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Norway recovers porcelain, chandeliers from 18th century shipwreck
Norway recovers porcelain, chandeliers from 18th century shipwreck OSLO, June 1 : Archaeologists have recovered a trove of Chinese porcelain and European-made goods from a recently discovered 18th-century shipwreck off the coast of Norway, government and museum officials said on Monday. Among the goods found in the remains of the unnamed sailing ship were tightly stacked white and blue porcelain bowls as well as goblets, textiles, grain and parts of chandeliers, the Norwegian Maritime Museum...
'We restore paintings to their former glory'
'We restore paintings to their former glory' Visiting stately homes or art galleries, the paintings offer a glimpse into the past; how people dressed, what a place looked like, what myths or fables inspired art. What also might strike you is, after centuries on display, how can some remain in such good condition, the colours still bright, the details clear and defined? For a vast swathe of paintings in venues across Yorkshire, the answers lies in a Sheffield studio, where old artwork is...
India confined Pakistan navy to its ports during Operation Sindoor: Rajnath Singh
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Shrek, Captain Cook and the stars: Welcome to Brian Robinson's multiverse
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First shipwrecks linked to real pirates of the Caribbean found in Bahamas
First shipwrecks linked to real pirates of the Caribbean found in Bahamas In a first, underwater archaeologists in the Bahamas have discovered three shipwrecks associated with the Golden Age of Piracy off the coast of Nassau. For the first time, shipwrecks associated with the real pirates of the Caribbean have been discovered in the Bahamas. A team of archaeologists and filmmakers found six shipwrecks in and near Nassau, the capital of the island of New Providence.
Luxury for less: Where to find the best-value five-star hotels in Europe
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The criticism Marc Fennell always gets for Stuff the British Stole
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Blending form and function: A first look at 3 new MRT stations that will close the Circle Line loop
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Freedom Ship: Could this giant ‘floating city’ become the world's biggest cruise ship?
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Iron Age Britons may have removed the brains of the dead
A woman interred in Scotland 2000 years ago has peculiar scrape marks inside her skull, which suggest that removing the brain after death may have been a funeral tradition in Iron Age Britain. The funerary practices in Iron Age Britain – which ran from about 800 BC until the Roman invasion of Britain in AD 43 – and the Iron Age more generally are mysterious because human remains from that long ago rarely survive. We do know that some people from this time tended to be buried alongside their...