What Syriac scribes chose to keep: a digital dive into 1,000 manuscripts, with a new measurement called Excerpts Per Manuscript (EPM) to track…
The “mega-village” of Valencina de la Concepción, a large sustainable and egalitarian community at the height of the Copper Age
The Roman Brick Stamps of Trier – A Contribution to Research on the Organization of Ancient Building Ceramics Production and Distribution for the Expansion of a Metropolis in Northern Gaul
A new study reveals a long-isolated North African human lineage in the Central Sahara during the African Humid Period more than 7,000 years ago
Population surveillance, diverse religions and tolerance in the Ottoman Empire 200 years ago; a study in Comparative Studies in Society and History
Chemical analysis yields first evidence of wine from depas goblets, that even common people drank it in Troy
In-depth chemical analysis of three key 12th century medieval bronze doors by Barisanus of Trani uncovers which is the oldest and reveals how they were made; the analysed doors are from Trani, Ravello, Monreale
Cuneiforms: new digital tool for Researchers, thanks to the Thesaurus Linguarum Hethaeorum Digitalis (TLHdig) which was launched on the Hethitologie-Portal Mainz platform (HPM)
The frontiers of El Argar, the first state-society in the Iberian Peninsula, with its La Mancha and Valencia Bronze Age neighbours
Cleveland Museum of Natural History researchers propose new hypothesis for the origin of stone tools: an origin of stone knapping via the emulation of Mother Nature
Atapuerca rewrites the history of Europe’s first inhabitants with the oldest known face in Western Europe: a fossil of Homo affinis erectus from Sima del Elefante
First burials: Neanderthal and Homo sapiens interactions in the Mid-Middle Palaeolithic Levant discovered at Tinshemet Cave
‘You don’t just throw them in a box.’ Archaeologists, Indigenous scholars call on museums to better care for animal remains
The exhibition Caravaggio 2025 is one of the most ambitious projects ever dedicated to the painting of Michelangelo Merisi called Caravaggio
The oldest collection of prehistoric bone tools from Olduvai Gorge, mass-produced by hominins during the transition from Oldowan to Acheulean
The first Bronze Age settlement predating the Phoenician period in Maghreb, Morocco, has been found at Kach Kouch
Women’s Iconography in the 21st Century: Lancaster University hosts first-ever global women’s iconography archive
Time and life cycles reflected in the grinding stones of earliest Neolithic communities found in Central Europe
Researchers presents new evidence showing that humans lived in African rainforests much earlier than though until now, at least 150 thousand years ago
Clues of advanced ancient seafaring technology found in the Philippines and Island Southeast Asia; a study in Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports