Who Was the Man in the Well at Sverresborg? It was found in 1938 by the manager of Sverresborg Folk Museum, Sigurd Tiller, while investigating the castle ruins
Peaches spread across North America through Indigenous political and social networks and thanks to land use practices
The article The Gendered Construction of the Japanese Language-Learning Boom in Postcolonial Korea is published in the Asian Studies journal
Bones from Tudor Mary Rose shipwreck suggest handedness might affect collarbone chemistry and help to learn more about life for sailors in the 16th century
Ten years after its inaugural publication, the Free University of Berlin has relaunched the international open-access encyclopedia “1914-1918-online: International Encyclopedia of the First World War”
The novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin has been published in Norway 60 times, it highlights how the country has trailed behind in the racism debate.
Beneath the Brushstrokes, van Gogh’s Sky in the painting “The Starry Night” is Alive with Real-World Physics; a new study in Physics of Fluids
Archivist explores Troy’s invisible workers in the ’30s: laborers at early archaeological sites often received no recognition for their contributions
Researchers exhume bodies of 10 victims from the Barranco de Víznar ravine, a mass grave in Granada, they were shot in the head with their hands tied
John Stone has found the request for two copies of Shakespeare’s Othello to be sent to Lisbon, Portugal, in 1765