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929 results for "rock art" — page 33 of 47
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
U_4_05 — Food as Culture — Sacred Cuisine & Taboos
Food is never merely nutrition — it is universally the medium through which societies construct identity, enforce social boundaries, communicate with the divine, encode ecological knowledge, mark rites of passage, and ex
W_4_04 — Mississippian Culture — Cahokia, Mound Builders, and the Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
Cahokia, located near present-day East St. Louis, Illinois, was the largest pre-Columbian settlement north of Mexico, reaching a peak population of 20,000 or more around 1050-1200 CE. The site features Monks Mound — the
W_4_00 — Americas Pacific Indigenous: Subfolder Summary
W_4_03 — Andean Civilizations — Chavín, Nazca, Tiwanaku, Caral
The Andean region produced one of the world's great independent civilizations — arguably the most underappreciated. From Caral (~3000 BCE, contemporary with Egyptian pyramids and Sumerian Ur) to the Inca (conquered by Sp
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
W_1_04 — Persian Civilization — Achaemenid Empire, Magi, and Cosmic Kingship
The Persian Empire (550–330 BCE under the Achaemenids, revived 224–651 CE under the Sassanids) created the largest empire the ancient world had seen — stretching from Libya to India, governing ~44% of the world's populat
W_0_00 — World Civilizations: Section Summary
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
W_3_10 — Benin Kingdom: Bronzes, Walls, and Political Sophistication
The Kingdom of Benin (c. 1180–1897 CE) — centered on Benin City (Edo) in present-day southern Nigeria — was one of the most politically sophisticated and artistically accomplished states in precolonial Africa. Ruled by a
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_5_03 — Mongol Tengrism and Central Asian Shamanism
Tengrism is one of the world's oldest continually practiced sky-god religions, centered on Möngke Tengri ("Eternal Blue Sky") as the supreme cosmic deity. Originating among the Turkic-Mongol peoples of the Central Asian
W_5_00 — Steppe European Global: Subfolder Summary
ZH_1_07 — Antikythera Mechanism: World's First Astronomical Computer
The Antikythera mechanism is a corroded mass of bronze gears and inscribed plates recovered in 1901 from an ancient shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera, dated to approximately 60–70 BCE (though the mechanism it
C_1_02 — Trickster Archetype
The trickster is among the most universal figures in world mythology — a boundary-crossing, rule-breaking, shape-shifting entity who operates between categories (divine/human, order/chaos, life/death, male/female) and wh
C_1_08 — Twin Mythology — Duality, Doubling, and the Divine Pair
Twin mythology represents one of the most widely distributed narrative patterns in world religion — divine or semi-divine twins appear across every major cultural tradition: the Vedic Ashvins, Greek Dioscuri (Castor and
C_1_01 — Cross-Cultural Patterns & Synthesis
This synthesis document maps the universal serpent/reptilian being across 13 major civilizations, finding that all 13 originally depicted serpent figures positively — as teachers, civilizers, and wisdom-keepers. The nega
C_1_00 — Universal Archetypes Patterns: Subfolder Summary
C_4_17 — Pygmy (Mbuti/BaAka) Forest Cosmology
The forest-dwelling peoples of Central Africa — commonly grouped under the exonym "Pygmy" but comprising distinct populations including the Mbuti of the Ituri Forest (Democratic Republic of Congo), the BaAka of the Centr
C_4_09 — Pueblo, Hopi, and Ancestral Puebloan Traditions
The Pueblo peoples — including the Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, and Tewa communities — maintain among the most continuous cultural traditions in North America, with deep roots in the Ancestral Puebloan (formerly "Anasazi") civiliz
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