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56 Famous Artifacts That Uncover A Lot About Our Past

History is what defined our civilization and will do so hundreds of years later. Written stories and famous Artifacts have done the most to keep the records of humanity alive. Since you can’t change historical facts, famous ancient artifacts are here to support them and resolve the disputed ones. For this reason, a lot of historic artifacts are, one way or another, irreplaceable. But what makes an artifact valuable enough that it becomes so famous?

The most renowned artifacts are the ones that left a mark on the history of humankind. There are a lot of ancient artifacts that date back thousands of years before the rise of modern society. Modern ones are more creativity-based. From paintings to bells, a lot of them are considered cultural artifacts due to their significance to the local populace. These artifacts define the history of the culture that created them and humanity. The more pristine the condition — the more fame they will garner.

So, if you are like Indiana Jones, looking for historical artifacts, not in some ancient archaeology sites, but on the internet, you can call off your search! We have created a list of the best examples of artifacts that are famous all around the world. Look at the list below and expand your historical knowledge. If an artifact piqued your interest and you have never heard about it, be sure to upvote it. If you’ve heard about the listed artifact and would like to share more — leave a comment below!

#1 The Oseberg Ship (Year 820)

The Oseberg ship is an ornate Viking vessel made of oak that could be sailed or rowed. It was constructed in Norway around 820 AD and was Discovered in 1904 in a large burial mound at the Oseberg farm near tønsberg. It is one of the most beautiful and well-preserved Viking artifacts ever found.

Image credits: Petter Ulleland

#2 Bust Of Queen Nefertiti (1345 BC)

The Nefertiti Bust is a sculpture of the ancient Egyptian Queen Nefertiti, the wife of Pharaoh Akhenaten, who ruled in the 14th century BC. It is easily one of the most recognizable ancient world artifacts. The artifact is shrouded in mystery, controversy, and celebrity. Some believe she was a foreign queen, while others believe she ruled as Pharaoh after her husband passed away or that they ruled together.

Image credits: Giovanni Pracucci

#3 Terracotta Army (246 BC – 209 BC)

Unlike other historical artifacts, this funerary gift cannot be slipped into a sarcophagus or placed in the corner of a tomb — it consists of over 8000 statues of soldiers, statesmen, horses, and carriages. These clay soldiers were life-size and highly realistic, even holding functional weapons until curators replaced them for safety and preservation. Although only ten different facial models were used, each soldier appears to be unique.

Image credits: David Stanley

#4 Book Of Kells (9th Century)

This four-volume Gospel book from the ninth century is Ireland's most famous medieval European manuscript, thanks to its rich decorative illuminations and masterful calligraphy. Its pages are filled with beautiful illustrations of people, animals, mythical beasts, and Celtic knots.

Image credits: ajay_suresh

#5 Mask Of Tutankhamun (1323 BC)

Possibly the most famous ancient artifact from the Egyptian world, the funeral mask of King Tutankhamun is a stunning fragment of both history and art. While the burial site was discovered in 1922, it took three more years to open the sarcophagus of the young ruler and transport it to the museum. The sculptor also used different materials when producing the piece, ranging from lapis lazuli to amazonite.

Image credits: Roland Unger

#6 Aztec Sun Stone (15th Century AD)

The Aztec Sun Stone, also known as the Aztec calendar, is a 24-ton sculpture carved in the 15th century to honor the Sun god Tonatiuh. It is now housed at Mexico's National Museum of Anthropology and has appeared on a lot of modern products. The five successive Suns from Aztec mythology are depicted on the Aztec Sun Stone.

Image credits: Juan Carlos Fonseca Mata

#7 Rosetta Stone (196 BC)

During Napoleon's Egypt campaign in the early 1700s, a group of French soldiers discovered a large, inscribed stone slab at Rosetta. Egyptologists quickly got to work on understanding the inscriptions. The slab and its accompanying text, which originally belonged to a temple, can be traced back to Ptolemy V's reign. The Rosetta Stone's discovery was most notable for its potential for reading Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs.

Image credits: Hans Hillewaert

#8 Galileo's Telescopes (In Year 1609)

Everything Galileo Galilei touched is famous in some way. He changed the understanding of the solar system and contributed a lot to the founding of modern astronomy. He did that using mainly his telescopes. Galileo's telescopes are some of the most famous artifacts there are.

Image credits: Zde

#9 Lucy, Addis Ababa (Lived 3.2 Million Years Ago)

Nothing says old like a three million-year-old artifact. Happily named Lucy, she supports evolutionary theory and significantly contributes to our understanding of human origins. Lucy's skull and bone fragments represent 40% of a female hominid who lived 3.2 million years ago. Lucy set the stereotypes of women from three million years ago.

Image credits: Ji-Elle

#10 Sutton Hoo, England (6th - 7th Centuries AD)

Sutton Hoo, in the east of England, is the location of several early medieval cemeteries, including an Anglo-Saxon ship burial, one of the most remarkable archaeological finds ever discovered in the United Kingdom. Archeologist Basil Brown discovered the remains of an 86-foot-long (27 m) ship loaded with treasures inside the mound and the skeleton of a long-dead Anglo-Saxon leader.

Image credits: Ziko-C

#11 Machu Picchu (1420–1530 AD)

Machu Picchu, one of the most visited archaeological sites on the planet, is a 15th-century Inca site perched high on a mountainside in Peru. In 1911, the late Hiram Bingham III, a Yale University professor, rediscovered the site. Until then, the ancient ruins had escaped the notice of Spanish conquistadors and settlers. Many archaeologists believe Machu Picchu was once the royal estate of Pachacuti Inca Yupanqui, an Inca ruler from the 14th century.

Image credits: Zielonamapa.pl

#12 Rapa Nui (11th - 17th Centuries AD)

Rapa Nui, Easter Island, is best known for its 1,000 giant "head" statues — moai. They were carved and erected between the 11th and 17th centuries AD. The figures, oversized heads atop long torsos, range in height from 6 ft (2 m) to more than 30 ft (9 m), with one unfinished moai on the island standing more than 65 feet (20 meters). The moai were built by a group of Eastern Polynesian settlers who arrived on the island around the first century AD.

Image credits: Bradenfox

#13 Venus Of Willendorf (24,000 BC – 22,000 BC)

Venus of Willendorf is the female icon of the Ice Age. The four-inch-tall figurine has prominent private parts but no feet or facial features. Braids, or perhaps a knit cap, cover her head, and pigment spots indicate that the tan limestone artifact was once red. The figurine was discovered in 1908, about a week into excavations at Willendorf II, an Austrian site along the Danube River about 50 miles from Vienna.

Image credits: MatthiasKabel

#14 King Tut's Tomb (1332 BC)

A team of archaeologists led by British Egyptologist Howard Carter discovered the Egyptian pharaoh's lavish burial chamber in 1922. Tutankhamun rose to power at nine in 1332 BC and passed away nine years later. His untimely demise could explain why the pharaoh's tomb appears rushed. Microbes discovered on the tomb's walls suggest that the wall paint was not even dry when the tomb was closed.

Image credits: EditorfromMars

#15 Antikythera Mechanism (205 BC – 100 BC)

The Antikythera Mechanism is an enigmatic artifact. Archaeologists only realized the significance of the artifact two years after its discovery. Based on the ancient Egyptian calendar and the familiar zodiac system, the mechanism consists of multiple gears that, when rotated, reveal specific details about the date and the positions of the Sun and Moon.

Image credits: Marsyas

#16 Pompeii (7th – 6th Century BC)

In 79 A.D., an erupting Mount Vesuvius engulfed the Roman city of Pompeii in a cloud of volcanic gases and debris. The city and its inhabitants were buried beneath a layer of pumice stone and ash 19 to 23 ft (6 to 7 m) deep. Pompeii remained undisturbed for over a thousand years until an architect named Domenico Fontana came across the ancient Pompeii residence while working on a construction project.

Image credits: Qfl247

#17 The Pyramidion Of The Black Pyramid Of Dashur (1820 BC)

Pyramidions were created to be the capstones of ancient Egyptian pyramids, and few have survived into the present day. This one was discovered in the rubble near the Black Pyramid of Amenemhat III at Dashur. The Pyramidion Of The Black Pyramid Of Dashur is in relatively good condition, with legible inscriptions on all four sides.

Image credits: Jon Bodsworth

#18 Lycurgus Cup (4th Century AD)

The Lycurgus cup is a mythical Roman cage cup depicting King Lycurgus. Its color changes depending on the light that shines on it. It is the only complete Roman object made of this glass type. It was built in the fourth century AD around 1800 AD, a gilt bronze rim and foot were added, and in the middle of the 19th century, the Rothschild family purchased it. In 1957, the British Museum purchased the cup.

Image credits: Marie-Lan Nguyen

#19 Dead Sea Scrolls (300 BC – 100 BC)

The Dead Sea Scrolls are an ancient manuscript collection discovered in the Qumran Caves near the West Bank. The Dead Sea Scrolls, which consist of 981 pieces of textual evidence in total, are among the most famous ancient artifacts of all time. The manuscripts were stored in fortified clay jars and were preserved by the dry Qumran climate.

Image credits: Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg)

#20 The Divje Babe Flute (50,000 BC)

The Divje Babe flute is a piece of a cave bear's femur, perforated with spaced holes, and is approximately 50,000 years old. As people's perceptions of Neanderthals shift from barbaric, uncivilized brutes to more educated individuals, there is widespread agreement that the Divje Babe flute is a musical instrument. Discovered in a cave in Slovenia in 1995, the Divje Babe flute might be the oldest musical instrument.

Image credits: Petar Milošević

#21 The Voynich Manuscript (15th Century AD)

This 15th-century codex, dubbed "the world's most mysterious book," is written in an unknown script by an unknown author. The purpose of the book, as well as a translation of the text, has eluded investigators to this day. The manuscript contains "lively" illustrations that appear to encompass several scientific topics. The manuscript's origins are still unknown, with some claiming it's a hoax and others claiming it's the work of aliens.

Image credits: en.wikipedia.org

#22 Akrotiri, Thera (1500 BC)

Around 1500 B.C., the Greek island of Thera (now known as Santorini) suffered the same fate as Pompeii. A powerful eruption of the Thera volcano covered all traces of the thriving metropolis in several meters of volcanic debris when the Bronze Age settlement was at its peak. The city was not fully excavated until 1967, under the direction of Greek archaeologist Spyridon Marinatos.

Image credits: Joyofmuseums

#23 Nebra Sky Disc (1600 BC – 1000 BC)

Found on accident by amateur treasure hunters, the Nebra Sky Disc's significance was soon revealed by professional reviewers. The disc has golden dots behind two larger plates shaped in circular and crescent forms. This scene depicts the sky with a sun, moon, and stars. Later in the artifact's life, a few more plates symbolizing the solstice were added, indicating that the disc was used to learn about astronomy.

Image credits: Frank Vincentz

#24 Babylonian Map Of The World (900 BC – 700 BC)

This famous ancient artifact is an early depiction of the world, as known by the Babylonians around 900 BC. It is typical of old-world maps in that it centers on local features, such as the Euphrates, and then expands outwards. The Babylonian Map covers neighboring cities with accompanying labels, followed by an ocean and several landmasses beyond it.

Image credits: Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg)

#25 Cave Of Altamira (14,000-18,500 Years Ago)

An amateur archaeologist and his young daughter discovered the prehistoric paintings that adorn the walls of the Cave of Altamira in Spain in 1879. The Paleolithic drawings, created with charcoal and natural Earth pigments, depict bison, aurochs (a type of extinct wild cattle), horses, deer, and the outlines of human hands. Scientists believe these drawings were made just as humans began to settle down in northern Europe.

Image credits: Museo de Altamira y D. Rodríguez

#26 Ur Ram (2500 BC)

One of the most famous artifacts from the ancient world is the Ram in a Thicket — two figurines depicting a ram perched up over a bush. They were discovered in 1928 at the Royal Cemetery of Ur, an important archaeological site in modern-day Iraq. Ram in a Thicket denotes advanced crafting ability for its time. They were made from such materials as gold, lapis lazuli, copper, and wood.

Image credits: Benjamin82877

#27 Nok Terracotta Sculptures (1500 BC – 500 AD)

Despite being widely scattered across the southern Sahara, the Nok Terracotta Sculptures are some of the most famous ancient artifacts and earliest examples of ironwork from the African continent. Because erosion has reduced many sculptures to fragments, complete heads are highly valued. While the function of these terracotta heads is unknown, their craftsmanship is impressive.

Image credits: snl.no

#28 Olmec Colossal Heads (1500 BC – 400 BC)

The Olmec Colossal Heads are seventeen monumental figures depicting human heads that are historical artifacts from the Olmec civilization, which was the first to settle in Mesoamerica. All the sculptures depict males, with detailed headdresses of cloth and feathers, either with faces smiling, neutral, or threatening.

Image credits: Arian Zwegers

#29 Mask Of Agamemnon (1550 BC -1500 BC)

In 1876, the German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann discovered several golden masks among gravesites at Mycenae, Greece, excavating on behalf of the Greek Archaeological Society. There were five funeral masks of men, women, and children. Schliemann believed he had discovered the body of King Agamemnon from Homer's Iliad because of the status associated with this practice and the gold found in the tomb.

Image credits: DieBuche

#30 Sword Of Goujian (771 BC – 403 BC)

Despite being over 2,500 years old, this Chinese dagger has a razor-sharp edge. It was discovered in a tomb in Hubei, China, and is thought to date from 771 to 403 BC. The Metropolitan Museum of Art notes that the eight characters engraved on the blade are ancient writing called "bird-worm seal script," which reads, "King of Yue... made this sword for [his] personal use."

Image credits: Siyuwj

#31 Sydney Rock Engravings (+3000 BC)

Aboriginal Australians were known to have created detailed designs on rock faces, which have since become some of the most famous ancient relics, and had been living in the area as far back as 28000 BC. It's hard to say when these works of art were made, but most historians agree that they originated between 3000 and 4000 BC, during the late Neolithic period.

Image credits: Sardaka

#32 Trundholm Sun Chariot (1400 BC)

The Trundholm Sun Chariot has left archaeologists with more questions than answers since it was found alone, without any other historical artifacts nearby. The disc is gilded on one side and adorned with highly decorative concentric rings. Many believe that the Trundholm Sun Chariot symbolizes the rise and setting of the Sun since it travels from east to west.

Image credits: Stig Nygaard

#33 Phaistos Disc (1850 BC – 1400 BC)

Luigi Pernier, an Italian archaeologist, discovered a small disc in the ruins of a palace in the Phaistos region of Crete in 1908. Even though an earthquake destroyed much of the palace and the historical artifacts inside, the Phaistos Disc was safe.

Image credits: C messier

#34 The Alfred Jewel (9th Century AD)

This royal relic, discovered in a field in Somerset, England, in 1693, dates to the reign of King Alfred the Great (871-899 AD) and bears the inscription "AELFRED MEC HEHT GEWYRCAN," which translates as "Alfred ordered me to be made." The jewel was originally part of an aestel, or pointer, a device used to follow the text in manuscripts, according to the Ashmolean Museum. The aestel, a "significant" piece of Anglo-Saxon goldsmithing, was crafted around a slice of rock crystal.

Image credits: Michael Kooiman

#35 Nazca Lines (500 BC)

The Nazca Lines are geoglyphs (large designs produced on the ground) located on the coastal plateau of Peru. Most of them were created by the ancient Nazca people between 500 BC and AD 500. The mysterious lines were never "discovered," as they are visible from nearby foothills and were likely observed by people before they were brought to the general public's attention.

Image credits: Diego Delso

#36 Royal Game Of Ur (2600 BC – 2400 BC)

Thousands of years ago, the Royal Game of Ur was a popular pastime for the people of Mediterranean and Middle East regions. As Irving Finkel, assistant keeper in the Department of the Middle East at London's British Museum, explains, "For such a long time, there were no forms of entertainment. Games had an excellent stronghold in that environment. They were unrivaled."

Image credits: BabelStone

#37 Staffordshire Hoard (650–675 AD)

In 2009, a man in Staffordshire, England, struck gold while strolling through the countryside. The man was using a metal detector in a newly plowed field when he discovered the largest Anglo-Saxon treasure hoard. Archaeologists excavated the site and recovered over 3,500 pieces of gold, silver, and other metals. Most of the artifacts had something to do with warfare — none of them were household items such as cups or silverware.

Image credits: David Rowan, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery

#38 The Grave Of Richard III (25 August 1485)

Archaeologists from the University of Leicester in England discovered King Richard III's grave in 2012. The king passed away in battle in 1485, and rather than a state funeral, Richard's body was reportedly held at the Grey Friars Church in Leicester. Archaeologists found the former church and recovered the late king's bones using historical records. Richard III was reburied in Leicester Cathedral in a marble tomb in 2015.

Image credits: Chris Tweed

#39 Bronze Bells (2,000-3,600 Years Old)

Bells — love them, or hate them — contributed a lot to our history. The bells, discovered in 1978 in the tomb of Marquis Yi in the 4th century BC, represent the pinnacle of early music and bronze casting. Sixty-five bronze bells of various sizes were arranged in three rows on a wood-and-copper frame to create beautiful sounds.

Image credits: YouTable

#40 Madaba Map (560 And 565 AD)

The Madaba map is the oldest surviving map of the Holy Land (particularly Jerusalem). While the mosaic map originally depicted a large swath of the Middle East, from southern Syria to central Egypt, much of it was destroyed by the time it was discovered. The portion of the map depicting Jerusalem has been preserved and includes an oval-shaped walled city with six gates, 21 towers, and several buildings and structures.

Image credits: Danny

#41 Troy (3,000 BC – 500 AD)

Few archaeological sites are as contentious as Troy, the ancient city described in Homer's Iliad as the site of the Trojan War between the kingdoms of Troy and Mycenaean Greece. Scholars disagree on whether this legendary war occurred and whether it occurred where people now identify as the ancient city of Troy. It is thought to have stood on a site known as Hisarlik on Turkey's northwest coast.

Image credits: CherryX

#42 Leonardo Da Vinci's 'The Mona Lisa' (1503 - 1517)

Everyone knows the masterpiece of the Mona Lisa, a painting that Leonardo Da Vinci worked on from 1503-06 to 1517. The artifact is housed in the Louvre in France and is a big tourist attraction. About 6 million visitors each year come and see the painting. Valued at $800 million, the Mona Lisa has the highest insurance value of any painting in history.

Image credits: wikipedia.org

#43 Oldowan Choppers (1.7 Million Years Ago)

Oldowan "chopper" tools were created 2.5 to 1.2 million years ago by Homo habilis, an ancestor of Homo sapiens, and were used for "cutting, chopping, and scraping" plants and animals. The first of these tools was discovered in Tanzania's Olduvai Gorge, but similar artifacts were scattered in eastern, central, and southern Africa.

Image credits: Didier Descouens

#44 Palace Of Knossos, Crete (1950 BC)

The Palace of Knossos is a Bronze Age structure built by the Minoan civilization around 1950 BC on the Greek island of Crete. Knossos is best known for its vibrant frescoes, depicting mythological creatures, marine wildlife, and ceremonial scenes. The site also produced a wide range of Minoan pottery, many of which are now on display at the nearby Heraklion Archaeological Museum.

Image credits: Theofanis Ampatzidis

#45 Ancient Roman Tourniquets (199 BC – 500 AD)

Tourniquets were reported to be used by the ancient Romans to control bleeding, particularly during the amputation of body parts. Most of them were designed with a body part in mind — some focused on the legs, others on the arms. One of the most preserved Roman tourniquet artifacts is the one used on the thigh from the Hamonic collection. It's easy to see how similar the old tourniquets are to more modern ones.

Image credits: wellcomecollection.org

#46 Alabaster Relief From Palace Of Nimrud (9th Century BC)

This relief of King Ashurnasirpal II, now housed at the Louvre, is from the palace of Nimrud in Assyria, where it covered part of an unbaked brick wall. In the ninth century BC, Assyria adopted this style of architecture. A characteristic truncated cone with a smaller cone emerging from the middle and a long "streamer" dangling from its back serves as the king's unmistakable trademark.

Image credits: Ashley Van Haeften

#47 Gobekli Tepe (11,000 Years Ago)

Göbekli Tepe is an archaeological site in southern Turkey near the modern-day city of Urfa that dates back more than 11,000 years. Only a portion of the site has been excavated since its discovery in 1963, but researchers believe the discovered structures were part of a prehistoric temple. The T-shaped limestone blocks that line the site's stone rings are one of Göbekli Tepe's most notable features. 

Image credits: Zhengan

#48 The First Gutenberg Bible To Arrive In The United States (15th Century AD)

The Gutenberg Bible, one of the first mass-printed books, is a watershed moment in the history of humanity — and literacy in general. James Lenox purchased the Bible, which is now on display at the New York Public Library, in 1847.

Image credits: NYC Wanderer

#49 A Jade Cong From The Liangzhu Culture (3300-2200 BC)

The Neolithic Liangzhu culture, which lived in China's Jiangsu province in the third millennium BC, created items out of jade, ceramic, and stone that are still in use today. Khan Academy describes these objects as "among the most impressive yet enigmatic of all ancient Chinese jade artifacts." Also, they "were difficult and time-consuming to manufacture. Because jade cannot be split, it must be worked with hard abrasive sand."

Image credits: Editor at Large

#50 Lydenburg Heads (400 AD – 500 AD)

While playing as a child on his father's farm in Mpumalanga, South Africa, Karl-Ludwig von Benzig came across a collection of historical artifacts that would alter the course of his life. After officially extracting the Lydenburg Heads as a teenager in the 1960s, he received widespread acclaim. The two sculptures can be worn as masks and house animal figurines. This evidence, combined with detailed necklaces, suggests that the heads were likely made for rulers or elites.

Image credits: Mike Peel

#51 Gerzeh Beads (3200 BC – 3000 BC)

The Gerzeh Beads, regarded as the first relic of antiquity, were found in a North Egyptian tomb in 1911. These nine beads are part of a necklace that includes agate, lapis lazuli, gold, and other precious stones. After examining the iron's chemical makeup in the early 2010s, researchers concluded that the iron utilized to manufacture these beads came from a meteorite.

Image credits: Dependability

#52 The Dagger Of Bush Barrow (2,000 BC)

The Bush Barrow dagger is one of England's most spectacular Bronze Age artifacts. Although the blade is made of bronze, the handle is adorned with tiny gold studs in a zig-zag pattern. Because it required such delicate work, this artifact was most likely created by children. The artifact was adorned with approximately 140,000 small gold studs.

Image credits: Pasicles

#53 The Pesse Canoe (8000 BC)

The Pesse canoe, thought to be the oldest-known boat in the world and certainly the oldest canoe in history, was discovered during the construction of a highway in Pesse, a village in the Dutch province of Drenthe. Carbon dating has placed the canoe to the Mesolithic period, between 8040 BC and 7510 BC.

Image credits: commons.wikimedia.org

#54 The Ubaid Lizards (5,000 BC)

Excavators in Iraq discovered something strange — several relics that depict humanlike figures with lizard characteristics such as almond-shaped eyes, stretched heads, long, slender faces, and a reptile nose. Some appear to be wearing helmets with shoulder pads. Other figures with staffs were found, presumably as a symbol of law and authority.

Image credits: Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP(Glasg)

#55 Hand Of Glory (18th Century Ad)

A Hand of Glory was allegedly the carefully prepared and preserved right hand of a felon, used by burglars to send sleepers in a house into a state of deep unconsciousness from which they couldn't awaken. The clenched hand is used as a candle holder for a candle made of human fat in one version, but in another (consistent with Whitby's hand), the outstretched hand has its own fingers lit.

Image credits: badobadop

#56 Caral Quipu (3000 BC)

The ancient Caral-Supe civilization thrived on the coast of modern-day Peru between 4000 and 2000 BC, before the rise of the Olmec and Incan dynasties. Caral, the first city in the Americas, was built while they were there. Caral had over 3000 residents in the third century BC. Archaeologist Ruth Shady discovered a quipu that recorded the history of the town.

Image credits: Håkan Svensson Xauxa



This post first appeared on How Movie Actors Look Without Their Makeup And Costume, please read the originial post: here

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56 Famous Artifacts That Uncover A Lot About Our Past

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