AGENDA November 2025

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Archaeologists unravel the mysteries of Pueblo culture

Archaeologists unravel the mysteries of Pueblo culture

Prof. Radosław Palonka has been investigating historic sites and customs of the 3000-year-old Pueblo culture.
Mythos as MythUS International Summer School

Mythos as MythUS International Summer School

The Mythos as MythUs summer school program studies myth and popular narrative, from antiquity to the present.
Theoretical approaches to Ancient Greek Religion

Theoretical approaches to Ancient Greek Religion

The deadline for the receipt of all abstracts is the 11th of February 2024.
Rijksmuseum: Rediscovered Rembrandt portraits on long-term loan

Rijksmuseum: Rediscovered Rembrandt portraits on long-term loan

The 1635 portraits of Jan Willemsz van der Pluym and Jaapgen Caerlsdr. disappeared from view for almost two centuries, before resurfacing two years ago.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art repatriates artifacts

The Metropolitan Museum of Art repatriates artifacts

The returned antiquities include statues from the Koh Ker archaeological site.
North America’s first people may have arrived by sea ice highway

North America’s first people may have arrived by sea ice highway

A growing number of archeological and genetic finds suggests that people made their way onto the continent much earlier than believed.
China deciphers ancient rituals

China deciphers ancient rituals

Scholars of China's Tsinghua University have deciphered five documents recorded on bamboo slips dating back to the Warring States period.
First ground-based survey of damage to Ukrainian cultural sites

First ground-based survey of damage to Ukrainian cultural sites

The war in Ukraine is not just a war against a people, but a war on culture.
Earliest evidence for domestic yak using archaeology, ancient DNA

Earliest evidence for domestic yak using archaeology, ancient DNA

In a study an international team of researchers report archaeologically and genetically confirmed evidence for domestic yak.
Viking dentistry was surprisingly advanced

Viking dentistry was surprisingly advanced

The study examined 3,293 teeth from 171 individuals among the Viking Age population of Varnhem in Västergötland, Sweden. T
Archaeologists unearth one of earliest known frame saddles

Archaeologists unearth one of earliest known frame saddles

In April 2015, looters sacked an ancient cave burial at a site called Urd Ulaan Uneet high within the Altai Mountains of western Mongolia.
Ancient Balkan genomes reveal how Slavic Europe was formed

Ancient Balkan genomes reveal how Slavic Europe was formed

The ancient genomes of 146 individuals who inhabited the Balkan Peninsula during the first millennium has been recovered and analysed.
Italy’s tough town

Italy’s tough town

A rare roofed theatre, markets, warehouses, a river port and other startling discoveries were made by a Cambridge-led team of archaeologists.
Scandinavia’s oldest known ship burial is located in mid-Norway

Scandinavia’s oldest known ship burial is located in mid-Norway

This summer, archaeologists and a metal detectorist conducted a small survey of Herlaugshagen, at Leka in the northern part of Trøndelag County.
Pompeii: Prison bakery emerges

Pompeii: Prison bakery emerges

A bakery-prison, where enslaved workers and donkeys were confined and exploited to grind the grain needed to make bread.
Oldest fortresses in the world discovered

Oldest fortresses in the world discovered

Archaeologists from Freie Universität Berlin together with an international team confirm ancient prehistoric fortifications in Siberia.
Coins offer insight into monetary circulation in ancient Egypt

Coins offer insight into monetary circulation in ancient Egypt

Thousands of previously ignored small coins discovered in Marea, a city near Alexandria, have been examined by numismatists.
Virginia Museum returns works of art to countries of origin

Virginia Museum returns works of art to countries of origin

The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA) announced on Dec. 5 that the museum has deaccessioned and returned 44 works of ancient art.
Switzerland repatriates Hellenistic artifact to Libya

Switzerland repatriates Hellenistic artifact to Libya

The Director of the Federal Office of Culture handed over a marble sculpture of a young woman’s head at the Libyan Embassy in Bern on Dec. 5.
Baboons in captivity in Ancient Egypt

Baboons in captivity in Ancient Egypt

Baboons were raised in captivity before being mummified in Ancient Egyptian sites, according to a study published December 6, 2023.
Ancient Balkan genomes trace the rise and fall of Roman Empire’s frontier

Ancient Balkan genomes trace the rise and fall of Roman Empire’s frontier

A multidisciplinary study has reconstructed the genomic history of the Balkan Peninsula during the first millennium of the common era.
Conceptualising sacred languages and their visual inimitability

Conceptualising sacred languages and their visual inimitability

The final programme of the conference has been issued.
International Xenophon Society (IXS) Conference

International Xenophon Society (IXS) Conference

Submissions on any topic relevant to Xenophon are welcome, as the aim of the conference is to reflect the wide diversity of his output.
Museums and Justice at the 13th CoMuseum Conference

Museums and Justice at the 13th CoMuseum Conference

This year's CoMuseum International Conference is about justice and representation: being fair within and through museums and cultural organizations.
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