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1,472 results for "churning of sea of milk" — page 6 of 74
A_2_15 — Sefer Yetzirah: Book of Formation and Jewish Mystical Cosmology
The Sefer Yetzirah (Sēfer Yĕṣîrāh, "Book of Formation" or "Book of Creation") is the earliest extant work of Jewish mystical-cosmological speculation, a compact and cryptic treatise — only 1,300–2,500 words depending on
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
A_2_11 — Book of Jubilees: Angelic Calendar and Retold Genesis
The Book of Jubilees (also called Leptogenesis or "Little Genesis") is a Second Temple Jewish text (composed c. 160–150 BCE) that retells the narrative of Genesis 1 through Exodus 12 as a revelation dictated to Moses on
A_2_10 — Gospel of Thomas: Sayings Gospel and Hidden Wisdom
The Gospel of Thomas is a collection of 114 sayings (logia) attributed to "the living Jesus," preserved in a complete Coptic translation within the Nag Hammadi library (Codex II, discovered 1945 in Upper Egypt) and in fr
A_2_03 — Book of Enoch & the Watchers
The Book of Enoch (1 Enoch) is one of the most detailed ancient texts describing interactions between non-human beings ("Watchers") and humanity. Excluded from most biblical canons by the 4th century CE, it was preserved
A_2_20 — Odes of Solomon: Early Christian Mystical Hymns
The Odes of Solomon are a collection of 42 hymns dating to the late 1st or early 2nd century CE, composed originally in Syriac (or possibly Greek), making them the earliest surviving Christian hymnal. Rediscovered in 190
A_4_04 — The Kojiki: Japan's Record of Ancient Matters
The Kojiki ("Record of Ancient Matters"), completed in 712 CE, is the oldest surviving literary work in Japan and the primary source for Shinto mythology and the divine origin of the Japanese imperial line. Compiled by Ō
A_4_39 — Egyptian Book of the Dead: Funerary Texts, Afterlife Geography, and Judgment of the Soul
The "Book of the Dead" (Pert em Heru, "Coming/Going Forth by Day") is a corpus of ancient Egyptian funerary texts — spells, hymns, incantations, and illustrated vignettes — designed to guide the deceased through the Duat
A_4_03 — Popol Vuh: The Maya Book of Creation
The Popol Vuh ("Book of the Community" or "Book of Counsel") is the most important surviving mythological and historical text of the ancient Americas. A K'iche' Maya creation narrative, it was written down in the Latin a
A_4_10 — I Ching (Yijing) — The Classic of Changes
The I Ching (易經, Yìjīng, "Classic of Changes") is one of the oldest continuously used texts in human history, originating from Shang dynasty oracle bone divination (~1200 BCE) and formalized during the Western Zhou perio
A_4_16 — Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol) and Bon Tradition
The Bardo Thodol (བར་དོ་ཐོས་གྲོལ, "Liberation Through Hearing in the Intermediate State"), popularly known as the Tibetan Book of the Dead, is a collection of funerary texts attributed to the 8th-century Indian master Pa
A_3_03 — Egyptian Book of the Dead and Funerary Literature
The Egyptian Book of the Dead (Pert em Hru — "Coming Forth by Day") is a collection of ~200 magical spells, hymns, and instructions designed to guide the deceased through the Duat (underworld) and into eternal life in th
A_3_01 — Kebra Nagast: The Glory of Kings (Ethiopian)
The Kebra Nagast ("Glory of Kings") is a 14th-century CE Ethiopian text — written in Ge'ez, the classical Ethiopian liturgical language — that serves as the foundation myth of the Solomonic dynasty of Ethiopia and the sp
A_3_10 — Egyptian Coffin Texts: Middle Kingdom Afterlife Spells
The Egyptian Coffin Texts are a corpus of approximately 1,185 funerary spells inscribed primarily on the interior surfaces of rectangular wooden coffins during Egypt's Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE, Dynasties 11–13).
A_3_12 — Epic of Sundiata: Mandinka Foundation Myth and West African Oral Epic
The Epic of Sundiata (Sunjata, Soundjata, Son-Jara) is the foundational oral epic of the Mandinka (Manding) peoples of West Africa, narrating the life of Sundiata Keita (c. 1217–1255 CE), the historical founder of the Ma
U_1_01 — Music Theory, Harmonic Series, and the Physics of Sound
Music theory intersects physics, mathematics, and human perception in ways that have fascinated thinkers since Pythagoras first demonstrated that pleasing musical intervals correspond to simple numerical ratios on a mono
U_3_11 — Board Games and Games of Strategy
Board games — structured games played on a marked surface (board) with pieces, dice, cards, or tokens according to defined rules — are among the oldest and most culturally revealing human artifacts. Ancient games: the Ro
U_3_10 — Printmaking and the History of the Book
Printmaking — the creation of images or text by transferring ink from a prepared surface to paper or other substrate — and the history of the book are intertwined stories of how humans multiplied information. Relief prin
U_5_31 — Chauvet Cave: Paleolithic Art and the Origins of Human Visual Expression
The Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc Cave (Grotte Chauvet), discovered on December 18, 1994, by speleologists Jean-Marie Chauvet, Éliette Brunel, and Christian Hillaire in the Ardèche gorge of southern France, contains some of the old
X_5_20 — Medical Regulation: Clinical Trials, Drug Safety, and the History of Oversight
Medical regulation — the system of laws, agencies, and protocols governing drug development, clinical trials, and medical device approval — evolved over centuries from virtually no oversight to the elaborate global frame
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