Focus on silver screen stars and cinema-going, from the 1930s onwards, is now open to all; the project is led by Lancaster University
The Royal Opera House is delighted to announce that, this March, audiences across the globe will be able to watch Giacomo Puccini’s final opera Turandot
Back to the time of the first Homo Sapiens with a futuristic clock, the new Radiocarbon 3.0; the study has been published in PLoS One
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution releases rare video footage from the first submersible dives to RMS Titanic
2.9-million-year-old butchery site, Nyayanga, reopens case of who made first stone tools; the study has been published in Science
Descriptions and phrases used in the Revelation of John are similar in terminology to those appearing on curse tablets produced in antiquity and the associated sorcery rituals
The exhibition Gardens and Medicinal Virtues, Health and Beauty between Past and Present, at the Marciana National Library, Venice
Three straight years of severe drought accelerated the Hittite Empire’s collapse, according to a new research published on Nature
Eleonora di Toledo and the Invention of the Medici Court in Florence, the exhibition at the Uffizi Galleries, is divided into seven sections
Texas A&M-led research team identifies oldest bone spear point in the Americas; the study has been published in Science Advances
New insights into the chemistry of embalming show how globalized trade relationships had already become nearly 3,000 years ago
Neanderthals hunted elephants: Earliest evidence found of humans killing elephants for food; the study is published in Science Advances
The study shows for the first time that Vikings brought animals, specifically horses and dogs, to Britain in the 9th century
Lustre and Luxury from Islamic Spain. Liquid Frontiers and Entangled Worlds is an exhibition curated by Filiz Çakır Phillip
It sounds a little like Stone Age standup: A Denisovan and a human walk past a bees’ nest heavy with honeycomb. What happens next? Study offers new insight on what ancient noses smelled
A study, an analysis of the large herbivore skulls found at Cueva Des-Cubierta, confirms that the Neanderthals possessed symbolic capacity
Railway made Swedish villages and towns greener: construction of the main railway lines in Sweden included a large-scale garden project
‘Golden boy’ mummy was protected by 49 precious amulets, CT scans reveal; the study has been published in Frontiers in Medicine
In an area plagued by periods of drought, it is difficult to understand how the great ancient city of Great Zimbabwe thrived for centuries, but the answer to that has now been found
A satirical work has been fount: to justify many of its arguments, it draws on texts by Elio Antonio de Nebrija