A Chimú tunic made of camelid fiber with gold alloy squares. From Peru, c. 900–1470 CE, now housed at the Dallas Museum of Art [959×1200]August 1, 2025
Casas Grandes, in Mexico, is one of the largest and most complex Mogollon culture sites in the region. Settlement began after 1130 CE, and the larger buildings developed into multi-storied dwellings after 1350 CE. The community was abandoned approximately in 1450 CE [1170×2258]August 1, 2025
Dancer. China, Tang dynasty (617-907 AD). Earthenware with pigment. Loaned to the Brooklyn Museum [3000×4000] [OC]August 1, 2025
Interior of the 15th century CE Incan temple “Coricancha” in Cusco, Peru. To construct Coricancha, the Inca used ashlar masonry which made the temple much more difficult to construct, as the Inca did not use any stone with a slight imperfection or break [750×937]August 1, 2025
A dwarf Killing a Grasshopper – 1st Century BC – Roman Intaglio Ring, “A bearded and emaciated dwarf with a long phallus” pinning a grasshopper and stabbing it with a knife [1223×1600]August 1, 2025
A silver drachma inscribed with MASSA[LIA] (ΜΑΣΣΑ[ΛΙΑ]), dated 375-200 BCE, during the Hellenistic period of Marseille, bearing the head of the Greek goddess Artemis on the obverse and a lion on the reverse [4282×2051]August 1, 2025
Bronze statuette of a cupid with a dolphin; parts of a fountain, discovered in the Casa degli Archi, Pompeii, of the 1st c. CE. Naples arch. museum, MANN inv. 111701 [1536 x 2048]July 31, 2025
Cycladic cylindrical pithos, with motifs of dolphins swimming. From Akrotiri, Thera, of 17th – 16th c. BCE. Museum of Prehistoric Thera [Akr. 3210] [1451 x 2048]July 31, 2025
The Zbruch Idol or the Światowid ze Zbrucza (Worldseer from Zbruch) C 9th Century at Kraków Archaeological Museum. One of the few Remnants Pre-Christian Slavic believe.[883×2575]July 31, 2025
This hybrid tiger-dragon bronze figure stands 75.5 cm tall, and was found in 2021 in pit 8 of Sanxingdui archaeological site in China. C. 1700-1150 BCE [3835×3398]July 31, 2025
China’s oldest surviving city map is carved on a 3-meter-tall stone tablet. Known as the Map of Pingjiang, it was made in 1229 CE and covers the area within Suzhou’s city walls with remarkable accuracy: 5 city gates, 359 bridges, 67 temples, and numerous streets, lanes, and canals [3492×3459]July 31, 2025