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17d
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNCarthaginians, Ancient Rome’s Infamous Enemies, Are Not Exactly Who Scholars Thought They Were, Ancestry Study SuggestsDNA reveals that the people of Carthage, a powerful independent colony founded by the Phoenicians, had little genetic ...
The chestnut trees of Europe tell a hidden story charting the fortunes of ancient Rome and the legacy it left in the ...
At the centre is the Piazzetta Ripetta, a calm courtyard where you forget the often chaotic city on the other side of the ...
The seafarer peoples of the past who mastered the oceans were crucial in laying the foundations upon which civilizations were ...
Planning your summer vacation? TripAdvisor's Summer Travel Index reveals the most popular domestic and international ...
2d
Independent.ie on MSNA postcard from ‘The Port’ – why Portrush is ‘the little town that’s got it all going on’Nothing better sums up the absurdity of our weather, I mused over a Guinness at the Harbour Bar, than the cheery day-tripper ...
During Trajan’s reign from 98-117 CE, Rome and its territories encompassed an estimated 1.9 million square miles stretching north to Britain and westward to the Caspian Sea in present day Albania.
Asked whether it was unexpected for an American to be elected, Father Reese said: “Oh yeah, shocking.” Robert Prevost, who ...
7d
The Christian Post on MSNTravel: Visiting Azerbaijan, a little-known country at the crossroads of everythingAdmittedly, this country wedged between Russia to the North, the Caspian Sea on the East and Iran to the South is hardly the ...
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