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157 results for "plumed serpent" — page 1 of 8
C_2_12 — Kukulkan / Quetzalcoatl — The Feathered Serpent Deep Dive
The Feathered Serpent is the most important and enduring deity/symbol complex in Mesoamerican civilization — spanning over 2,000 years (from Olmec iconography ~1200 BCE through the Spanish Conquest in 1521 CE) and appear
A_2_01 — Bible Serpent References
The Bible contains extensive references to serpents, dragons, and reptilian-type beings whose original meanings differ sharply from later theological reinterpretation. The Hebrew word "nachash" carries meanings of serpen
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
C_4_02 — Pacific Island Serpent & Sky-Being Traditions
The Pacific Ocean encompasses over 165 million square kilometers — the largest single geographic feature on Earth — and yet every habitable island within it was settled by human navigators using knowledge systems of extr
C_4_01 — Credo Mutwa & African Serpent/Reptilian Traditions
This document examines Credo Mutwa & African Serpent/Reptilian Traditions, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Basic Information, Key Life Events, The Significance of Ti
C_4_04 — Tuareg and Saharan Serpent Traditions
The Sahara Desert — the world's largest hot desert at 9.2 million km² — was GREEN, wet, and densely inhabited for most of the last 11,000 years. The "African Humid Period" (AHP, ~11,000-5,000 BP) transformed the Sahara i
C_5_21 — Serpent-DNA Visual Parallels: The Double Helix in Ancient Iconography
Entwined serpent imagery — two serpents coiling around a central axis — appears across civilizations separated by vast distances and millennia: the caduceus of Greek Hermes (two serpents around a winged staff), the Nehus
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_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
C_2_15 — The Serpent as Initiation Guide: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Across radically diverse cultures, the serpent functions not merely as a symbol but as an initiatory agent — a being whose encounter marks the boundary between ordinary consciousness and transformed understanding. This p
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
C_2_02 — The Flood-Serpent Connection
Across 14 major flood traditions — Sumerian, Babylonian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Maya, Aboriginal, Greek, Norse, and others — a consistent dual-force structure emerges: a sky/authority deity destroys, while a serpent/w
C_2_10 — Basque Language, Culture, and Serpent Mythology
This document examines Basque Language, Culture, and Serpent Mythology, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Euskara — Europe's Last Language Isolate, Linguistic Features
C_2_13 — Fuxi and Nüwa — Chinese Serpent-Bodied Creator Deities
Fuxi (伏羲) and Nüwa (女媧) are the primordial creator deities of Chinese mythology — typically depicted with human upper bodies and intertwined serpent tails, representing the foundational pair from whom all humanity descen
C_2_11 — Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive
This document examines Quetzalcoatl / Feathered Serpent Comprehensive, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Etymology and Core Identity, Olmec Origins — The Earliest Evid
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
K_4_01 — Shamanism, Entheogens & Serpent Visions
Shamanism as a cross-cultural altered-state practice is Tier 1 anthropology (Eliade 1964, Winkelman 2010). Clinical psilocybin and DMT research is Tier 1 (Griffiths 2006/2019, Strassman 2001, Davis 2021). The consistent
Serpent_DNA_Consciousness_Thread
The twin-serpent-on-axis motif appears across every major civilization without documented contact: the Gudea Libation Vase of Ningishzida (Louvre AO 190, ~2150–2120 BCE, Sumer), the Greek caduceus of Hermes (~8th century
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:
INTERDOC_27 — The Serpent Symbol: Global Inversion from Sacred to Evil
[KEY FINDING] The serpent is the single most universal sacred symbol in human culture. Every inhabited continent produced independent serpent veneration: Wadjet and Uraeus (Egypt — the cobra on the pharaoh's crown repres
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