RESEARCH BASE

Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence

3,721 documents 34 sections 43,623 citations 34,854 keywords indexed 4 evidence tiers

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.

895 results for "Red Sea ports" — page 6 of 45

M_5_16 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_5_16 — Dead Sea Scrolls: Discovery, Contents, and Suppressed Interpretations

The Dead Sea Scrolls comprise approximately 981 manuscripts discovered between 1947 and 1956 in eleven caves near Khirbet Qumran on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea in the West Bank. The scrolls date from the 3rd cent

dead sea scrolls qumran essenes nag hammadi copper scroll temple scroll
M_1_05 Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_05 — Phaistos Disc — Undeciphered Minoan Artifact

The Phaistos Disc is a fired clay disc approximately 15 cm in diameter, impressed on both sides with a spiral arrangement of 241 signs comprising 45 distinct symbols, discovered in 1908 by Italian archaeologist Luigi Per

Phaistos Disc Minoan Crete undeciphered stamped movable type
A_2_04 Foundations

A_2_04 — Dead Sea Scrolls Expanded

The Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS), discovered between 1947–1956 in 11 caves near Qumran on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea, comprise over 900 manuscripts dating from the 3rd century BCE to the 1st century CE. Beyond their w

Dead Sea Scrolls Qumran Book of Giants Copper Scroll Watchers 4Q534
A_2_12 Verified Foundations

A_2_12 — Pistis Sophia: Gnostic Cosmology of Light and Redemption

The Pistis Sophia ("Faith Wisdom") is a major Gnostic text preserved in the Askew Codex (British Library, Add. MS 5114), a 4th–5th century CE Coptic manuscript containing four books of post-resurrection teachings attribu

Pistis Sophia Gnostic Coptic aeons archons light
A_4_14 Foundations

A_4_14 — Shan Hai Jing (Classic of Mountains and Seas)

The Shan Hai Jing (山海經, "Classic of Mountains and Seas") is one of the most extraordinary texts of the ancient Chinese literary corpus — an encyclopedic compendium of mythological geography, zoology, mineralogy, and cosm

Shan Hai Jing Classic of Mountains and Seas Chinese mythology Kunlun Hundun Bifang
A_3_17 Credible Foundations

A_3_17 — Punic & Carthaginian Sacred Texts

The Punic (Western Phoenician) civilization, centered on Carthage (modern-day Tunisia, founded traditionally in 814 BCE by emigrants from Tyre), was one of the great Mediterranean powers for over six centuries — yet its

Carthage Punic Phoenician Tanit Baal Hammon tophet
U_1_02 Art, Music & Culture

U_1_02 — Sacred Music — Chant, Raga, and Acoustic Theology

Sacred music — sound deliberately structured for ritual, worship, or spiritual transformation — appears in every documented human culture. From the elaborately rule-governed Quranic recitation (tajwid) to the microtonal

sacred music Gregorian chant Byzantine chant Vedic chanting raga gamelan
U_3_04 Art, Music & Culture

U_3_04 — Fermentation, Brewing & Sacred Beverages

Fermentation — the biochemical conversion of sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide by yeast and bacteria — is among humanity's oldest biotechnologies, with evidence of intentional fermented beverages dating to the Jiahu r

fermentation brewing beer wine mead sake
U_5_20 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_20 — Sacred Geography: Landscape, Pilgrimage, and Ritual Space

Sacred geography is the study of how human cultures invest physical landscapes with spiritual, cosmological, and mythological significance — transforming terrain into hierophanic space where the divine intersects the mat

sacred geography sacred landscape pilgrimage ritual space axis mundi hierophany
U_5_24 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_24 — Totemism: Animal Ancestors, Sacred Kinship, and Species Identity

Totemism is a system of belief and social organization in which human groups maintain spiritual, ancestral, or kinship relationships with natural species, objects, or phenomena (the "totem"). First documented systematica

totemism totem animal ancestor clan identity lévi-strauss durkheim
U_5_26 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_5_26 — Sacred Drumming, Rhythm & Percussion Traditions

Drumming is arguably the oldest and most universal musical practice, with archaeological evidence stretching to the Neolithic period and ethnographic documentation across every inhabited continent. From Siberian shamanic

sacred drumming frame drum shamanic drum percussion rhythm trance
U_5_28 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual

Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance

hierophany mircea eliade sacred space theophany axis mundi sacred geography
U_2_14 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_2_14 — Minimalism in Art: Reduction, Silence, and Essential Form

Minimalism — emerging in the early 1960s in New York as a radical reaction against the emotional excess of Abstract Expressionism — reduced art to its most fundamental elements: simple geometric forms, industrial materia

minimalism minimal art Donald Judd Dan Flavin Carl Andre Sol LeWitt
U_4_01 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_01 — Sacred Dance — Ritual Movement from Shamanism to Sufi Whirling

Sacred dance represents one of humanity's oldest and most widespread forms of religious expression, predating written language and formal theology. From the Sufi sema (whirling ceremony) of the Mevlevi order to the Lakot

sacred dance Sufi whirling sema Bharatanatyam Sun Dance shamanic dance
U_4_08 Art, Music & Culture

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

garden design sacred landscape paradise Persian garden Zen garden Hanging Gardens
U_4_06 Art, Music & Culture

U_4_06 — Architecture as Sacred Art — Cathedrals, Mosques, Temples

Sacred architecture represents humanity's most ambitious attempt to materialize the divine in built form — encoding theological doctrines, cosmological models, mathematical principles, and ritual programs into stone, woo

sacred architecture cathedral mosque temple Chartres Hagia Sophia
U_4_05 Art, Music & Culture

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

food culture food taboos sacred cuisine kosher halal soma
X_5_29 Verified Medicine & Healing

X_5_29 — Epidemiology and Pandemics: Disease, Civilization, and the Biology of Outbreaks

Epidemiology — the study of disease distribution and determinants in populations — has fundamentally shaped human history, often more decisively than warfare or politics. The Antonine Plague (165–180 CE, likely smallpox)

epidemiology pandemics infectious disease plague smallpox influenza
X_1_08 Medicine & Healing

X_1_08 — Water & Healing: Hydrotherapy, Sacred Springs, Mineral Waters

Water has been the most universally venerated healing substance across human civilizations — from Mesopotamian purification rituals (3000 BCE) through Greek thermae, Roman bathhouse networks (900+ documented across the e

hydrotherapy balneotherapy thermal springs mineral water sacred springs holy well
W_1_19 Credible World Civilizations

W_1_19 — Hanseatic League: Medieval Trade Networks and Urban Power

The Hanseatic League (die Hanse) — a confederation of merchant guilds and market towns in northwestern and central Europe — dominated Baltic and North Sea trade from the mid-12th through the mid-17th century, at its peak

hanseatic-league hanse medieval-trade kontor lubeck bergen