribed on UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
Antiquities robbers were caught red-handed while trying to loot Dead Sea scrolls at the Cave of Sculls in the region of the Leopard’s Ascent (Judean Desert, Israel).