Profile Editor Dan Bavister speaks to New York Times bestselling fantasy author John Gwynne, exploring the inspirations and challenges that forged his legendary career.
When jingoism reigns supreme, science takes a backseat. The recent announcement by Chief Minister M. K. Stalin that Iron Age began in Tamil Nadu is a case in point.
The Orthodox Church today honors the memory of St. Charalambos the Wonderworker,, a revered figure known for his miraculous ...
You grow up in post-World War II Austria, immigrate to the United States to become a professional bodybuilder, invest your earnings in real estate, and then make an attempt at acting in movies; you ...
An ancient treasure in Spain contains meteoritic iron, proving early civilizations worked with celestial metals centuries ...
The cache included swords, spears, lances and chainmail. Researchers think these items may have been buried as part of a ...
We are orphans. There is no such thing as half an orphan. We need help and no one is giving it to us,” says Noam Ben Ami.
Long before Rome, before China's Iron Age, Tamil Nadu was already forging some of the world's finest swords. New ...
Archaeologists in Denmark have found a cache with more than 100 weapons: dozens of spears, swords, knives, and chainmail in ...
During the Iron Age, between 1,500 and 2,000 years ago, a chieftain buried an arsenal of weapons sufficient to equip a small ...
The claims about early origins of iron, like in Tamil Nadu recently, show an obsession for showcasing regional achievements rather than addressing important questions about the past.
Archaeological finds have shown that Yorkshire was occupied at a time when early hunters from continental Europe were no...