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Kolkata: Trinamool's 2026 assembly poll strategy is likely to focus on tapping the Bengal-first sentiments of the state's 7.6 ...
The Indo-Caribbean Shri Shakti Mariammaa temple is at risk of closing its doors if its small congregation cannot raise the ...
HYDERABAD: All Mahankali temples in the city are set to celebrate Bonalu on a grand scale on Sunday. Temples have been decked ...
First Half_1, San Jose, Harkes, 2 (Martinez), 21st minute; 2, FC Dallas, Musa, 8, 45th+3. Second Half_3, FC Dallas, Musa, 9 (Ramiro), 85th; 4, San Jose, Martinez, 9 (Skahan), 86th.
A new study argues that the pharaoh’s statues weren’t destroyed out of revenge, but were ‘ritually deactivated’ because of the power they contained.
Egyptologists have long claimed the statuary of Hatshepsut in Luxor was wantonly destroyed, it may have been "ritually deactivated" instead.
Research suggests the destruction of her statues "were perhaps driven by ritual necessity rather than outright antipathy." ...
Some of the female pharaoh's statues were "ritually deactivated," a new study finds.
The shattered statues of Queen Hatshepsut: the reasons for the wreckage Ritual ‘retirement’ rather than family feud might explain why so many figures of the female pharaoh are broken and cracked.
New York's Statue of Liberty is well known as a symbol of refuge for immigrants, but the statue's original design stood for something else.