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.
2,379 results for "Ark of the Covenant" — page 41 of 119
ZH_3_12 — South American Archaeoastronomy Beyond the Inca
While the Inca astronomical tradition (the ceque system, the Intihuatana, and the dark-cloud constellations of the Milky Way) is the most thoroughly studied in South America, numerous pre-Inca and non-Inca civilizations
ZH_5_08 — Solstice and Equinox Traditions: Seasonal Markers Across Cultures
The solstices (longest and shortest days) and equinoxes (equal day and night) are the four cardinal points of the solar year — astronomically defined by the Sun reaching its maximum/minimum declination (solstices) or cro
ZH_5_14 — Dark Sky Preservation: Light Pollution and Heritage Night Skies
Light pollution — the excessive, misdirected, or obtrusive artificial light that brightens the night sky — has transformed humanity's relationship with the stars more profoundly than any development since the invention o
ZH_2_10 — Astronomical Alignments in Medieval Architecture: Cathedrals and Mosques
Medieval cathedrals and mosques — two of the most ambitious architectural traditions in history — both incorporate astronomical considerations into their design, though in different ways and for different reasons. Christ
ZH_1_20 — Egyptian Decans & Star Clocks: Timekeeping by the Night Sky
The Egyptian decan system — a method of dividing the night sky into 36 stellar groups (decans) whose sequential heliacal risings (first visible appearance on the eastern horizon just before sunrise) marked ten-day period
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_14 — Dumézil's Trifunctional Hypothesis: Indo-European Social Structure in Myth
Georges Dumézil (1898–1986) was a French comparative mythologist and philologist who proposed that the mythologies, religions, and social institutions of Indo-European-speaking peoples share a common tripartite ideologic
C_1_20 — The Shadow Archetype in World Mythology
The Shadow archetype, articulated by Carl Gustav Jung as a fundamental component of the psyche, manifests across world mythologies as the dark double, the rejected brother, or the monstrous other that heroes must confron
C_1_03 — Mother Goddess / Earth Goddess Pattern
The Mother Goddess or Earth Goddess archetype represents one of the most ancient, geographically widespread, and archaeologically attested religious patterns in human history, with material evidence stretching from Upper
C_1_19 — The Triple Goddess Pattern: Maiden, Mother, Crone
The Triple Goddess — typically expressed as Maiden, Mother, and Crone corresponding to the waxing, full, and waning moon — represents one of the most influential archetypes in comparative mythology and modern Paganism, t
C_4_16 — Zulu and Southern African Cosmologies
Zulu and broader Southern African cosmologies constitute one of the richest and most dynamic indigenous religious systems on the African continent, rooted in Bantu-speaking peoples' migrations into the region over the pa
C_5_09 — Georgian/Caucasian Mythology and the Prometheus Connection
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_5_21 — Serpent-DNA Visual Parallels: The Double Helix in Ancient Iconography
Entwined serpent imagery — two serpents coiling around a central axis — appears across civilizations separated by vast distances and millennia: the caduceus of Greek Hermes (two serpents around a winged staff), the Nehus
C_5_26 — World Age Doctrine: Cycles of Creation and Destruction
The World Age Doctrine — the belief that cosmic time is divided into successive ages or epochs, each ending in destruction and giving way to the next — is one of the most widespread cosmological frameworks in human thoug
C_5_28 — Ritual Sacrifice: Blood, Fire, and the Sacred Exchange
Ritual sacrifice — the deliberate destruction or offering of something valuable (animal, human, agricultural produce, wealth) to a divine or supernatural power — is one of the most universal and oldest documented human p
C_5_11 — Slavic Mythology — Perun, Veles, and the World Tree
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_5_34 — Greek Religion: Gods, Ritual, and the Sacred in Ancient Greece
Greek religion was not a unified creed but a diverse ecology of practices, beliefs, and institutions that varied by polis, period, and social context. At its core was polytheistic ritual practice — animal sacrifice, liba
C_5_23 — Threshold Guardian: The Universal Gatekeeper Archetype
The Threshold Guardian — a supernatural figure stationed at the boundary between profane and sacred space, between the known world and the unknown, between life and death — is one of the most universal archetypes in worl
C_3_15 — The Labyrinth as Ritual Pathway: From Minoan Crete to Modern Practice
The labyrinth is one of humanity's most enduring symbols, with examples spanning from Bronze Age Cretan coins (c. 1200 BCE) to Scandinavian stone labyrinths, medieval cathedral floor designs, and contemporary therapeutic
C_3_07 — Initiation Rites, Coming of Age, and Ritual Transformation
Initiation rites — structured rituals transforming an individual from one social/spiritual status to another — are among the most universal and ancient human cultural practices. Arnold van Gennep (1909) identified the th
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