• Merovingian pottery workshops yield new finds

    Updated: 2021-11-19 04:19:01
    Archaeologists have unearthed hundreds of kilos of Merovingian-era pottery in the village of Sevrey in eastern France. Many of the vessels are in excellent condition and there are some types that have never been recorded before. Mentioned in medieval texts, the Sevrey workshop was the only one in the region to produce the orange/brown pottery […]

  • Unfinished Roman aqueduct found in Armenia

    Updated: 2021-11-17 04:19:03
    Archaeologists have discovered the remains of an arched aqueduct that the Romans began but never finished in Artaxata, Armenia. It is the easternmost arched aqueduct ever discovered in the territory of the Roman Empire. The Artaxata area has been settled since the 5th–4th millennia B.C. The city was founded around 180 B.C. by King Artashes-Artaxias […]

  • The history of writing in 1.5 hours

    Updated: 2021-11-16 02:16:46
    Among the many treasures of this summer’s virtual lecture series accompanying the Getty Museum’s exhibition on 3000 years of Mesopotamian history, there was one particularly sparkly jewel. From Laundry Lists to Liturgies: The Origins of Writing in Ancient Mesopotamia was an absolute revelation, and I’m not just saying that because it was hosted by my […]

  • 4th c. B.C. Greek amphora pits found in Marseille

    Updated: 2021-11-15 04:44:00
    A preventative archaeology excavation in Marseille has unearthed three pits of Greek amphorae dating to the 4th century B.C. Archaeologists have been excavating the site of an office building renovation in a neighborhood of the city that was extensively reconstructed in the second half of the 19th century. A 16th century convent was on the […]

  • Mass grave of 25 women, children found in Chan Chan

    Updated: 2021-11-14 03:35:31
    Archaeologists have unearthed a mass grave containing the remains of 25 individuals, mostly women, at the pre-Inca site of Chan Chan near Trujillo in northern Peru. The bodies were  wrapped in layers of fabric and arranged in seated positions within an excavation area of 10 square meters at the southern wall of the Chimu citadel. […]

  • Tudor grotesque paintings found under walls

    Updated: 2021-11-13 04:44:18
    A complete 16th century wall painting has been discovered beneath a 19th century plaster wall at Calverley Old Hall in Leeds, Yorkshire. The painting covers the full surface of the Tudor wall. It was done in black, ochre and white pigments in the grotesque style, featuring fantastical beasts and men with climbing vine ornaments and […]

  • Largest hoard of Roman silver found in Augsburg

    Updated: 2021-11-12 04:18:01
    City archaeologists in Augsburg have unearthed the largest Roman silver hoard ever discovered in Bavaria. The hoard of approximately 5,600 silver denarii from the 1st and 2nd centuries was found in the Oberhausen district, the oldest part of the city, at the site of a planned residential development. The coins in the hoard range in […]

  • Oldest preserved woven fabric made of oak, not linen or wool

    Updated: 2021-11-11 04:13:10
    Woven textiles discovered at the Neolithic settlement of Çatalhöyük in central Turkey that were thought to be linen have been identified as bast fiber harvested from local oak trees. Unearthed in the first excavations at the site between 1962 and 1965, the textiles date to between 6700 and 6500 B.C., making them the oldest preserved […]

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