A headless, bronze statue at the Cleveland Museum of Art is confirmed to have been looted from Bubon, Türkiye, and will soon be returned.
This is the first time archaeologists found a royal tomb since the discovery of King Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1922.
Archaeologists from the Museum of London have discovered a well-preserved part of the ancient city of London’s first Roman ...
Inside the super-private Torlonia Collection of ancient marbles, and the strategy to clean them up and bring them back into ...
Pompeii only came under Roman control around 160 years before its destruction – and its traffic-worn streets show how the ...
Towering bronzes depicting emperors once graced an ancient shrine in a region of what is now Turkey that was once part of ...
The Cleveland Museum of Art will return a headless bronze sculpture to Turkey after the Manhattan D.A. identified it as ...
The remarkably well-preserved basilica was part of a public meeting place where citizens and politicians could socialize, ...
The museum dropped a legal effort to block the seizure of the statue by investigators who said the bronze, thought by some to ...
The Cleveland Museum of Art has agreed to transfer a statue that has been the subject of an ongoing dispute to the District ...
Experts are surprised at how much of the basilica, or town hall, survived. The ancient building was part of Roman London’s ...
While most of the world was in lockdown, a team of 15 researchers carefully scraped thousands of years of soot, dirt, and ...