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.
87 results for "Roman pilum" — page 4 of 5
J_4_08 — Ancient Refrigeration and Ice Storage — Yakhchāl to Ice Houses
The ability to preserve cold — to store ice, cool water, and refrigerate food — was achieved by ancient civilizations through ingenious engineering solutions that exploited evaporative cooling, radiative cooling, thermal
J_4_18 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Aqueducts, Qanat & Water Management
Ancient hydraulic engineering represents some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring technological achievements. From the qanat systems of Persia (first millennium BCE) — underground galleries that transported gro
J_4_11 — Ancient Siege Technology: Engineering Warfare
Siege warfare — the art and engineering of attacking and defending fortified positions — drove some of the most sophisticated technological development in the ancient world. From the Assyrian Empire (which pioneered syst
Q_3_12 — Telescope Technology and Observational Cosmology
The history of astronomy is inseparable from the history of telescope technology, and each major advance in instrumentation has triggered transformative discoveries. Galileo (1609) turned a simple refracting telescope to
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_02 — Pompeii and Herculaneum — Frozen in Volcanic Time
The Roman cities of Pompeii (~11,000 population) and Herculaneum (~5,000 population) were destroyed and simultaneously preserved by the catastrophic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The eruption (now dated to October
D_2_04 — Baalbek — Colossal Stones of the Bekaa Valley
Baalbek (ancient Heliopolis — "City of the Sun") is one of the most monumental archaeological sites in the ancient world, located in the Bekaa Valley of eastern Lebanon at the foot of the Anti-Lebanon mountain range. The
B_4_05 — Ancestor Spirits and Ancestral Worship Traditions
Ancestor veneration is arguably the most universal religious practice in human history, attested in every inhabited continent from the Neolithic onward. It rests on a shared premise: the dead do not disappear but persist
Y_4_05 — Dreams, Dream Incubation, and Oneiric Knowledge
Dreams have been treated as a source of knowledge, prophecy, and divine communication in virtually every civilization. Ancient Mesopotamians maintained professional dream interpreters (šāʾilu) and compiled dream omen com
Y_1_03 — Classical Antiquity Entheogens Synthesis
This document examines Classical Antiquity Entheogens Synthesis, a topic within the Consciousness research area. Key areas of investigation include Were Ancient Mediterranean Religions Entheogenic?, Why This Matters, The
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
H_1_10 — Damnatio Memoriae and State-Directed Historical Erasure
Damnatio memoriae ("condemnation of memory") — the deliberate, systematic erasure of an individual, event, or idea from the historical record by a governing authority — is one of the oldest and most persistent forms of i
H_4_24 — Lost Technologies: Things Ancients Could Do That We Can't Replicate
Throughout history, civilizations developed technologies, materials, and techniques that were subsequently lost — and that modern science has struggled or failed to fully replicate. These "lost technologies" range from m
ZE_2_02 — Prophecy, Divination, and Oracular Traditions
Divination — the practice of obtaining knowledge of the unknown (future, hidden, distant) through non-ordinary means — is arguably the most universal religious/intellectual practice in human history. Every documented civ
F_2_11 — Ancient Spice and Incense Routes: Aromatic Trade Networks
The trade in aromatic substances — frankincense, myrrh, cinnamon, cassia, pepper, cloves, nutmeg, camphor, sandalwood, spikenard, and dozens of other plant-derived resins, barks, seeds, and oils — constitutes one of the
F_2_16 — Numismatic Evidence for Ancient Trade: Coins as Contact Proof
Coins — small, durable, precisely dated, and geographically attributable objects — are among the most powerful archaeological evidence for long-distance trade, cultural contact, and economic integration in the ancient wo
F_2_14 — Ancient Glass Bead Trade: From Mesopotamia to Sub-Saharan Africa
Glass beads are among the most archaeologically informative objects in the ancient world — small, durable, widely traded, and chemically distinctive — making them exceptional tracers of long-distance exchange networks sp
F_2_18 — Ancient Trade in Aromatics: Frankincense, Myrrh, and Sacred Resins
Frankincense (Boswellia sacra and related species) and myrrh (Commiphora myrrha) — aromatic tree resins harvested from the arid landscapes of southern Arabia (Oman's Dhofar region, Yemen's Hadramawt) and the Horn of Afri
F_4_23 — Salt Trade Routes: The White Gold of Antiquity
Salt — essential for human survival (minimum ~500 mg sodium/day), food preservation, animal husbandry, and chemical processing — was one of the most traded commodities in human history, generating dedicated trade routes,
F_4_03 — Ancient Maritime Technology and Naval Knowledge
The history of maritime technology reveals that ancient civilizations achieved levels of nautical engineering and navigational skill far exceeding common assumptions. Phoenician sailors may have circumnavigated Africa ~6
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