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  1. The Establishment Has Already Acknowledged A Lost Race of Giants - Part 1

    ... located on the banks of the Etowah River in Bartow County, Georgia. Built and occupied in three phases, from 1000–1550 ... in the sand dunes of the sun-sprayed Golden Isles, Georgia, archaeologists have gouged out the strange record of ...

    Jason Jarrell - 13/03/2021 - 01:00

  2. The Top 10 Revelations in Human Evolution in 2021

    ... ) Genetic research on Homo skulls discovered at Dmanisi, Georgia, and published in Science by University of Zurich ...

    ancient-origins - 11/01/2022 - 14:11

  3. Paleolithic Tools Prove Hominins Were in Europe 1.4 Million Years Ago

    ... cranial remains and stone tools at a site near  Dmanisi, Georgia  in the latter region, and it was these discoveries ... at Korolevo I.  (Roman Garba /  Nature ) The sites in Georgia in the Caucasus and southwestern Europe are separated ...

    Nathan Falde - 06/03/2024 - 16:00

  4. Varangian Guard: Bodyguards and Berserkers of the Byzantine Empire

    Read Part 1

    The tale of the Varangians continues in its prime in the form of the Varangian Guard, a prominent and selective Byzantine army arising in the 10th century. Composed of the Scandinavian marauders in the beginning, the Varangian Guard survived until the 13th or 14th centuries as the Byzantine Emperor's elite sentinel.

    Riley Winters - 20/06/2019 - 22:33

  5. Alchemist British Monks: Digging Up The Old Gunpowder Mills

    16th-Century monks in Britain had a blast! They were the first to experiment with the recipe of saltpeter, Sulphur and charcoal to produce gunpowder in Britain. In the Battle of Crecy in 1346 the British artillery used gunpowder against the French for the first time. By the 16th century water mills were producing cotton, paper, flour, oil and other products, but they were converted into gunpowder mills, due to shortages experienced during warfare.

    Rebecca Batley - 31/10/2022 - 20:35

  6. Clare Castle, Seat Of Elizabeth De Clare Who Defied Her King

    Not all castles are occupied by fairy princesses. In the 14th century, Elizabeth de Clare was one of the wealthiest and most powerful women of her time, who defied her king to defend her lands. Today in Suffolk, the ruins of Clare Castle, located within a country park which was once part of the Castle grounds, perch on top of a steep 30-meters (98-feet) high motte.

    Rebecca Batley - 03/04/2023 - 18:30

  7. Pre-Columbian Explorers in the Americas: The Hard Evidence

    ... before Columbus set sail? Chinese Votive Sword Found in Georgia suggests Pre-Columbian Chinese travel to North ...

    Dr Pat Hanratty - 18/08/2019 - 18:39

  8. Leiston Abbey 13th-Century Pirating Monks Of Rural Suffolk

    The original Leiston Abbey was once the home of pirating monks, but today the ruins of the second Leiston Abbey, showcasing some of the finest and most complete monastic remains in the south of England, lie well off the beaten track in rural Suffolk.

    Rebecca Batley - 19/06/2023 - 18:44

  9. Ancient Spas: The Lifegiving Power of Water and the Gods

    In the world of today, a spa is generally understood to mean a health resort, a place where people visit in order to rejuvenate their body, mind, and spirit. Spas today come in many varieties, including the day spa, hotel spa, and medical spa.

    dhwty - 12/11/2019 - 18:55

  10. Venta Icenorum: Excavating Romans In Boudicca’s Lands

    Today the sleepy village of Caistor St Edmund in the country of Norfolk with its typical church spire and green, seems unremarkable but 2,000 years ago the terrain helped shaped the future of the whole of Britain. Just outside the village lies the ruins of Venta Icenorum, a Roman town whose name means the ‘marketplace of the Iceni’.’ The name was preserved in a third-century Roman document called the Antonine Itinerary, and Venta Icenorum was the site of a Roman settlement built at the heart of Iceni lands.

    Rebecca Batley - 04/01/2023 - 23:09

  11. Sudeley Castle’s ‘Footprints’ Of The Tudors

    Awarded the accolade as “one of England’s most picturesque castles”, the manor of Sudeley Castle lies just to the east of the picturesque River Isbourne, a few miles from Cheltenham, on the edge of the Cotswold Plateau. Besides being renowned for its majestic beauty, the castle is well-known as one of the favorite palaces of the most infamous of all royal dynasties; the Tudors.

    Rebecca Batley - 20/07/2022 - 18:59

  12. Rare medieval skeletal remains excavated in Wales date to 13th century

    The remains of a woman who died around the late 12th or early 13th century were excavated under the foundation a Welsh church that has been converted into a museum. The church was built over an older church in the 1820s.

    Mark Miller - 30/03/2015 - 00:46

  13. Revisiting Vindolanda, The Roman Outpost Of Hadrian’s Wall

    Sitting proudly on the line of Hadrian's Wall in northern England, just south of the Scottish border, the Roman fort of Vindolanda has dominated the landscape for nearly 2,000 years.

    Rebecca Batley - 17/12/2022 - 01:19

  14. Big Bend National Park Petroglyphs Irreparably Damaged by Vandals

    ... above images show. Native American History Destroyed In Georgia’s Track Rock Gap Vandals Damage Ancient Artifacts ...

    Sahir - 11/01/2022 - 18:00

  15. New dating of Homo erectus skull reclassifies Lantian Man as oldest known hominin in northeast Asia

    ... Gongwangling Homo erectus cranium, similar to that seen in Georgia and Indonesia", said HUANG Weiwen, a professor of the ...

    aprilholloway - 29/11/2014 - 00:50

  16. The Largest Native American Cave Art Site in SE North America Emerges!

    ... Kentucky, Tennessee, northern Alabama and northwest Georgia ) over the last two decades, as per a 2011 report in ...

    Sahir - 04/05/2022 - 01:28

  17. Advanced Technology of the Ancient Chinese Automata

    ... a Revolt with His Abilities Chinese Votive Sword Found in Georgia suggests Pre-Columbian Chinese travel to North ...

    dhwty - 04/06/2016 - 03:34

  18. The Comet that Sparked a Worldwide Flood ‘Myth’

    ... New Jersey, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, Florida, and Nebraska. The people in Maryland refer ...

    Dennis Brooks - 21/11/2017 - 18:54

  19. Timurid Empire’s Arts and Culture Influenced Much of the Known World

    ... Transoxiana. By age 48 he had conquered Iran, Mesopotamia, Georgia and Armenia. He took on the Golden Horde in 1389-1395 ...

    Mark Miller - 27/10/2018 - 15:34

  20. Pembroke Castle Revealing A Secret Of Henry VII’s Birthplace

    Situated on a high ridge between two tidal inlets in the south-west corner of Wales, Pembroke Castle, with its walls still standing sentinel after hundreds of years, dominates the landscape. These walls stand as silent witnesses to a narrative of pre-historic occupation as well as centuries of tumultuous history; to the power of William Marshall, ‘England’s Greatest Knight’; and to the birth of the most infamous of all English royal dynasties, the Tudors.

    Rebecca Batley - 22/06/2022 - 22:30

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