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Urquhart Castle: The Other Attraction On Loch Ness

Urquhart Castle: The Other Attraction On Loch Ness Jun 9th, 2012 at 12:00PM: Today the Olympic torch is crossing Loch Ness by boat. While locals are hoping for Nessie to make an appearance, one attraction will definitely be on view: the spectacular Urquhart Castle. This castle sits on Strone Point, a headland jutting out into the loch. It's unclear when the castle was built. It was certainly there by the 13th century but there may have been a fort there as far back as ...

The Viking Ship Museum In Oslo, Norway

The Viking Ship Museum In Oslo, Norway Jun 7th, 2012 at 1:00PM: Norway is famous for its breathtaking fjords and Viking heritage. A hundred years ago at the Oseberg fjord, archaeologists discovered a Viking ship burial containing the bodies of two women. The ship was so well preserved that it could be entirely reconstructed. Now it's the centerpiece of Oslo's Viking Ship Museum and one of the country's most popular attractions. The Oseberg ship is 21.58 ...

Medieval Tarot Deck, Webster's Dictionary Manuscript Among Treasures On Display In New York

Medieval Tarot Deck, Webster's Dictionary Manuscript Among Treasures On Display In New York Jun 5th, 2012 at 3:00PM: The Morgan Library & Museum in New York City has opened its annual summer exhibition of rare items from its collection. These include everything from a draft of George Washington's inaugural speech to a deck of medieval tarot cards, including the one shown here in this Wikimedia Commons image. This card is the Wheel of Fortune, and comes from the Visconti-Sforza tarot deck, made in Milan c. ...

Visit The Newport Medieval Ship In Wales

Visit The Newport Medieval Ship In Wales May 30th, 2012 at 10:00AM: When the city of Newport, Wales, was building its Riverfront Arts Centre back in 2002, there was an amazing discovery. A large medieval trading vessel was discovered in very good condition. The ship measured about 85 feet in length and was 26 feet wide at its widest point. The timbers of the clinker-built ship survived the centuries thanks to the oxygen-poor conditions in the River Usk where ...

Medieval Frescoes By Giotto Threatened By Construction Project

Medieval Frescoes By Giotto Threatened By Construction Project May 25th, 2012 at 11:00AM: Priceless frescoes in the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua, Italy, may be damaged by a nearby construction project, experts say. The frescoes were painted by Giotto di Bondone around 1305 and are considered a high point in medieval art. They depict the life of Jesus and the Last Judgement and were painted for the private chapel of a rich banker. The figures' lifelike style and naturalistic poses ...

St. Brendan: Did An Irish Monk Come To America Before Columbus?

St. Brendan: Did An Irish Monk Come To America Before Columbus? May 16th, 2012 at 10:30AM: Today is St. Brendan's feast day. To the Irish, St. Brendan needs no introduction. For those less fortunate in their birth, let me tell you that he may have been Ireland's first adventure traveler. Saint Brendan was an Irish holy man who lived from 484 to 577 AD. Little is known about his life, and even his entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia is rather short. What we do know about him mostly ...

Torture Museums Look At The Dark Side Of History

Torture Museums Look At The Dark Side Of History May 13th, 2012 at 9:00AM: Ah, the Good Old Days, when everyone lived in a perpetual Renaissance Festival quaffing ale and shouting "Huzzah!" It must have been wonderful. Not! People died young, the cities were filled with rats and open sewers, and God help you if you ever got arrested. You'd be taken to a torture chamber in order to "confess" while being subjected to various imaginative torture devices, like the ...

Overlooked London: Saint Bartholomew The Great Church

Overlooked London: Saint Bartholomew The Great Church Apr 25th, 2012 at 9:00AM: London is a city full of historic churches. Some can be a bit hard to find and get missed by the casual visitor. One of these is Saint Bartholomew the Great in West Smithfield. Built by a courtier of King Henry I, it has been open for worship since 1143 and was the center of a large complex of church buildings before the Dissolution of Henry VIII took away most of its lands and two-thirds of ...

Carlisle Castle Celebrates 1000th Birthday

Carlisle Castle Celebrates 1000th Birthday Apr 24th, 2012 at 10:00AM: One of England's most besieged castles has turned the ripe old age of 1000 this year. A new exhibition at Carlisle Castle in Carlisle, England, tells its thousand-year history. Well, approximately a thousand years, since nobody actually knows when the first castle was built here. Like with many great English castles, it got its start with a Roman fort. This fell to ruins and was replaced in ...

Archaeologists Discover York Minster's Earliest Church

Archaeologists Discover York Minster's Earliest Church Apr 7th, 2012 at 10:00AM: Archaeologists digging in the medieval foundations of York Minster in York, England, have found evidence for an early building that may have been the first church on the site. The team examined a trench from the original medieval construction site of the present building and found the remains of at least thirty people. They also found two large postholes. These are filled holes in the earth ...

Modern Thieves Loot Medieval Castle In England

Modern Thieves Loot Medieval Castle In England Mar 29th, 2012 at 10:00AM: Last week we reported on how thieves and vandals are destroying Britain's heritage. They've struck again. A group of thieves sneaked into the grounds of Helmsley Castle near Helmsley, Yorkshire, at night and stole the lead gutters from the visitor center. Metal theft is a growing problem and police estimate the lead is worth about £1,000 ($1,595) as scrap. While the castle itself ...

Peeing drunks ruining historic buildings in Chester, England

Peeing drunks ruining historic buildings in Chester, England Mar 21st, 2012 at 1:00PM: The Chester Rows, a set of medieval buildings in downtown Chester, England, are under threat from drunks peeing on them. This unique set of timber buildings are built atop Roman ruins and offer raised, covered walkways with shops behind them. Unfortunately, these hidden spaces are perfect for drunken louts to relieve themselves. Shopkeepers are complaining about the smell and urine seeping ...

The Kensington Runestone and other Viking mysteries in America

Mar 16th, 2012 at 10:00AM: When I was in the fifth grade, my teacher asked me what I thought was an easy question. "Who discovered America?" "The Indians!" I replied. My teacher frowned at me and asked, "No, what EUROPEAN discovered America?" "Oh, Leif Erikson. He was a Viking." Obviously annoyed, my teacher told me, "No! COLUMBUS discovered America." "But the Vikings came here in the year 1000. ...

L'Anse aux Meadows: A Viking colony in Canada

L'Anse aux Meadows: A Viking colony in Canada Mar 15th, 2012 at 10:00AM: The Vikings were some of the best sailors of the Middle Ages. They sailed all over the Mediterranean, far up the rivers of Russia and across the north Atlantic to colonize Iceland and Greenland. For a long time archaeologists wondered if they ever made it to other parts of North America besides Greenland. Although some Viking sagas mention a land called Vinland to the west of Greenland, no ...

New stretch of Great Wall of China found using Google Earth

New stretch of Great Wall of China found using Google Earth Mar 3rd, 2012 at 1:00PM: A British researcher scanning through images from Google Earth has discovered a new section of the Great Wall of China. Surprisingly, this part of the famous wall isn't in China, but rather Mongolia. The Great Wall is actually comprised of several walls built in various centuries by several different rulers starting in the fifth century B.C., or perhaps earlier. When Great Wall expert ...

Genghis Khan exhibit in Chicago the biggest ever

Genghis Khan exhibit in Chicago the biggest ever Feb 27th, 2012 at 3:00PM: A new exhibition at the Field Museum in Chicago spotlights the world's greatest conqueror. Genghis Khan brings together the largest collection of 13th century Mongol artifacts ever. The exhibition traces the career of Genghis Khan from his birth in 1162, to a noble but obscure family, through his conquest of an empire that was larger than the Roman Empire. In fact, it was the largest ever, ...

2012 is shaping up to be a big year for Islamic art

2012 is shaping up to be a big year for Islamic art Feb 27th, 2012 at 2:00PM: This year, several major exhibitions and new galleries are focusing on Islamic art. The biggest news comes from Paris, where the Louvre is building a new wing dedicated to Islamic art. This is the biggest expansion to the museum since the famous glass pyramid. The new wing will have room to display more than 2500 artifacts from the Louvre's permanent collection as well as notable loans. It will ...

New trail for medieval church paintings in England

New trail for medieval church paintings in England Feb 13th, 2012 at 2:00PM: The church of St Mary the Virgin in the little village of Lakenheath, Suffolk, England, contains a treasure trove of medieval church paintings. They were discovered 130 years ago when Victorian workmen were cleaning off centuries of grime and lime wash from the walls. What they found was a series of detailed paintings of religious subjects painted from c.1220-c.1610. The church was repainted ...

Photo of the Day: Sunset over Bruges

Photo of the Day: Sunset over Bruges Feb 12th, 2012 at 6:00PM: The Belgian city of Bruges is famous for its stunning medieval architecture - it's a fact made all the more apparent by today's photo, taken by Flickr user clee130. Taken at sunset, the city's gothic cathedral spires (that's the Church of Our Lady on the left, and St. Salvator's Cathedral on the right) and angular roofs are bathed by the warm glow of an ethereal, golden light. Taken any ...

Mistra: a medieval ghost town in southern Greece

Mistra: a medieval ghost town in southern Greece Feb 10th, 2012 at 12:00PM: On a steep hill overlooking the Vale of Sparta in southwestern Greece stands the last capital of the Roman Empire. In 395 AD, beset by enemies, the empire split into western and eastern halves. The Western Roman Empire was soon overwhelmed. The east flourished. Its capital was at Constantinople, modern Istanbul. Known as the Byzantine Empire, it developed a distinctive style of art and ...

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