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"The Ice-Maiden" (Danish: Iisjomfruen, or Isjomfruen in contemporary Danish) is an 1861 literary fairy tale by the Danish writer Hans Christian Andersen. The first English translation was published by King and Baird in 1863.
The Siberian Ice Maiden, known locally as the Princess of Ukok (Russian: Принце́сса Уко́ка), the Altai Princess (Russian: Алтайская принцесса), Devochka ("Girl") and Ochy-bala (Russian: Очы-бала, the heroine of the Altaic epic), is a mummy of a woman from the 5th century BC, discovered in 1993 in a kurgan belonging to one of the Pazyryk burials, from ...
The Ice-Maiden, an 1861 story by Hans Christian Andersen; The Ice Maiden, a 2002 novel by Edna Buchanan; Ice Maiden, a 2011 novel by Sally Prue; Ice Maiden Expedition, a 2017–2018 British Army expedition to Antarctica; Susie Wiles, chief of staff of 47th president-elect of the United States Donald Trump; Ice Maiden, a 2024 documentary about ...
Since the discovery of her incredibly well-preserved frozen remains in 1995, she has become known by many names — the “Ice Maiden,” Juanita and the Lady of Ampato — but little was known ...
Experts have reconstructed the face of the 'Ice Maiden', an Inca girl sacrificed in the Andes
The reconstruction is part of a new exhibit at the Andean Sanctuaries Museum in Arequipa, Peru, that features what researchers currently know about the Ice Maiden and the symbolic artifacts buried ...
Another of her nicknames, Ice Maiden, derives from the cold conditions and freezing temperatures that preserved her body on Mount Ampato. [ citation needed ] Juanita has been on display in the Catholic University of Santa María 's Museum of Andean Sanctuaries (Museo Santuarios Andinos) in Arequipa, Peru almost continuously since 1996, and was ...
The Ice Maiden – fifth century BCE. The most famous undisturbed Pazyryk burial so far recovered is the Ice Maiden or "Altai Lady" found by archaeologist Natalia Polosmak in 1993 at Ukok, near the Chinese border.