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3,717 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 10 of 186
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
A_3_08 — Celtic Mythology and Druidic Tradition
Celtic mythology encompasses the religious narratives, cosmological concepts, and heroic legends of the Celtic-speaking peoples who dominated much of western and central Europe from the Hallstatt period (c. 800 BCE) thro
A_3_03 — Egyptian Book of the Dead and Funerary Literature
The Egyptian Book of the Dead (Pert em Hru — "Coming Forth by Day") is a collection of ~200 magical spells, hymns, and instructions designed to guide the deceased through the Duat (underworld) and into eternal life in th
A_3_02 — The Egyptian Pyramid Texts: Oldest Religious Literature on Earth
The Pyramid Texts are the oldest substantial body of Egyptian funerary literature ever discovered and among the oldest substantial religious corpora of any civilization — inscribed on the interior walls of Old Kingdom py
A_3_14 — West African Oral Traditions
West African oral traditions constitute one of the world's richest and most extensively documented systems of non-written knowledge transmission. The griot (or djeli in Mande languages) tradition of the Manding, Wolof, F
A_3_07 — Kalevala and Finnish-Baltic Mythology
The Kalevala is the Finnish national epic, compiled from oral folk poetry (runo songs) by physician-scholar Elias Lönnrot and first published in 1835 (32 poems) with an expanded edition of 50 poems in 1849. Lönnrot trave
A_3_04 — Hesiod's Theogony and Works and Days
Hesiod (~700 BCE) is, alongside Homer, one of the two foundational poets of Greek literature. His Theogony ("Birth of the Gods") presents the first systematic Greek cosmogony — from primordial Chaos through the births of
A_3_05 — Ancient Egyptian Medical and Scientific Papyri
Ancient Egyptian medical and scientific papyri constitute the earliest known systematic attempts at empirical investigation of the human body, disease, and the natural world. The Edwin Smith Papyrus (~1600 BCE, copied fr
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
A_3_11 — Homeric Hymns: Divine Preludes and the Gods of Olympus
The Homeric Hymns are a collection of 33 hexameter poems addressed to individual Greek deities, composed between approximately 750 and 500 BCE and attributed in antiquity to Homer — though they are the work of multiple a
A_3_19 — Basque Mythology & Creation Traditions
Basque mythology represents one of Europe's oldest surviving pre-Indo-European belief systems, preserved through the oral traditions of the Basque people (self-named Euskaldunak) of the western Pyrenees (the Basque Count
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_20 — Dogon Cosmological Knowledge
The Dogon are a West African people numbering approximately 800,000, living primarily on the Bandiagara Escarpment and surrounding plateau in Mali. Their remarkably detailed cosmological and astronomical knowledge became
A_3_18 — Etruscan Sacred Texts: The Liber Linteus and Ritual Tradition
The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna/Rasna) were the dominant civilization of pre-Roman Italy (c. 900–100 BCE), controlling much of central Italy from their homeland in Etruria (modern Tuscany, Umbria, and northern Lazio).
A_3_15 — Middle Kingdom Egyptian Literature: Wisdom Texts, Prophecies, and Poetry
The Middle Kingdom of Egypt (c. 2055–1650 BCE, Dynasties XI–XIII) is recognized as the classical age of Egyptian literature, producing texts that served as literary models for over a millennium. Major genres include wisd
A_3_21 — West African Creation Texts: Bambara & Fulani Cosmogony
The Bambara (Bamana) and Fulani (Fula/Peul) peoples of the western Sahel (Mali, Guinea, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, and across West Africa) possess two of the most elaborate creation mythologies in Sub-Saharan Africa
A_3_10 — Egyptian Coffin Texts: Middle Kingdom Afterlife Spells
The Egyptian Coffin Texts are a corpus of approximately 1,185 funerary spells inscribed primarily on the interior surfaces of rectangular wooden coffins during Egypt's Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE, Dynasties 11–13).
A_3_16 — Renaissance Esotericism: Hermeticism, Ficino & the Occult Revival
The Italian Renaissance witnessed a dramatic revival of Hermetic, Neoplatonic, and Kabbalistic thought that fundamentally shaped Western intellectual history. In 1463, Cosimo de' Medici commissioned Marsilio Ficino to tr
A_3_06 — Orphic Hymns, Tablets, and the Orphic Tradition
The Orphic tradition represents one of the most influential yet enigmatic religious movements of the ancient Greek world, centered on the mythical poet-musician Orpheus, who was believed to have descended to the underwor
A_3_13 — Meroitic Texts and Nubian Sacred Literature
Meroitic is the oldest written language of sub-Saharan Africa, used by the Kingdom of Kush (centered at Meroë in modern Sudan) from approximately the 3rd century BCE to the 5th century CE. Francis Llewellyn Griffith achi
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