Archaeologists in Mongolia have uncovered a mass grave of Han warriors who fought against the Xiongnu over 2,000 years ago.
the nomadic warriors who devastated the Western Roman Empire, have long been a source of fascination and mystery for historians. These formidable invaders, led by the infamous Attila the Hun, are ...
Excavation photo of the Hun-period “eastern-type” burial from Budapest ... One dominant theory about Hunnic origin posits that the equestrian warriors originated in what is now Mongolia, during the ...
Researchers found that the group led by Attila the Hun contained a mixture of diverse ... In the late fourth century, a group of warriors began encroaching upon the borders of the Roman Empire.
(The graves of ‘woman warriors’ are changing what we know about ancient gender roles.) Beneath a huge earthen burial mound at Oseberg in Norway, for example, researchers in 1903 discovered a ...
One intriguing skeleton, however, is a 35- to 50-year-old Hun woman with an elongated skull who was buried with gold earrings at the site of Pusztataskony in Hungary in the first half of the fifth ...
Skull of a woman with skull modification found in a Hun-era burial in Pusztataskony, Hungary, that can be directly linked to Xiongnu elite burials from Mongolia. | Credit: Tamás Hajdu, ...