While it’s really easy to dismiss much of the past as a sort of horrible, dark age, the truth is that humans have always been humans. For every bizarre superstition, there were incredible inventions, for each bad idea, there was human ingenuity and innovation. So it can be worthwhile to look at some of the things our ancestors left behind.
We’ve gathered some interesting, cool and downright bizarre pictures of artifacts from across history. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own thoughts in the comments below.
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A 1,500-Year-Old Pair Of Lady’s Sandals
A 1,500-year-old pair of Byzantine-era lady’s sandals was discovered during digs associated with the Marmaray, a commuter rail line, Project in Istanbul. The sandals, which likely belonged to a Greek woman, bear the following message in Greek: “Use in health, lady, wear in beauty and happiness.”
Still nowadays in Greece, when you buy something, like new clothes or shoes, the others tell you "Με γεια", (use it) with health :D
We have it in Turkish, too. We also say "Wear/use it (while) smiling"
Load More Replies...The Tintignac Swan Helmet
In 2004, archaeologists discovered the swan-shaped Gallic bronze helmet in an excavation of Tintignac in Southern France. Dated to the 1st century BC, the helmet was most likely worn by a wealthy, high-ranking member of society. Although it was excellently crafted from bronze and made to protect the wearer's ears and head, it was probably only used as a ceremonial item.
Yeah much more likely to strike fear into the enemy "meh, I've never even seen a dragon", "fück he's wearing a swan, scarper lads!"
Load More Replies...Tell me you've never seen an angry swan without telling me you've never seen an angry swan. Never, ever, pester a swan, or a goose.
Load More Replies...A 121-Year-Old Time Capsule
While replacing a bridge in Kingussie, Scotland, construction workers discovered a 121-year-old time capsule. Buried deep in the foundations of the bridge, the metal box held the following items: a newspaper dated 22 September 1894, a scroll and a bottle of whiskey.
Btw: I believe it's whisky in Scotland, and this is the most Scots thing ever.
Just needs some porridge, haggis and a square sausage.
Load More Replies...The Herculaneum Bread Loaf
Stamped sourdough bread probably isn’t the first thing you think of at the mention of historical artifacts. The Herculaneum loaf was baked just before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD and discovered in 1930 after the excavation of the House of the Stags. It is currently preserved in the National Archaeological Museum in Naples.
That museum is huge. When I was working near Naples I visited it three times and I'm not sure I saw everything.
I have never been hungrier for forbidden volcano loaf than I am right now.
I thought it was supposed to Little People bread.
Load More Replies...Tasting History with Max Miller recreated the recipe for this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sw2qrt6tOKw
A 3200-Year-Old Egyptian Attendance Tablet
Held by The British Museum, a limestone tablet or ostracon dating back to 1250 BCE offers a fascinating glimpse into the work-life balance of ancient Egyptian workers. 40 employees and their reasons for missing work are inked in red and black New Egyptian hieratic script. Among them are entries like ‘embalming brother’, ‘brewing beer’, and ‘scorpion bit him’.
Οstracon is NOT a limestone tablet, but a broken piece of pottery. They were used to vote against citizens who were considered dangerous and exile (ostracize) them.
I always thought it had to do with ostriches. Learn something new every day :)
Load More Replies...It would be more fun if it was in hieroglyphics. Instagram worthy picture of brother with Anubis, drunks, and of course a scorpion 'biting' a man.
Hieroglyphics were only used in formal writing. This would be hieratics.
Load More Replies...A 1,500-Year-Old Byzantine Church
During the expansion of the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway in 2015, construction workers made an interesting discovery: a 1,500-year-old Byzantine church. With a white marble floor and a cross-shaped baptistery, the condition of the elaborate church far surpassed other similar structures discovered in the Holy Land.
any major project in Israel requires the Antiquities Authority to be involved. They have found Roman Temples, Ancient Synagogue's, Old Churches, etc all the time when consturction projects happen. Its a region that has been the center of land trade route between Europe, Asian, and North Africa, had been fought over many times, etc. They find new things all the time. It's an archaeologists dream. There are over 8000 active dig sites in Israel and the WB, though only 200 or so are protected from vandalism and robbers, as there isnt enough money to protect them all, and all the time ancient sites get destroyed by looters or political vandals
I honestly don’t know how they could complete _any_ major construction projects with the amount of sites they must uncover
Load More Replies...The Nazca Lines Of Peru
The Nazca lines were constructed over 2,000 years ago by people of the Nazca culture. The drawings spanned kilometers and included geometric shapes, straight lines, plants, and animals. Since their discovery in the 1920s, their importance remains a mystery, but some hypothesize they were drawn for astronomical purposes or religious ceremonies.
Peru has now reduced the area of protection and is offering drilling leases for bid in the removed areas https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/03/americas/peru-nazca-lines-park-environmental-risk-intl-hnk
That's because that's what most of the early constructions are known to have been.
Load More Replies...people must have been terrified of their local shaman, if they could be forced to work on this sort of stuff for years and years.
Most images show the representational ones but there are scores of straight lines that just go on and on, over hills and valleys.
White Mountain’s Numerous Handprints
At least 200 years ago, handprints were carved into the sandstone surface of the White Mountain in Wyoming. They are unlike any other petroglyphs because they’re deeply etched into the stone. While archaeologists are baffled by the prints, visitors feel a compelling connection to those who created them.
Really. Perhaps they weren't carved deeply but time has worn them so.
Load More Replies...I googled "The site is also considered sacred by the Shoshone, Arapaho, and Ute tribes, potentially being a birthing place for Plains and Great Basin tribes." are carvings created by the Ancestral Eastern Shoshone people between 1000 and 1800 CE. These markings, thought to represent individuals who visited the mountain, are believed to be linked to vision quests, spiritual journeys, or important ceremonies."
Why am I picturing future generations (IF they survive the Trumpaloompa era) doing that same thing in the random hand and footprints that seem to find their way into newly laid concrete/cement?
1300 Year-Old Viking Skis
In 2014, archaeologists uncovered a lone wooden ski on Digervarden Mountain in Norway. Fast forward to 2021, researchers discovered the second ski buried more deeply in the ice. Both skis were handmade over 1,300 years ago and were not identical due to their individual history of wear and repair.
There may be many other artefacts that reappear under melting ice. Problem is, if they are not disovered quickly, they decompose and are lost forever.
I had to laugh: "Both skis were handmade over 1,300 years ago" - yeah, I could have told you that. Not much in the way of automated machine tools back in those days. 🤣
The Antikythera Mechanism
In 1901, the Antikythera mechanism was discovered among the remains of a shipwreck off the coast of the Greek island of Antikythera. The hand-powered device is regarded as the first known analog computer and was used to predict eclipses and astronomical positions years in advance. It could also track the cycle of the ancient Olympics.
It's not been totally understood yet - the problem is that it's in very poor condition. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/how-well-did-the-mysterious-antikythera-mechanism-actually-work-180986451/
predicting eclipses was probably ultra important to people who thought god controlled the heavens.
There are some fascinating Youtube clips of people making working replicas. Worth a look.
Bronze Coins Buried In A Ceramic Jar
In 2018, archaeologists unearthed a 15th-century ceramic jar full of bronze coins at a residence belonging to a samurai just north of Tokyo. The coins were most likely acquired over time through trade, as they were from different regions and periods. The exact reason why the jar was buried remains a mystery.
On the whole and as I understand it, hoards of buried coins here in Europe were buried for safe keeping to be recovered if possible - when you're being attacked or similar, it's a way to hide the money.
The Pyramidion Of Amenemhat III
Crafted around 1850 BC, the pyramidion (capstone) of the Pyramid of Amenemhat III in Dahshur, Egypt, was excavated from the sand on the east side of the pyramid in 1900. The pyramidion was carved out of black granite and was intricately inscribed on all four faces. It is now at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
The Ancient Clay Tablets Of Akkadia
Researchers from the Girsu Project uncovered more than 200 tablets at a site in Southern Iraq, dating back to the third millennium BCE. Written in Cuneiform, a Middle Eastern writing system, the tablets detailed all aspects of Sumerian life, including people’s names, their roles, state of affairs, blueprints, maps, and much more. The tablets reveal just how concerned the Akkadian Empire was with bureaucracy.
‘Form is the sworn enemy of arbitrariness, twin sister of freedom.’ (v Ihering)
Load More Replies...Most of the surviving cuneiform tablets were originally written on clay and intended to be erased and reused. We can still see them because the cities were often burned by enemies and they were baked hard.
The, erm, tablet in the picture is Old Babylonian Empire, which is the successor of the Akkadian Empire and not in the third millennium BC. They were also found in Uruk, whereas the text describes Girsu. The image and the text have zero connection, the text is not referring to the tablet in the picture.
The fact they got that close is pretty good for BP.
Load More Replies...A 60-Year-Old Letter To Santa
British builders found a 1943 letter written by a boy named David during the demolition of a chimney. The letter was to Santa and detailed a humble list of things he wanted for Christmas, such as toys and slippers. Contractor Lewis Shaw started the #FindDavid campaign on social media and successfully delivered the letter and wishlist to David.
If you click on the link to ABC News under the post, you can see that the story is from December 2015 ( https://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/builder-finds-owner-touching-60-year-santa-letter/story?id=35693828 )
Load More Replies...He reportedly said "why are you giving it to me? It's addressed to Santa"
He's going to be in for a shock when he finds out his letter never made it.
The Peculiar Roman Dodecahedron
The Roman Dodecahedron is one of a few historical artifacts that still baffles people today. First found in 1739, over 130 have since been discovered all over Europe. They are small and hollow objects with 12 faces made from copper alloy. With no inscriptions, their purpose isn’t known, and as a result, more than 50 possible explanations have been published to date.
I saw a show that featured this object. That is exactly what it is. I think it was specifically for making socks and someone figured out the pattern of movements to sew/use it in.
Load More Replies...It is a device for hand weaving different sizes of woollen gloves. Multiple videos are on YouTube.
Spool knitting has no history prior to the 16th century, thes are from the 2nd to 4th centuries BC. This is not what they are for, long disproven.
Load More Replies...No archaeological training here. But I suspect that they were made to show Roman Empire school kids what a dodecahedron looked like.
Okay, but have the four and six side equivalents also been found?
Load More Replies...I wonder if the environment they were found in would explain their function?
Apparently they were found in areas where rich people where buried. Made from bronze and costly metals. Watched a video by Joe Scott about this very thing the other day.
Load More Replies...There's no sign of use on any of them - and, as it happens, no evidence connecting them to Rome: none have been found in Italy and most were made in Gaul. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_dodecahedron. My totally evidence-free guess is that they were made in part to show off the maker's top-notch metal casting skills, but there must be more to it than that. https://uk.news.yahoo.com/amateur-archaeologist-discovers-bizarre-roman-151803764.html
A 17th Century African Burial Ground
In 1991, a lower Manhattan excavation for a new federal building unearthed a 17th-century burial ground where enslaved Africans were interred between the 1690s and 1790s. The site is considered New York City’s earliest African American cemetery and was named a National Historic Landmark in 1993, followed by a National Monument in 2006.
I think "American burial ground for Africans" would be a more accurate title. To my mind, an African burial ground would be in Africa.
A 60,000-Year-Old Mammoth Tusk
Property owner AMLI is credited for the discovery of a Columbian Mammoth tusk fossil at their apartment development site in Seattle. Regarded as the largest and most intact tusk discovered in Seattle, paleontologists estimated it to be over 60,000 years old, with its exact age to be determined using carbon dating. It was carefully removed for preservation by the paleontologists and eventually found a home at the Burke Museum of Natural History.
Did the mammoth have a broken tusk, and all of the other mammoths decided to sign its tusk?
When a fossil in unearthed, it's usually encased in plaster for safety. Perhaps it's a custom for the members of the dig to sign the 'cast'?
Load More Replies...You have no purpose in life if you've never signed on a 60.000 year old mammoth's task. I knew I was missing something important.
Tusk is brown and unsigned in second pic. The top one is plaster for protection
Load More Replies...A Mammoth's Skull And Tusk
In 2020, oil workers found Woolly mammoth remains while working on an oil field on the Yamal Peninsula near the Arctic Circle in Russia. The skull and tusk were the second-largest mammoth discovery that year, likely due to global warming induced permafrost thaw in the region.
Two Dozen 18th Century Coffins
While building an apartment building in Philadelphia’s historic district in 2017, construction workers unearthed two dozen intact coffins and human remains. Experts dated the remains, belonging to over 60 individuals, to the 18th century. The site is believed to be a decommissioned burial ground for the First Baptist Church, established in 1707. When the church relocated to a larger location in 1860, all remains should have been transferred to the Mount Moriah Cemetery. How or why these were left behind is unknown.
You son of a witch, you left the bodies and you only moved the headstones! You only moved the headstones! Why? Why? -- Poltergeist (1982)
In fairness, was the supernatural a proven thing in that universe or was that the first time there were ghosts?
Load More Replies...An Ancient Mayan Ball Court In Mexico
In 2006, construction workers discovered a 2,500-year-old Mayan ball court while working on construction for a housing project in Merida, Mexico. The court, described as 70% intact, is 82 ft long and 15 ft wide. Archaeologists also linked it to a ballgame which held deep cultural and religious meaning in Mayan society.
For anyone wanting to know what the game was, basically there would be two teams and one ball, players could only run/walk on the central strip of grass and the aim was to throw the ball through the other teams goal… the goal is that stone circle sticking out the wall on either side, would have been super hard to do! Seen one of these things in real life
Every Saturday at 18:00 in front of the city cathedral of Merida local Mayans play the game called Pok-Ta-Pok. (believed to be called that because it's the sound the ball makes) Good video on YT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvcWL75Vxio
future scientists will also claim that football "had deep religious meaning" in American society . . .
I find it so funny how almost everything is attributed to ritual or religion. I mean, you could argue that sports are practically religious to some people, absolutely, but it's not religion by the strict definition of the term. Look at football in Scotland in the 80s and 90s: there was a strong religious and political divide, but it still wasn't technically a religion. What would these Mayans say, if we could ask them. Would they laugh and say 'no, but it's a festival day so we have time to have fun'?
A 12th-Century Mansion In Wellington
In 2013, at a construction site in Wellington, British archaeologists discovered the foundations of a 12th-century mansion no one knew existed. During the dig, they also uncovered ceramic roof tiles and floor tiles with intricate designs similar to the ones at Glastonbury Abbey. These suggested the mansion was of high status and historically significant.
Dāmn. The Wellington which I live in (One of probably a hundred, around the world) doesn't have any 12th century mansions!
Yeah I was just thinking that doesn't look like NZ
Load More Replies...The Temple Of Pharaoh Ptolemy Iv
In 2019, construction workers in the Tama township located in northern Sohag, Egypt, discovered the long-lost temple of Pharaoh Ptolemy IV while drilling for a new sewage drain. The 2,200-year-old temple from Ptolemy IV’s reign (221 to 204 BC) bears inscriptions reading “Ptolemy IV” along its limestone walls, together with imagery of animals and birds.
That's the best picture they've got of this thing? It looks like the snow on my TV.
Well to be fair it's not like they could colour it in and make it stand out more is it? Though it does remind me of a potato stamp.
Load More Replies...A Medieval Hospital In Madrid
In 2013, construction workers unearthed a 15th-century hospital in Madrid during an excavation for a new Apple Store. Four years earlier, other construction workers at a neighboring site had uncovered the ruins of an adjoining church. It is believed the hospital was used to treat plague patients before being demolished in the 1850s.
Church often ran hospitals and hospices at the time. Charity was a Christian duty and virtue. Which is why there kinda had to be poor people so others could be charitable. I love the scene and Sean Connery's character's comment in the Name of the Rose when they throw the kitchen garbage to the poor: "the abbey's generous gifts to the poor"
Apparently, that's a "European depiction of the Persian (Iranian) doctor Al-Razi, in Gerardus Cremonensis"
It's interesting to note that during the 15th century, Christians were driving the Muslims out of Spain. Muslims studied many sciences, held ancient scrolls and information from the Greeks and Romans, and knew a lot about medicine. If this hospital was there before the "Reconquista," as it was called, It could be very old, much older than the Catholic Spain which come after it. Of course, it was Christian before the Muslims took it also, going back to the beginning of Christianity.
The Saqqara Bird
In the 1898 excavation of the tomb of Pa-di-l'men, the Saqqara Bird was discovered. The wooden model bird is dated to 200 BCE and has a wingspan of 18 cm. From a ceremonial object to a toy, the bird has many suggested purposes. Another hypothesis is that it is a model aircraft, but there is insufficient evidence to support this theory.
Could be a bird. Could be a plane. Could be Superman... Wait, let me get my glasses.
Load More Replies...well, if it was a model aircraft it should be capable of flying. For a few meters (yards) at least
A 1,100-Year-Old Viking Sword
In 2017, reindeer hunters on a mountain in southern Norway discovered a Viking sword made of high-quality iron. Archaeologists believe the high altitude (5,381 ft above sea level) and the mountain’s cold, dry conditions helped preserve the sword. They also think the sword may have been lost over 1,100 years ago by a Viking journeying through the rough terrain during a blizzard.
Well, Helga, if that sheath you made didn't fall apart I might still have it!
Load More Replies...That's got to be rust. Left exposed to oxygen, iron will rust.
Load More Replies...A Ceremonial Obsidian Blade
An Obsidian blade was discovered by the Wilder brothers after an earthquake in Northern California unearthed it. It is said to have been used ceremonially by the Karuk people. Some members of the Karok tribe claim these blades are still used today.
The picture reads: 'as it is held in ceremony'. I'd look at it that way, too, having an idea how tricky making obsidian blades is.
Load More Replies...An Unexploded Ordnance From Ww2
On Christmas Day in 2016, 54,000 Augsburg residents had to be evacuated from their homes while explosives experts worked to defuse a RAF b**b from WWII found under a construction site. If detonated, the 2-ton b**b could have destroyed all buildings within a mile radius. The unexploded b**b was one of many discovered in Europe and Asia multiple years earlier.
Yesterday roundabout 20.000 people had to be evacuated in Cologne/Germany because 3 large bombs had to be defused. It was the largest evacuation since WW2 in Germany.
I was just going to say that these evacuations are a regular occurrence where I live in Hamburg, too.
Load More Replies..."the 2-ton b**b could have destroyed all buildings within a mile radius" Uh, no. This is wildly inaccurate. This isn't a nuclear bomb. 4,000 pounds of explosives does not destroy three square miles of city.
When I was a kid in NZ (70s), there was a UK programme called 'UXB' - UneXploded Bomb. I was amazed that there were still unexploded bombs still around London. This find is even more amazing.
London was bombed quite extensively, so I'm not surprised they still find unexploded ordnance and they will find more in the future. Just off the coast of Belgium there is a large dump of WWI unexploded gas containers. They are quietly rusting away and the fear is that sometime, not too far into the future, these canisters will break open and a cloud of deadly gas will drift wherever the wind blows.
Load More Replies...Anyone else wonder why bomb was edited and think it must have been b00b?
One day I'm going to go to this site and every other with will be censored.
Load More Replies...Given that we each dropped hundreds of tonnes of bombs on each other for years it’s hardly surprising really. There is a govt agency in France to deal with unexploded weapons from the 1st World War
Dan, it wasn't hundreds of tonnes of bombs. It was millions of tonnes dropped on Europe by the Allies. A Lanc could carry ten tons. The RAF sent out thousand bomber raids - that worked out to approximately 5,000 tonnes of bombs *each night* of the big raids. The Iron Harvest is what they call unexploded munitions from WWI in France: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_harvest
Load More Replies...My grandfather was stationed in Guam after WWII, when my uncles were young (8-10). They would go out in the forest surrounding the base to play. One day they came back with an unexploded bomb bouncing in their little red wagon. That caused quite a kerfluffle according to my grandma.
It's so tragic that 80ys after the war there are still unexploded bombs around and ammumition they disposed of in the Baltic Sea. Meanwhile, thousands of landmines have been and are being buried in Ukrainian soil.
Be thankful you're not in Indochina. "The US dropped over 7 million tons of bombs on Indochina during the [Vietnam] war, more than triple the 2.1 million tons it dropped on Europe and Asia during World War II," https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_War#Unexploded_ordnance
Load More Replies...censoring "bomb" will probably keep people from figuring out what's in the picture.
Bomb is now an edited word, too? Why...are you scared all this editing will blow up in your face?
The Mysterious Dropa Stones
Discovered in 1938 by Chinese professor Chi Pu Tei, the Dropa stones allegedly detail the story of an extraterrestrial spacecraft carrying Dropa people that crash-landed on Earth. Chinese archaeologists translated the stones’ hieroglyphic-type markings, and their findings were purportedly published in Tsum Um Nui’s academic journal. However, no records of this journal have ever been found, and others question the existence of both Chi Pu Tei and Tsum Um Nui.
The Dropa stones are regarded as a not-so mysterious hoax, at least as an out-of-place artifact...🪨
Mmmm... extra old chrispbread/knäckebröd. Just like grandma used to make. Leksands-R...dskiva.png
An 18th Century Cemetery
In 2011, an archaeologist named Ryan Gray uncovered a burial site at the French Quarter during a test dig for a pool installation at Vincent Marcello’s residence. The remains were part of the St. Peter Cemetery in New Orleans, where other skeletons were found in the 80s. Gray excavated all the coffins and transported them to Louisiana State University for further examination.
This is the reason why I choose to become ashes to ashes and dust to dust.
The same. I don't want anyone messing with my bones.
Load More Replies...Yep, bowler hats and bustles were all the rage in the 18th Century.
isn't there some law against desecration of the dead? even if it isn't some native American burial ground?
The Black Stone In The Center Of The Grand Mosque
Located in the eastern corner of the Kaaba, the Black Stone dates back to the time of Adam and Eve and is an Islamic relic revered by Muslims. Believed to absorb the sins of all who touch it, the artifact plays a central role in some Islamic pilgrimage rituals.
Yes the same historical time when dragonsnakes ruled the earth and Atlantis was on the rise, some say Conan the barbarian where friends with Adam and Eve.
Load More Replies...Yes, you do! And so do I. In my back yard, not yours.
Load More Replies...it is said to be a meteorite allegedly found in the 6th century. it was later shot apart by some invader, so only five small pieces remain, now set in silver. nothing to do with religion.
It's the central focus of the Hajj, which each follower of Islam is supposed to do at least once in their life. Whether you believe in a particular religion or not, saying it has nothing to do with religion is pretty stupid.
Load More Replies...it is thought to be a meteorite that was worshipped by pagans, and it religious significance --if you go for that sort of thing-- predates judaism...
in reality, it's a meteorite found by a shepherd in the desert. now it's a way to contact their god.
I was raised catholic. I don't consider myself religious anymore, but as far as I can recall, didn't we all agree the story of Adam and Eve wasn't literal and that they weren't real people? Or have we devolved again into taking everything in the Bible too literally? Ah, wait, that last part might have some truth to it...
Every time I read about bones being dug up... I don't want to be someone's research project.
Why not? You would just be bones. Bones don't care.
Load More Replies...Every time I read about bones being dug up... I don't want to be someone's research project.
Why not? You would just be bones. Bones don't care.
Load More Replies...
