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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNWho Drank Wine in Ancient Troy? New Research Suggests Just About EveryoneIn the first book of the Iliad, the god Hephaestus passes a “double goblet” around at a banquet on Mount Olympus. “He poured ...
Wine drinking in ancient Troy was not restricted to the upper classes, as has long been supposed – something our new research ...
What do we really know about Priam’s Treasure from Hisarlik, the ancient site of Troy? Where is it now, and was it really ...
Upon its discovery of Troy, certain artifacts and objects were unearthed, including what Schliemann called the gold Treasure ...
In Troy, wine was far from being reserved solely for the rich and powerful, indicating that it was an element present in the ...
For the first time, scientists have found definitive proof that wine was drunk at the ancient city of Troy, according to a ...
A team of researchers from the universities of Tübingen, Bonn, and Jena has conclusively demonstrated that wine was consumed ...
Heinrich Schliemann made a brief visit to the western Tokyo suburb of Hachioji during his monthlong stay in Japan in 1865 before he turned to archaeology and discovered the ancient city of Troy ...
The ruins of Troy were rediscovered over 150 years ago by a German businessman and amateur archeologist named Heinrich Schliemann. Among the artifacts Schliemann recovered in present-day Hisarlik ...
Homer’s The Iliad recounts one of history’s greatest legendary epics. It also describes a round of drinks shared by the gods ...
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