The huge tomb of Amenhotep III, who ruled ancient Egypt between 1390 B.C. and 1350 B.C., is carved into the hillside on the ...
Maynard Owen Williams was National Geographic's first foreign correspondent, and in 1923 he was on hand for an event the ...
On Saturday, Egypt opened a pharaoh's tomb after more than two decades of renovation. Some of its contents were robbed in ...
Prince Khaemwaset, born in the 12th century BCE, was an archaeologist of his own already ancient civilization. You could call ...
Movies are among the most powerful drivers of pop culture, which is why the images and ideas they present often leave a ...
Join Dr. Ioannis Syrigos from Ancient Origins as he interviews Eckart Frahm, Yale professor and leading expert on Assyria and Mesopotamian history. Together, they’ll uncover the mysteries of the ...
The tomb of Pharoah Amenhotep III, one of the largest in southern Egypt's Valley of the Kings and Queens, was officially opened to the public Saturday, after years of restoration. Egypt's tourism and ...
While the Egyptian pyramids are the most famous, they are not the only ones; in fact, one country has even more.
A new theory, increasingly breaking through the rigid frameworks of traditional narratives, invites us to rethink the role of the pyramids in Egypt’s history.
Authorities investigating 'disappearance' of item from Khenti Ka's tomb, a month after priceless golden bracelet was sold and melted down after being stolen from Cairo museum ...