Archaeologists excavating a field in the municipality of Kutenholz in the Stade District, in Lower Saxony, Germany, have ...
A metal detectorist recently discovered not one, but two bronze and wood daggers that experts dated to over 3,000 years ago.
The blades were found in just 11 inches of dirt and are believed to have served a cult-like purpose, experts said.
A clay tablet, almost 4,000 years old, reveals how a Mesopotamian man named Nanni took matters into his own hands when he ...
University College London, the University of Central Lancashire, Ege University, and other institutions have discovered that ...
A roughly 4,800-year-old royal Mesopotamian cemetery in eastern Turkey appears to complicate existing theories about how some ...
Søren Kiehn/Museum VestsjællandMuseum inspector Arne Hedegaard Andersen holds the discovery. Two locals from Zealand, the largest island of Denmark, decided to take an evening stroll through a ...
Officials said the daggers — estimated to have been forearm length — are among the oldest Bronze Age artifacts ever ... or ideology and were not used as weapons or in funeral rituals ...
In the Iliad, did Homer really describe the type of warfare common to the Mycenaean Era? Or was he describing the warfare of ...
Perched on the edge of a river near the city of Siirt, Türkiye, is an archaeological site that offers a chance to completely ...