The towering bronze sculpture by Khaleb Brooks will be installed at West India Quay in 2026
The 3,500-year-old artifact had been on view at an Israeli museum, which wants to use the mishap as a teaching opportunity
A Pennsylvania museum will auction the portrait—and split the proceeds with the descendants of Henry and Hertha Bromberg
After years of painstaking work, Rabbi Shem Tov Ibn Gaon finished the illustrated manuscript in 1312
A newspaper detailing the accounts of loved ones, published on April 20, 1912, was recently discovered in a wardrobe and sold at auction
A recent study of the Menga dolmen in Spain reveals complex construction techniques used roughly 6,000 years ago
The 2,500-year-old building with roots in both science and religion helped track the movement of the sun and stars
Found near the Aegadian Islands, just west of Sicily, the bronze rostrum played a role in the last battle of the First Punic War, which ended in 241 B.C.E.
While fishing at an undisclosed lake, Sabrina Solomon slipped and fell—and came face to face with the remains
The handwritten note, which bears a 1903 postmark, recently arrived at a building society in Wales
The artist experimented with perfumes and created his own fragrances from flowers and fruit
The artwork was a gift from the Marquis de Lafayette, who also included the fortress' key
The 18th-century poet wrote some of his most renowned works in the house in southern England, which has since fallen into disrepair
"Looted" examines how the Nazis systematically plundered Jewish cultural items during World War II
Police have identified a suspect, and preservationists have removed "all traces" of paint
Crews installed buoys and mooring lines to mark the locations of 19 wreck sites in the Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary
The 12-foot-tall bronze artwork depicts the former congressman with his hands over his heart
The bangles, which date to around 800 C.E., are now on display at the Moesgaard Museum
New research theorizes that hunters used pikes planted in the ground—with their sharp tips pointing upward—to impale approaching wildlife using the creature's own weight and momentum
The 2,000-year-old cobbled pathway was likely built after the Romans invaded Britain in the first century C.E.
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