This tall stone once stood in what is now North Korea.
Dismantled during the Japanese occupation and later rebuilt in Seoul, it carries the traces of travel, loss, and the long return of beauty.
This dazzling gold shows how the Korean peninsula was already connected to the wider Eurasian world - through trade, belief, and imagination that shimmered across thousands of miles.
This quiet stone changed how we see East Asia.
Shaped nearly 300,000 years ago, it revealed that early humans here made tools just like those in Africa and Europe, proving that the story of human beginnings was never one-directional.
Across the desert, stories were maps. These Songlines told people where to find water, food, and how to walk the land — a memory system sung aloud.
Bronze heads and coral crowns, history stolen.
Walls that spoke of kings, conquest, and gods.
An ancient tablet that carries the first great flood story.
Before writing, people counted with clay tokens sealed in envelopes — the first step toward cuneiform.
A jar scratched with the birth of writing.
Chessmen from Norway, lost on a Scottish beach.
A golden compass to read stars, time, and faith.
A queen’s blood ritual carved in stone.
Wooden sticks that burned down Parliament — and lit the story of writing.