Death
Unusual Viking Grave Includes Nested Boats Buried 100 Years Apart
Archaeologists don't know why the two vessels were buried on top of one another, but the practice may be linked with property rights
The AIDS Memorial Quilt Is Heading Home to San Francisco
The groundbreaking community arts project has long been under the stewardship of the Atlanta-based NAMES Project Foundation
The True History Behind Martin Scorsese's 'The Irishman'
Many have suggested Frank Sheeran's claims about the murder of Jimmy Hoffa are mere fantasy; the historical context of Scorsese's epic is more nuanced
Archaeologists Unearth Remains of Infants Wearing 'Helmets' Made From the Skulls of Other Children
Members of Ecuador's Guangala culture may have outfitted the infants in skulls as a protective measure
Werner Doehner, Last Survivor of the Hindenburg Disaster, Dies at Age 90
The event “was definitely a repressed memory,” says Doehner’s son
The Meaning Behind Six Objects on Día de los Muertos Altars
From marigolds to sugar skulls, the traditional Mexican holiday is full of symbols
Archaeologists Discover Medieval Woman and Child's Skeletons at the Tower of London
The remains shine a light on the ordinary people who lived and worked in one of England’s most notorious historic sites
Dublin Wants to Reclaim James Joyce's Body Before the Centenary of 'Ulysses'
Critics question whether the author, who died in Zurich after a 30-year exile, ever wanted to return home, even in death
Archaeologists Discover 20 Sealed Ancient Egyptian Coffins
The sarcophagi—decorated in shades of red, green, white and black—were found stacked in two layers in a giant tomb
You Can Now Visit Chernobyl's Control Room, if You're Quick About It
Visitors will have five minutes to look around the contaminated spot where the worst nuclear disaster in history took place
Jar Depicting Thracian Athlete Found in Grave of Sports Fan of Antiquity
Your move, fanatics of the 21st century
Why Cokie Roberts Admired Dolley Madison
The legendary newswoman, who died at 75, appeared on a Smithsonian podcast earlier this summer to speak about a favorite topic, the first ladies
Grave Hints at Interaction Between Early Humans Living in Great Lakes, American Southeast
Parallels between burial sites in the two regions suggest long-distance networks emerged earlier than previously believed
Photographer Robert Frank, Who Exposed the Alienation and Heartbreak of America, Dies at 94
‘I was tired of romanticism,’ Frank once said. ‘I wanted to present what I saw, pure and simple.’
Diet Eman, the Dutch Resistance Fighter Who Helped Jews Escape the Nazis, Has Died at 99
Eman was haunted by the horrors she had seen to the end of her life. 'It really breaks your heart,' she once said
155 Years After His Death, Abolitionist John Pierre Burr's Epitaph Updated to Include His Father, Aaron Burr
Descendant Sherri Burr's research shows that the vice president had children with Mary Emmons, a servant in his household
500-Year-Old Inca Mummy Repatriated to Bolivia
Dubbed Ñusta, or 'Princess,' the mummy represents the first archaeologically significant set of remains to be repatriated to the Andean country
Toni Morrison, ‘Beloved’ Author Who Cataloged the African-American Experience, Dies at 88
'She changed the whole cartography of black writing,' says Kinshasha Holman Conwill of the National Museum of African American History and Culture
Why John Dillinger’s Relatives Want to Exhume His Body
They suspect that the man killed by federal agents in 1934 was not, in fact, the outlaw, but a Dillinger expert dismisses the theory as 'total nonsense'
Plaque Memorializes First Icelandic Glacier Lost to Climate Change
In 2014, the Okjökull was declared dead after dwindling from over 5 square miles to a mound of "dead ice"
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