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2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed

  • archaeology.org language
  • 2025-09-20 00:30 event
  • 8 hours ago schedule
2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed
AEGERTEN, SWITZERLAND—Swiss archaeologists gained new insight into Roman engineering and provincial infrastructure when the remains […] The post 2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Aegerten, Bern, Helvetii, Jura, Roman bridge, Switzerland, Thielle, wooden posts

617. W. M. Mitchell's The Underground Railroad

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

William M. Mitchell (circa 1826 to circa 1879) was a free-born Black overseer in North Carolina who, after 12 years managing slaves on a plantation, experienced a religious awakening, condemned slaver

618. Lear Green

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Lear Green (circa 1839-1860) was an enslaved African American woman in Baltimore, Maryland, who had herself shipped in a chest to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to escape slavery. Her story is frequently

619. German-Soviet War

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The German-Soviet War, known in the USSR and today's Russia as the Great Patriotic War or, in Western Europe, as the Eastern Front of the Second World War (1939-45), began in June 1941 with Operation

620. Futures after Progress: Hope and Doubt in Late Industrial Baltimore

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Chloe Ahmanns Futures After Progress offers a delightful journey into South Baltimores environment and ecology. South Baltimore, due to frequent factory fires, chemical explosions, and aerial pollutan

621. Underground Railroad

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Underground Railroad was a decentralized network of White abolitionists, free Blacks, former slaves, Mexicans, Native Americans, and others opposing slavery in the United States who established se

622. Battle of Smolensk in 1943

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Battle of Smolensk in August to September 1943 was the second time the Soviet Union and the Third Reich fought over the city on the Dnieper during the Second World War (1939-45). By the summer of

623. The Poems of Christopher Marlowe

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Christopher Marlowe (1564-1593), also known as Kit Marlowe, was one of the most influential dramatists of Elizabethan theatre. Though he is best known for his plays, his poems were very popular in the

624. Battle of Kursk

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Battle of Kursk (Jul-Aug 1943), which involved nearly 6,000 tanks, was the largest tank battle in history and ended in a decisive victory for the Red Army in WWII (1939-45). Two Axis armies had at

625. This Barking Dog

  • 5 months ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

On 5 May 1593, a series of anti-Protestant bills were posted throughout the city of London. One of the bills was written in iambic pentameter and included several references to the works of celebrated

1. 2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed

  • 8 hours ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

AEGERTEN, SWITZERLAND—Swiss archaeologists gained new insight into Roman engineering and provincial infrastructure when the remains […] The post 2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Aegerten, Bern, Helvetii, Jura, Roman bridge, Switzerland, Thielle, wooden posts

2. World's Oldest Evidence of Mummification Found

  • 9 hours ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA—Mummification was practiced by various cultures across the world at different times, perhaps most […] The post World's Oldest Evidence of Mummification Found appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, China, Chinchorro, earliest mummification, hunter gatherer, Indonesia, Mummification, smoke-drying, Vietnam

3. The Pre-WWI Alliance System

  • 17 hours ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The alliance system in Europe was one of the causes of the First World War (1914-18), although it did not make war inevitable. In the first decade of the 20th century, the Triple Entente powers of Great Britain, France, and Russia stood against the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy (which remained neutral when war broke out but then joined the Entente powers in 1915). The terms...

4. Saint Augustine: An African in the City of God

  • 19 hours ago schedule
  • historytoday.com language

Saint Augustine: An African in the City of God JamesHoare Fri, 09/19/2025 - 08:00

5. China’s first emperor sought elixir of life in Tibet

  • 21 hours ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

An inscription carved on a rock face high on the Tibetan Plateau records a previously unknown expedition sent by Emperor Qin Shi Huang (259–210 B.C.), the first emperor of unified China and owner of the iconic Terracotta Army that guards his tomb, seeking the elixir of life. Ancient records state that the emperor sent an … Read the full post →"China’s first emperor sought elixir of life in Tibet"

6. Forgotten Medieval Castle Discovered on Scottish Isle

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

ISLAY, SCOTLAND—BBC News reports that a forgotten medieval castle and royal stronghold were identified at […] The post Forgotten Medieval Castle Discovered on Scottish Isle appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, castle, Finlaggan, Hebrides, Islay, Lords of the Isles, MacDonalds, medieval, Scotland, tower

7. Rare Wampum Beads Found at Canada's Colony of Avalon

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

FERRYLAND, CANADA—CBC reports that an exceptionally rare set of Native American wampum beads were discovered […] The post Rare Wampum Beads Found at Canada's Colony of Avalon appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, colonial America, colony of avalon, ferryland, Lord Baltimore, Native American, Newfoundland, quahog, shell beads, wampum

8. Dig Uncovers Major Egyptian Mining Site on Sinai Peninsula

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

WADI AL-NASB, EGYPT—An Egyptian archaeological mission working at the Wadi Al-Nasb site in the southern […] The post Dig Uncovers Major Egyptian Mining Site on Sinai Peninsula appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, copper, Egypt, mining, New Kingdom, Sinai Peninsula, smelting, Wadi al-Nasb

9. Graf Zeppelin's Round the World Trip of 1929

  • 1 day ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Graf Zeppelin was the most successful of all Zeppelin airships, making several hundred trips across the Atlantic between Europe and the Americas. In 1929, a new age of air travel dawned when the Graf Zeppelin flew around the world in just three weeks. On its circumnavigation, the Graf Zeppelin left New York and took in Friedrichshafen, Tokyo, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. As Zeppelin's star...

10. Pisistratus

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

Pisistratus (circa 600-527 BCE), or Peisistratus, was an ancient Greek tyrant who ruled the city-state of Athens. Initially a student of the lawgiver and political philosopher Solon, Pisistratus presented himself as the champion of the poor, disenfranchised masses of Athens, and used their support to seize power in 560 BCE. Though he was ousted from the city five years later, he was twice reinstated...

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