News
Op-ed: The average urban historic sacred place generates more than $1.7 million in economic impact every year. What are ...
It was thought that disabled people were looked down upon in the Middle Ages, but a new discovery disputes that belief.
Princess Charlene of Monaco and Queen Letizia of Spain led the well-dressed royal ladies of Europe as guests arrived at St Peter's Square in Vatican City in their droves for the inauguration mass of ...
3d
TheTravel on MSNMedieval Skeleton Sheds Light On Sweden's Healthcare For DisabledAfter a man in his early twenties was injured, he managed to keep his standing in society despite being forever disabled.
3d
Interesting Engineering on MSNMedieval skeleton reveals what Swedish disability care was really likeA new study analyzed the skeleton of a man who lived with a disability during the Middle Ages to determine what his treatment ...
As Europe’s royals gathered in St. Peter’s Square for Pope Leo XIV’s inauguration mass, several royal women were spotted in ...
As head of the Catholic Church, Pope Francis made it easier for the other Christians to come together around his role. People ...
King Felipe and Queen Letizia, two of the most prominent Catholic royals in Europe, were seated in the front row, alongside ...
In recent weeks, Europe’s remaining Catholic royal families marked the news of Pope Leo's election with public messages of ...
With rainy winters, ties to Britain dating back 200 years and dozens of proper pubs, the port is affectionately known as ...
Learn how researchers combined modern tech, text, and bones to uncover details about a disabled man’s life in medieval Sweden ...
The skeleton of a man with a severe dislocated fracture of the knee, found in a cemetery in Lund, southern Sweden, is helping ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results