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At Çatalhöyük, the 9,000-year-old proto-city of Anatolia, archaeologists have uncovered a rare 8,500-year-old wooden ladder fragment—the first physical proof of how its people entered their homes.
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Video: Anatolia Cafe & Cuisine

Looking for a coffee experience that’s a little deeper than your usual latte? Anatolia Cafe & Cuisine, a cozy, family-run cafe located on Overland Park Lane in Charlotte, brings the rich tradition of ...
Machiel Kiel transformed a humble childhood into a lifelong mission to preserve the rich, multilayered heritage of the ...
Scientists have obtained genetic material from the ancient Minoans and Mycenaeans, who lived three to five thousand years ago ...
Historian Selena Wisnom explores how Ashurbanipal, the last great ruler of Assyria, combined calculated brutality with an ...
After the Istanbul and Balıkesir quakes, what's next? Professor Üşümezsoy says Istanbul's major risk has passed, but warns of ...
Sometimes the seeds of collapse are sown in the very soil of prosperity. Beneath the ancient city of Troy's shining walls, ...
The archaeological site at Turkey’s Boğazköy-Hattusha, the former capital of the Bronze Age Hittite empire, is a hotbed of ...
An international team of researchers from Germany, Georgia, Armenia, and Norway has analyzed ancient DNA from 230 individuals ...
Ancient Lydia holds the distinction of creating the first coins in the world; they soon evolved into beautiful works of art.
An international team of researchers from Germany, Georgia, Armenia, and Norway has analyzed ancient DNA from 230 individuals ...
How we have honoured the dead through millennia? Take a look at some of the earliest such memorials found around the world.