
-
Son scores and assists to lead South Korea over host USA 2-0
-
Granollers, Zeballos win men's US Open doubles in thriller
-
Sabalenka defeats Anisimova to retain US Open crown
-
Bordeaux-Begles win to start Top 14 season, Stade Francais run in seven
-
Luhrmann mines 'mythical' Elvis footage for new film
-
England's Kildunne set to miss Women's Rugby World Cup quarter-final with head injury
-
Indie favourite Jarmusch beats Gaza war film to Venice top prize
-
Lisbon funicular cable disconnected before deadly crash: inspectors
-
England have to 'prove a point' in Serbia test: Tuchel
-
Poignant Portugal cruise, England unbeaten in World Cup qualifying
-
England down Australia, face Scotland in Women's Rugby World Cup quarter-finals
-
Italy's Toni Servillo wins best actor at Venice
-
Indie favorite Jarmusch beats out Gaza war film for Venice top prize
-
China's Xin Zhilei wins best actress award at Venice Film Festival
-
England to face Scotland in Women's Rugby World Cup quarter-finals after record-equalling win over Australia
-
Jihadists kill 63 in attack on Nigerian town
-
UK police arrest 150 people in latest Palestine Action demo
-
Sinner and Alcaraz set for gripping third act in US Open final
-
McIlroy in hunt for first win since Masters at Irish Open
-
Laboured England beat Andorra to extend 100 percent record on road to World Cup
-
Colombia 'committed' to drug fight, minister says, as US deadline looms
-
Record-breaker Verstappen pips McLaren pair to Italian GP pole
-
Swiss minister eyes 'opportunity' after US tariff talks
-
Israel flattens high-rise as it tells Gaza City residents to flee
-
Soler takes solo Vuelta stage 14 win, Vingegaard bites back
-
Under-fire Nagelsmann promises 'changes' after Slovakia upset
-
Canada too strong for Scotland as US rout Samoa at Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Verstappen pips McLaren pair to pole at Italian GP
-
Stade Francais run in seven tries for sunny opening to Top 14
-
Canada too strong for Scotland at Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Marc Marquez wins Catalunya MotoGP Sprint as brother crashes
-
88 postal operators suspend services to US over tariffs: UN
-
Trescothick warns England cannot take World Cup spot for granted
-
Vatican receives first LGBTQ pilgrimage
-
Israel-Premier Tech modify kit after Vuelta protests
-
Turkey opposition calls extraordinary congress for Sept 21
-
Israel flattens Gaza City high-rise as it tells residents to flee
-
McLaren's Norris fastest at final Italian GP practice
-
Versace leads crowds bidding farewell to Giorgio Armani
-
New Zealand's Savea hailed for heroics in his 100th Test
-
Alex Marquez claims first pole of season for Catalunya MotoGP
-
Seoul says over 300 South Koreans held in US battery plant site raid
-
Thailand's next PM reaffirms fresh polls promise
-
France's Gasly extends Alpine contract until 2028
-
'Gutsy' All Blacks beat Springboks to extend Eden Park record
-
Israel tells residents to leave Gaza City ahead of offensive
-
Thousands pay respects to Italian designer Giorgio Armani
-
Last-gasp Wallabies edge Argentina in Rugby Championship thriller
-
Chilean candidate downplays communist roots in quest for presidency
-
Sinner relishing 'special' US Open final with Alcaraz

Greece to open museum of ancient undersea treasures
A new museum showcasing thousands of ancient archaeological artefacts found at sea will open next year at the Greek port of Piraeus near Athens, officials said on Monday.
The EU-funded museum -- the largest cultural project currently underway in Greece -- has a budget of more than 93 million euros ($97 million).
Culture Minister Lina Mendoni said the new 26-square-metre (6.8-square-metre) building would display "thousands of finds emerging for years from the depths of the Greek seas", without giving further details.
Besides archaeology, the museum at the country's largest port will also highlight Greece's rich shipping history, she said.
"Our country needed such a museum for decades," Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said while on a visit to the site on Monday.
The museum, expected to open in the summer of 2026, will occupy part of the Piraeus docks, incorporating some existing elements from a 1930s storage silo.
According to the culture ministry, it will display more than 2,500 antiquities including many now in storage in Pylos, Rhodes and Paros.
In antiquity Piraeus was the principal port of ancient Athens, from which its distinctive trireme ships would sail across the Mediterranean Sea.
The city's small archaeological museum currently has a bronze naval ram and marble eye from a 4th-century trireme on display.
D.Cunningha--AMWN