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41 results for "dragon" — page 1 of 3
A_1_09 — Tiamat — Primordial Chaos Dragon and Cosmic Creation
Tiamat (Akkadian: ti'āmat or tâmtu, "sea") is the primordial chaos deity in the Enuma Elish — the Babylonian creation epic (composed ~1100 BCE, though drawing on older traditions). Tiamat represents the primordial salt w
A_1_10 — Marduk — Supreme Deity of Babylon and Dragon Slayer
Marduk (Sumerian: dAMAR.UTU, "Sun Calf of the Storm"; Akkadian: Marduk) is the patron deity of Babylon and, from the late 2nd millennium BCE onward, the supreme god of the Babylonian pantheon. Originally a minor city-god
C_1_09 — Storm God Pattern — Thunder, Dragon-Slaying, and Indo-European Myth
The storm god who defeats a chaos serpent/dragon (the Chaoskampf — "chaos-battle") is arguably the most widely distributed mythological motif across Indo-European cultures and beyond. Zeus defeats Typhon, Thor battles Jö
C_5_13 — Vietnamese and Indochinese Dragon-Serpent Traditions
The dragon-serpent traditions of Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand represent a distinctive regional synthesis of indigenous aquatic serpent veneration with both Chinese dragon symbolism (from the north) and Indian Na
C_2_06 — Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier)
This document examines Chinese Dragon Mythology & Ancient Scriptures (Research Dossier), a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Dragon as water/weather regulator, Dragon as
ZF_3_03 — Ocean Mythology: Sea Serpents, Leviathan, Dragon Kings, and Primordial Waters
Every maritime civilization has produced a rich mythology of the sea — and a striking cross-cultural pattern emerges: serpentine or draconic beings are the most universal ocean guardians and deities. From the Sumerian En
B_3_09 — Dragon Typology — Cross-Cultural Serpent-Dragon Traditions
Dragons and giant serpents appear in nearly every major mythological tradition worldwide — European fire-breathing dragons, Chinese lóng (beneficent celestial beings), Mesoamerican feathered serpents, Australian Aborigin
B_5_05 — Megafaunal Fossil Misidentification and the Origins of Monster Traditions
The field of geomythology — a term coined by geologist Dorothy Vitaliano in 1968 — investigates how ancient peoples interpreted fossils, geological formations, and megafaunal remains, and how those interpretations genera
U_3_11 — Board Games and Games of Strategy
Board games — structured games played on a marked surface (board) with pieces, dice, cards, or tokens according to defined rules — are among the oldest and most culturally revealing human artifacts. Ancient games: the Ro
W_1_01 — Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism
The Olmec civilization (~1500–400 BCE), centered in the tropical lowlands of Mexico's Gulf Coast (modern Veracruz and Tabasco), is widely considered the "mother culture" of Mesoamerica — the civilization from which later
W_2_08 — Korean Shamanism (Muism / Musok)
Korean shamanism (Muism or Musok, 무속) is one of the oldest continuous spiritual traditions in East Asia, predating the introduction of Buddhism (4th century CE) and Confucianism to the Korean peninsula. Centered on mudan
W_2_03 — Daoism and Chinese Alchemy
Daoism is one of the world's oldest continuous philosophical-religious traditions, originating in China by at least the 4th century BCE and likely much earlier. Its alchemical tradition encompasses both waidan (external
C_5_07 — Hittite and Hurrian Mythology — Kumarbi Cycle
The Hittite and Hurrian mythological traditions, preserved on cuneiform tablets from Hattusa (modern Boğazköy, Turkey), provide the crucial "missing link" between Mesopotamian and Greek mythology. The Kumarbi Cycle — a H
C_5_01 — Cognitive Anthropology of Serpent Archetypes
This document examines the evolutionary and cognitive science explanations for why serpent beings appear in virtually every human culture. Snake Detection Theory (Isbell, 2009) proposes that primates evolved superior vis
C_5_08 — Armenian Mythology and the Urartian Connection
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_2_01 — World Religions & Serpent/Reptilian Connections
Serpent and reptilian beings appear across every major world religion — Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Gnosticism, Zoroastrianism, Egyptian tradition, Chinese cosmology, Japanese mythology, Mesoamerica
ZF_3_13 — Sacred Seas — Ocean Mythology and Maritime Ritual Worldwide
Every major maritime culture has developed elaborate mythological frameworks for understanding and relating to the sea — systems of divine governance, ritual propitiation, and cosmological meaning that reflect genuine ec
Q_3_17 — Titan: Prebiotic Chemistry on Saturn's Largest Moon
Titan, Saturn's largest moon (diameter 5,150 km — larger than Mercury), is the only body in the solar system besides Earth with stable surface liquids and a dense nitrogen-dominated atmosphere. Discovered by Christiaan H
INTERDOC_36 — Amphibious Teacher Beings and the USO Connection
[KEY FINDING] The Apkallu (Akkadian) / Abgal (Sumerian) — the "Seven Sages" — are described in Mesopotamian texts as beings sent by the god Enki/Ea to teach humanity the arts of civilization. Berossus (Babylonian priest,
INTERDOC_42 — The Serpent Being: Humanity's Oldest and Most Inverted Mythology
[KEY FINDING] Before the rise of Indo-European and Abrahamic traditions, serpent beings were the most widely venerated entity category on Earth:
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