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3,046 results for "hi no tama" — page 41 of 153
W_4_07 — Amazonian Traditions, Plant Teachers, and the Ayahuasca Complex
The Amazon Basin — the world's largest tropical rainforest — is home to approximately 400 indigenous groups with an extraordinary tradition of plant-based knowledge unmatched anywhere on Earth. At the center of this trad
W_4_02 — Polynesian Navigation and Rapa Nui
The Polynesian settlement of the Pacific Ocean — the largest migration in human prehistory — colonized virtually every inhabitable island across 16 million km² of open ocean using non-instrument navigation techniques of
W_4_06 — Dreamtime Songlines and Aboriginal Navigation
Songlines (also called dreaming tracks or song paths) are one of humanity's most extraordinary intellectual achievements — a vast network of songs that simultaneously encode mythological narrative, geographic navigation
W_4_05 — Iroquois Confederacy and the Great Law of Peace
The Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse), commonly known as the Iroquois Confederacy, created one of the world's oldest continuous systems of participatory governance, uniting five — later six — nations under the Grea
W_4_09 — Indonesian Megalithic Living Traditions — Nias, Sumba, Toraja
Indonesia harbors what may be the world's most significant collection of living megalithic traditions — cultures that continue to quarry, transport, and erect massive stone monuments using methods broadly analogous to th
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_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_10 — Greek Religion as Lived Practice
Greek religion as actually practiced bore little resemblance to the sanitized "mythology" familiar from modern retellings. It was not a coherent theological system but a complex ecology of ritual obligations embedded in
W_1_23 — Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB)
The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB, c. 8800–6500 BCE) represents one of the most transformative periods in human history — the era when small communities of early farmers in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia scaled up into
W_1_09 — Canaanite Religion Beyond Ugarit — El, Asherah, and Ba'al in the Iron Age
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
W_1_29 — Sumerian Civilization: Origins of Urban Society, Writing, and the First Cities
Sumerian civilization, flourishing in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) from c. 4500 to 1900 BCE, produced the world's first cities (Uruk, Ur, Eridu, Lagash, Nippur), the first writing system (cuneiform), the first codi
W_1_21 — Minoan Civilization: Detailed Analysis
The Minoan civilization of Crete (c. 2700–1450 BCE) was the first advanced civilization in Europe and one of the most remarkable cultures of the Bronze Age Mediterranean. Named by archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans (1851–194
W_1_14 — Carthage: Punic Civilization, Navigation, and Tophet
Carthage (from Phoenician Qart-ḥadašt — "New City") was a Phoenician colony founded c. 814 BCE on the coast of modern-day Tunisia that grew into the dominant maritime and commercial power of the western Mediterranean — a
W_1_22 — Hittite Empire: Detailed Analysis
The Hittite Empire (c. 1650–1178 BCE) was one of the great powers of the Late Bronze Age, dominating Anatolia (modern Turkey) and rivaling Egypt, Babylon, and Assyria as a peer kingdom in the international system of the
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_27 — Minoan Civilization & Thalassocracy
The Minoan civilization — Europe's first advanced literate society — flourished on Crete and surrounding Aegean islands from approximately 2700–1450 BCE, predating Mycenaean Greece and exercising maritime dominance (thal
W_1_07 — Etruscan Religion and Mystery Traditions
The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna) — who dominated central Italy from ~800–300 BCE before being absorbed by Rome — possessed one of antiquity's most elaborate divination and religious systems, yet their language remains
W_2_22 — Southeast Asian Classical Kingdoms: Srivijaya, Majapahit, Champa & Pagan
The classical kingdoms of Southeast Asia (c. 3rd–15th centuries CE) — maritime empires and agrarian states spanning from Sumatra to Vietnam — represent some of history's most sophisticated polities, yet remain underrepre
W_2_18 — Majapahit Empire
The Majapahit Empire (1293–c. 1527 CE) was the last major Hindu-Buddhist state in Java and arguably the most powerful maritime polity in Southeast Asian history. At its zenith under King Hayam Wuruk (r. 1350–1389) and hi
W_2_15 — Champa Kingdom: Southeast Asian Hindu-Buddhist Maritime Power
The Kingdom of Champa (c. 192–1832 CE) was an Austronesian-speaking, Hindu-Buddhist maritime polity occupying the central and southern coast of modern-day Vietnam — a configuration that placed it at the crossroads of the
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