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355 results for "flood myth" — page 6 of 18
B_4_11 — Apsaras and Gandharvas: Hindu-Buddhist Celestial Beings
Apsaras (apsarā, "moving in water" or "moving between waters of the clouds") and Gandharvas (gandharva) are complementary classes of celestial beings in Hindu and Buddhist cosmology — the divine dancers/nymphs and divine
B_4_19 — Smithing & Craft Deities: Divine Artisans Across Cultures
Smithing and craft deities represent one of the most consistent divine archetypes across cultures, reflecting the deep association between metallurgical skill and supernatural power in premodern societies. From Hephaestu
B_2_19 — Smithing and Craft Deities: Cross-Cultural Analysis
Smithing and craft deities occupy a distinctive mythological position across cultures: they are simultaneously among the most revered and most marginalized divine figures. Hephaestus (Greek), Vulcan (Roman), Ptah (Egypti
B_2_17 — Ancestral Heroes and Demigods: Heracles, Maui, Cú Chulainn
Ancestral heroes and demigods — beings of mixed divine and human parentage, or mortal heroes who achieve quasi-divine status through extraordinary deeds — represent a theological category that mediates between the fully
B_2_06 — Nephilim / Giants Comprehensive
"Nephilim" appears only twice in the Hebrew Bible (Genesis 6:4, Numbers 13:33), yet the concept of giant offspring from divine-human unions pervades virtually every ancient tradition worldwide. The Hebrew term carries am
B_2_20 — World Serpent Comparative: Jörmungandr, Ouroboros, Shesha, and Global Serpent Cosmologies
The World Serpent — a cosmic serpent that encircles, supports, or threatens the world — is among the most widespread and persistent motifs in human mythology, appearing independently in traditions separated by vast dista
B_1_25 — Ocean Deity: Sea Gods and Maritime Divine Figures
Ocean deities — gods, goddesses, and spirits who personify, control, or inhabit the sea — appear in every maritime and coastal culture on Earth, reflecting the ocean's dual nature as provider and destroyer. In Greek myth
B_1_13 — Creator Deities: Brahma, Ptah, Khnum, Prajapati, Bumba
Creator deities — gods who bring the cosmos, the earth, and living beings into existence — embody humanity's deepest theological reflections on origin, purpose, and the nature of existence itself. Cross-cultural survey r
B_1_20 — Trickster Deities: Cross-Cultural Comparison
The trickster is among the most widespread deity archetypes in world mythology, appearing independently across every inhabited continent. Characterized by cunning, boundary-crossing, shapeshifting, and the subversion of
B_1_17 — Underworld Deities: Ereshkigal, Hades, Hel, and the Rulers of the Dead
Every major world civilization has produced deities or supernatural rulers associated with death and the underworld. The Sumerian Ereshkigal (attested from the 3rd millennium BCE), the Greek Hades (first named in the Ili
B_3_06 — Leviathan — Biblical Sea Monster and Chaos Serpent
Leviathan (Hebrew: לִוְיָתָן, Livyātān) is the great sea monster of the Hebrew Bible — a multi-headed, fire-breathing chaos serpent whom only YHWH can subdue. Appearing in Job 41 (the longest single monster description i
B_3_12 — Phoenix and Firebird: Resurrection Bird Across Cultures
The Phoenix — a mythical bird that dies in fire and is reborn from its own ashes — is among the most enduring and widespread symbols of death, regeneration, and immortality in world mythology. The concept appears in dist
B_3_17 — Nāga Kings: Serpent Deities in Buddhist, Hindu, and Southeast Asian Tradition
The Nāga (Sanskrit: नाग) — divine serpent beings with the power to assume human, serpentine, or hybrid forms — constitute one of the most pervasive and enduring supernatural categories across South and Southeast Asian re
B_3_11 — Kitsune, Huli Jing, and Fox Spirits in East Asian Tradition
Fox spirits — beings that have cultivated supernatural powers through longevity, meditation, or absorbing celestial energy — represent one of the most richly developed and culturally significant categories of supernatura
H_2_05 — History Rewriting and Textbook Controversies
The rewriting of history through state-controlled textbooks and curricula is one of the most persistent and globally consequential forms of knowledge suppression. This document examines four major case studies: the "Lost
P_5_19 — Mircea Eliade: Sacred and Profane, Eternal Return, History of Religions
Mircea Eliade (1907–1986), Romanian-born historian of religions, was arguably the most influential scholar of comparative religion in the 20th century. His core concepts — hierophany (the manifestation of the sacred in o
F_4_04 — Post-Catastrophe Knowledge Preservation
If advanced civilization existed before the Younger Dryas impact (~12,800 years ago), how could its knowledge survive total civilizational collapse? This is not an idle question — it is the central engineering problem of
I_3_08 — Roswell Incident: Historical Analysis
The Roswell incident (early July 1947) is the most culturally significant and extensively investigated event in UAP history. The core facts are not disputed: in early July 1947, rancher W.W. "Mack" Brazel discovered unus
M_5_18 — Mound Builders: Adena, Hopewell, Mississippian, and the Erasure of Indigenous Achievement
The "Mound Builders" refers to the diverse Indigenous North American cultures that constructed elaborate earthen mounds across eastern North America from approximately 3700 BCE (Watson Brake, Louisiana) through European
M_3_12 — Stone Softening Claims: Mythological and Chemical Analysis
Among the most intriguing and elusive claims in alternative archaeology is the idea that ancient Andean peoples possessed a botanical or chemical method of "softening" stone — reducing hard stone (particularly the andesi
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