News

A shock study now suggests that a skeleton in Alexander the Great's family tomb once thought to be King Phillip II isn't the ...
Prince Harry's bitter feud with his estranged father King Charles shows no sign of being resolved - and it's having a heartbreaking knock-on effect. It means that Harry's young children Prince ...
The Skeleton Key is one of the most useful Daedric Artifacts in The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion — instead of a weapon or a piece of armor, the Skeleton Key is a powerful lockpick that never breaks.
A new portrait of King Charles and Queen Camilla will feature on the cover of Tatler magazine, painted by former royal tour artist Phillip Butah. Butah, who was personally chosen by the King to ...
Bite marks on a Roman-era skeleton found in York are the first physical evidence gladiators fought animals, experts have said. Teeth imprints from a large cat were found on the pelvis of a man ...
A skeleton recovered from an intriguing Roman ... reader in archaeology and classics at King’s College London. Big cats like lions would have been captured in northern Africa, then transported ...
Modern forensic techniques found that the teeth behind the marks probably belonged to a large feline, and the part of the skeleton that had been in the creature’s mouth further indicated it must ...
That’s the dream that the characters over in King of the Hill are enjoying. That and a good daily dose of selling “propane and propane accessories.” Well, Funko was hoping to spread some of ...
The King will not attend the Pope's funeral in Vatican City on Saturday, despite his close relationship with the late pontiff. Instead, the Prince of Wales will represent his father at the service ...
Left: A lion bite mark on the skeletal remains. Right: A marble relief depicting a human-lion gladiatorial fight. © Left: From the research paper: Unique ...
Despite his struggles, the Pope continued to work and devote his life to service in his final days, even finding the strength to receive King Charles and Queen Camilla during their State Visit to ...
An “extremely rare” 16,000-year-old canine skeleton from southern France offers evidence that Stone Age humans cared for their pets – although the animal was also probably killed by humans.