How would a New York Times obituary writer measure up to the scribes of the Book of the Dead? He found out at the Brooklyn Museum.
Lee Cronin's The Mummy won't be going the route of the 1999 Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz classic, a crowd-pleasing ...
The Nile nourishes a green band stretching through the desert, from the heart of Africa to the Mediterranean Sea. Along its ...
In a 2023 paper, Professor Ingo Strauch argued that graffiti should be considered a genre of Indian epigraphy using a ...
Archaeologists in Saqqara are amazed today by the discovery of a 4,300-year-old mummy covered in gold that has been found intact in Egypt.
A study suggests hunger and stress may explain the Jesus temple cleansing, offering a human view of why tables were ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Missing for 96 years, legendary Egyptian statue half found in Nile
A joint Egyptian-American archaeological team has pulled the 12.5-foot upper half of a colossal statue of Ramesses II from ...
The pharaoh's tomb was opened for the first time on February 16, 1923, by archaeologist Howard Carter ...
The opening of the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun in 1923 has been followed by a trail of death and misfortune, with those who ...
I came across several theories for red doors. First, a red door is a reminder of the original Passover in the Hebrew Bible, ...
Irish Mirror on MSN
Mysterious deaths all trace back to contact with Tutankhamun's tomb
As the anniversary of Tutankhamun's tomb unveiling approaches, we examine the mysterious deaths and misfortunes that befell ...
The Times of Israel on MSN
Hangry Jesus? Rumbling stomach may have spurred iconic ‘cleansing of the Temple’
A new peer-reviewed article offers an alternative reading of the famous Gospel story that saw Jesus flipping the tables of ...
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