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656 results for "Adi Granth" — page 22 of 33

U_3_06 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_06 — Woodworking and Carpentry Traditions

Woodworking — the shaping of wood for functional and aesthetic purposes — is among the oldest human technologies, predating metalworking by millennia. Archaeological evidence: the Schöningen spears (Germany, ~300,000 yea

woodworking carpentry joinery timber framing Japanese joinery shipbuilding
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_26 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_26 — Sacred Drumming, Rhythm & Percussion Traditions

Drumming is arguably the oldest and most universal musical practice, with archaeological evidence stretching to the Neolithic period and ethnographic documentation across every inhabited continent. From Siberian shamanic

sacred drumming frame drum shamanic drum percussion rhythm trance
U_2_10 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_2_10 — Animation: From Zoetrope to CGI and Global Traditions

Animation — the creation of the illusion of movement through the rapid display of sequential images — is both a technology and an art form with roots extending from pre-cinema optical toys to contemporary computer-genera

animation zoetrope phenakistoscope Disney rotoscope cel animation
U_2_01 Art, Music & Culture

U_2_01 — Color Symbolism and Chromatic Traditions Across Cultures

Color is both a physical phenomenon (wavelengths of electromagnetic radiation) and a cultural construction, with different societies dividing the visible spectrum in strikingly different ways. Berlin and Kay's landmark 1

color symbolism Berlin and Kay basic color terms liturgical colors chakra synesthesia
U_4_04 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_04 — Masks & Performance Traditions Worldwide

Masks are among the most universal cultural artifacts in human history, appearing independently on every inhabited continent and serving functions spanning religious ritual, ancestor communication, healing, social contro

masks masquerade performance ritual theater Greek tragedy Noh
X_1_06 Medicine & Healing

X_1_06 — Shamanic Healing Traditions: Global Survey

Shamanic healing — the use of altered states of consciousness, ritual action, and spirit interaction for therapeutic purposes — represents humanity's oldest and most globally distributed medical tradition. Found on every

shamanic healing shamanism soul retrieval extraction healing divination trance healing
W_4_07 World Civilizations

W_4_07 — Amazonian Traditions, Plant Teachers, and the Ayahuasca Complex

The Amazon Basin — the world's largest tropical rainforest — is home to approximately 400 indigenous groups with an extraordinary tradition of plant-based knowledge unmatched anywhere on Earth. At the center of this trad

ayahuasca DMT Banisteriopsis caapi Psychotria viridis Shipibo icaros
W_4_08 World Civilizations

W_4_08 — Native American Great Plains and Vision Quest Traditions

The Great Plains of North America — stretching from the Canadian prairies to Texas, from the Rocky Mountain foothills to the Mississippi — sustained some of the most mobile, ceremonially rich, and militarily sophisticate

Lakota Sioux Cheyenne Crow Comanche Pawnee
W_1_07 World Civilizations

W_1_07 — Etruscan Religion and Mystery Traditions

The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna) — who dominated central Italy from ~800–300 BCE before being absorbed by Rome — possessed one of antiquity's most elaborate divination and religious systems, yet their language remains

Etruscan Etruria Rasenna haruspicy liver divination Piacenza liver
W_3_01 World Civilizations

W_3_01 — Bantu Cosmology, Migration, and Iron Traditions

The Bantu expansion (~3000 BCE–500 CE) is one of the largest and most consequential human migrations in history: speakers of proto-Bantu languages from the Nigeria-Cameroon borderland spread across most of sub-Saharan Af

Bantu Bantu expansion Bantu migration Niger-Congo proto-Bantu iron smelting
W_5_01 World Civilizations

W_5_01 — Scythian / Steppe Nomad Traditions and Animal Style Art

The Scythians (c. 900–200 BCE) were a confederation of Iranian-speaking steppe nomads who dominated the Eurasian grasslands from the Black Sea to the Altai Mountains. Known primarily through Herodotus (Book IV) and spect

Scythian Scythia steppe nomads Pazyryk kurgan Kurgan hypothesis
ZH_3_17 Credible Archaeoastronomy

ZH_3_17 — Amazonian Astronomical Traditions

Amazonian indigenous astronomical traditions represent some of the least-documented but most sophisticated non-Western star knowledge systems, integrating stellar observation with ecological management, seasonal agricult

Amazonian-astronomy ethnoastronomy Desana Barasana dark-cloud-constellations Pleiades-calendar
ZH_5_08 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_5_08 — Solstice and Equinox Traditions: Seasonal Markers Across Cultures

The solstices (longest and shortest days) and equinoxes (equal day and night) are the four cardinal points of the solar year — astronomically defined by the Sun reaching its maximum/minimum declination (solstices) or cro

solstice equinox seasonal marker winter solstice summer solstice Yule
ZH_5_22 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_5_22 — Indian Astronomical Traditions: From Vedanga Jyotisha to the Kerala School

Indian astronomical traditions represent one of the longest continuous programs of celestial observation and mathematical modeling in human history, spanning from Vedic-period naked-eye observations (c. 1500–500 BCE) thr

Indian astronomy Vedanga Jyotisha Aryabhata Surya Siddhanta nakshatras Kerala school
ZH_2_05 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_05 — Japanese and Korean Astronomical Traditions

The astronomical traditions of Japan and Korea developed in close dialogue with Chinese astronomy — but were far from mere copies. Both civilizations adapted Chinese astronomical models, instruments, and calendrical meth

Japanese astronomy Korean astronomy Tenmon Cheomseongdae Nihon Shoki guest stars
ZH_2_11 Credible Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_11 — Southeast Asian Astronomy: Thai, Burmese, Khmer, and Indonesian Traditions

The astronomical traditions of Southeast Asia — Thailand (Siam), Myanmar (Burma), Cambodia (Khmer), Java, Bali, and the wider Malay-Indonesian archipelago — represent a distinctive synthesis of Indian, indigenous, and (i

Southeast Asian astronomy Thai astronomy Burmese astronomy Khmer astronomy Indonesian astronomy Angkor Wat
ZH_2_02 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_02 — Indian Astronomical Traditions: Aryabhata to Jantar Mantar

Indian astronomy (Jyotish Shastra) constitutes one of the most mathematically sophisticated astronomical traditions of the pre-modern world, spanning from the Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE) through the classical siddhānt

Indian astronomy Jyotish Aryabhata Brahmagupta Bhaskara Varahamihira
ZH_2_16 Verified Archaeoastronomy

ZH_2_16 — Islamic Astronomical Tables (Zīj): Precision Observation and Computational Tradition from Baghdad to Samarkand

The zīj (Arabic: زيج, plural zījāt) is the Islamic astronomical handbook tradition — comprehensive sets of numerical tables and computational instructions enabling astronomers to calculate the positions of the Sun, Moon,

zij Islamic astronomy astronomical tables al-Khwarizmi Ptolemy planetary theory
C_4_08 Global Traditions

C_4_08 — Philippine Mythology and Anito Traditions

The Philippines — an archipelago of 7,641 islands in Southeast Asia — possesses one of the richest and most diverse mythological traditions in the world, encompassing hundreds of ethnolinguistic groups (Tagalog, Visayan,

Philippine mythology anito diwata bathala Austronesian babaylan