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17 results for "Ethiopian Orthodox"
A_3_09 — Ethiopian Sacred Texts Beyond the Kebra Nagast
The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church preserves the most expansive biblical canon in Christendom — 81 books, compared to 66 in the Protestant canon and 73 in the Roman Catholic canon — including texts considered apocryp
A_3_01 — Kebra Nagast: The Glory of Kings (Ethiopian)
The Kebra Nagast ("Glory of Kings") is a 14th-century CE Ethiopian text — written in Ge'ez, the classical Ethiopian liturgical language — that serves as the foundation myth of the Solomonic dynasty of Ethiopia and the sp
W_3_06 — Coptic and Ethiopian Christian Mystical Traditions
The Coptic and Ethiopian Christian traditions represent the oldest continuously operating Christian institutions in Africa, preserving theological, liturgical, and textual materials that have been lost or marginalized in
A_2_03 — Book of Enoch & the Watchers
The Book of Enoch (1 Enoch) is one of the most detailed ancient texts describing interactions between non-human beings ("Watchers") and humanity. Excluded from most biblical canons by the 4th century CE, it was preserved
D_3_05 — Lalibela Rock-Hewn Churches — Ethiopia's New Jerusalem
The rock-hewn churches of Lalibela in northern Ethiopia constitute one of the most extraordinary architectural achievements in sub-Saharan Africa and the Christian world. Located in the Lasta region of the Ethiopian High
D_3_14 — Rock-Hewn Churches of Tigray: Beyond Lalibela
While Lalibela's eleven rock-hewn churches are world-famous, a far more extensive but less-known tradition of rock-cut church architecture extends across the Tigray Region of northern Ethiopia (and neighboring Eritrea) —
W_5_11 — Byzantine Empire: Constantinople, Orthodoxy, and East Roman Legacy
The Byzantine Empire (c. 330–1453 CE) — the continuation of the eastern half of the Roman Empire, centered on Constantinople (modern Istanbul, founded as Byzantium, refounded by Constantine I in 330 CE) — endured for ove
INTERDOC_46 — Christian Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline from the Church Fathers to the Modern Era
Christian institutional suppression operated through six interconnected mechanisms across 19 centuries: (1) Canon formation and text destruction — defining which texts were "scripture" and systematically destroying all o
A_2_11 — Book of Jubilees: Angelic Calendar and Retold Genesis
The Book of Jubilees (also called Leptogenesis or "Little Genesis") is a Second Temple Jewish text (composed c. 160–150 BCE) that retells the narrative of Genesis 1 through Exodus 12 as a revelation dictated to Moses on
ZB_3_05 — Seed Banks Dormancy and Germination
Seed dormancy — the inability of a viable seed to germinate under otherwise favorable conditions — is a critical survival strategy allowing plants to persist through unfavorable periods and disperse germination across ti
H_2_03 — Academic Gatekeeping, Paradigm Resistance, and the Sociology of Knowledge
Academic gatekeeping — the processes by which scientific communities control which ideas, methods, and practitioners gain legitimacy — is simultaneously essential to quality (filtering out error, fraud, and pseudoscience
H_2_16 — Dissident Scientists: Careers Destroyed by Heterodox Views
The history of science includes numerous cases of researchers whose careers were damaged, marginalized, or destroyed because they advanced ideas that contradicted the prevailing scientific paradigm — ideas that were, in
H_2_06 — Successful Paradigm Shifts in Archaeology: Cases Where Orthodoxy Was Wrong
The history of science contains well-documented cases where firmly held orthodoxies were overturned by new evidence, often after decades of resistance from established authorities. Thomas Kuhn's The Structure of Scientif
H_3_02 — Suppression of Gnostic and Heterodox Christianity
From the earliest centuries of Christianity through the medieval period, a sustained campaign of suppression eliminated dozens of alternative Christian movements, destroying their texts and persecuting their adherents. B
N_5_01 — The Shamanic-to-Institutional Pipeline
Across every major civilization, a remarkably consistent pattern emerges: direct, experiential knowledge-traditions — shamanic practices rooted in altered states of consciousness — undergo a five-stage transformation int
D_3_13 — Aksum Stelae: Ethiopian Monumental Engineering
Aksum (also Axum) — a city in the northern Ethiopian highlands (Tigray Region) — was the capital of the Aksumite Kingdom (c. 1st–7th centuries CE), one of the most powerful and sophisticated states of the ancient world,
P_4_11 — Indian Darshanas — Six Orthodox Systems of Hindu Philosophy
The Indian philosophical tradition produced six orthodox (āstika) systems (darśanas, literally "viewpoints") that accept the authority of the Vedas: Samkhya, Yoga, Nyaya, Vaisheshika, Mimamsa, and Vedanta. Alongside thre
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