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61 results for "Khmer Empire" — page 3 of 4
E_2_07 — The 4.2 Kiloyear Event — Bronze Age Climate Catastrophe
The 4.2 kiloyear event (~2200 BCE) was a severe, century-scale aridification episode that constitutes one of the most significant abrupt climate changes of the Holocene. Identified through speleothem, marine sediment, an
E_2_05 — Late Antiquity Little Ice Age (536–660 CE) and the Fall of Antiquity
The period 536–660 CE represents one of the most catastrophic environmental and civilizational crises in recorded human history, now termed the Late Antiquity Little Ice Age (LALIA). It began in 536 CE — described by his
E_5_08 — Justinianic Plague & Late Antique Pandemics
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) was the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis, striking the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's reconquest campaigns. A
E_5_10 — Justinianic Plague: The First Pandemic and the Fall of the Ancient World
The Justinianic Plague (541–750 CE) — the first historically documented pandemic of bubonic plague caused by Yersinia pestis — struck the Byzantine Empire at the height of Emperor Justinian I's attempted reconquest of th
INTERDOC_49 — Buddhist Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against Buddhist Traditions
Buddhist suppression spans 2,200 years across three continents and at least six distinct persecutor categories: (1) Zoroastrian/Sasanian — the priest Kartir (3rd century CE) suppressed Buddhism, Manichaeism, and Christia
ZC_2_18 — Societal Collapse — Tainter's Complexity Theory
Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies (1988) proposed one of the most influential theoretical frameworks for understanding why civilizations fail: societies collapse when the marginal returns on increasing c
D_2_13 — Palmyra: Crossroads of Civilizations
Palmyra (ancient Tadmor; Arabic: Tadmur) — an oasis city in the Syrian desert approximately 215 km northeast of Damascus — rose to extraordinary prominence between the first and third centuries CE as a caravan trade hub
B_4_11 — Apsaras and Gandharvas: Hindu-Buddhist Celestial Beings
Apsaras (apsarā, "moving in water" or "moving between waters of the clouds") and Gandharvas (gandharva) are complementary classes of celestial beings in Hindu and Buddhist cosmology — the divine dancers/nymphs and divine
B_3_01 — Dynastic Serpent Lineage Claims
Across every inhabited continent except Australia, royal houses claimed literal genealogical descent from serpent, dragon, or reptilian beings. These were not metaphors — they were formal genealogical claims inscribed in
B_3_08 — Garuda — Divine Eagle and Serpent Enemy
Garuda (Sanskrit: गरुड, Garuḍa) is the divine eagle of Hindu and Buddhist mythology — the king of birds, the eternal enemy of serpents (nāgas), and the mount (vāhana) of the god Viṣṇu. First attested in the Rig Veda (~15
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
F_2_12 — Saharan Trade Routes: Gold, Salt, and Knowledge Across the Desert
The trans-Saharan trade routes — a network of caravan trails crossing the world's largest hot desert (~9 million km²) between the Mediterranean coast and sub-Saharan West Africa — were among the most important long-dista
F_4_18 — Roman Britain and Beyond: Provincial Connectivity
Roman Britain (43–410 CE) — the province of Britannia — represents one of the most thoroughly documented examples of how Rome's imperial system connected a peripheral, previously fragmented region to continent-wide econo
W_4_18 — Tiwanaku and Wari: Pre-Inca Andean Empires
Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) and Wari (Huari) were the two dominant polities of the Andean Middle Horizon (c. 500–1000 CE), together representing the first large-scale expansionary states in South American history and the most
W_1_05 — Phoenician Civilization — Alphabet, Navigation, and the Purple Empire
The Phoenicians — coastal Canaanites inhabiting a narrow strip of the eastern Mediterranean (modern Lebanon, plus parts of Syria and Israel) — never built a military empire but achieved something arguably more consequent
W_1_16 — Hittite Empire: Anatolia's Forgotten Superpower
The Hittite Empire (c. 1650–1178 BCE) dominated Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia for nearly five centuries, rivaling Egypt, Babylon, and Assyria as one of the Late Bronze Age's four "Great Powers." Operating from their
W_1_18 — Byzantine Iconoclasm: Theology, Politics, and Image Destruction
Byzantine Iconoclasm (c. 726–843 CE) was the most consequential theological and political crisis in the Eastern Roman Empire's history, centered on whether the creation and veneration of religious images (eikōnes) of Chr
W_1_30 — Alexander the Great: Conquest, Hellenization, and Cultural Fusion
Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BCE), known as Alexander the Great, created the largest empire the ancient world had seen in just 13 years of campaigning — conquering from Greece to Egypt to the Indus Valley, covering
W_1_12 — Persian Civilization — Achaemenid, Parthian, and Sassanid
Persian civilization produced three of antiquity's greatest empires — the Achaemenid (550–330 BCE), Parthian (247 BCE–224 CE), and Sassanid (224–651 CE) — that together dominated the Middle East, Central Asia, and parts
W_5_22 — Uyghur Khaganate
The Uyghur Khaganate (744–840 CE) was a Turkic steppe empire centered in the Orkhon Valley (modern Mongolia) that fundamentally challenged the stereotype of nomadic empires as purely pastoral and destructive. Under Bögü
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