Interesting Historical Artifacts That Will Take You Time Traveling and Teleport You to Thousands of Years Ago as soon as you see them

Some of the ancient artifacts that have managed to survive from past to present are powerful enough to teleport you to the past! Take a look at these interesting and strange historical artifacts that will transport you to the lands of civilizations that existed thousands of years ago as soon as you see them! 👇

Source: https://www.reddit.com/r/ArtefactPorn/

1. Swedish battleship Vasa. It sank in 1628, less than a kilometer after its first voyage, and was recovered from the seabed almost completely intact 333 years later.

The ship, now in the Vasa Museum in Stockholm, is the best-preserved 17th-century ship in the world.

2. Thonis-Heracleion was one of the largest ports in Egypt, but B.C. 100-AD It slowly sank into the sea between 800 BC.

Here we see a stele from the reign of Pharaoh Nectanebo I (380–360 BC), excavated in 2000 AD, the same year as the rediscovery of the city.

3. A cabin on the 19th-century steamship Aachen, which was hit by a torpedo in July 1915. The ship now lies at the bottom of the Baltic Sea.

4. Early Bronze Age Grave of a wealthy woman from the first Franzhausen cemetery in Austria. The woman, who died nearly 4,000 years ago, was found buried with elaborate bronze decorations and a unique headdress.

It is now on display in the Natural History Museum in Vienna.

5. The 3,200-year-old tomb of Queen Nefertari. This tomb is also called the Sistine Chapel of ancient Egypt.

The paintings, found on almost every surface in the tomb, are considered the best-preserved and most meaningful decorations of any burial site in Egypt.

6. A letter written by a woman to her deceased husband and found in his grave along with a lock of her hair. (Korea, 1586.)

“You always told me, ‘Let’s live together until our hair turns gray and die on the same day.’ So how did you leave me behind?”

7. Drawings of a 7-year-old boy named Onfim from 13th century Russia.

8. The Punic cothon of Carthage in present-day Tunisia, BC. An image depicting what it looked like in the 3rd century compared to today.

9. Graves of a Catholic woman and her Protestant husband, who were not allowed to be buried together because of their different beliefs. (1888, Netherlands)

10. In the small village of Nashtifan in Iran, some of the oldest windmills in the world are still turning. Windmills made of natural clay, straw and wood have been grinding grain into flour for an estimated 1,000 years.

11. The pyramid of the Kushite queen Amanishakheto before and after Giuseppe Ferlini destroyed it in search of treasure in 1830. (10 BC)

Ferlini is said to have seriously damaged or destroyed at least 40 of the Nubian pyramids.

12. This 14th-century door in Exeter Cathedral in England is thought to be the oldest cat flap in existence.

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