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A week of arts in Harare
Attendees follow proceedings during the documentary screening. Last week, Harare witnessed an extraordinary convergence of cultural events, beginning in the morning of June 27 with veteran bureaucrat ...
Civilizations from Stone Age Scotland to the eighth-century Maya to 13th-century African empires have used dry stone walling ...
Thousands of sculpted heads – captive African men, women, and children – meticulously created by the artist Kwame Akoto-Bamfo ...
Badminton Asia Women’s Team gold medalist Tanvi Sharma, Junior World No. 1 men’s doubles pair Bhargava Ram Arigela & Viswa Tej Gibburu will spearhead a power-packed 19-member Indian squad for the ...
As Lord Foster’s equestrian sculpture to honour Queen Elizabeth II gets under way, we look at the best representations of a ...
His grave lies under a slab of stone atop a hill in Zimbabwe. Oxford’s Oriel College, where the exhibition will be held in September, is a symbolic setting.
Zimbabwe is the house of stone, both literally and figuratively, with its very name derived from the ancient stone city of Great Zimbabwe. Stone is more than just a material here – it’s the ...
Zimbabwe, meaning “House of Stone,” derives its identity from the Great Zimbabwe ruins, a 1,800-acre Iron Age city built with precision-cut stones delicately stacked without mortar.
Zimbabwe, meaning “House of Stone,” derives its identity from the Great Zimbabwe ruins, a 1,800-acre Iron Age city built with precision-cut stones delicately stacked without mortar.
Zimbabwe, meaning “House of Stone,” derives its identity from the Great Zimbabwe ruins, a 1,800-acre Iron Age city built with precision-cut stones delicately stacked without mortar.
Zimbabwe, meaning “House of Stone,” derives its identity from the Great Zimbabwe ruins, a 1,800-acre Iron Age city built with precision-cut stones delicately stacked without mortar.