It looks like you're trying to zoom in on this page. For best results: use the most recent version of your browser, disable your browser's 'zoom text only' setting, and use your browser's default font size settings.
To zoom in, use [Ctrl] + [+] in Windows, and [Cmd] + [+] on a Mac. To zoom out, use the keyboard shortcut [Ctrl] + [-] in Windows and [Cmd] + [-] on a Mac.
This brightly colored relief—along with 120 similar lions and other animals, real and fantastic—once lined the Processional Way running from the Ishtar Gate, Babylon’s main entrance.
The Yale University Art Gallery is home to John Trumbull’s “The Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776,” a painting the artist worked on for more than three decades.
Yale's Walt Whitman Collection includes these eyeglasses, housed in a box that includes a note from Mary O. Davis, to J. H. Johnston dated March 26, 1895.
The semi-nomadic Lurs crafted bronzes from 1500 to 700 B.C.E. When a warrior and his horse died together, they were buried with their weapons and equipment, including bells.
Written in Central Europe in the late 15th or 16th century, the manuscript is still the focus of vigorous debate about its origin, language, and date, as well as its puzzling drawings and undeciphered text.
This ebony and gold cabinet features 17 rare original drawings by Lady Diana Beauclerc, medallions studded with precious stones, and Horace Walpole's arms and crest.