RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
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.
263 results for "sacred architecture" — page 11 of 14
A_2_16 — Testament of Solomon: Demonology, Architecture, and Rings of Power
The Testament of Solomon (Diathēkē Solomōntos) is a pseudepigraphic text (c. 1st–5th century CE, probably 3rd century) in which King Solomon narrates how he received a magical ring from the Archangel Michael, enabling hi
A_4_15 — Guru Granth Sahib as Primary Sacred Text
The Guru Granth Sahib (ਗੁਰੂ ਗ੍ਰੰਥ ਸਾਹਿਬ) is the central sacred scripture and living spiritual authority ("eternal Guru") of Sikhism, compiled by the fifth Guru, Arjan Dev, in 1604 CE (the Adi Granth) and finalized by the
A_4_35 — Chinese Millenarian Sacred Texts
Chinese millenarian sacred texts constitute a vast, largely unstudied corpus of sectarian religious literature produced over more than a thousand years (Song dynasty through the 20th century) by heterodox religious movem
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).
U_5_29 — Ancient Brewing: Beer, Civilization, and Sacred Fermentation
Beer may be older than bread. Archaeological evidence from Raqefet Cave (Israel, c. 13,000 BCE) and Göbekli Tepe (Turkey, c. 10,000 BCE) demonstrates that cereal fermentation predated or co-evolved with agriculture, supp
U_4_00 — Sacred Symbolic Ritual: Subfolder Summary
INTERDOC_76 — Spatial Memory Architectures and Non-Local Consciousness Geometry
[KEY FINDING] The most efficient way for human consciousness to retain abstract, non-spatial information is to forcibly encode it into a 3D spatial construct (the Memory Palace). Modern fMRI demonstrates that mnemonic ch
W_1_25 — Dilmun: Sacred Land of the Persian Gulf
Dilmun (Sumerian: NI.TUK.KI; also spelled Telmun) was an ancient civilization and trading polity centered on present-day Bahrain, with extensions to Failaka Island (Kuwait), the eastern Arabian coastal region, and possib
ZH_5_07 — Light and Shadow Hierophanies: Temple Sun Daggers and Solar Inserts
A hierophany — a manifestation of the sacred — is realized in some of the world's most famous ancient structures through the precise interplay of light and shadow. On specific calendar dates — typically solstices, equino
C_5_38 — Sky Burial: Excarnation, Ritual Exposure, and the Sacred Treatment of the Dead
Sky burial (jhator in Tibetan, meaning "giving alms to the birds") is a funerary practice in which the body of the deceased is placed on an elevated, open-air site and exposed to the elements and to carrion birds — prima
C_5_34 — Greek Religion: Gods, Ritual, and the Sacred in Ancient Greece
Greek religion was not a unified creed but a diverse ecology of practices, beliefs, and institutions that varied by polis, period, and social context. At its core was polytheistic ritual practice — animal sacrifice, liba
C_3_08 — Death Rituals, Funerary Architecture, and the Technology of Dying
How a culture treats its dead reveals its deepest beliefs about what a human being is and what (if anything) lies beyond death. From the earliest known intentional burial (~100,000 BCE, Qafzeh Cave, Israel — ochre-staine
Z_1_14 — Chromatin Remodeling: Epigenetic Architecture of the Genome
Chromatin remodeling — the dynamic restructuring of the protein-DNA complex (chromatin) that packages eukaryotic genomes — is a central mechanism of gene regulation and a cornerstone of epigenetics. In eukaryotic cells,
K_5_18 — Working Memory: Cognitive Architecture and Executive Function
Working memory (WM) is the cognitive system responsible for temporarily holding and manipulating information during complex tasks such as reasoning, language comprehension, and decision-making. Distinguished from passive
INTERDOC_65 — The Constants of Existence: A Cross-Domain Architecture
[KEY FINDING] The universe appears to run on approximately 30 physical constants (CODATA 2022), none of which are derived from theory. Life on Earth obeys approximately 12 biological constants (genetic code, ATP, homochi
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
INTERDOC_15 — Astronomical Alignment as Global Pattern
Human civilizations on every inhabited continent independently developed monumental architecture precisely aligned to astronomical events — solstices, equinoxes, cardinal directions, and specific stellar risings. Newgran
D_2_07 — Persepolis: Achaemenid Architecture, Apadana Reliefs, and Imperial Ideology
Persepolis (Old Persian: Pārsa; modern Takht-e Jamshid, Fars Province, Iran) was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, constructed primarily under Darius I (r. 522–486 BCE) and his son Xerxes I (r. 486
D_2_14 — Valley of the Kings: Royal Tombs and Afterlife Architecture
The Valley of the Kings (Arabic: Wadi al-Muluk; ancient Egyptian: Ta-sekhet-ma'at, "The Great Field") — a narrow, arid wadi on the west bank of the Nile opposite ancient Thebes (modern Luxor) in Upper Egypt — served as t
D_1_12 — Chichen Itza — Calendrical Pyramid and Sacred Cenote
Chichen Itza, located in the northern limestone lowlands of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, was one of the largest and most powerful Maya cities during the Terminal Classic and Early Postclassic periods (c. 750–1250 CE).
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