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 "i ching" — page 29 of 187
W_2_27 — Jōmon Civilization: Japan's 14,000-Year Pre-Agricultural Complex Society
The Jōmon culture of Japan (~14,000–300 BCE) represents one of the most extraordinary challenges to conventional models of human development. [KEY FINDING] Jōmon people produced the world's oldest known pottery (radiocar
W_2_18 — Majapahit Empire
The Majapahit Empire (1293–c. 1527 CE) was the last major Hindu-Buddhist state in Java and arguably the most powerful maritime polity in Southeast Asian history. At its zenith under King Hayam Wuruk (r. 1350–1389) and hi
W_2_02 — Angkor Wat, Khmer Cosmology, and Hindu-Buddhist Temple Mountains
Angkor Wat is the largest religious monument ever built — a 162.6-hectare temple complex in northwestern Cambodia, constructed under King Suryavarman II (r. ~1113-1150 CE) as a Hindu temple dedicated to Vishnu. It repres
W_2_21 — The Khmer Empire and Angkor
The Khmer Empire (~802–1431 CE), centered in present-day Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and spatially extensive states in Southeast Asian history, and its capital Angkor was the largest preindustrial city on Eart
W_2_15 — Champa Kingdom: Southeast Asian Hindu-Buddhist Maritime Power
The Kingdom of Champa (c. 192–1832 CE) was an Austronesian-speaking, Hindu-Buddhist maritime polity occupying the central and southern coast of modern-day Vietnam — a configuration that placed it at the crossroads of the
W_2_17 — Khmer Empire & Angkor Hydraulics
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE), centered in modern Cambodia, was one of the most powerful and technologically sophisticated states in Southeast Asian history. Its capital, Greater Angkor, covered approximately 1,000 k
W_2_09 — Ainu Mythology and Bear Ceremonialism
The Ainu are the Indigenous people of Hokkaido (northern Japan), Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, whose cosmological system centers on the concept of kamuy — divine spirits that inhabit all natural phenomena and voluntar
W_2_20 — Vedic Civilizations
The Vedic period (c. 1500–500 BCE) represents the formative era of Indian civilization, encompassing the composition of the Rig Veda (the oldest surviving Indo-European literary text), the development of the fire sacrifi
W_2_23 — Pyu City-States
The Pyu city-states (c. 200 BCE – 1050 CE) were the earliest urbanized polities in mainland Southeast Asia, located in the dry zone and Irrawaddy River valley of modern Myanmar (Burma). Three major walled cities — Beikth
W_2_28 — Gupta Empire: Classical India's Golden Age
The Gupta Empire (c. 320–550 CE) is widely regarded as the "Golden Age" of classical India — a period of extraordinary achievement in literature, science, mathematics, philosophy, art, and architecture that set the cultu
W_2_13 — Sogdian Civilization: Silk Road Merchants and Cultural Brokers
The Sogdians — an Eastern Iranian people centered in the fertile valleys of the Zerafshan and Kashkadarya rivers (modern Uzbekistan and Tajikistan — the cities of Samarkand and Bukhara) — were the quintessential merchant
W_2_12 — Khmer Empire Beyond Angkor: Jayavarman, Hydraulics, and Collapse
The Khmer Empire (c. 802–1431 CE) — centered in present-day Cambodia and extending across much of mainland Southeast Asia — was one of the most powerful and sophisticated civilizations in world history, yet its true scal
W_2_11 — East Asian Ancestor Veneration Systems
Ancestor veneration — the ritual maintenance of relationships with deceased family members through offerings, prayers, and commemorative ceremonies — constitutes the deepest continuous layer of East Asian religious pract
W_2_25 — Tocharian Civilization & Tarim Basin
The Tocharian civilization of the Tarim Basin (modern Xinjiang, China) represents one of the great puzzles of Indo-European studies: a population speaking the easternmost Indo-European languages — Tocharian A (Agnean) an
W_2_16 — Srivijaya Maritime Empire
Srivijaya (c. 650–1377 CE) was a Malay Buddhist thalassocracy centered on the island of Sumatra (modern Indonesia) that dominated maritime trade across the Strait of Malacca and the South China Sea for over 500 years. At
W_5_02 — Celtic and Druidic Traditions
The Celtic peoples — a linguistic and cultural group spread across Europe from Anatolia to Ireland between roughly 800 BCE and 400 CE — developed one of the most sophisticated pre-literate knowledge systems in the Wester
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
W_5_14 — Mapuche Civilization: Resistance, Cosmovision, and Araucanian Culture
The Mapuche ("People of the Land") — also historically known by the Spanish term Araucanians — are an indigenous people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina who achieved something nearly unique in the histor
W_5_25 — Silk Road & Ancient Trade Networks
The Silk Road — a term coined by German geographer Ferdinand von Richthofen in 1877 (Seidenstraße) — refers to the interconnected network of overland and maritime trade routes linking China, Central Asia, the Indian subc
W_5_12 — Lapita Culture: Pacific Colonization and Pottery Horizon
The Lapita cultural complex (c. 1600/1500–500 BCE) was the foundational maritime culture that colonized Remote Oceania — transforming the Pacific from a barrier into a highway and ultimately giving rise to the Polynesian
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