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Researchers Solve Mystery of Armenia's "Dragon Stones"

  • archaeology.org language
  • 2025-09-23 00:30 event
  • 6 hours ago schedule
Researchers Solve Mystery of Armenia's
TIRINKATAR, ARMENIA—Zartonk Media reports that an international team of researchers conducted a comprehensive study of […] The post Researchers Solve Mystery of Armenia's "Dragon Stones" appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Armenia, Dragon Stones, stela, Trinkatar, vishap, water ritual

628. 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

629. 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

630. 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

631. 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

632. 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

633. 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

634. 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

635. This Barking Dog

  • 6 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. Hittite Site Yields Dozens of Cuneiform Tablets and Seal Impressions

  • 5 hours ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

KAYALIPINAR, TURKEY—Recent excavations near the Turkish village of Kayalipinar, which has been identified as the […] The post Hittite Site Yields Dozens of Cuneiform Tablets and Seal Impressions appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, bird divination, cuneiform tablets, Hittite, Kayalipinar, Samuha, seal impression, Turkey

2. Researchers Solve Mystery of Armenia's "Dragon Stones"

  • 6 hours ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

TIRINKATAR, ARMENIA—Zartonk Media reports that an international team of researchers conducted a comprehensive study of […] The post Researchers Solve Mystery of Armenia's "Dragon Stones" appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Armenia, Dragon Stones, stela, Trinkatar, vishap, water ritual

3. Artifacts from Wreck of Titanic's Sister Ship Recovered

  • 6 hours ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

ATHENS, GREECE—The sinking of the RMS Titanic is perhaps the most famous shipwreck in history, […] The post Artifacts from Wreck of Titanic's Sister Ship Recovered appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Athens, Britannic, Greece, Kea, RMS Titanic, ship's bell, shipwreck, underwater archaeology

4. Mercenary War

  • 7 hours ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Mercenary War, or Truceless War, was a brutal conflict fought between Carthage and its mutinous soldiers from 241 to 237 BCE, during a lull in the Punic Wars. When Carthage's mercenary soldiers were denied the payment that they had been promised, they revolted, leading to a large-scale rebellion supported by several North African settlements. The Carthaginians initially fared poorly against...

5. Russian Civil War

  • 14 hours ago schedule
  • worldhistory.org language

The Russian Civil War (1917-22) began shortly after the Bolshevik Revolution of November 1917. The Bolsheviks (the Reds) immediately found themselves in conflict with various opposition forces who disagreed with Bolshevik policies like abolishing the monarchy, redistributing land to peasants, and withdrawing from the First World War (1914-18). The anti-Bolsheviks were by no means united and included...

6. The Battle of Stamford Bridge

  • 16 hours ago schedule
  • historytoday.com language

The Battle of Stamford Bridge JamesHoare Mon, 09/22/2025 - 08:00

7. Remains of earliest standard gauge railway in Scotland found

  • 19 hours ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

Archaeologists have discovered the remains of Scotland’s earliest standard gauge railway in Cockenzie, East Lothian. Believed to have been in use as early as 1775, the 1435mm (4’8.5″) wide wooden railway may even predate the Willington Waggonway of Newcastle, previously believed to be the oldest standard gauge railway. That 1435mm track gauge would spread from … Read the full post →"Remains of earliest standard gauge railway in Scotland found"

8. Early medieval Slavic boat reassembled

  • 2 days ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

The wreck of an early medieval Slavic boat discovered in 1984 is being pieced back together by conservators at the Kamień Land History Museum in Kamień Pomorski, northwestern Poland. It dates to the second half of the 12th century and was in use for a hundred years before meeting its demise in the late 13th … Read the full post →"Early medieval Slavic boat reassembled"

9. Medieval leper hospital burials found in Lübeck

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • thehistoryblog.com language

Graves connected to a medieval leprosarium have been discovered in Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. A human bone was encountered last week during construction of a new “bicycle superhighway” on Ratzeburger Allee just outside the medieval city gates. The police were called at first, and when they determined it was not a criminal issue, archaeologists stepped in … Read the full post →"Medieval leper hospital burials found in Lübeck"

10. Downed Trees Reveal Ancient Irish Monument

  • 3 days ago schedule
  • archaeology.org language

ACHILL ISLAND, IRELAND—When a severe storm recently struck Achill Island in Ireland’s County Mayo, the […] The post Downed Trees Reveal Ancient Irish Monument appeared first on Archaeology Magazine. News, Achill Island, Bronze Age, Cloghmore, cloughmore, County Mayo, Ireland, standing stones

11. 2,000-Year-Old Roman Bridge Posts Reemerge from Riverbed

  • 3 days 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

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