Dig It With Raven on MSN
Senet - Making ancient Egypt’s most famous board game
Senet is one of the best known ancient Egyptian board games, with references dating back to early dynastic Egypt and continued use into the early centuries CE. Over time it gained strong afterlife ...
Weekly Trust on MSN
The future of medicine in Nigeria is private - Dr Maryam Dija Ogebe
Doctor Maryam Dija Ogebe is reputedly the first female medical doctor from northern Nigeria. She studied at the University of Lagos College of Medicine, where she graduated in 1971. After specialist ...
Teams from the Egyptian Red Crescent stationed at the Rafah border crossing received early Saturday the 15th group of wounded and ill Palestinians travelling between the Gaza Strip and Egypt for ...
Landmark decision expands professional inclusion, strengthens standards, and supports the next generation of Ayurveda ...
Unlike in modern times, where magic is often relegated to folklore or fiction, the Egyptians saw it as a natural and ...
Sayed, Director of the African Center for Women’s Health and Consultant in Emergency and Trauma Medicine, has issued a ...
Sayed, Director of the African Center for Women’s Health and Consultant in Emergency and Trauma Medicine, has issued a warning regarding popular Egyptian Ramadan staples. Dishes such as Egyptian Baked ...
Researchers found a tiny bottle from ancient Rome that contained fecal residue and traces of aromatics, offering evidence ...
Archeologists found evidence that ancient Romans may have used a medical treatment involving perfume... and human feces.
The Abu Dhabi-based sovereign investor participated in a $50 million pre-Series C fundraising for the Egyptian firm, along with other institutional and private investors, including Saudi Arabia’s ...
In many Egyptian households, pressure rarely arrives as an argument. It shows up in small, familiar moments: a passing ...
Black History Month should not be about trivia or symbolic firsts. It should be about unlearning—about dismantling the white perspective that framed Africa as marginal and Black people as derivative.
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