Day 112 The largest Neolithic site in Europe
The south-east Transdanubian Region known as the Sárköz was an important zone of interaction from the earliest Neolithic to the middle Copper Age. In this area, Neolithic cultures such as […]
The south-east Transdanubian Region known as the Sárköz was an important zone of interaction from the earliest Neolithic to the middle Copper Age. In this area, Neolithic cultures such as […]
Ten years ago on 10 August 2009 a team from the DAI’s Romano-Germanic Commission made an extraordinary discovery at the site of Waldgirmes near Wetzlar, a Roman settlement from around […]
Since 1995 the Commission for Archaeology of Non-European Cultures has been working with the Institut National des Sciences de l’Archéologie et du Patrimoine – Morocco’s antiquities authority – on research […]
Archaeological research in the Melanesian cultural area needs the input of ethnology. The living traditions and ways of life of different ethnic groups appear like a unique reflection of bygone […]
The settlement mound of Tabakoni near the village of Torsa in western Georgia is the site of a joint research project by the Eurasia Department and Sokhumi University in Tbilisi, […]
Selinunte was the largest Greek colony on Sicily in terms of area. It was founded at the end of the 7th century BC by the mother city Megara Hyblaea further […]
The German expedition house in Thebes was officially opend for operations on 24 December 1904. Its purpose was to offer researchers and artists an opportunity for “thorough work and fresh […]
Taganrog lies about 60 kilometres west of Rostov on the Don and some 10 kilometres from where the Don today flows into the Sea of Azov. The settlement at the […]
In the late 19th century Roman finds were made, and subsequently a series of forts identified, along the river Lippe in Westphalia. The Roman finds from Haltern am See near […]