Nearly 400 archaeological artifacts have been uncovered in Iraq’s Babil province after heavy rainfall exposed ancient remains ...
Live Science on MSN
6 'lost' cities archaeologists have never found
Waššukanni has never been found and some scholars think that it may be located in northeastern Syria. The people who lived in ...
Live Science on MSN
'A huge surprise': 1,500-year-old church found next to Zoroastrianism place of worship in Iraq
A 2,000-year-old palace in the Republic of Georgia and a 1,500-year-old church in Iraq suggest Zoroastrians coexisted with people of other religions.
14don MSN
Christians and Zoroastrians coexisted peacefully in 5th-century Iraq, archaeologists suggest
The team of archaeologists led by Dr. Alexander Tamm (FAU, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) and Prof. Dirk Wicke (Institute of Archaeological Sciences, Goethe University Frankfurt) ...
Archaeologists from Germany have returned from northern Iraq without museum-ready artifacts but with rare insight into how ...
The secretary-general of the Council of Ministers confirmed that Ur will turn its historic legacy into a cultural and tourism ...
Ceramics are one of the most important sources of information for archaeologists. Yet how these objects are produced, ...
At a book launch event held at the AUB Archaeological Museum, the American University of Beirut Press (AUB Press) celebrated ...
Archaeologists uncover a 3,000-year-old workshop in Iraq, revealing how Iron Age communities crafted ceramics and organized production.
The name of this place means “the town or city of Judah,” and it belonged to the Babylonian Empire. Its existence is known ...
It seems that Christians and Zoroastrians in the fifth century lived peacefully side by side in what is today Iraq. A team of archaeologists from Goethe University Frankfurt was able to corroborate ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results