Lucie Goulet's blog

Heinrich Schliemann's Search For Troy

Heinrich Schliemann lived a fascinating life in his search for Troy.

The life of Heinrich Schliemann is as legendary as the city he claimed to have discovered. A quintessential 19th century adventurer and amateur archaeologist, his obsession for Troy took him around the world and to Turkey and Greece. Fascinated by Homer’s epic narration, Schliemann stopped at nothing to discover the historical sites named by the poet. The veracity of his findings is however often questioned. Heinrich Schliemann: fanatic obsessed by his boyhood dreams or successful antiquarian?

A Boyhood Dream

Born in 1822 to a poor Protestant minister father and an unpublished literary critic mother who died when he was nine, Schliemann had a rag to riches life. Like many children of his time, he had to leave school at 14 to take up a job, selling herring and candles.

Ancient Beauties: Neanderthal Make-up and the Medicinal Benefits of Cleopatra Eyes

The worlds of cosmetics and archaeology have recently collided over two unexpected discoveries. Over the course of the past week, researchers have discovered that Neanderthals used make-up and that Cleopatra's face paint was good for her eyes. Which fact is most surprising?

The first thing that springs to mind when thinking about Neanderthal man is definitely not refinement. It’s more beard, dirt, animal skins, grunts and women carried by their hair. Like so many clichés depicted in classroom textbooks and carried on by Hollywood, this idea is probably far from the truth. Thanks to scientific research undertaken in Murcia, in the South of Spain, we now know that Neanderthals used a primitive form of make-up.

Bombs, Nazis and a Major Facelift: The History of Berlin's Neues Museum

Neues Museum - Museumsinsel - Berlin

The Neues Museum (New Museum), the latest museum to benefit from the renovation programme on the Museumsinsel, first opened in Berlin in 1850. Built to display a collection of Egyptian artefacts as well as ethnographic, prehistoric and early historic collections, it was at the time the solution to a lack of storage space in the Altes Museum (Old Museum). Wartime damage and economic shortage kept the building shut for decades, until its long-awaited re-opening tomorrow.

The Good, The Bad, and the Belly: The Facts About Ancient Beer

Model of a Beer Brewery Wood and Paint Middle Kingdom EgyptEarlier this month, beer-drinkers from around the world convened at Oktoberfest to celebrate their favourite bevvy. Associated with fights and bloated bellies, beer gets a pretty bad press these years. But the brew has been drunk for millennia, and it seems that the ancients had some surprisingly positive benefits for the drink.

The invention of beer is impossible to attribute to either a period or country. The easy fermentation process means that civilisations around the world probably started producing beer independently around the same time.

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