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.

226 results for "Roman Indian trade" — page 6 of 12

M_2_01 Forbidden Archaeology

M_2_01 — Anomalous Megaliths: Nan Madol, Baalbek, and Unexplained Engineering

Several ancient megalithic sites worldwide exhibit engineering achievements that remain difficult to fully explain with our current understanding of the tools, techniques, and organizational capacity available to their b

Nan Madol Pohnpei Micronesia Saudeleur dynasty basalt columns artificial islands
M_1_01 Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_01 — OOPArts Catalog (Out-of-Place Artifacts)

"Out-of-Place Artifacts" (OOPArts) are objects that appear anomalous for their age or context. This document catalogs 17 major OOPArts, individually rated. The critical finding: 4 are GENUINE (Tier 1) — real artifacts wi

OOPArt Antikythera Nazca Lines Piri Reis Quimbaya Iron Pillar
M_1_18 Verified Forbidden Archaeology

M_1_18 — Ancient Metallurgy Anomalies

Ancient metallurgical achievements frequently surpass what conventional archaeological narratives would predict for their time periods, leading to enduring debates about the sophistication of pre-industrial materials sci

ancient metallurgy Damascus steel wootz Delhi iron pillar Antikythera mechanism Roman concrete
A_1_11 Foundations

A_1_11 — Ebla Tablets and Third-Millennium Syrian Archives

The Ebla tablets comprise approximately 17,000 cuneiform tablets and fragments discovered at Tell Mardikh (ancient Ebla) in northwestern Syria between 1964 and 1975 by an Italian archaeological team led by Paolo Matthiae

Ebla Tell Mardikh cuneiform Eblaite third millennium BCE Syrian archives
A_4_13 Foundations

A_4_13 — Ramayana — India's Epic of Dharma, Exile, and Return

The Ramayana (रामायण, "Rama's Journey") is one of the two great Sanskrit epics of India, attributed to the poet Valmiki and composed in its earliest form during the 5th–4th century BCE, with later expansions through the

Ramayana Valmiki Rama Sita Ravana Hanuman
A_4_11 Foundations

A_4_11 — Upanishads — Core Vedantic Philosophy

The Upanishads (उपनिषद्, "sitting near" a teacher) are the concluding philosophical sections of the Vedas and the foundational texts of Vedantic philosophy. Composed between approximately 800–200 BCE, the principal (mukh

Upanishads Vedanta Brahman Atman Maya Chandogya
A_4_01 Foundations

A_4_01 — The Mahabharata: India's Epic of Cosmic War

The Mahabharata is the longest epic poem ever composed — at ~100,000 verses (1.8 million words), it is roughly 10 times the combined length of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Attributed to the sage Vyasa ("the compiler"), it

Mahabharata Kurukshetra Bhagavad Gita Krishna Arjuna Pandava
U_3_08 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_08 — Glassmaking and Stained Glass

Glass — an amorphous solid formed by rapidly cooling molten silica (SiO₂) with fluxes (soda/potash to lower melting temperature) and stabilizers (lime to prevent water solubility) — has been manufactured for ~5,000 years

glass glassmaking stained glass Murano blown glass Roman glass
U_3_17 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_3_17 — Culinary Arts and Food Culture: Cuisine as Cultural Expression

Food culture — the practices, beliefs, rituals, and technologies surrounding food production, preparation, and consumption — is one of the most fundamental expressions of human identity, connecting ecology, agriculture,

culinary-arts food-culture gastronomy fermentation spice-trade cuisine-evolution
U_3_18 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_18 — Ancient Metallurgy and Material Innovation

Ancient metallurgy — the extraction, alloying, and shaping of metals from raw ores — was among the most transformative technological achievements of human civilization, enabling new tools, weapons, agricultural implement

ancient-metallurgy bronze-age iron-smelting copper alloys bloomery
U_3_05 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_3_05 — Fashion and Costume History

Fashion — from Latin factio (making, doing) — encompasses clothing, accessories, and bodily presentation as systems of social communication, aesthetic expression, and cultural identity. Archaeological evidence: the oldes

fashion costume history clothing dress haute couture fashion industry
U_5_10 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_5_10 — Architecture as Cultural Expression: Sacred and Civic Space

Architecture — the design and construction of buildings and spatial environments — is simultaneously a practical art (shelter, function, structure) and a profound form of cultural expression, embodying a society's cosmol

architecture sacred space civic architecture temple cathedral mosque
U_2_03 Art, Music & Culture

U_2_03 — Pottery & Ceramics as Cultural Record

Pottery is the most abundant artifact category in archaeological sites worldwide — more pottery sherds have been excavated than any other class of human-made object — making ceramics the foundation of archaeological chro

pottery ceramics Jōmon Lapita Greek vases Chinese porcelain
U_2_11 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_2_11 — Landscape Painting: Shanshui, Hudson River, and the Natural Sublime

Landscape painting — the artistic representation of natural scenery — is among the most culturally revealing genres in the history of art, because the way a culture depicts nature reveals its deepest assumptions about th

landscape painting shanshui Chinese landscape Hudson River School sublime picturesque
U_2_17 Credible Art, Music & Culture

U_2_17 — Death Masks & Funerary Portraiture

Death masks — three-dimensional representations of a deceased person's face, typically created by molding plaster, wax, or metal directly over the corpse's features — represent one of humanity's oldest artistic and ritua

death mask funerary mask Mask of Agamemnon Tutankhamun Fayum portraits Roman imagines
U_2_07 Verified Art, Music & Culture

U_2_07 — Mosaic and Tile Art

Mosaic — images or patterns created from small pieces (tesserae) of stone, glass, ceramic, or other materials set in mortar — is one of the most durable art forms, with surviving examples spanning 4,000+ years. Origins:

mosaic tessera tile art Roman mosaic Byzantine mosaic Islamic tilework
X_1_02 Medicine & Healing

X_1_02 — Ayurveda: Indian Medical System

Ayurveda ("science of life") is one of the world's oldest continuously practiced medical systems, originating in the Indian subcontinent with textual roots in the Charaka Samhita (~2nd century BCE, internal medicine) and

Ayurveda dosha vata pitta kapha Charaka Samhita
W_4_02 World Civilizations

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

Polynesia Polynesian navigation star compass wayfinding Rapa Nui Easter Island
W_1_05 World Civilizations

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

Phoenicia Phoenician alphabet Tyre Sidon Byblos
W_1_07 World Civilizations

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

Etruscan Etruria Rasenna haruspicy liver divination Piacenza liver