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Live Science on MSNAncient 'military outpost' in North Macedonia might be birthplace of Alexander the Great's grandmotherRemains of what may be the ancient capital city of the Kingdom of Lyncestis have been found in North Macedonia.
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Daily Express US on MSNArcheologists in awe as lost city linked to Alexander the Great may have been uncoveredArchaeologists are working on unearthing the lost capital city of the Kingdom of Lyncestis in North Macedonia - homeland of ...
7don MSN
Archaeologists recently uncovered the remains of a lost city dating back thousands of years – and newfound evidence suggests ...
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Live Science on MSNArchaeologists may have discovered the birthplace of Alexander the Great's grandmotherMore analysis is needed to support the finding but, if confirmed, the discovery could reveal the location of the place where Alexander the Great's paternal grandmother was born. Lyncestis was a small ...
It took place at Gradishte, an archaeological site near the North Macedonian village of Crnobuki; it was done with the help of experts from Macedonia’s Institute and Museum in Bitola.
Nick Angeloff, an archaeologist at Cal Poly Humboldt, has called the developments at Gradishte a once-in-a-lifetime discovery ...
Alexander was born in ... The young king of Macedonia, leader of the Greeks, overlord of Asia Minor and pharaoh of Egypt became 'great king' of Persia at the age of 25. Over the next eight years ...
the discovery could reveal the location of the place where Alexander the Great's paternal grandmother was born. Lyncestis was a small kingdom that flourished in North Macedonia, which was ...
Until now, researchers thought that the city was built long after Alexander the Great's death, during the reign of Philip V (221 to 179 B.C.). But the discovery of a coin minted between 325 and ...
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