Category
page 11901 archaeological discoveries
Code of Hammurabi
Babylonian code of law or conduct
Font-de-Gaume
thumb|220px|Cave entrance
KV44
KV44 is an ancient Egyptian tomb in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, Egypt. It was discovered and excavated by Howard Carter in 1901 and was re-examined in 1991 by Donald P. Ryan. The single chamber accessed by a shaft contained three intact Twenty-second Dynasty burials; the remains of seven mummies from the original interment were found within the fill. The original cutting of the tomb is dated to the Eighteenth Dynasty.
Magdalen papyrus
manuscript

Prince of the Lilies
Minoan mural painting from Knossos, Crete
Namara inscription
ancient arabic inscription
Grimaldi Man
hominin fossil

El-Amrah
village in Qena Governorate, Egypt
Sebek-khu Stele
ancient Eqyptian rock inscription
Bawit
thumb|right|Fragment of a mural from Bawit
thumb|right|Detail of Christ from the Icon of Christ and Abbot Mena
Bawit ( Bāwīṭ; Coptic: ⲡⲁⲩⲏⲧ Pavēt) is an archaeological site located north of Asyut, near the village of Dashlout, in Egypt. It covers an area of , and houses a cemetery and the ruins of the Hermopolite monastery of Apa Apollo founded by Apollo in the late fourth century. The structures on this site are relatively well preserved, and demonstrate different aspects of a monastic complex of Middle Egypt.
Acropole Tomb
Achaemenide burial
El-Amra clay model of cattle
Predynastic Egyptian sculpture
Heracles of Antikythera
statue of Heracles