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423 results for "cultural burning" — page 1 of 22

H_1_07 Suppression & Thesis

H_1_07 — Nazi Cultural Theft and Book Burning

The Nazi regime conducted two parallel campaigns of cultural destruction and theft between 1933 and 1945: the public burning and censorship of books deemed "un-German" (undeutsch) beginning with the May 10, 1933 book bur

Nazi book burning Bücherverbrennung May 1933 degenerate art Entartete Kunst ERR
H_1_11 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds

The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th

cultural revolution four olds mao zedong red guards destruction heritage struggle session
H_1_05 Suppression & Thesis

H_1_05 — Qin Shi Huang Book Burning and Burying of Scholars (213–212 BCE)

In 213 BCE, Qin Shi Huang — China's first emperor — ordered the burning of books (fenshu 焚書) that contradicted Legalist state ideology, and in 212 BCE reportedly buried alive 460 Confucian scholars (kengru 坑儒) who defied

Qin Shi Huang book burning burying of scholars fenshu kengru Legalism Li Si
C_5_03 Global Traditions

C_5_03 — Indigenous Knowledge Systems

Indigenous knowledge systems represent the longest-running experiments in human survival — the Australian Aboriginal peoples have maintained continuous cultural practice for 65,000+ years, making theirs the oldest living

indigenous knowledge traditional ecological knowledge TEK Aboriginal Dreamtime oral tradition songlines
H_3_19 Verified Suppression & Thesis

H_3_19 — Indigenous Knowledge Destruction: Colonial Erasure & Residential Schools

The destruction of indigenous knowledge systems represents one of history's most comprehensive and deliberate episodes of cultural erasure, spanning from the Spanish burning of Maya codices in the 16th century to the res

indigenous-knowledge-destruction residential-schools colonial-erasure library-burning oral-tradition-suppression cultural-genocide
M_4_04 Forbidden Archaeology

M_4_04 — Library Destructions and Lost Knowledge Catalogs

The deliberate or accidental destruction of libraries and knowledge repositories is one of humanity's recurring tragedies. From the Library of Alexandria (whose gradual destruction eliminated perhaps 400,000–700,000 scro

Library of Alexandria Musaeum burned library destroyed library book burning biblioclasm
W_1_30 Verified World Civilizations

W_1_30 — Alexander the Great: Conquest, Hellenization, and Cultural Fusion

Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BCE), known as Alexander the Great, created the largest empire the ancient world had seen in just 13 years of campaigning — conquering from Greece to Egypt to the Indus Valley, covering

alexander the great macedon hellenistic conquest persia darius
ZH_5_05 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_5_05 — Cross-Cultural Constellation Patterns: Connecting Star Groupings Worldwide

Every documented human culture groups stars into constellations or asterisms — named patterns that organize the sky into a readable, memorizable, and culturally meaningful map. Yet surprisingly few star groupings are uni

constellations cross-cultural asterism star patterns IAU Greek
ZH_2_12 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_12 — Agricultural Astronomy: Star-Based Planting and Harvest Calendars

Before modern calendars, weather services, and agricultural extension offices, farming communities worldwide used stellar observations to time their agricultural activities — planting, irrigation, harvesting, and animal

agricultural astronomy heliacal rising Pleiades Sirius planting calendar harvest
ZH_1_01 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_1_01 — Archaeoastronomy: Discipline, Debates, and Cultural Astronomy

Archaeoastronomy is the interdisciplinary study of how past cultures understood, used, and integrated celestial phenomena — the motions of the sun, moon, planets, and stars — into their architecture, ritual practices, ag

archaeoastronomy cultural astronomy ethnoastronomy astronomical alignment ancient astronomy celestial observation
C_1_01 Global Traditions

C_1_01 — Cross-Cultural Patterns & Synthesis

This synthesis document maps the universal serpent/reptilian being across 13 major civilizations, finding that all 13 originally depicted serpent figures positively — as teachers, civilizers, and wisdom-keepers. The nega

cross-cultural patterns serpent knowledge-giver teacher flood
C_5_20 Verified Global Traditions

C_5_20 — Seasonal Ritual Cycles: Solstice, Equinox, and Agricultural Festivals

Seasonal ritual cycles — religious festivals, agricultural ceremonies, and sacred observances tied to the solstices, equinoxes, and the transitional points between them — represent humanity's oldest continuous relationsh

solstice equinox seasonal ritual Wheel of the Year Saturnalia Yule
C_2_14 Verified Global Traditions

C_2_14 — Rainbow Serpent Across Cultures: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Analysis

The Rainbow Serpent is arguably the most geographically widespread and temporally deep mythological motif in human culture, appearing as a primordial water/creation deity across Australian Aboriginal traditions (where ro

Rainbow Serpent Dreamtime Ngalyod Ungud Dan Danbala
Credible

INTERDOC_22 — Near-Death Experience, Afterlife Belief, and Cross-Cultural Evidence

[KEY FINDING] The AWARE (AWAreness during REsuscitation) study — a four-year prospective study across 15 hospitals in the UK, US, and Austria, led by Sam Parnia (published 2014, Resuscitation) — found that 39% of 140 car

near-death experience NDE afterlife out-of-body experience cardiac arrest AWARE study
Credible

INTERDOC_24 — Library Destruction and the Erasure of Knowledge

[KEY FINDING] The Library of Alexandria — founded by Ptolemy I Soter (~295 BCE), estimated to have held 400,000–700,000 scrolls — suffered multiple destruction events: Julius Caesar's fire (48 BCE, which may have burned

Library of Alexandria Nalanda book burning knowledge destruction cultural erasure manuscript loss
Verified

INTERDOC_64 — Cross-Cultural Constellations: Independent Invention vs. Diffusion as a Knowledge-Transmission Probe

The 88 modern IAU constellations are a cultural product — 48 from Ptolemy (~150 CE, derived from Mesopotamian/Babylonian sources), 12 from Keyser and de Houtman (~1596, Dutch East Indies), and 28 filled in by 17th–18th c

constellation systems cross-cultural astronomy precession Polynesian navigation cultural diffusion independent invention
ZC_4_19 Credible Social Science

ZC_4_19 — Disaster Resilience Anthropology: Cultural Adaptation to Catastrophe

Disaster anthropology — the study of how human societies prepare for, experience, respond to, and recover from catastrophic events — emerged as a distinct subfield through the work of Anthony Oliver-Smith (University of

disaster anthropology resilience cultural adaptation vulnerability hazard risk perception
ZC_4_16 Verified Social Science

ZC_4_16 — UNESCO World Heritage: Protection, Politics, Cultural Patrimony

UNESCO World Heritage — the international system for identifying, protecting, and preserving sites of "outstanding universal value" — represents both humanity's noblest effort at collective stewardship of shared cultural

UNESCO World Heritage cultural heritage patrimony heritage convention site protection
G_2_12 Credible Modern Frameworks

G_2_12 — Cultural Evolutionary Theory — Boyd, Richerson, and Henrich

Cultural evolutionary theory — developed primarily by Robert Boyd, Peter Richerson, and Joseph Henrich — provides a rigorous, formally modeled framework for understanding how cultural traits (beliefs, practices, technolo

cultural evolution dual inheritance gene-culture coevolution social learning imitation prestige bias
O_5_03 Verified Earth Anomalies

O_5_03 — Wildfires, Fire Ecology, and Pyrogeography

Fire is one of Earth's most powerful and pervasive ecological forces — not an aberration but a fundamental natural process that has shaped terrestrial ecosystems for at least 420 million years (the earliest charcoal evid

wildfire fire ecology pyrogeography prescribed burn fire regime fire-adapted