Deep in the Jordanian desert lies an extraordinary ruin. It is a Roman fort that can stake a claim to being the best-preserved example anywhere in the former empire. But this relic of imperial power is in urgent need of conservation work. David Breeze,…
It is understandable perhaps, here in Britain, that we have a somewhat partial understanding of Ancient Rome’s border defences – with most attention focused naturally on Hadrian’s Wall, the extraordinary fortified structure that is the largest Roman artefact anywhere in the world. But while Hadrian’s Wall is unique in many ways, its 73-mile length makes up just a small part of Rome’s vast frontier network – which at the empire’s height spanned some 3,100 miles in total, from the Irish Sea to the Black Sea, then south through the Middle East, and across North Africa to the Atlantic. All along…
Continue reading ->What Lehner’s team found was a far-flung complex of houses, storage galleries, kitchens, dormitories, and offices. The ‘Lost City of the Pyramid Builders’ saw light.…
The British Museum said that it would continue to use the word ‘mummy’, but would use the name of the mummified person wherever this was known…
Myanmar is a newcomer to the study of South-east Asian prehistory. Twenty years ago, I joined a group of colleagues to visit, at the invitation of the Myanmar government, the first Bronze Age site to be discovered there.…
Lebanon is a powerful vision of men at war, made real and intense by the fact that we never once move outside the tank, and only see the outside world from the interior.…
Calum Henderson explores fascinating examples of postcards from the First World War which feature in John Wilton's latest book.…
On 10 May 1894, Aquincum Museum in Budapest opened its doors to the public. Here, in anticipation of the forthcoming anniversary of…
Julius Caesar campaigned to conquer France for five years before the war of attrition reached its climax at Alésia. The patchwork quilt…
What is it? This 2,100-year-old piece of bronze sheet cut into the shape of a life-size right hand has been dubbed the…
An internationally touring exhibition featuring mummies and artefacts from Graeco-Roman Egypt has opened in the UK for the first time at the…
Open 10am-5pm daily (1 April to 30 October)Weybourne, Norfolk, NR25 7ERwww.muckleburgh.co.uk+ 44 (0)1263 588 210 The Muckleburgh Military Collection is the largest…
Festivals IWM Duxford flying season: 50th anniversary April-October 2023IWM Duxford, Cambridgeshire, CB22 4QR, UKwww.iwm.org.uk/duxford-air-shows-50+44 (0)20 7416 5000 In the summer of 1973,…
Although the Austrian navy had won a remarkable victory against the Italians at the Battle of Lissa in the Adriatic on 20…
The exhibition 'The Van de Veldes: Greenwich, art and the sea' continues at the Queen’s House in Greenwich, London SE10 9NF, until…
How were smaller posts were distinguished? What steps did the authorities take to ensure that orders, post, goods,…
Matthew Symonds examines the resistance that Roman forces faced as they strove to conquer Britain.…
In the early years of Hadrian’s reign, the military situation in Britain was in danger of spiralling out…
Vietnam veteran James H Willbanks, who is a consultant to Ken Burns' The Vietnam War, looks back on…
Neil Faulkner analyses the reasons for the eventual defeat of the United States in Indo-China.…
Last month’s CA reviewed an exhibition in Cirencester that features six ‘gladiator’ skeletons excavated in York. Struck by…
In a new book, Larrie D Ferreiro explains how a special relationship between British and US combat scientists…
How much can we know about the role of women in Roman society? Natalya Kahn examines inscriptions from…
Coinciding with the centenary of the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun, a major exhibition Daughters of the…
Sutton Hoo is best known as the location of an astonishing ‘princely’ Anglo-Saxon ship burial – but the…
Before the celebrated US paratroopers known as ‘Easy’ Company were deployed on D-Day, they were based at Aldbourne…
The bleakest moment for Britain's wartime prime minister came not in 1940 – when his popularity soared and…
From 1917 to the 1950s, Winston Churchill had a long and bumpy relationship with the Soviet Union, and…
Chris Bambery takes issue with Churchill’s claim that 1940 was ‘the finest hour’, arguing that the true moment…
One of the bloodiest encounters between Scottish and English armies took place not on British soil – but…
Graham Goodlad reveals how two late-Victorian commanders forged a winning partnership in South Africa – but left controversy…
Myth surrounds the famous Palace of Knossos, but there is much more to the Cretan site than the…
A new exhibition, displayed amid the remains of London’s Roman amphitheatre, tells the story of the gladiators who…
Detailed analysis of an elaborate 13th-century mosaic at Canterbury Cathedral has revealed a medieval masterpiece that may be…
Roman villas are rarely excavated these days, because we already ‘know about them’. Yet when a villa is…