The 15th-century edition of Hafez's "Divan" will be sold at Sotheby's next month
Eanswythe was the granddaughter of Ethelbert, the first English king to convert to Christianity
Though women make up nearly half of visual artists in the United States, they represent just 13 percent of artists in museum collections
The Florence Nightingale Museum in London seeks to illuminate the "full story" of the pioneering healthcare reformer
The incident, which happened over the weekend, remains under investigation but may have involved faulty brakes
When utilitarian thinker Jeremy Bentham died in 1832, he requested his preserved remains be displayed in "an appropriate box or case"
In the wake of the war, she did not attempt to hide her identity. "Unequivocally," she said, "I was a Jew"
"Gyotaku," or the art of pressing ink-dipped fish onto paper, represents a wealth of scientifically accurate data on Japan's marine life
The move is part of an ongoing effort to correct gender imbalances in the city's 150-year-old "blue plaque" initiative
Keen travelers can pay $138 to spend a night inside Lucy the Elephant, a 138-year-old six-story structure on the Jersey Shore
A statewide ban prohibiting the distribution of single-use plastic bags went into effect on Sunday
To the ancient Egyptians, the big cat symbolized strength and power, demarcating a tomb of high status
Conservation efforts uncovered the Baroque artist's signature along the hilt of David's sword
A new Sketchfab collection brings models of fossils, artwork and more into the public domain
National Portrait Gallery exhibit features snapshots of Muhammad Ali, John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr.
Two newly publicized translations suggest the message is a memorial to a man who died in the 1700s
A new exhibition in NYC features high-end couture, historic ballet costumes and modern athletic wear
The record-breaking show attracted almost double the number of visitors as the Paris museum's 2018 Delacroix retrospective
The taboo on booger hunting stretches back centuries, reveals a book recently digitized by the British Library
The 200-year-old house, where Juliette Gordon Low was born in 1860, is undergoing renovations to increase its accessibility
Page 91 of 255