RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
193 results for "sacred objects" — page 1 of 10
D_5_12 — Masks, Ritual Objects, and Power Artifacts
Ritual objects — masks, amulets, relics, bundles, sacred vessels — are among humanity's most ancient artifacts and serve as interfaces between the human and spiritual worlds. Masks appear in the archaeological record fro
U_5_10 — Architecture as Cultural Expression: Sacred and Civic Space
Architecture — the design and construction of buildings and spatial environments — is simultaneously a practical art (shelter, function, structure) and a profound form of cultural expression, embodying a society's cosmol
U_4_13 — Mandala: Sacred Circle Art, Meditation, and Cosmic Diagram
A mandala (Sanskrit: मण्डल, maṇḍala, "circle," "essence," "completion") is a geometric, symmetrical diagram — typically circular or square-within-circle — used in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and other Asian religious traditio
U_4_18 — Sacred Architectural Proportions
Sacred architectural proportion refers to the use of specific mathematical ratios and geometric relationships in the design of temples, cathedrals, mosques, and other religious structures — ratios believed by their build
U_4_15 — Ritual Objects and Votive Offerings: Material Culture of Devotion
Ritual objects — material things created, consecrated, or used in religious or ceremonial practice — and votive offerings — objects dedicated to a deity, saint, or supernatural power in fulfillment of a vow, in supplicat
C_5_27 — Labyrinth Mythology: From Knossos to Sacred Geometry
The labyrinth — a unicursal or multicursal path winding toward a center — is one of the most ancient and globally distributed symbols. The most famous is the Labyrinth of Knossos (Crete), traditionally built by Daedalus
C_5_28 — Ritual Sacrifice: Blood, Fire, and the Sacred Exchange
Ritual sacrifice — the deliberate destruction or offering of something valuable (animal, human, agricultural produce, wealth) to a divine or supernatural power — is one of the most universal and oldest documented human p
C_5_15 — Ethnobotany and Sacred Plant Knowledge Across Cultures
Ethnobotany — the study of relationships between peoples and plants — reveals that virtually every human culture has identified, cultivated, and ritualized psychoactive, medicinal, and sacred plants. Richard Evans Schult
INTERDOC_25 — The Sacred Feminine: Suppression, Survival, and Recovery
Venus figurines — over 200 carved female forms dating from ~40,000–11,000 BCE, found from Western Europe to Siberia — represent the oldest known figurative art tradition. The Venus of Hohle Fels (~40,000 BCE, Germany) is
INTERDOC_29 — Sacred Number, Geometry, and Architecture
The golden ratio (φ = 1.6180339...) — defined as the ratio where the whole is to the larger part as the larger part is to the smaller — appears in: the Parthenon façade (debated — Markowsky, 1992, argues the measurements
ZC_4_05 — Tourism, Heritage, and the Anthropology of Sacred Sites
The anthropology of tourism and heritage examines how places, objects, and practices are designated as culturally significant, how they are consumed by visitors, and who controls the narratives, profits, and meanings at
T_5_07 — Psychology of Sacred Space and Place
Sacred space — physical locations experienced as qualitatively distinct from ordinary space, charged with spiritual significance, numinous power, or transcendent meaning — is a universal feature of human culture. From Pa
D_1_25 — Ollantaytambo: Megalithic Engineering in the Sacred Valley
Ollantaytambo (Quechua: Ullantaytampu) is a monumental Inca archaeological site at 2,792 m elevation in the Sacred Valley (Urubamba Valley) of Peru, approximately 72 km northwest of Cusco. It served simultaneously as a r
D_5_22 — Sacred Temple Architecture: Ritual Space, Cosmic Geometry, and Divine Dwelling
Sacred temple architecture — the deliberate design of built environments to serve as dwelling places for deities, sites of ritual performance, and physical expressions of cosmological order — represents one of humanity's
D_5_28 — Monumental Architecture: Engineering, Power, and Sacred Space
Monumental architecture — construction at scales that exceed domestic or practical necessity, requiring coordinated labor of hundreds to tens of thousands of workers — is a cross-cultural phenomenon extending from Göbekl
D_5_25 — Sacred Mountains: Axis Mundi and Global Mountain Veneration
Mountains occupy a uniquely sacred position in virtually every culture on Earth — serving as the dwelling place of gods, the point where heaven and earth meet, the axis around which the cosmos rotates, and the place wher
D_5_16 — Color Symbolism in Ancient Sacred Architecture
Ancient sacred buildings were never the bare stone ruins we see today. From Egyptian temples blazing with red, blue, yellow, and green to Maya pyramids coated in vivid red plaster to Greek temples painted in polychromati
D_5_27 — Electromagnetic and Acoustic Properties of Sacred Sites
A growing body of measurement work shows that several Neolithic and Bronze Age ceremonial sites — Newgrange (Ireland, ~3200 BCE), the Hypogeum of Ħal Saflieni (Malta, ~3300–3000 BCE), Chavín de Huántar (Peru, ~1200–500 B
D_5_18 — Mandala Sacred Architecture: Cross-Cultural Cosmic Diagrams in Stone
The mandala (Sanskrit: "circle" or "completion") is a geometric diagram — typically featuring concentric circles and squares, radial symmetry, and a defined center — that functions as a map of the cosmos, a meditation ai
D_5_15 — Sacred Geometry Scientific Evaluation
Sacred geometry — the attribution of spiritual or cosmic significance to geometric forms — pervades world architecture, art, and esoteric traditions. This document applies rigorous mathematical and statistical testing to
BROWSE BY SECTION — 3717 documents across 34 fields