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114 results for "night hag" — page 2 of 6
N_1_03 — Pythagorean Brotherhood as Proto-Secret Society
Pythagoras of Samos (~570-495 BCE) was a Greek philosopher, mathematician, and mystic who founded a communal religious-philosophical society in the Greek colony of Croton (modern Calabria, southern Italy) around 530 BCE.
N_1_14 — Pythagorean Brotherhood: Mathematics, Mysticism & Secret Knowledge
The Pythagorean Brotherhood (c. 530–400 BCE), founded by Pythagoras of Samos in Croton (southern Italy), was simultaneously a philosophical school, a religious community, and a political movement. The Pythagoreans are cr
F_1_03 — Phoenician and Carthaginian Atlantic Exploration
The Phoenicians and their Carthaginian successors were the ancient world's supreme mariners, operating an extensive maritime network across the Mediterranean and beyond from roughly 1500 BCE to 146 BCE. Ancient literary
I_3_11 — The Brazilian Night of UFOs: Official Military Encounters
On the night of May 19, 1986, multiple unidentified objects were tracked on military and civilian radar across southeastern Brazil — primarily over São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and surrounding areas — and the Brazilian Air
X_2_08 — Fasting — Medical Science and Sacred Tradition
Fasting — the deliberate abstention from food for defined periods — is simultaneously one of humanity's oldest sacred practices (observed in virtually every major religious tradition) and one of the most actively investi
M_5_19 — Mahabharata: Archaeological and Historical Evidence
The Mahabharata, attributed to the sage Vyasa, is one of the two great Sanskrit epics of ancient India — an encyclopedic text of approximately 200,000 verses (the longest epic poem in world literature, roughly ten times
M_3_05 — Serapeum of Saqqara Precision Stone Boxes
The Serapeum of Saqqara is an underground burial complex near Memphis, Egypt, where the sacred Apis bulls of the god Ptah-Sokar-Osiris were interred from at least the New Kingdom (c. 1400 BCE) through the Ptolemaic perio
M_2_01 — Anomalous Megaliths: Nan Madol, Baalbek, and Unexplained Engineering
Several ancient megalithic sites worldwide exhibit engineering achievements that remain difficult to fully explain with our current understanding of the tools, techniques, and organizational capacity available to their b
M_1_19 — Bog Bodies, Ritual Preservation, and Wetland Sacrifice
Bog bodies — human remains naturally preserved in the acidic, oxygen-poor, tannic environment of Northern European peat bogs — constitute one of archaeology's most dramatic categories of evidence. Over 1,000 bog bodies h
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_06 — Quranic Cosmology, Jinn, and Islamic Angelology
The Quran — Islam's primary sacred text (610–632 CE) — presents a rich cosmological framework that includes seven heavens and seven earths, a Throne of God (al-Arsh) upon the cosmic waters, a fully populated invisible re
A_4_01 — The Mahabharata: India's Epic of Cosmic War
The Mahabharata is the longest epic poem ever composed — at ~100,000 verses (1.8 million words), it is roughly 10 times the combined length of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Attributed to the sage Vyasa ("the compiler"), it
A_4_22 — Puranas: Hindu Cosmological Encyclopedia
The Puranas (Purāṇa, "ancient, old") are a vast corpus of Hindu sacred literature comprising 18 Mahāpurāṇas ("Great Puranas") and 18 Upapurāṇas ("Secondary Puranas"), totaling hundreds of thousands of verses (the Skanda
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_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_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_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
U_1_01 — Music Theory, Harmonic Series, and the Physics of Sound
Music theory intersects physics, mathematics, and human perception in ways that have fascinated thinkers since Pythagoras first demonstrated that pleasing musical intervals correspond to simple numerical ratios on a mono
U_1_03 — Music, Acoustics, and Consciousness in Ancient Traditions
The relationship between music, sound, and altered states of consciousness has been recognized in virtually every known culture — from Paleolithic bone flutes (~40,000 BCE, Hohle Fels, Germany) to Pythagorean harmonic th
U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples
Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo
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