Study History >> sitemap >> Page:4:
  • Magical and mortal punishments of the Inca Pachacutec
  • Trepanations in ancient Peru
  • What was life like for the Inca royalty of Peru?
  • Mayan stone panels with images of ball players
  • San Martín should not be at the center of the memory of Independence
  • The epic end of the Spanish Empire in South America:the last defenders of Peru
  • Infographic by Miguel Grau
  • The Curacas:Inca leaders
  • Túpac Yupanqui:The Inca Navigator
  • The history of Peru under suspicion
  • Why is Peru called Peru?
  • Manuel Arturo Odría:The lucky dictator
  • The myth of José de San Martín, the “Andalusian” soldier who stabbed the Spanish Empire in America
  • Reflection on the teaching of history in Peru
  • Mummy Juanita:the sacrifice of the Inca ice maiden
  • Ychma Culture or Ichma Society
  • The story of the first mayor of Lima
  • Funerary practices in the archaeological site PALLKA - VALLE de Casma.
  • Lambayeque:Pomac and the power of Sicán
  • The Ghost Crab Mask
  • The Death of the Sun - Lambayeque Sicán
  • The dramatic end of the Mochica civilization
  • -Battle of Ayacucho-
  • The Huancayo Constitution of 1839:"a monstrous birth"
  • The Velasquista October Revolution
  • -I DID NOT FINISH THE WORK OF THE REVOLUTION-
  • History of the first seven constitutions of Peru
  • Pre-Inca writing on Pallares
  • Idleness as a crime in Inca criminal law
  • Gomez Suarez de Figueroa Inca Garcilaso de la Vega
  • Act of independence:Peru became independent on July 15
  • Did the Universal Flood really exist?
  • Social differences in the Sicán culture
  • Who was José Carlos Mariategui?
  • This is how the corvette Unión circumvented the Chilean blockade in Arica in 1880
  • The painful death of Grau
  • Chronicler Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala (1487-1533)
  • Letter from San Martin to Castile
  • Tupac Amaru I (1537-1572)
  • One-armed Inca (1515-1545)
  • Atahualpa Inca Yupanqui (1487-1533)
  • Pachacutec Inca Yupanqui (1400- 1471)
  • Bolívar and San Martín designed a country based on the marginalization of the indigenous
  • Lima:The battle of the five presidents
  • Andrés Avelino Cáceres, The marshal who never gave up
  • INÉS HUAYLAS YUPANQUI, Symbol of the conquered woman
  • The origin of parties and politicians
  • Cusco in description of the personal secretary of Francisco Pizarro
  • Battle of San Juan:How did Andrés Avelino Cáceres relate this episode of the War of the Pacific?
  • The Andean face of the foundation of Lima
  • Lord of Sipan (800-835)
  • The mystery of the mummy Juanita (1431-1445)
  • Why was the war against Chile lost?
  • The last cartridge of Bolognesi and the death of Alfonso Ugarte (Chilean version)
  • Here rests the Huáscar, the tomb of Grau
  • The Aymara Kingdoms or Lake Kingdoms
  • Warning sign. Shining Path and the dogs
  • Warning sign. Shining Path and the dogs
  • Machupicchu:Genesis, rise, decline.
  • Who was Rumi Maqui?
  • Carlos Marx and his controversy with Simón Bolívar
  • Why did Karl Marx repudiate Simón Bolívar?
  • The Immortality of Bolognesi in the Morro de Arica
  • Francisco Bolognesi and the Pledge of Allegiance
  • LONG LIVE LABOR DAY!
  • Sechín Culture (1800 - 800 BC)
  • LIMA CULTURE (100 BC- 600 AD)
  • CHACHAPOYA CULTURE (800- 1470 AD)
  • SICÁN CULTURE - LAMBAYEQUE (750-1350 AD)
  • CHINCHA CONFEDERATION (1200 -1476 AD)
  • Atuncolla, Architectural Jewel of the Altiplano
  • Portrait of Miguel Grau Seminario
  • THE CHIMU KINGDOM (1200 -1400 AD)
  • SOCIETIES OF THE SECOND REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
  • THE LORD OF WARI
  • THE LIBERATOR DON JOSÉ DE SAN MARTÍN
  • Second Andean Horizon - Wari Empire
  • TIWANAKU CULTURE (100 BC-1100 AD)
  • VICUS CULTURE
  • NAZCA CULTURE
  • MOCHE OR MOCHICA CULTURE - Second Part
  • What happens when a country does not abide by a ruling of the Hague Court?
  • Judgment of The Hague:Case Peru - Chile
  • This is how The Hague could fail in the Peru-Chile maritime dispute
  • The Lima of Taulichusco:pre-Hispanic
  • Lima before Lima:Prehispanic
  • First Regional Development - Moche Culture
  • How was the new year celebrated in Lima during the last century?
  • mysteries of christmas
  • Christmas in the Lima of Yesteryear
  • EMERGENCE OF THE ANDEAN STATE
  • They find two funerary bundles in Huaca Pucllana de Miraflores
  • The Sacred City of Caral - Supe
  • The Chavín Phenomenon - Reading
  • Interview with Krzysztof Makowski about the Wari discovery in Huarmey
  • Great Wari find in Huarmey:63 mummies and 1,200 gold and silver objects
  • PARACAS CULTURE
  • CHAVÍN CULTURE Cultural Synthesis
  • ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL FORMATIONS OF THE ANDEAN WORLD
  • Sexuality in the Prehispanic world - Part II
  • Sexuality in the Prehispanic world
  • COMPENDIUM OF ECONOMIC HISTORY OF PERU- TOMO I
  • Peruvian Civilizations
  • CARAL, Cultural Heritage of Humanity
  • Prehispanic architecture
  • «Supercalifragilisticoespialidoso»:sued for violating intellectual property rights
  • The rebellion and execution of the Santee Sioux in 1862 (II)
  • Frederick Townsend Ward, the Yankee Mandarin who led the Chinese Imperial Army (I)
  • «The Conqueror», a shooting of death
  • Isaac Parker, "the hanging judge"
  • Henry Wirz, the southerner executed for war crimes
  • Victoria Woodhull, the first woman to run for president of the United States.
  • Coxey's Army (1894), a pioneering social protest march on Washington
  • The Swiss monk who baptized Sitting Bull
  • Pat Garrett &Billy the Kid
  • Little Bighorn, the swan song of the Indian Wars
  • Crazy Horse Murder
  • Butch Cassidy &The Sundance Kid. Two men and one destiny?
  • "The Greensboro Four", a symbol of the fight against racial segregation in the US.
  • Thomas Dewey, mobster hunter and protagonist of a historical headline
  • “The Black Sox Scandal” (1919), mafia and match-fixing in the baseball world series
  • When John Wayne played Gary Cooper at the Oscars
  • The Forgotten War (1812) and the origin of the US anthem
  • How a Roman Dictator Named a US City
  • When West Point Was a Spree:The Punch Riot (1826)
  • The postage stamp that gave a canal to Panama
  • Roy Bean, "The Law West of the Pecos"
  • Apalachin:the day the mob came out (much to their chagrin) in the open.
  • The singular and bloody burial of Alaric, the man who sacked Rome.
  • The Battle of the River Frigidus (394):Pagan Romans vs. Christian Romans
  • The Battle of Adrianople (378 AD), the Roman Empire humiliated by the Goths.
  • Ulfilas, the man who baptized and taught the Goths to write.
  • Charles Laughton and the "I, Claudio" that was not released
  • Leonora Cohen, the suffragette of the Tower of London
  • Seretse Kahma and Ruth Williams, fight against British imperialism and racism
  • Dr. Ludwig Guttmann, from Nazi horror fugitive to promoter of the Paralympic Games
  • The Profumo case, sex and espionage in London in the 1960s
  • How the Battle of Stirling Bridge, the height of William Wallace's fame, came about
  • History versus fiction in "Braveheart."
  • Margaret of Scots, Queen of Norway
  • The assassination of King James I of Scotland
  • The fight for the crown of Scotland:Robert Bruce against John Comyn
  • Lecture on peninsular military orders at the Con H de Historia conference
  • Presentation of «From war to unification. History of León and Castile from 1037 to 1252»
  • The succession of Fernando I el Magno de León (II):war between brothers and unification under Alfonso VI
  • The succession of Fernando I el Magno, king of León (I):reign, testament and death of Fernando I
  • Henry V:the hero of Agincourt and the broken dream of uniting the crowns of England and France
  • Henry VI, the boy who was crowned king of England and France "because of Joan of Arc"
  • When Castile claimed Gascony:Alfonso VIII and the campaign of 1205
  • The Treaty of Tours (1444). Epilogue of the Hundred Years War and prologue of the War of the Roses
  • Les Espagnols sur mer. Winchelsea (1350):when the Castilian army nearly wiped out the Plantagenets
  • Collaboration in the podcast of the Úbeda Historical Novel Contest on Bernard Cornwell and The Last Kingdom
  • New edition of “The Plantagenets” for sale
  • Lord Stanley's Dilemma:A Short Story of the Battle of Bosworth (22 August 1485)
  • The political project of Richard III of England:the Parliament of 1484
  • Complete conference on the Plantagenets and the War of the Roses at the Tercios Viejos bookstore
  • The "bloody feast of Roskilde" (1157), when reality surpasses fiction
  • Absalon Rig, "founder" of Copenhagen and promoter of Christianity in Denmark
  • When being a princess was not a fairy tale:Ingeborg of Denmark, queen of France (1175-1237)
  • Queen Margaret and the Kalmar Union (1397) between Denmark, Sweden and Norway
  • Magnus the Good:the Norwegian who was King of Denmark (1042-47)
  • Kim Philby, the KGB mole decorated by Franco
  • The Duke of Windsor and the Nazis
  • Sidney Reilly Ace of Spies?
  • How a wedding put an end to a civil war:Catherine of Lancaster, first princess of Asturias
  • María de Padilla, a key figure in the reign of Pedro I of Castile
  • Elizabeth I of Castile and Plantagenet
  • Elizabeth of Castile, 1st Duchess of York and great-grandmother of two Kings of England
  • Eudoxia Commena, Byzantine princess rejected by Alfonso II of Aragon and grandmother of Jaime "the Conqueror".
  • Talesa de Bearn, lady of Uncastillo and enemy of Ramiro II of Aragon
  • The day Alfonso X the Wise knighted the future Edward I of England
  • The brightest jewel in the British crown comes from Spain
  • The succession of Alfonso VII
  • The birth of the kingdom of Portugal
  • Blanche of Castile (I):queen of France
  • Berenguela of Navarra (II) "Most humble former queen of the English" and Lady of Le Mans
  • Berengaria of Navarre, Queen of England
  • The death of García Sánchez, count of Castile (year 1028)
  • The succession of Ramiro II of Aragon
  • The reunification of the kingdoms of Castile and León
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine (III):mother of kings
  • Henry of Castile:brother of Alfonso X, Senator of Rome, globetrotting warrior and victor over lions
  • origin of the name Eleanor
  • The infant Fernando de la Cerda and the succession of Alfonso X el Sabio
  • The infant Alfonso de Aragón (1222-1260) and the legacy of Jaime I the Conqueror
  • Rise and collapse of the Caliphate of Córdoba:from Abderramán III to the «fitna» (I)
  • Battle of Albelda (859):Ordoño I of Asturias against Mûsá Ibn Mûsa of the Banu-Qasi
  • Mauregato and the Tribute of the hundred maidens
  • Did the kings of Spain, Navarre and Portugal make Three Wise Men at the baptism of an English prince in 1367?
  • The Battle of Tamarón (1037):turning point in relations between León and Castile
  • The myth of the independence of the county of Castile (II)
  • The myth of the independence of the county of Castile (I)
  • The legend of the judges of Castile
  • Rise and collapse of the Caliphate of Córdoba:from Abderramán III to the «fitna» (II)
  • Alfonso III el Magno, king of Asturias (II):succession and transfer of the capital of the kingdom
  • Alfonso III the Great, King of Asturias (I):reign (866-910)
  • The first exile of the Cid (II):causes and reconciliation with Alfonso VI
  • The first exile of the Cid (I):background
  • The Pact of Jaén (1246) and the birth of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada
  • Toda Aznárez, Queen of Pamplona:Queen Victoria of the Peninsular Middle Ages (II)
  • Toda Aznárez, queen of Pamplona:Queen Victoria of the peninsular Middle Ages (I)
  • The books "From Covadonga to Tamarón" and "From war to unification" available in electronic format
  • Merry Christmas 2019
  • Podcast in “The Rain Cafe” about Queen Urraca de León
  • Ramiro I, King of Asturias
  • Alfredo, king of Wessex, and Alfonso III, king of Asturias:historical parallels (II)
  • Alfredo, king of Wessex, and Alfonso III, king of Asturias:historical parallels (I)
  • Sancho, the cursed name of the Castilian monarchy
  • The succession of Alfonso IX of León (III):the Concord of Benavente
  • The succession of Alfonso IX of León (II). Candidates for the throne
  • The succession of Alfonso IX of León (I). Background
  • Urraca de León (c.1080-1126), the complicated reign of a woman in the Middle Ages
  • The battle of Cuarte (1094):when the Cid showed that the Almoravids were not invincible
  • 1066, the year the fate of England changed three times
  • Emma of Normandy, example of the English crossroads in the eleventh century between Saxons, Danes and Normans
  • The eventful access to the throne of King Edward III of England and the long shadow of his reign
  • Simon de Montfort, a Frenchman at the center of the power struggle in 13th-century England
  • Eduardo «The Black Prince», the man who could reign and change history
  • Richard III:murderer of the Princes of the Tower of London?
  • Joanna Plantagenet, natural daughter of John the Landless and wife of Llywelyn the Great of Wales
  • Hereward "The Wake", precursor to Robin Hood
  • Elizabeth of York, link between Plantagenet and Tudor and mother of Henry VIII
  • The Hundred Years War:the origin of the conflict
  • Richard III and the Battle of Bosworth (1485), the last charge of the Plantagenets
  • Eduardo I Longshanks, the failed crusade that almost cost him his life.
  • The complicated succession of Henry I of England and the birth of the Plantagenet dynasty
  • The Battle of Lewes (1264):Origin of English Parliamentary Democracy?
  • Tribulations of a Teenage King:Richard II of England and "The Peasant's Revolt" (1381)
  • Owain Glyndwr, the last Welsh rebel
  • Origin of the title Prince of Wales to designate the heir to the crown of England
  • Edward I of England, Wales and the Arthurian Legends
  • Edward I of England v. Llywelyn, Prince of Wales
  • Richard Neville, The Kingmaker, key figure in the Wars of the Roses
  • England 1330:Edward III and the storming of Nottingham Castle
  • The murder of Thomas Beckett
  • 1362:French ceases to be the official language of trials in England
  • Juan sin Tierra, the black sheep of the Plantagenets
  • The discovery of the remains of Richard III
  • The Battle of Falkirk:Edward I, the Defeat of William Wallace, and the Myth of Robert Bruce's Treason
  • Sudeley Castle, the cursed castle
  • The Plantagenets, a movie dynasty
  • Lambert Simnel,“The Dublin King”, the man who challenged the first Tudor king
  • Alfred the Great, the Saxon king who held off the Danish invasion of England
  • 1066:William the Conqueror and his violent coronation ceremony in London
  • Richard the Lionheart:legend versus history (II)
  • Richard the Lionheart:legend versus history (I)
  • Henry IV "Bolingbroke", usurper of the throne of England
  • Sweyn Forkbeard, the Danish king who conquered England
  • The gestation of the Anglican schism beyond Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn.
  • The curious story of the discovery of the remains of Juan sin Tierra
  • Joan of Kent, first Princess of Wales
  • Hastings 1066:The Mystery of Harold Godwinson's Oath to William of Normandy
  • John II, the French king who put honor before freedom and died in prison in London
  • The death of Arthur of Brittany
  • On the homosexuality of Richard the Lionheart
  • The story behind the legend of Robin Hood
  • The mystery of the death of Edward II of England
  • Henry VII and the fulfillment of the prophecy about the return of King Arthur
  • Nicholaa de La Haye:Defender of Castles and Sheriff of Lincolnshire
  • Edward IV and the War of the Roses:its apparent end
  • Richard de Clare, the Norman who could reign in Ireland and caused the English invasion of the country
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of France and England (II)
  • Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of France and England (I)
  • Aethelflaed, daughter of Alfred the Great and Lady of the Mercians
  • The Origin of English Parliamentarism
  • England 1388:when the "impeachment" affected dukes and marquises
  • The complicated beginnings of the reign of Henry III of England
  • William the Lion, King of Scotland (1165-1214) and vassal of England?
  • The Princes of the Tower of London (article by Matthew Lewis)
  • The beautiful but false story of Blondel de Nesle and the rescue of Richard the Lionheart
  • For whom were the defeated at the Battle of Stoke Field (1487), the epilogue of the War of the Roses, fighting? (II)
  • For whom were the defeated at the Battle of Stoke Field (1487), the epilogue of the War of the Roses, fighting? (YO)
  • Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York (I):Lord Protector of England and Defender of the Realm
  • The other invasions of England (IV)
  • The other invasions of England (III)
  • The other invasions of England (II)
  • The other invasions of England (I)
  • Perkin Warbeck, impostor or the real Richard, Duke of York? (III):the deeds of his contemporaries
  • A visual journey through the history of England
  • The authentic Richard III, very far from the one described by Shakespeare
  • Are the princes of the Tower of London buried in Westminster?
  • Matilda of Flanders, the queen of the Norman conqueror of England (I)
  • The other invasions of England (V)
  • The Welsh Castles of Edward I of England
  • Aethelflaed, daughter of Alfred the Great and Lady of the Mercians
  • Gwenllian of Wales, the sad story of the princess condemned to a life in captivity in a convent
  • The Empress Matilda and the flight from Oxford Castle (1142)
  • The origin of the Tudor dynasty:Margaret Beaufort and a host of unforeseen circumstances (I)
  • Were the Beauforts, origin of the Tudor dynasty, removed from the right to the English throne?
  • Anne FitzhHugh Lovell (article by Michèle Schindler)
  • The King:historical notes (II)
  • The King:historical notes (I)
  • Podcast on Libros.com to announce the print publication of "What Shakespeare Didn't Tell You About the Wars of the Roses"
  • Athelstan of Wessex, first King of England
  • George of Clarence, brother of two kings of England and executed for treason in the Tower of London (I)
  • The origin of the Tudor dynasty:Margaret Beaufort and a host of unforeseen circumstances (III)
  • The Plantagenets will have a new enlarged and illustrated edition
  • The death of Humphrey of Gloucester and the origin of the Wars of the Roses
  • Shakespeare's Richard III:portrait of the last Plantagenet or veiled criticism of an adviser to Elizabeth I?
  • Interview on the Radio Uruguay program “Butterfly Effect”
  • Paths and detours in Central Brazil:history in the Federal District region
  • Viking food was the richest of the Middle Ages in Europe
  • Medieval archaeological records made by a child
  • Scientists reveal the face of a mummy over 2,000 years old
  • The pirate cemetery on Ile Sainte-Marie
  • Stone Age Massacre Offers Earliest Evidence of Wars Occurring
  • The masked mummies of the Yamal Peninsula
  • The ancient city of Petra could also have an astronomical purpose
  • Do we still use tools invented by Neanderthals?
  • Sexuality expressed in pre-Columbian ceramic art
  • Oldest evidence of a decapitation in the Americas
  • The pyramids of Sudan
  • An Incredible Bone Armor Discovered in Siberia
  • Another prehistoric ancestor identified?
  • The oldest tattoos in the world
  • Neanderthals were as smart as Homo sapiens
  • The military dictatorship in Brazil (1964-1985)
  • Ephemeris:January 27, a special day for classical music
  • The history of Labor Day
  • The process of canonization in the Catholic Church
  • The true story of Orion, the constellation
  • And who was Saint Paul the Apostle?
  • School activities for Earth Day
  • Over six thousand subscribers and still growing!
  • The story of the Rabbit and the Easter Eggs
  • 10 movies to watch this Easter
  • Holy Week in Peru:Some traditions of Lima and provinces
  • Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868)
  • The fall of the wall:The end of an era
  • Abraham Lincoln was elected on a day like today
  • Five centuries of the Sistine Chapel
  • Mount Everest like you've never seen it before
  • Two brilliant minds:Galileo Galilei and Stephen Hawking
  • The old Samurai:Japanese wisdom with a positive message
  • Dakar 2013:When advertising turns a city into a "brand"
  • The world won't end tomorrow
  • What is the Court of The Hague? Where is?
  • World History:The Tehran Conference (1943)
  • Universal History:Isabella the Catholic (1451-1504)
  • Thanksgiving:More important than Christmas in the US.
  • Diwali:Christmas in India
  • Forms of greeting in different cultures
  • The Mozart Effect:A form of early stimulation or an advertising creation?
  • Why do we celebrate Mother's Day?
  • greeting for labor day
  • Jazz:Music as an educational tool
  • Spill Magisterial tells you:The origin of the bicycle
  • Blog DM starts Cycle of Biographies:"And who was...?"
  • The origin of clapping:Why do we clap?
  • The art of making paper:Course-Workshop at the National Library of Peru
  • How is a new pope chosen?
  • What does it mean to be left-handed?
  • Franz Liszt (1811-1886):Music's First Massive Star
  • Spill Magisterial presents the Peruvian Educational Thought Collection at the Book Fair
  • Do we know everything about the National Symbols?
  • July 10:The Day of Silence
  • Hopscotch anniversary:​​50 years of an involving story
  • The fascinating history of messages in a bottle
  • The origin of Father's Day
  • Spill Magisterial takes the Collection of José María Arguedas to the whole country
  • May 17:Internet Day
  • December 12:Our Lady of Guadalupe, evangelizer of Mexico and Latin America
  • Nelson Mandela:Farewell to a universal human being
  • And who was Flora Tristan?
  • What do we know about the Philippines?
  • October 5:World Teachers' Day
  • Friday the 13th of 1307:The origin of superstition
  • An exotic instrument:the Didgeridoo (or Didieridú)
  • Google celebrates 15 years among us
  • Peruvian Music Board announces its series of tributes to great composers:Centenaries 2013
  • The story behind the “Anonymous” mask
  • And who was Clement Markham?
  • History of the judgments of the Court of The Hague:Information of interest
  • Martin Luther King:A Universal Citizen
  • And who was Andres Bello?
  • Those who left us this 2013:In Memoriam
  • How do they celebrate the New Year in other countries of the world?
  • New Year:Kabbalahs and popular superstitions for this New Year's Eve
  • The Fearsome Fireworks:A Story of Celebration and Danger
  • The meaning of Christmas Eve
  • The Story of Christmas Carols:A Song for Christmas
  • And who was Maria Montessori?
  • The history of ice cream:A pleasure for the palate
  • When guitars cry:Paco de Lucía (1947-2014)
  • Why does February have only 28 days?
  • February 21:International Mother Language Day
  • Julio Cortázar in memory:30 years after his departure
  • How and where does Valentine's Day arise?
  • Puno dresses up for a party and colorful religiosity in February
  • The history of the carnivals
  • The 75 years of The Wizard of Oz:A cinema classic that is still valid
  • And who was Norbert Wiener?
  • “Crimean? Ukraine? What is that miss?
  • And who was Paulo Freire?
  • Jules Verne:When fantasy becomes reality
  • World Down Syndrome Day:March 21
  • March 19, 1738:Túpac Amaru II is born
  • Albert Einstein:135 years after his birth
  • Remembering a violin master:The other Yehude
  • March 8:International Women's Day
  • Education International:What does this multinational institution of teachers' unions do?
  • And who was Saint Paul the Apostle?
  • Over six thousand subscribers and still growing!
  • And who was Walter Peñaloza Ramella?
  • And who was Juan José Vega Bello?
  • And who was Clorinda Matto de Turner?
  • Magisterial Spill presents the anthropological work of Arguedas in Huaraz
  • And who was Emilio Barrantes Revoredo?
  • And who was Mercedes Indacochea Lozano?
  • And who was Everardo Zapata Santillana?
  • Peruvian Educational Thought Collection:Five more volumes were presented at the Ricardo Palma Book Fair
  • Spill Magisterial regrets the sensitive death of the R.P. Ricardo Morales Basadre S.J. (1929-2013)
  • And who was Alejandro Octavio Deustua?
  • Peruvian Art History Course of the National Library of Peru
  • The Hague:A summary of this important historical moment in Peru
  • Do you know the history of our capital?
  • And who was Daniel Alomía Robles?
  • And who was Antonia Moreno de Cáceres?
  • Spill Magisterial spreads the masterpiece life of Guillermo Thorndike
  • The educational thought of José Antonio Encinas
  • And who was Alfonso Ugarte?
  • And who was Jorge Basadre?
  • And who was Saint Vincent de Paul?
  • The Hague Judgment:Some Reflections
  • And who was Cayetano Heredia?
  • Óscar Avilés Arcos (1924-2014):Synonym of criollismo
  • Spill Magisterial successfully presented the final stretch of the CPEP
  • Meet the authors of the last 5 volumes of our Peruvian Educational Thought Collection
  • Spill Magisterial presents volumes 11 to 15 of the Peruvian Educational Thought Collection
  • And who was José Sabogal?
  • And who was Hermilio Valdizán?
  • And who was Federico Villarreal?
  • Terror in the Andes:A chilling episode in the history of Peru
  • Spanish foundation of Lima:481 years later
  • Anniversary of Lima:Some reflections
  • Educational reforms in Peru:An interesting article
  • Our colorful Hummingbird will sing in the sky
  • And who was Andrés Rázuri?
  • Psychologist's Day:April 30
  • And who was Constantino Carvallo?
  • Bilingual and Rural Intercultural Education:Challenge and pending task
  • Holy Week in Peru:Some traditions of Lima and provinces
  • Influential and unknown Nazis (1)
  • Le Havre 1944, the great crossroads (3)
  • Le Havre 1944, the great crossroads (2)
  • Le Havre 1944, the great crossroads (1)
  • History of the Gestapo (6)
  • History of the Gestapo (5)
  • History of the Gestapo (4)
  • History of the Gestapo (3)
  • History of the Gestapo (2)
  • History of the Gestapo (1)
  • The bombing of Dresden
  • V2, the secret weapon of Nazi Germany
  • Hitler's Olympics
  • The medical crimes of Nazi Germany
  • Animals in Nazi Germany
  • The puppies of Nazi Germany
  • The first lady of Nazi Germany
  • Drugs in Nazi Germany
  • The New Religion of Nazi Germany
  • The gold of Nazi Germany
  • Tours and visits in the places of Nazism
  • Hitler did die in the Berlin bunker
  • The Nazis and the Jewish Holocaust
  • What is a Nazi concentration camp
  • what is nazism
  • Georg Elser, an unknown hero
  • Naval Museum in Gdynia
  • European Solidarity Center
  • Danzig War College
  • Headquarters of the High Commissioner of the League of Nations
  • World War II Museum
  • danzig post office
  • Visit to the Berlin Bunkers – Berliner Unterwelten
  • Berlin Olympic Village
  • Otto Weidt's workshop
  • new synagogue
  • Headquarters of the Todt Organization
  • Reichstag
  • Moltke Bridge
  • Prison on the Lindenstrasse
  • Plötzensee Prison
  • Cecilianhof Palace
  • New chancellery and Hitler's bunker
  • Russo-German Museum
  • German Resistance Museum
  • Luftwaffe Museum
  • anti-war museum
  • Gypsy Holocaust Memorial
  • Monument to the dead Jews in Europe
  • Monument to homosexuals persecuted by Nazism
  • propaganda ministry
  • Reich Aviation Ministry
  • Soviet Memorial Schönholzer Heide
  • Treptower Park Soviet Memorial
  • Tiergarten Soviet Mausoleum
  • The Capitulation of Berlin
  • Kommando Heinkel
  • Martin Luther Memorial Church
  • memory wounds
  • large cargo body
  • Fehrbelliner Platz
  • Sachsenhausen bread factory
  • SS brick factory
  • UFA Film Studios
  • Berlin Olympic Stadium
  • Grunewald Station
  • Anhalt Station
  • Embassy of Japan
  • Embassy of Italy
  • Embassy of Spain
  • SS and Gestapo headquarters
  • Wehrmacht Headquarters
  • Kriegsmarine Command
  • victory column
  • Concentration Camps Central – IKL
  • T4 operation center
  • Invalides Cemetery
  • Szczypiorski House
  • Wansee Conference House
  • Papestrasse prison
  • Falkensee Outer Field
  • Grossbeeren Field
  • Marzahn gypsy camp
  • Sachsenhausen concentration camp
  • gasometer bunker
  • Bunker of the Reich Railways
  • Humboldthain anti-aircraft bunker
  • bebelplatz
  • Reich Bank
  • Arsenal
  • Tempelhof Airport
  • MAN tank factory in Nuremberg
  • Ruins of the Church of Santa Catalina
  • Editorial of the newspaper "Der Stürmer"
  • Gestapo Barracks Nuremberg-Fürth
  • Nuremberg Main Synagogue
  • Nuremberg Imperial Castle
  • Courthouse
  • Zeppelin Field
  • Kongresshalle
  • Luitpoldhalle
  • Luitpoldarena
  • Ehrenhalle
  • Local Nazi Party Headquarters
  • Hauptmarkt
  • Neuengamme concentration camp
  • Bunker at Berliner Tor
  • Ohlsdorf Central Cemetery
  • SS Barracks at Langenhorn
  • Fuhlsbüttel concentration camp
  • Memorial to Ernst Thälmann
  • Command of the X military region
  • Villa Budge
  • bunker steintorwall
  • Monument to the 76th Infantry Regiment
  • Nordholz Airfield
  • Weddewarden Airfield
  • Wild Field – Langlütjen II Fortress
  • house of german emigration
  • U-2540 Technical Museum
  • Wesermunde Marine School
  • Baggerloch Forced Labor Camp
  • Valentin submarine bunker
  • Lebensborn Friesland
  • Hornisse submarine bunker
  • Rothensee lock system
  • Adolf Hitler Barracks in Magdeburg
  • Hindenburg Barracks
  • Buckau R. Wolf Machinery Factory
  • Krupp-Grusonwerk armament factory
  • Polte armament factory
  • Magdeburg Western Cemetery
  • Magdeburg Police Headquarters
  • Magdeburg ancient synagogue
  • Magdeburg City Hall
  • Liberation House Memorial
  • Tamaric Fountains, the cursed pre-Roman fountains described by Pliny the Elder.
  • Complete list of World Heritage Sites that Rome left us.
  • The birth of the Nasrid Kingdom, the lords of the Alhambra in Granada.
  • For that summer of 1987, let's save the Puente de Alcántara.
  • The impregnable pre-Iberian settlement of Vilars d'Arbeca
  • Province of Soria, more than 10,000 km2 of pure history.
  • Discover a Roman amphitheater without leaving home. Archeology from space.
  • Homón de Faro, the stones that hide the origin of the Kingdom of Asturias.
  • Cairn de Mont Petit, from a megalithic tomb to a German bunker in WWII.
  • Juliobriga, the Roman city of the Cantabrians.
  • Eight Roman amphitheaters that will surprise the followers of Rome.
  • Inside the U-995, a German submarine from WWII.
  • Iberian Wolf Center, Félix Rodríguez de la Fuente, two characters in our history.
  • The largest prehistoric treasure in Spain was located in As Silgadas.
  • Champollion Museum, a “little piece” of Egypt in the heart of France.
  • The mysterious Roman villa of La Dehesa in Soria, a pagan monastery?
  • Zeugma, the submerged Roman city of a thousand mosaics.
  • Cantavieja in images, a refuge city for the Templars and Carlists.
  • Mysterious towns of agotes, marginalization without response
  • Bobastro, the story of the rebel who put Al-Andalus in check.
  • Image gallery of the medieval town of Frías (Burgos)
  • Flemish Beguinages, a way of approaching the Middle Ages in the 21st century.
  • Tiermes, the Roman city carved out of stone.
  • The Visigoths and the long conquest of the rich Córdoba.
  • Castellum de Medina Sidonia, the Romans also built castles.
  • Gaillard, the European castle inspired by the Crac des Caballeros.
  • The Crac de los Caballeros, the most admirable and best preserved castle in the world.
  • Miravet Castle, a Templar refuge on the banks of the Ebro River.
  • How to enter history in 15 days, Cecilienhof Palace.
  • The Almohads and the Alcazar of Jerez de la Frontera.
  • The castle of Peñiscola, the retreat of the old Templars.
  • Alamut, the mythical fortress of the sect of assassins.
  • The castle-abbey of Montearagón, the "poor brother of Loarre".
  • Gormaz, the largest caliphal fortress in Europe, the work of Al-Hakam II
  • Sarre Castle, a story with many horns.
  • The Scythians, the rich horsemen of the Pontic steppes.
  • Gorham's cave, the dawn of the last Neanderthal.
  • Ancient cultures that used vultures to fire their own.
  • Culture or State?; El Argar, paradigm of the Bronze Age in the Iberian Peninsula
  • The Magdalenian:the consecration of prehistoric artists.
  • The evolution of the mysterious Tartessian warrior stelae
  • Los Millares, the birth of a new society more than 5000 years ago.
  • A look at the debate on the world of Tartessos.
  • Silvia Marín, restorer of the CRBMC, reveals the method that will be used to restore the Naveta des Tudons.
  • Some of the best examples of Megalithism in the Iberian Peninsula.
  • The Neolithic, the reason for the greatest change in the history of Humanity.
  • The debate between faith and science of the Abbe Breuil and his followers.
  • The Minoan civilization, the people who did not want to go to war.
  • 5th century. The day the Barbarian Peoples divided up Hispania
  • Elderly in Ancient Rome, the danger of getting old.
  • Origin and institutions of Sparta, the society of the mythical Greek warriors.
  • Lusio Quieto, from Dion Casio to Posteguillo.
  • Attila, the scourge of the Romans?
  • The Flavian dynasty, the consolidation of the Roman Empire.
  • Viriato, the shepherd who became the hero that everyone needed.
  • The assassination of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, the "man of the people" in Rome.
  • Hammurabi Code, the curious laws of the first legislator in history.
  • Emperor Aurelian, the savior of the Roman Empire.
  • Trajan, simply "the best" of the five good emperors.
  • Special on Rome of DHistórica nº 0
  • My favorite articles from the last twelve months.
  • Osio de Córdoba, the unknown bishop from Córdoba, a key figure in the late Roman Empire.
  • And after Commodus, what? The year of the five emperors.
  • Rome against the barbarians, the conquest of Germany.
  • Put in the skin of a Roman legionnaire.
  • The world that Alexander the Great left us
  • Brief history of the Hittites.
  • The Achaemenid dynasty, kings of kings.
  • The mythical foundation of Rome, from Aeneas to Romulus.
  • The Visigoths. The archeology of an eminent religious kingdom.
  • the druid A trip to the dark post Roman Britain.
  • Leovigildo, the sword that forged Visigothic Hispania.
  • Pedro I of Castile. The king who ordered the construction of Muslim palaces.
  • Gosvinta. Rebel, Visigoth and defenestrated by history.
  • Crusaders, the story of the first Castilians on their way to Jerusalem.
  • From the Battle of Mantzikert to the arrival of the Crusader armies.
  • The Good Guzman, by Juan Luis Pulido Begines.
  • Isabel I of Castile, the woman who believed in Christopher Columbus.
  • 14 key dates to know the history of the Vikings.
  • Urban II's speech, which gave rise to the Crusades.
  • 13th century. From Al-Andalus to Andalusia, a land of cruelty and opportunities.
  • The War of the Two Peters, 1356-1367. Spain at stake.
  • Sisebuto, (612-621), the pious, cruel and intellectual Visigoth king.
  • The looting of Almanzor to Santiago de Compostela.
  • The Order of Cluny, the powerful "men in black" in the Middle Ages.
  • Ramiro, the bastard who dreamed of the Kingdom of Aragon.
  • Charlemagne, the father of Europe, and his short-lived Carolingian Empire.
  • The origin of the Almogávares, the Aragonese and Catalan army that conquered Athens.
  • Ibn Mardanish (Wolf King), the Muladi who wanted to conquer al-Andalus from the Almohads.
  • Brief history of the Spanish Way, 1,000 km after the Tercios.
  • The Peace of Westphalia (1648), the day we changed the cross for the flag.
  • The war of 80 years, the greatest nightmare of the Spanish Empire.
  • The Sanssouci Palace in Potsdam, the dream of Frederick II of Prussia.
  • History of Menzies, the castle in Scotland where you live like a maharajah.
  • The controversial gift of Felipe V to the city of Cervera
  • The cotton race on the eve of the Industrial Revolution
  • Route of the hermitages of Tebaida in the mountains of Montserrat
  • The Treaty of Versailles, the first day of World War 2
  • The enemies of the First Republic.
  • The Berlin conference, the day that Europe changed the destiny of Africa
  • Scapa Flow, diving between the ships of two world wars.
  • The mysterious giants created by the Nuragic civilization in Sardinia
  • The oldest song in history
  • The oldest map of Spain
  • Carchemish, the ancient city excavated by Lawrence of Arabia
  • A Roman multi-purpose knife from 1800 years ago
  • This idol could be the oldest writing in history
  • The mysterious Arab ring found in a Viking market
  • Deciphering the mysterious Indus script
  • Derveni Papyrus:the oldest book in Europe
  • The mysterious London Stone, a piece of history in the middle of the city
  • The White Horse of Uffington and the British geoglyphs
  • What is inside the Great Pyramid?
  • Selinunte, the only ancient Greek city that is completely preserved
  • They analyze the cosmic particles inside the bent pyramid of Dahshur
  • They discover the fossilized remains of a crocodile 10 meters long
  • Ancient sphinx found in Chinese tomb
  • Knossos recovered from the Bronze Age collapse and tripled in size
  • Qidan, the legendary city of King Ad lost in the Arabian desert
  • The Forma Urbis, the gigantic map of Rome created in the 3rd century
  • They investigate two islands with a sunken Byzantine monastery in the Sea of ​​​​Marmara
  • Italian scientists try to recreate the voice of Otzi, the ice man
  • Neanderthals may have inhabited Scandinavia
  • The network of oldest mining galleries in Greece, under the Acropolis of Toricos
  • A hitherto unknown Greek theater discovered on the island of Lefkada
  • A site with thousands of fossils of dinosaurs killed by the meteorite of the Great Extinction
  • Cuneiform tablets with astronomical calculations on the orbit of Jupiter
  • 2,000-year-old horse racing rulebook discovered in Turkey
  • A new interpretation of the Rök Stone runes as riddles and riddles
  • A tower with an air conditioning system, the oldest of its type, discovered in Kuwait
  • The place with the most dolmens in the world:the Korean peninsula
  • A medieval amulet invoking elves and the Trinity, found in Denmark
  • A new study tries to explain how humans began to use fire
  • When researchers found the place where Hannibal crossed the Alps more than 2,000 years ago
  • Oldest Portuguese shipwreck from the Age of Discovery found in Oman
  • The vitrified fortresses of Europe, an unexplained geological and archaeological anomaly
  • Evidence of the oldest Stone Age bonfire in Europe, in a Spanish cave
  • The cave paintings of Abri Faravel, the most enigmatic in Europe found in the Alps
  • They find an object for sound effects used in Shakespearean functions of the Curtain Theater
  • Bronze Age tools made of copper from Cyprus found in Sweden
  • The Luvites:a new civilization appears in the historiography of Antiquity
  • They find a mummy of an 18-week fetus, the youngest found so far
  • The strange sarcophagus of Hercules that appeared in Tarragona and that remains undated
  • Discovered in Heliopolis an Egyptian temple of the XXX dynasty
  • Kublai Khan's palace discovered under the Forbidden City
  • They find a sanctuary of the Greek god Pan at the Hippos site in Israel
  • New proto-historic discoveries at Bazira, the easternmost of the Greek fortifications in Asia
  • The oldest footprints of Homo Erectus, in Eritrea
  • The German wooden Stonehenge, a Neolithic sanctuary where human sacrifices were performed
  • A measurement error makes the base of the Great Pyramid of Giza not a perfect square
  • Archaeologists believe they have discovered the burial place of the Attalid dynasty in Pergamon
  • The remains of the Athenian naval base from the 5th century BC. which housed the fleet from the Battle of Salamis
  • Roman slingshots found in Scotland perforated to produce noise and intimidate the enemy
  • A skeleton found in Trondheim confirms events mentioned in the Viking sagas
  • An oracular well dedicated to Apollo in Athens, the first found in the city
  • Cart Ruts, the prehistoric grooves in the rocky soil of Malta
  • The first European farmers were direct descendants of Aegean peoples
  • The Lion Man of Ulm, first theriomorphic prehistoric sculpture discovered
  • The 14 prehistoric tunnels in Cornwall whose function is still unknown to archaeologists
  • The remains of a Thracian woman dismembered according to Orphic rites, found in Bulgaria
  • A new study theorizes that cannabis began to be used 10,000 years ago by the founders of Western culture
  • La Hougue Bie, one of the ten oldest structures in the world, Nazi bunker and current museum
  • The Most Famous Ancient Egyptian Discovery You Probably Haven't Heard About
  • The Sayhuite Stone, a three-dimensional relief map found at an Inca site
  • The remains of ancient Hittite Zippalanda and the temple of their Storm god
  • The unique stones with flying reindeer from Mongolia and Siberia, erected 3,000 years ago
  • Possible ruins of the lost city of Rhapta discovered on the Tanzanian coast
  • Kalkriese Hill, the site of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest
  • The pyramids of the Argolis in Greece, mentioned by Pausanias in the 2nd century
  • A chest found in China may contain a bone from the skull of Buddha
  • The unique Roman dodecahedrons whose usefulness remains unknown
  • Megalithic passage tombs could also have been astronomical observatories
  • The Giraffes of Dabous, the largest animal petroglyphs in the world, created 10,000 years ago
  • The Archaeological Mistake That Led to the Development of Dew Condensing Air Wells
  • Hezekiah's tunnel, one of the oldest in the world, built in 701 BC. and visitable
  • The mysterious African Nok civilization, the first to create life-size terracotta figures
  • The strange City of Midas, carved out of the rock by the Phrygians almost 3,000 years ago
  • The plates of Pirgi, the Rosetta stone of the Etruscan language
  • Ani, the ghost town of 1001 churches
  • The forgotten menhirs of Vangchhia in India
  • The Trilingual Inscription of Xerxes in the Van Fortress, the only one in Old Persian preserved outside of Iran
  • Krakow burial mounds lined up with the rising sun at Beltane
  • The Thracian Horseman, the deity who inspired the equestrian representation of Saint George
  • The megalithic sculptures of the Bada Valley in Indonesia, older than the moai of Easter Island
  • The Stone of the Pregnant Woman, one of the largest monoliths of Antiquity
  • The clay bisons of the Tuc d'Audoubert cave, a unique ensemble in Palaeolithic art
  • The Plain of Megalithic Jars in Laos, of still unknown origin
  • Dholavira, the world's first urban settlement destroyed by a tsunami, more than 3,000 years ago
  • The cromlech of Nabta Playa in Egypt, a thousand years older than Stonehenge
  • The other Petra, located a few kilometers north of the famous Nabataean city
  • Several ships sunk during the Battle of Java in 1942 have disappeared from the bottom of the sea
  • Serpent Mound, the largest effigy mound in the world, situated on an astroblem
  • The more than 500 megalithic labyrinths City of Troy found in northern Europe
  • How archaeologists seeking to confirm biblical history found the oldest love poem and changed the world forever
  • The venus of Berejat Ram and Tan-Tan, possible first examples of human art
  • Olympias, the only active trireme in a modern marina
  • The walls of Benin, the longest structure built by man, with 16,000 kilometers in length
  • The Senegambia Stone Circles, the largest group of megalithic complexes in the world
  • Sophisticated Neolithic Chinese jade discs and tubes whose exact function is unknown
  • Iceland's Mysterious Rings May Be Ruins of Viking Age Celtic Settlements
  • The Crómlech de los Almendros, the largest megalithic monument in the Iberian Peninsula
  • Corlea Trackway, a prehistoric wooden road in Ireland
  • The ancient Celtic kingdom of Rheged in Great Britain
  • The strange moai that is different from all the others
  • The Heroon of Aeneas in Lavinium opens to the public for the first time
  • Archaeologists discover prehistoric obsidian mines for the first time
  • Rivers and seas of mercury in the tomb of the first emperor of China, sealed for 2,200 years
  • The oldest surviving unopened bottle of wine is over 1,500 years old.
  • The Helmet of Leiro, a Bronze Age object found in Galicia of unknown function
  • The Menhir Partido of Er Grah, the tallest monolith in European prehistory
  • Great Zimbabwe, the largest pre-colonial stone structure in Sub-Saharan Africa, built in the 11th century
  • The story of the mummified lungs of the Merovingian queen Arnegonda
  • The impressive Brownshill dolmen, the largest in Europe of its type
  • The Iranian lake that houses the tomb, still not found, of Hulagu Khan
  • The statue-biography of King Idrimi, one of the most important discoveries in archeology
  • When archaeologists found the place of the initial position of the Greek ships in the Battle of Salamis
  • Grimes Graves, a Neolithic site with more than 400 mine shafts up to 14 meters deep
  • The Mysterious Grooved Stones of Gotland
  • Archaeologists find a large Neolithic labyrinth in Denmark
  • The Sajama Lines, the Bolivian Nazca
  • The Etruscan book of the 3rd century BC. that appeared in Egypt, used to bandage a mummy
  • The enigmatic Drums of Folkton, found in a Neolithic child's grave
  • The Greek island of Keros, the oldest island sanctuary in the world
  • The questions of the Signario de Espanca, the first Paleohispanic alphabet discovered
  • The Pyrenean cromlechs, more than 1,400 megalithic circles between Andorra and the Bay of Biscay
  • Markings only visible by moonlight on a Cornish megalithic monument
  • Thousands of tourist graffiti from other times in the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh Ramses VI
  • The "city of giants" discovered in Ethiopia
  • The reconstruction of the face of an Egyptian dignitary of the XVIII dynasty
  • The controversial Prenestine Fibula containing the oldest Latin inscription discovered
  • The Phoenician ship of Mazarrón, the most complete ancient ship found in the Mediterranean
  • Map Rock, a petroglyph with a prehistoric map from 12,000 years ago
  • Evidence that the ancient Egyptian city of Amarna may have been built with child labor
  • The flint ax that broke the biblical conception of the antiquity of humanity
  • Carved stone balls from Scotland, prehistoric artifacts of as yet unknown function
  • The more than 4,500 cave paintings of the Kalahari desert, some older than those of Lascaux and Altamira
  • The underground aqueduct of Eupalino, an engineering masterpiece of antiquity
  • The dragon houses of the island of Euboea in Greece, megalithic constructions of unknown function and age
  • The Broch of Mousa, a prehistoric tower mentioned twice in the Viking sagas
  • The Stone of King Arthur, a 6th-century tombstone with Latin and ogam inscriptions
  • The double discovery of the Curmsun disc, which mentions the Viking king Harald Bluetooth
  • Giuseppe Ferlini, the man who demolished 40 pyramids in search of gold
  • The Great Gallery, the impressive rock panel with life-size figures in the Utah desert
  • When unsuspecting Vikings bought counterfeit swords
  • The oldest written text in Europe found in Iklaina, the first city-state of Greece
  • The Greek sculpture of Apoxyomeno found at the bottom of the sea with seeds and fruits inside
  • The oldest human-made metal object in South America
  • The spectacular prehistoric seal found in the tomb of the Griffin Warrior
  • The monumental tombs of the Achaemenid kings in Naqsh-e Rostam:Darius, Xerxes, Artaxerxes...
  • The spectacular tomb of Antiochus I Theos on the summit of Mount Nemrut
  • The Erdstall, thousands of tunnels of difficult dating and unknown function found in Europe
  • Oracle bones, the unique support of the first Chinese writing
  • The Copper Scroll, the Dead Sea Scroll that is the map of a hidden treasure
  • Undeciphered Neolithic protowriting discovered on tortoise shells
  • The Schöningen spears, the oldest fully preserved hominid weapons
  • The 10,000-year-old prehistoric pencil found in a Stone Age lake
  • Remains of the oldest Homo Sapiens found outside of Africa change the timeline of evolution
  • The petroglyphs of the Asphendou cave in Crete, the oldest in Greece, date to the end of the Pleistocene
  • Evidence of metallurgical workshops found under the promontory-pyramid of Keros, in the Cyclades
  • The archaeological discoveries of Pylos force us to review the current knowledge of the Mycenaean era
  • The gigantic trilingual inscription of Behistún and the decipherment of the cuneiform script
  • They find in Mexico an Aztec structure that seems to represent a model of the Universe
  • A massive network of Bronze Age fortresses discovered in Syria
  • Strange prehistoric stones decorated with unknown symbols found on a Danish island
  • The Nebra sky disk may be the earliest known portable astronomical instrument
  • The first archaeological evidence of Julius Caesar's landing site in Britain
  • The Epitaph of Sicilian, the oldest surviving song complete with musical notation and text
  • The Saqqara Bird, an Egyptian artifact from 200 B.C. it looks like a miniature plane
  • Archaeologists find in Sardis remains of military equipment from the war between Persians and Lydians
  • How a Greek Peasant Found the World's Most Famous Statue
  • The tsunami that destroyed Atlit-Yam, a Neolithic town submerged in the Mediterranean
  • The day the Egyptians stopped writing hieroglyphs
  • The inscriptions found in Tintagel, the place of origin of the legend of King Arthur
  • The Ljubljana Marsh Wheel is the oldest wooden wheel discovered in the world and is over 5,000 years old.
  • Assyrian tablets reveal the location of the ancient royal city of Mardaman
  • 4,000-year-old cuneiform tablets seized by the US government come from a city not yet found
  • The oldest wooden tools used by Neanderthals, found at a site in the Basque Country
  • Archaeologists discover the body of Chinese warlord Cao Cao
  • The Vyne ring, the object stolen in the fourth century that could have inspired Tolkien
  • The first Roman boxing gloves, found at the Vindolanda site
  • The sinking of the San Diego, the Spanish galleon that carried Japanese mercenaries to stop a Dutch invasion
  • The oldest bridge in the world, in the Sumerian city of Ngirsu
  • Brattahlíð, Erik the Red's farm in Greenland
  • The solar alignment that occurs twice a year in the temple of Abu Simbel
  • The oldest portrait in the world, carved in ivory 26,000 years ago
  • Fort Samaipata, the largest work of cave architecture in the world
  • When Cicero found the tomb of Archimedes in Syracuse
  • The Kurkh Monolith, the first documentary allusion to Israel and the Arabs
  • 500,000 ancient papyri are preserved in the world, a good part accessible through the internet
  • The 12 most important archaeological discoveries in Greece in the last decade
  • Thousands of seals, remnants of a huge papyrus archive, found in a cave in Israel
  • Cosquer, the underwater cave with cave paintings discovered in 1985 in Marseille
  • The Great Pyramid of Cholula, hidden under a mountain, is the largest in the world in terms of surface and volume
  • New study suggests prehistoric rock art depicts constellations, dates and events
  • The remains of the Battle of Himera, one of the greatest archaeological discoveries of recent decades
  • How a French botanist brought to Europe the first complete written testimony of the Mesopotamian civilization
  • Danevirke, the system of fortifications built on the Danish peninsula since the Iron Age
  • How archaeologists found the origin of the legend of King Midas, who turned everything he touched into gold
  • The oldest carpet in the world, found in an Iron Age tomb
  • The monumental seated relief excavated by the Hittites on Mount Sipylus more than 3,000 years ago
  • The Lepsius List, the first inventory of Egyptian pyramids, made by a Prussian archaeologist in 1846
  • A mathematical analysis of the mysterious Folkton Drums suggests that they may be units of measurement for the construction of Stonehenge.
  • How the Ancient Egyptians Invented Wine Labels
  • Linant Pasha, the engineer who saved the pyramids of Giza from being dismantled
  • The first museum in history, created in 530 BC. in the city of Ur by princess Ennigaldi
  • Largo di Torre Argentina, the place where Julius Caesar died
  • The northernmost pyramid in Egypt was also the tallest, and today it is in ruins
  • Lord Carnarvon, the patron of Howard Carter whose death gave rise to the legend of the Curse of Tutankhamun
  • How archaeologists discovered the first diplomatic treaties, written in a hitherto unknown language
  • Offa's Dyke, the medieval earthen wall that separated the English from the Welsh kingdoms
  • They reconstruct the face of Ava, a woman found in an early Bronze Age tomb in Scotland
  • Study suggests prehistoric men ritually cut off their fingers
  • A study reveals a surprising detail of the mausoleums of Chinese emperors
  • The oldest wooden staircase in Europe, found in a Bronze Age mine whose tunnels only 2 percent have been explored
  • The Etruscan helmet found at a Celtic site containing the oldest known Germanic inscription
  • They discover how and from where the blue stones of Stonehenge were extracted
  • Neanderthal footprints found in Gibraltar
  • Europe's megalithic monuments may have a common origin in Brittany
  • They identify the fault that caused the earthquakes that shook Rome at the end of Antiquity
  • Guachimontones, the unusual pre-Hispanic city in western Mexico with conical pyramids
  • A Taste for Fat May Have Made Us Human, New Study Suggests
  • Diamond Sutra, the oldest printed and dated book, before the printing press
  • The Nymphaeum of Mieza, the place where Aristotle instructed Alexander the Great
  • How the bilingual inscription of Karatepe, from the 8th century BC, allowed the deciphering of Anatolian hieroglyphs
  • The Colossus of Dionysus and the kuroi of Flerio, Greek statues from the 6th century BC. that remain unfinished in the quarries of Naxos
  • Three ancient marble quarries found in Greece, with unfinished columns
  • A study suggests that the ancient inhabitants of Rapa Nui built their monuments next to freshwater sources
  • The cities founded by the Visigoths in the Iberian Peninsula, the only new ones in Western Europe between the 5th and 8th centuries
  • They discover 100 new inscriptions at the Wadi El-Hudi site in Egypt, and one of them mentions Pontius Pilate
  • They find in Jerusalem a piece of pottery with the image of the Egyptian god Bes, protector of children and origin of the name of Ibiza
  • The strange and controversial prehistoric 'sorcerer' of the Trois Frères Grotto
  • How a lawyer bought Stonehenge in 1915 and resold it to the state with conditions
  • The oldest nautical astrolabe in the world, among the remains of the 1502 Portuguese shipwreck in Oman
  • An average of 1,500 people lived in Europe in the Upper Palaeolithic
  • A new study proposes that tool miniaturization was what set us apart from other primates more than 2 million years ago.
  • Rare two-faced statuette with horns and ritual ax from the Bronze Age found in Denmark
  • The Great Dam of Marib, one of the marvels of ancient engineering
  • The hand of Hercules in the Great Roman Temple of Amman
  • They find 'elixir of immortality' in a Chinese tomb
  • They find a ram-headed sphinx and a workshop from 3,000 years ago in Egypt
  • Analysis of silver found in deposits in Israel advances the Phoenician expansion through the Mediterranean by a century
  • They find evidence that the Gupta Empire disappeared due to great floods
  • Human settlements in the Amazon are much older than previously thought, according to a new study
  • A study suggests that the Romans built the foundations of their theaters according to an anti-seismic pattern
  • Valknut, the Nordic symbol whose meaning and original name are unknown
  • Study Suggests European Megalithic Tombs Were Family Tombs
  • They find in Belize a ceramic vessel with one of the longest pre-Columbian texts in Central America
  • They reconstruct the face of a dog from 4,500 years ago from the remains found in a Neolithic tomb in Scotland
  • The pre-Hispanic sculptors of the heads and potbellies of Monte Alto, in Guatemala, knew the magnetic properties of the rocks
  • The Ziggurat of Dur-Kurigalzu that Western travelers mistook for the Tower of Babel
  • A 4,500-year-old Mesopotamian pillar contains the first deciphered inscription on border disputes
  • Lapis Niger, the sanctuary where the first known Latin inscription was found, was already a mystery to the Romans themselves
  • They find ancient religious offerings in Lake Titicaca 500 years before the Incas
  • They find in Jerusalem a seal with the name of an official mentioned in the Bible
  • They discover the palace and the foundation stones of the temple of Ramses II in Abydos
  • Unknown 4,000-year-old city found on the border of the Akkadian Empire
  • Belzoni, the pioneer of Egyptology who unearthed the temples of Abu Simbel and opened an entrance to the pyramid of Khafre
  • When Emperor Hadrian destroyed the longest bridge in the world
  • They reconstruct the face of two citizens of ancient Roman and Byzantine Sagalassos
  • The Stele of Lemnos, a tombstone from the 6th century BC. linking the Pelasgians to the Etruscans
  • They analyze a unique shield in Europe, made with sheets of bark in the Iron Age
  • The discovery of a jadeite tool shows the importance of salt in the Mayan economy
  • DNA sequenced from birch resin chewed by Scandinavian hunter-gatherers more than 10,000 years ago
  • A visual reconstruction shows what the Tell el-Retaba settlement in Egypt looked like 3,500 years ago
  • The strange stela of the 'extraterrestrial', a relief from the 1st century BC. found in Cáceres with an inscription not yet deciphered
  • 3rd century Roman game board 'Ludus latrunculorum' found in Vindolanda
  • One study suggests that large seasonal festivals were organized in Göbekli Tepe to recruit workers
  • King Balak mentioned in the Bible may have been a historical figure, according to a new reading of the Mesha stele
  • The head of Tecaxic-Calixtlahuaca, a strange Roman-looking sculpture found at a site in Mexico
  • Carthage was able to resist the Romans for a century and a half thanks to mining
  • They find the ancient city of Ziklag, where David took refuge with the Philistines
  • The history of the Phoenician sarcophagi of Cádiz and the man they never thanked
  • They find a votive deposit with evidence of bull sacrifice at the Selinunte site
  • The amazing place of Lebanon with Egyptian, Assyrian, Babylonian, Islamic and colonial stelae, inscriptions and dedications
  • A study reveals that the Philistines came from Europe
  • Reliefs in the Hittite sanctuary of Yazılıkaya could represent a lunar calendar
  • Bronze Age palace and cuneiform tablets found in Iraqi Kurdistan
  • Intact Roman shipwreck found sunk off the coast of Cyprus
  • Jewelry metal found in an Iron Age burial in Finland comes from southern Europe
  • The Silurian Hypothesis:Would it be possible to detect an advanced civilization in the geological record?
  • The inhabitants of Çatalhöyük already suffered from typical urban problems 9,000 years ago
  • A single family remains in the citadel of Erbil, the oldest continuously inhabited settlement in the world
  • Rings made of cereals found at a Bronze Age site in Austria
  • The fantastic cargo of the Uluburun, a Bronze Age ship of uncertain origin
  • The face of Lucy's ancestors:Australopithecus anamensis skull found for the first time
  • Cypriots carrying copper ingots on their shoulders in the Bronze Age
  • They find the Senate building of ancient Pelusium in Egypt
  • The Valley of Wonders is home to the largest number of open-air petroglyphs from the Bronze Age in Europe
  • Changes in arrowheads may show how Mesolithic hunter-gatherers responded to climate changes
  • Pont du Gard, the highest of the Roman aqueducts
  • The story of the Tiara of Saitaphernes, a fake Scythian piece that became a work of art
  • Tabula Traiana, Trajan's inscription on the Iron Gates only visible from the water
  • The Goujian Sword, found in 1966, hasn't rusted or dull for 2,500 years
  • The prehistoric altar of Monte d'Accoddi in Sardinia, a stepped pyramid a thousand years older than those in Egypt
  • They identify three solar storms that occurred in the seventh century BC. on Assyrian astronomical tablets
  • Stone of Ezana, the trilingual stele that narrates the history of the kingdom of Aksum in the fourth century
  • Via Cava, the mysterious paths carved into the rock by the Etruscans or earlier peoples
  • The Coligny Calendar, the bronze fragments that allowed the Celtic calendar to be reconstructed
  • 9 Small Bronze Age Sculptures Found On Orkney
  • They find in Pompeii mosaics and images of the work of the Roman Gromatics, until now only seen in medieval codices
  • Hundreds of cuneiform tablets and their "envelopes" unearthed in the ancient Mesopotamian city of Marad
  • Via Sacra, the path that goes up to the most important sanctuary of Latins and Romans hidden among television repeaters
  • They discover in the Denisova Cave the oldest animal statuette in the world
  • The Dokós wreck, the oldest shipwreck found by archaeologists
  • World's oldest mosaic found at Usakli Hoyuk Hittite site in Turkey
  • The place where humans became farmers is under the waters of a Syrian lake
  • Archaeologists find ten new Assyrian reliefs of King Sargon II, from the 8th century BC, carved along a 7-kilometer canal in Iraq
  • They discover the remains of the port of the ancient city of Meninx, founded by the Carthaginians in Tunisia
  • A new study explains the enigma of the orientation of the first Neolithic houses
  • The place where the oldest lighthouse in the world was
  • World's oldest known coastal defense system discovered in Israel
  • Archaeologists find gold-lined Bronze Age tombs near Nestor's Palace in Greece
  • The discovery of Dandan Oilik, the lost city on the Silk Road
  • They find a factory of Roman Garum, 2,000 years old, in Ashkelon
  • Monkeys Depicted in Santorini Bronze Age Murals Identified as Indus Valley Species
  • Impressive Iron Age Celtic shield found in England
  • 5,000-year-old sword found in Venetian monastery
  • How an archaeologist discovered the Natufian culture in 1928, which already made bread and beer before the development of agriculture
  • Human populations survived the super-eruption of the Toba volcano in Sumatra 74,000 years ago, according to a new study
  • Modern technology reveals secrets about the great white road of the Mayans
  • Archaeologists discover a lost city that may have conquered the kingdom of Midas
  • Solar disk found in Bronze Age urn in Denmark


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