From across human history and throughout the world.
1. Enheduanna is the oldest named poet (and writer full-stop!) in history.
She was a priestess in the Ancient Sumerian city of Ur, and lived in the 23rd century B.C.
2. Sappho was an Ancient Greek poet from the island of Lesbos whose fame and talent led her to be known as "the Tenth Muse."
Sadly, little of her work has survived.
3. Quintus Horatius Flaccus, known as Horace, was a Roman poet of the Augustan Age.
His Odes are often considered the finest of all Latin lyric poetry, and ranks alongside Virgil and Ovid as the greatest Roman poets.
4. Kalidasa, who lived in the 5th century A.D., is regarded as the greatest Ancient Indian poet.
5. Caedmon, who looked after animals at Whitby Abbey in the 7th century A.D., is the first named English poet.
6. Li Bai was (alongside his friend Du Fu) the greatest poet of the Tang Dynasty, a Golden Age in Medieval China.
7. Rumi was a 13th century Persian poet, scholar, and mystic, whose immense influence and popularity has lasted across the centuries.
8. Dante is most famous for his masterpiece, the Divine Comedy, but as a young man he was also a composer of shorter poems, especially on the theme of love.
9. Ah Bam is the name attributed to the author of The Songs of Dzitbalché, a collection of Ancient Mayan poetry compiled in the 15th century.
10. Matsuo Basho, who travelled throughout Edo period Japan writing poetry, is regarded as the master of the haiku.
11. Sayyid Abdallah was a poet and scholar who lived in the Lamu Archipelago and composed Swahili poetry in Arabic script during the 18th and 19th centuries.
12. Percy Bysshe Shelley, along with Lord Byron and John Keats, was one of the foremost poets of the Romantic Age. He drowned at just 29 years old.
13. Edward Thomas was a writer and poet who fought and died in the First World War, in 1917.
14. Fernando Pessoa was a Portuguese poet, writer, critic, essayists, and all-round enigma. He had at least 75 alter-egos and remains one of the most unique and fascinating literary figures of all time.
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It was made by Giuseppe Arcimboldo, one of the strangest (and funniest) artists who ever lived...
Giuseppe Arcimboldo was born in Milan in the year 1526, and he spent his life working in the court of the Holy Roman Emperors.
His unusual career — during which he painted things like Four Seasons in One Face, below — came just after the High Renaissance:
During the High Renaissance painters like Leonardo, Raphael, and Michelangelo had seemingly perfected art — in their shadow, what more could be achieved?
Their work had been graceful and harmonious, defined by mellow colours and highly idealised human figures:
When talking about Gothic Architecture — the architecture of Medieval Europe between the 12th and 16th centuries — people tend to focus on the outward appearance of buildings.
We say Gothic Architecture is about things like pointed arches, flying buttresses, and gargoyles.
But there is more to Gothic Architecture than that.
Because people didn't just decide to create "Gothic" cathedrals — these buildings, and every part of them, were the logical conclusion of a whole worldview.
Such was the argument made by a writer called John Ruskin in 1853.
Here are some ways it has been remembered since, in art and architecture — beginning with this simple but moving memorial in Hungary...
It's almost impossible to understand the scale of the First World War, which lasted from 1914 to 1918, until you've seen the cemeteries that had to be created after it ended.
At the Douaumont Ossuary in France, for example, 146,000 soldiers are buried.
And so the former battlefields of France and Belgium are now home to an endless procession of memorials dedicated to the First World War, each attempting in their own way to commemorate, teach, and endure.
From the soaring spires of the Canadian National Vimy Memorial:
The Museum of Modern Art in New York opened 95 years ago today.
So, from Vincent van Gogh to Minecraft, here's a brief tour through MoMA...
New York's Museum of Modern Art — opened on 7th November 1929 — was founded by Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, Lillie P. Bliss, and Mary Quinn Sullivan.
First based in the Crown Building, MoMA changed location several times and quickly grew in scale, popularity, and influence.
In 1939 it finally moved to a purpose-built museum, which has been expanded and added to over the last nine decades.
MoMA now holds over 200,000 works of art, from the late 19th century through today, along with masses of other materials relating to art history and design.