The sweet treats in ancient Rome were made by filling dates with nuts (such as almonds or walnuts) and then sometimes rolling ...
Supported by Ministry of Culture, Framji Dadabhoy Alpaiwalla Museum in Khareghat Colony reopened on Thursday. It offers ...
Believe it or not, those old pillows you have lying around your house can be reused and upcycled into clever DIY projects. Don't toss them into a landfill yet!
Ships from India took cotton, lapis lazuli, carnelian, bronze, wooden furniture, chickens ... camels made their appearance in Levant and Mesopotamia around 1,000 BC, almost five centuries after ...
Furniture workshops, quilt makers ... Use this map to find your way to this hidden culinary treasure in Mesopotamia – your taste buds will thank you for the journey. Where: 8719 State Rte 534, ...
Emerging from communities on the banks of the Tigris, in present-day Iraq, the Assyrians had conquered Babylon and Egypt and ruled in the Mesopotamian region from around 1300-600 B.C. At the dig ...
Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. A roughly 4,800-year-old royal Mesopotamian cemetery in eastern Turkey appears to complicate existing theories about how some ...
A team of archaeologists in Iraq, led by Sebastian Rey, the British Museum’s curator of ancient Mesopotamia, has uncovered compelling evidence of the empire’s formidable bureaucracy.
It is one of the oldest and greatest stores of knowledge: a vast library of texts amassed by Assyrian King Ashurbanipal, who ruled ancient Mesopotamia about 2700 years ago. But after his death ...
This theory was based on the idea that by the early Bronze Age, Mesopotamian societies were ruled by kings and organized into social hierarchies. But the new study complicates that idea.
Marked with the administrative details of government, the tablets have illuminated the complicated bureaucracy of an ancient Mesopotamian civilization. The tablets were discovered in the Sumerian ...