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.
3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 126 of 187
H_1_12 — Iconoclasm — Systematic Destruction of Sacred Images
Iconoclasm — the deliberate destruction of religious images, statues, and sacred art — is one of the most recurrent and cross-cultural forms of knowledge suppression in human history. Far from random vandalism, iconoclas
H_1_08 — Destruction of Nalanda and Asian Knowledge Centers
The destruction of Nalanda — the world's first residential university, operating continuously for approximately 700 years (5th–12th centuries CE) in what is now Bihar, India — represents one of the most consequential epi
H_1_03 — The Inquisition and Systematic Knowledge Suppression
The Inquisition—spanning the Medieval (1184), Spanish (1478–1834),
H_1_13 — Knowledge Loss in the Fall of Rome and Early Middle Ages
The collapse of the Western Roman Empire (conventionally dated to 476 CE, though the decline was a process spanning the 3rd–6th centuries) produced one of the most dramatic and well-documented episodes of knowledge and t
H_1_06 — Destruction of Pre-Islamic and Modern Cultural Heritage
The deliberate destruction of cultural heritage — from the Taliban's demolition of the Bamiyan Buddhas (2001) to ISIS's systematic obliteration of sites in Palmyra, Nimrud, Hatra, and the Mosul Museum (2014–2017) to the
H_1_02 — Burning of Maya Codices and Mesoamerican Knowledge Destruction
The systematic destruction of Maya manuscripts represents one of history's most devastating losses of accumulated knowledge. Bishop Diego de Landa's 1562 auto-da-fé at Maní destroyed thousands of Maya texts, leaving only
H_1_05 — Qin Shi Huang Book Burning and Burying of Scholars (213–212 BCE)
In 213 BCE, Qin Shi Huang — China's first emperor — ordered the burning of books (fenshu 焚書) that contradicted Legalist state ideology, and in 212 BCE reportedly buried alive 460 Confucian scholars (kengru 坑儒) who defied
H_1_01 — Suppression of Ancient Knowledge
This document catalogs the systematic destruction of ancient knowledge, artifacts, texts, and entire religions throughout history — framed both as deliberate suppression of heterodox knowledge (Claude/Gemini/Master persp
H_1_10 — Damnatio Memoriae and State-Directed Historical Erasure
Damnatio memoriae ("condemnation of memory") — the deliberate, systematic erasure of an individual, event, or idea from the historical record by a governing authority — is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of i
H_1_09 — Translation Losses and Textual Transmission Chains
Before the printing press (1440s CE), all knowledge transmission depended on manual copying (scribal reproduction of manuscripts) and oral tradition — both inherently lossy processes. Every manuscript copy introduced pot
H_1_07 — Nazi Cultural Theft and Book Burning
The Nazi regime conducted two parallel campaigns of cultural destruction and theft between 1933 and 1945: the public burning and censorship of books deemed "un-German" (undeutsch) beginning with the May 10, 1933 book bur
H_1_18 — Library of Alexandria: Destruction and the Knowledge-Loss Question
The Library of Alexandria was the most ambitious knowledge-collection project of antiquity, founded under Ptolemy I Soter (~290s BCE) and developed by Ptolemy II Philadelphus as part of the Mouseion — a state-funded rese
H_1_15 — Religious Text Sanitization: Canon Formation & Apocrypha Politics
The formation of religious canons — deciding which texts are authoritative and which are excluded — represents one of history's most consequential acts of knowledge control. The Christian biblical canon evolved over cent
H_1_11 — Chinese Cultural Revolution — Destruction of the Four Olds
The Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) unleashed one of history's most devastating campaigns of deliberate cultural destruction. Launched by Mao Zedong to reassert ideological control and purge perceived enemies, th
H_1_14 — Religious Text Sanitization: The Erasure and Editing of Sacred Traditions
Religious text sanitization — the deliberate editing, exclusion, suppression, or reinterpretation of sacred texts by institutional authorities to enforce doctrinal orthodoxy, eliminate heterodox teachings, or adapt tradi
H_3_19 — Indigenous Knowledge Destruction: Colonial Erasure & Residential Schools
The destruction of indigenous knowledge systems represents one of history's most comprehensive and deliberate episodes of cultural erasure, spanning from the Spanish burning of Maya codices in the 16th century to the res
H_3_05 — Colonial Looting, Museum Ethics, and Repatriation
The relationship between archaeology, empire, and cultural patrimony
H_3_13 — Colonial Epistemology: Western Science Dismissing Indigenous Knowledge
Colonial epistemology refers to the system of knowledge production and validation that emerged alongside European colonial expansion (15th-20th centuries) and continues to shape global academic practice — a system in whi
H_3_01 — Indigenous Knowledge Suppression — Colonialism and Epistemicide
Epistemicide — the systematic destruction of rival knowledge systems — is arguably the most devastating and least acknowledged consequence of global colonialism. Between 1492 and 1950, European colonial powers destroyed,
H_3_15 — Gender Bias in Archaeology: Androcentrism and Its Corrections
For most of its history, archaeology has been shaped by androcentric assumptions — the projection of modern Western gender norms onto past societies. The "Man the Hunter" paradigm (formalized at a 1966 symposium but impl
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