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  1. The Copper Age: When Metallurgy Came to Rule the World

    ... A very important archeological site in modern day Serbia has shed some new light on the matter. It shows clear ...

    Aleksa Vučković - 03/04/2021 - 14:42

  2. 7,000-Year-Old Ceramic Fragment with Signs, Symbols and Swastika May Be One of the Oldest Examples of Writing

    ... culture in Southern Europe, in the area that is now Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, known as the Vinča ...

    Alicia McDermott - 29/08/2016 - 21:55

  3. How the Great La Tene Culture Changed Iron Age Europe

    ... Switzerland, Austria, Germany, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Serbia, Hungary, western Romania and Ukraine, and many more. ... into the north of Italy, to the east into Hungary and Serbia, penetrating all the way to modern-day Turkey, where ...

    Aleksa Vučković - 05/11/2021 - 13:58

  4. Ancient Mariners: Transoceanic Voyages Before the Europeans

    ... crow flies, over 8,000 km (4970.97 miles) in modern day Serbia. From Ph.D. research in the Department of Archaeology ... they were in contact with areas as far out as Polynesia or Serbia does not seem too crazy. Considering nothing is really ... who also traveled west across Eurasia, eventually to Serbia during the Lepenski-Vir period, and also south-east by ...

    Freddie Levy - 08/03/2020 - 19:02

  5. The Great Pyramid of Giza as a monument of creation - Part 4: Fire Element

    Dr. Andrija K. Puharich, born in 1918 in Chicago, was a physician, inventor and parapsychologist and has many patents of inventions in the medical field to his name. Andrija Puharich had great admiration for the Serbian scientist Dr. Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) for his research on low frequency electromagnetic (ELF) waves in the early 20th century.

    Willem Witteveen - 20/06/2013 - 13:19

  6. 5,000-year-old stepwell found in Dholavira, said to be largest in India

    An ancient stepwell has reportedly been found in Dholavira, one of the largest cities of the Indus Valley Civilization.

    lizleafloor - 05/11/2014 - 00:37

  7. Trajan's Column: An Unyielding Pillar of Imperial Strength

    ... which coincides with modern day Romania and a portion of Serbia). Trajan's Column - Rome, Italy . ( demerzel21 /Adobe ...

    Riley Winters - 03/09/2019 - 17:37

  8. SB Research Group

    SBRG is an international and interdisciplinary project team of researchers (Italian, Croatian, Serbian, English and Finish members) connected with the University of Trieste (Italy) and researching in anthropology and in archaeoacoustics in Europe. SBRG also investigates on physical phenomena in ancient temples and sites considered sacred from ancient times.

    aprilholloway - 22/12/2014 - 03:39

  9. Astronomical alignment of geoglyph in Republic of Macedonia may point to Royal connection

    ... team of researchers (from Italy, Croatia, Serbia, Finland and United Kingdom) that combines astronomy, ...

    aprilholloway - 18/01/2015 - 13:13

  10. A Cycle of Life and Death: Slavic Goddesses Morana and Vesna

    Forever intertwined, Morana, goddess of winter and death, and Vesna, goddess of spring and rebirth, could not exist without each other. However, they could not possibly exist in the same place at the same time either. They are the forces that kept the ancient Slavic world turning in a cycle of death and rebirth. One goddess loved for her beauty and bounty, the other feared and hated for her ugliness and darkness.

    Veronica Parkes - 29/06/2021 - 19:45

  11. Extreme Drought Exposes Theropod Dinosaur Tracks in Texas River

    A record drought in Texas has exposed a bunch of 110-million-year-old dinosaur tracks in yet another example of how climate change is both revealing new things and making us uncomfortable.

    As lakes, rivers and streams dry up around the world, archaeological and anthropological gold is being revealed. This was made evident in Europe over the last week after a wealth of finds were reported.

    ashley cowie - 24/08/2022 - 22:53

  12. 8 Hilarious Curse Tablets from the Roman World

    The Roman Empire was famous for many things, but did you know they were also famous for their curse tablets? These tablets, called defixiones by researchers, were a way for ancient Romans to express their displeasure for others. Individuals known as curse writers would inscribe the curses onto tablets made of metal, stone, or pottery for Romans in desperate need. These Romans believed that the curse would come true as long as a curse writer inscribed it onto a tablet. 

    Lex Leigh - 01/12/2022 - 21:50

  13. From farming to sedentary lifestyles - how 6,000 years has transformed the human body

    ... from Germany, Hungary, Austria, the Czech Republic and Serbia. Her results show that after the emergence of ...

    aprilholloway - 08/04/2014 - 03:14

  14. Ice Age Hunters’ DNA Reveals The Origins Of Farming

    ... Genomes from 167 ancient bodies from Anatolia , Greece , Serbia, Austria and Germany have been analyzed using new deep ...

    ashley cowie - 13/05/2022 - 23:00

  15. Historians’ Gender Bias Accounts Of Illyrian Queen Teute’s Roman Encounter

    ... , Bosnia and Herzegovina, Slovenia,  Montenegro , Kosovo, Serbia, and Albania. Despite several notable ancient tribes ...

    MartiniF - 07/04/2023 - 21:41

  16. Kosem Sultan - The Last Influential Female Ruler of the Ottoman Empire

    ... as significant of a sultan as his great grandfather. Serbia and the Ottoman Empire: The Loss and Recuperation of ...

    Natalia Klimczak - 07/05/2020 - 21:05

  17. Bulgarian archaeologists unearth second ‘vampire’ grave

    ... the pagan rite had also been practised in neighbouring Serbia and other Balkan countries. Only 2 months ago we ...

    aprilholloway - 03/09/2013 - 01:14

  18. The Ottoman-Venetian Wars: 322 Years Of Battles Between East and West

    While it started out full of ambition, the highly influential maritime power, the Republic of Venice, soon found itself surrounded by competitors and foes. One of their major enemies was the lofty Ottoman Empire. After crossing into Europe in 1354, the Ottomans became a major threat not only for the Venetians, but all other Christian states on the continent. As the Ottoman Empire grew in size it spread across the seas as well, seizing coastal territories and setting up a major naval presence.

    Aleksa Vučković - 20/09/2021 - 22:49

  19. New Insights Into what Neolithic People Ate in Southeastern Europe

    ... landscape on the border between modern-day Romania and Serbia where the Danube cuts through the junction of the ...

    ancient-origins - 18/01/2019 - 13:58

  20. Ancient Sex Curse Revealed: May Your Penis Hurt When You Make Love!

    Curse tablets in the ancient world are like Facebook posts today—they were everywhere, created by almost everyone, and can still be found in the strangest of places. They could be broadly vague or incredibly specific; they could be politically, economically, or emotionally driven. They could be simple requests for vengeance or complex strategies for pain and suffering. Curse tablets were the slam-books of ancient Greece and Rome.

    Riley Winters - 24/02/2018 - 18:48

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