RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.

2,532 results for "CI" — page 100 of 127

A_3_08 Verified Foundations

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

Celtic mythology Druid Tuatha Dé Danann Mabinogion Táin Bó Cúailnge Irish mythology
A_3_03 Foundations

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

Book of the Dead Pert em Hru Coming Forth by Day Weighing of the Heart Ma'at Ammit
A_3_02 Foundations

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

Pyramid Texts Saqqara Unas Old Kingdom afterlife ascension
A_3_07 Verified Foundations

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

Kalevala Finnish mythology Elias Lönnrot oral tradition rune singing Väinämöinen
A_3_04 Foundations

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

Hesiod Theogony Works and Days Greek cosmogony Chaos Gaia
A_3_01 Foundations

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

Kebra Nagast Ethiopia Axum Aksum Ark of the Covenant Solomon
A_3_11 Verified Foundations

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

Homeric Hymns Demeter Apollo Hermes Aphrodite Dionysus
A_3_09 Verified Foundations

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

Ethiopian Ge'ez Ethiopic Book of Jubilees 1 Enoch Fetha Nagast
A_3_00 Foundations

A_3_00 — Egyptian African Mediterranean: Subfolder Summary

A_3_10 Verified Foundations

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).

Coffin Texts Middle Kingdom afterlife spells funerary literature Egypt
A_3_06 Verified Foundations

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

Orphism Orphic hymns Orphic tablets gold tablets Orpheus Dionysus
A_3_13 Verified Foundations

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

Meroitic script Nubia Meroë Kingdom of Kush Amun worship funerary texts
A_3_12 Verified Foundations

A_3_12 — Epic of Sundiata: Mandinka Foundation Myth and West African Oral Epic

The Epic of Sundiata (Sunjata, Soundjata, Son-Jara) is the foundational oral epic of the Mandinka (Manding) peoples of West Africa, narrating the life of Sundiata Keita (c. 1217–1255 CE), the historical founder of the Ma

Sundiata Keita Epic of Sundiata Sunjata Mali Empire Mandinka Manding
U_1_08 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_1_08 — Carnival, Festival, and Celebration

Carnival, festivals, and celebrations — periodic communal events characterized by heightened sensory experience, relaxation or inversion of social norms, shared feasting, music, costume, and collective joy — are universa

carnival festival celebration Mardi Gras Carnaval Diwali
U_3_05 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_05 — Fashion and Costume History

Fashion — from Latin factio (making, doing) — encompasses clothing, accessories, and bodily presentation as systems of social communication, aesthetic expression, and cultural identity. Archaeological evidence: the oldes

fashion costume history clothing dress haute couture fashion industry
U_5_25 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_25 — Throat Singing: Overtone Vocal Traditions and Acoustic Mastery

Throat singing (overtone singing) is a vocal technique in which a single performer simultaneously produces two or more distinct pitches — a sustained fundamental drone and one or more reinforced harmonics perceived as a

throat singing overtone singing khoomei tuvan mongolian harmonic singing
U_5_16 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_5_16 — AI-Generated Art: Creativity, Authorship & the Machine

AI-generated art — images, music, text, and video produced through machine learning systems — has become the defining creative controversy of the 2020s. Beginning with DeepDream (2015) and neural style transfer, accelera

AI art generative art DALL-E Midjourney Stable Diffusion diffusion models
U_5_28 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual

Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance

hierophany mircea eliade sacred space theophany axis mundi sacred geography
U_5_30 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_5_30 — Venus Figurines: Paleolithic Art, Fertility Symbolism, and the Female Form

Venus figurines — small statuettes of the female form, typically emphasizing breasts, abdomen, hips, and vulva while minimizing faces, arms, and feet — constitute one of the most widespread and enigmatic art traditions o

venus figurines paleolithic art venus of willendorf fertility symbol mother goddess upper paleolithic
U_2_20 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_2_20 — Islamic Geometric Art: Pattern, Calligraphy & Arabesque

Islamic geometric art — one of the most sophisticated and mathematically advanced artistic traditions in human history — developed from the 8th century CE across a vast geographic range from Andalusia to Central Asia, pr

islamic-art geometric-patterns calligraphy arabesque girih-tiles muqarnas