News

A new tool fills in missing portions of ancient inscriptions from the Roman Empire.
The software owes its name to a character from Roman legend, but its work is entirely grounded in the digital age. Unlike earlier methods that leaned on guesswork or limited cross-checking, Aeneas ...
Several cities in India have been facing severe waterlogging due to continuous rainfall. A viral AI-generated video suggests ...
Robert Wilson, who changed everything he touched, was the most influential theater artist of our time. And for him all ...
Nishijinori, the intricate weaving for kimonos that dates back more than a thousand years in Japan's ancient capital of Kyoto ...
The following is the full text of the Peace Message read on Aug. 6 by Hiroshima Gov. Hidehiko Yuzaki at a ceremony to mark 80 ...
How we have honoured the dead through millennia? Take a look at some of the earliest such memorials found around the world.
Google has launched Aeneas, a new tool designed to help historians contextualize and restore ancient Roman texts.
This description of the teething process comes from a 3,000-year-old medical handbook from ancient Assyria and Babylonia. The ...
Archaeologists have discovered a millennia-old clay seal in Jerusalem which may be linked to an ancient curse. The clay seal, ...
A brief history of beer, from ancient goddesses to Oregonian craft brews From 12,000 years ago to today, the historic beverage has changed dramatically ...