The Museum of Classical Archaeology in Cambridge is pleased to announce that an online version of the exhibition Mycenae: From Myth to History is now available.
Working in a cave in Liguria, Italy, an international team of researchers uncovered the oldest documented burial of an infant girl in the European archaeological record.
It is an installation in which the sculptor creates the characters according to his own aesthetics and recalls the values of 1821 and the struggle for Freedom.
The archaeological mission of the Institute of Ancient Near East Studies of the Universitat de Barcelona at the site of Oxyrhynchus (Egypt), led by researchers Maite Mascort and Esther Pons, has made a series of important discoveries.
Byzantine gold coinage was immensely important in the political, social, and cultural life of the Near East and the Western Mediterranean during Late Antiquity and into the Middle Ages.
Rising as high as 20 feet, ancient stone monoliths in southern Ethiopia are 1,000 years older than scientists previously thought, according to a new study in the Journal of African Archaeology.
Michael Steinhardt, one of the world’s largest ancient art collectors, has surrendered 180 stolen antiquities valued at $70 million and received a first-of-its-kind lifetime ban on acquiring antiquities.
The first volume of the open access Manual of Roman Everyday Writing, Vol. 1 Scripts and Texts (Mullen and Bowman), from the LatinNow project has been released.
The exhibition presents the emergence of the image of modern Greece, before and during the Greek Revolution up to the founding of the modern Greek state.