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FROM THE EDITOR
National Geographic History
Stone Age Bog Body Lived Between Two Worlds • New details about Vittrup Man, whose battered body was found in a bog, suggest he was an old-style hunter-gatherer who became a farmer.
SEAFARING IN THE STONE AGE
Journeys to the Ends of the Earth
Cabeza de Vaca: Explorer, Survivor, Historian • Shipwrecked in Texas in 1528, Spanish conquistador Cabeza de Vaca undertook a grueling trek westward, later writing a detailed account of the Indigenous communities he lived among.
STORY BEHIND A SURNAME
OBSERVATIONS
GOOD TREATMENT
A SPECIAL DISCOVERY
Opera in Venice: A Spectacle for the People • Once exclusively created for royalty, opera burst into public theaters in the mid-1600s, captivating the masses.
Dancing Down Into the Underworld
COMPLEX SETTINGS
The Sex Scandal Behind the Hundred Years’ War • Succession squabbles and accusations of infidelity rocked the House of Capet in what came to be known as the Nesle Tower affair, which put France on the path to a devastating conflict.
THE HEAVIEST PENALTIES
TAKING LIBERTIES
MOUNT NEMRUT EIGHTH WONDER OF THE ANCIENT WORLD • King Antiochus I of Commagene’s imposing tomb perches on a steep mountaintop in Turkey, guarded by extraordinary statues of Greco-Roman and Persian divinities.
BETWEEN TWO EMPIRES
Visitors to the Tomb
THE CELESTIAL LION OF NEMRUT DAĞ
Greco-Persian Influences
MONUMENTAL SPLENDOR
BENEATH THE WAVES SUNKEN CITIES OF THE ANCIENT WORLD • In recent decades, new technologies have revolutionized underwater archaeology and surfaced the remains of submerged coastal cities from the ancient world.
Pavlopetri The Oldest Sunken City
Imagining Ancient Pavlopetri
Phanagoria Beneath the Black Sea
Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus Egypt’s Lost Seaports
GOLDEN TREASURES OF THE DELTA • Archaeologists were surprised by the large amounts of gold found at Thonis-Heracleion and Canopus. The abundance of coins, jewelry, and gifts to the gods revealed how wealthy these cities were before they sank.
Epidaurus A Home by the Sea
GERMANICUS DEATH OF ROME’S GOLDEN BOY • Young, talented, and beloved, Germanicus was poised to be the next emperor of Rome. When he died unexpectedly, the empire mourned—and whispers of murder soon followed.
LIVING TO SERVE ROME
HOUSE OF CAESAR
THE SENATE OF ROME VS. GOVERNOR PISO • A bronze tablet records the Roman Senate’s condemnation of Piso.
POSTHUMOUS HONORS
THE ASHES OF GERMANICUS
MONGOLS CONQUEST OF THE WEST • In 1236 the great khan Ögödei launched a major offensive against Europe—crushing Kyivan Rus, Poland, and Hungary with his fearsome horsemen and their brilliant military strategies.
MONGOLS ATTACK
APOCALYPTIC VISIONS
SLAVERY IN EUROPE
REBOUND AND RECOVERY
NO HELP FOR HUNGARY
PRINCES IN THE TOWER
VANISHING ACTS
THE TOWER OF LONDON
ILLEGITIMATE CLAIMS
FUNERAL FOR A LOST KING
BONES BENEATH THE STAIRS
SPLIT FATE
MYSTERY MONARCH
ON THE PAPYRUS TRAIL
The Abinnaeus Papers: Life of a Roman Soldier • In 1893 a cache of personal papers found in Egypt revealed the everyday life of a fourth-century Roman officer.
THE PAPYRUS JACKPOT
ABINNAEUS IN COMMAND