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400 results for "bard tradition" — page 3 of 20
C_3_01 — Global Flood Stories
Over 500 independent flood traditions exist worldwide, spanning Mesopotamian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Greek, Aboriginal, Mesoamerican, and dozens of other cultures. The oldest written accounts — the Sumerian Eridu Gene
C_2_02 — The Flood-Serpent Connection
Across 14 major flood traditions — Sumerian, Babylonian, Biblical, Hindu, Chinese, Maya, Aboriginal, Greek, Norse, and others — a consistent dual-force structure emerges: a sky/authority deity destroys, while a serpent/w
ZF_3_06 — Polynesian and Indigenous Ocean Knowledge
Indigenous and Pacific Islander communities have accumulated millennia of empirical ocean knowledge — encompassing navigation, marine ecology, fisheries management, weather prediction, tidal patterns, and ocean-land rela
T_5_21 — Art of Memory: Mnemonic Systems from Simonides to Memory Palaces
The art of memory (ars memoriae) — systematic techniques for encoding, storing, and retrieving information through spatial and imagistic mnemonics — is among humanity's oldest cognitive technologies. The Method of Loci (
Y_2_01 — NDEs, OBEs & Consciousness Studies
Modern consciousness research — NDEs in cardiac arrest patients, children's past-life memories, and DMT-induced entity encounters — produces data that intersects remarkably with ancient descriptions of death journeys, as
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
F_4_04 — Post-Catastrophe Knowledge Preservation
If advanced civilization existed before the Younger Dryas impact (~12,800 years ago), how could its knowledge survive total civilizational collapse? This is not an idle question — it is the central engineering problem of
M_4_04 — Library Destructions and Lost Knowledge Catalogs
The deliberate or accidental destruction of libraries and knowledge repositories is one of humanity's recurring tragedies. From the Library of Alexandria (whose gradual destruction eliminated perhaps 400,000–700,000 scro
M_2_13 — Nan Madol — Pacific Megalithic Mystery
Nan Madol — a complex of 92 artificial islets built on a coral reef flat off the southeastern shore of Pohnpei (Federated States of Micronesia) — is the only ancient city in the world built entirely on water, and one of
A_1_15 — Mesopotamian Wisdom Literature
Mesopotamian wisdom literature — spanning over 2,000 years from Sumerian proverb collections (c. 2500 BCE) to late Babylonian philosophical dialogues (c. 500 BCE) — represents humanity's earliest sustained written engage
A_1_13 — Hittite Treaties and Legal Tradition: From Hattusa to International Law
The Hittite Empire (c. 1650–1178 BCE), based at Hattusa (modern Boğazköy, Turkey), produced one of the richest legal and diplomatic archives of the ancient world. Over 30,000 cuneiform tablet fragments recovered from the
A_2_13 — Sibylline Oracles: Prophecy Between Judaism and Paganism
The Sibylline Oracles (Oracula Sibyllina) are a collection of 12 surviving books (numbered 1–8, 11–14, with books 9–10 lost) of prophetic poetry in Greek hexameter verse, composed between the 2nd century BCE and the 7th
A_4_05 — Rig Veda and Vedic Cosmology
The Rig Veda (Sanskrit: ṛgveda, "Praise-Knowledge") is the oldest surviving religious text of the Indo-European world — composed in archaic Sanskrit between approximately 1500–1200 BCE (with some hymns possibly older). I
A_4_19 — Maya Codices: Dresden, Madrid, and Paris Manuscripts
The Maya codices are the only surviving pre-Columbian books from the Maya civilization — folding-screen manuscripts made of bark paper (huun) covered in lime plaster and painted with hieroglyphic texts and illustrations
A_4_36 — Hopi Prophecy Tablets & Oral Traditions
The Hopi (Hopituh Shi-nu-mu — "The Peaceful People") of northeastern Arizona possess one of the most elaborately structured prophetic cosmological systems among indigenous North American cultures — a system that encompas
A_3_08 — Celtic Mythology and Druidic Tradition
Celtic mythology encompasses the religious narratives, cosmological concepts, and heroic legends of the Celtic-speaking peoples who dominated much of western and central Europe from the Hallstatt period (c. 800 BCE) thro
A_3_14 — West African Oral Traditions
West African oral traditions constitute one of the world's richest and most extensively documented systems of non-written knowledge transmission. The griot (or djeli in Mande languages) tradition of the Manding, Wolof, F
A_3_19 — Basque Mythology & Creation Traditions
Basque mythology represents one of Europe's oldest surviving pre-Indo-European belief systems, preserved through the oral traditions of the Basque people (self-named Euskaldunak) of the western Pyrenees (the Basque Count
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_06 — Folk Music and Ethnomusicology
Folk music broadly refers to traditional music transmitted orally within communities, typically without known individual composers, evolving through collective performance practice. Ethnomusicology is the academic study
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