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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.

2,480 results for "Brú na Bóinne" — page 60 of 124

C_1_18 Credible Global Traditions

C_1_18 — The Wise Old Man / Mentor Archetype: Cross-Cultural Analysis

The Wise Old Man / Mentor archetype — identified by Carl Jung as the Senex or Mana personality — represents one of the most consistent character patterns in world mythology and narrative tradition. This figure appears as

wise-old-man mentor-archetype senex jung-archetype gandalf merlin
C_1_02 Global Traditions

C_1_02 — Trickster Archetype

The trickster is among the most universal figures in world mythology — a boundary-crossing, rule-breaking, shape-shifting entity who operates between categories (divine/human, order/chaos, life/death, male/female) and wh

trickster Loki Enki Coyote Anansi Prometheus
C_1_05 Global Traditions

C_1_05 — Dying-and-Rising Deity Pattern

This document examines Dying-and-Rising Deity Pattern, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Frazer's Original Formulation, The Critical Counter-Argument: Jonathan Z. Smit

dying and rising god resurrection Osiris Dumuzi Tammuz Baal
C_1_03 Global Traditions

C_1_03 — Mother Goddess / Earth Goddess Pattern

The Mother Goddess or Earth Goddess archetype represents one of the most ancient, geographically widespread, and archaeologically attested religious patterns in human history, with material evidence stretching from Upper

mother goddess earth goddess Gaia Pachamama Bhumi Devi Terra Mater
C_1_08 Global Traditions

C_1_08 — Twin Mythology — Duality, Doubling, and the Divine Pair

Twin mythology represents one of the most widely distributed narrative patterns in world religion — divine or semi-divine twins appear across every major cultural tradition: the Vedic Ashvins, Greek Dioscuri (Castor and

twins divine twins Ashvins Dioscuri Castor Pollux
C_1_12 Global Traditions

C_1_12 — Fire Symbolism, Sacred Flame, and the Theft of Fire

Fire is arguably the most transformative technology in human history — and the most universally sacralized natural phenomenon. The control of fire (~1.5 million years ago, Homo erectus) enabled cooking (which transformed

fire sacred flame Prometheus Agni Zoroastrian fire Atar
C_1_13 Global Traditions

C_1_13 — Sacred Mountains and the Cosmic Mountain

The sacred mountain is one of humanity's most enduring religious symbols — a vertical axis connecting earth and heaven that appears in virtually every major civilization. From Mount Meru at the center of Hindu-Buddhist-J

sacred mountain cosmic mountain axis mundi Mount Meru Mount Olympus Mount Sinai
C_1_07 Global Traditions

C_1_07 — Hero's Journey and the Monomyth

Joseph Campbell's "Hero's Journey" (1949) proposes that the world's mythological narratives share a single underlying structure — the monomyth — in which a hero departs from the ordinary world, undergoes initiatory trial

hero's journey monomyth Joseph Campbell departure initiation return
C_1_06 Global Traditions

C_1_06 — Sacred Trees, World Tree, and Axis Mundi

The sacred tree or world tree is arguably the single most universal symbol in human religious history — appearing independently in virtually every culture on every inhabited continent. As the axis mundi ("world axis"), t

axis mundi world tree Yggdrasil Bodhi tree Ashvattha Tree of Life
C_1_09 Global Traditions

C_1_09 — Storm God Pattern — Thunder, Dragon-Slaying, and Indo-European Myth

The storm god who defeats a chaos serpent/dragon (the Chaoskampf — "chaos-battle") is arguably the most widely distributed mythological motif across Indo-European cultures and beyond. Zeus defeats Typhon, Thor battles Jö

storm god thunder god chaoskampf dragon-slaying Indo-European Zeus
C_4_16 Global Traditions

C_4_16 — Zulu and Southern African Cosmologies

Zulu and broader Southern African cosmologies constitute one of the richest and most dynamic indigenous religious systems on the African continent, rooted in Bantu-speaking peoples' migrations into the region over the pa

Unkulunkulu Nomkhubulwane amadlozi isangoma inyanga Zulu creation
C_4_02 Global Traditions

C_4_02 — Pacific Island Serpent & Sky-Being Traditions

The Pacific Ocean encompasses over 165 million square kilometers — the largest single geographic feature on Earth — and yet every habitable island within it was settled by human navigators using knowledge systems of extr

Menehune Polynesian navigation Easter Island Moai Rongorongo Rainbow Serpent
C_4_06 Global Traditions

C_4_06 — Māori Mythology and Whakapapa

Māori mythology — the cosmological tradition of the Polynesian people of Aotearoa (New Zealand) — contains one of the world's most philosophically sophisticated creation narratives, moving from Te Kore (the Void/Potentia

Māori Aotearoa New Zealand whakapapa genealogy Ranginui
C_4_03 Global Traditions

C_4_03 — Yoruba Ogun and Divine Smiths Across Cultures

Every major culture on Earth attributes the invention of metalworking to a divine or supernatural being — a pattern so universal it must reflect something fundamental about the human relationship with metallurgy. The Yor

Ogun Yoruba orisha divine smith metalworking iron
C_4_08 Global Traditions

C_4_08 — Philippine Mythology and Anito Traditions

The Philippines — an archipelago of 7,641 islands in Southeast Asia — possesses one of the richest and most diverse mythological traditions in the world, encompassing hundreds of ethnolinguistic groups (Tagalog, Visayan,

Philippine mythology anito diwata bathala Austronesian babaylan
C_4_11 Global Traditions

C_4_11 — Berber/Amazigh Mythology and North African Traditions

The Amazigh (Berber) peoples represent one of North Africa's oldest continuous cultural traditions, with the Tamazight language family classified within the Afro-Asiatic phylum and archaeological presence documented acro

Berber Amazigh Tamazight North Africa Tassili n'Ajjer rock art
C_4_09 Global Traditions

C_4_09 — Pueblo, Hopi, and Ancestral Puebloan Traditions

The Pueblo peoples — including the Hopi, Zuni, Acoma, and Tewa communities — maintain among the most continuous cultural traditions in North America, with deep roots in the Ancestral Puebloan (formerly "Anasazi") civiliz

Pueblo Hopi Ancestral Puebloan Anasazi Four Worlds Ant People
C_4_14 Global Traditions

C_4_14 — Cherokee Cosmology and the Great Buzzard

Cherokee (Tsalagi) cosmology structures the universe as a three-tiered system: Galunlati (the Upper World of order, purity, and spiritual beings), Elohi (the Middle World of everyday human existence), and the Under World

Cherokee Tsalagi three-tier cosmos Selu Corn Mother Kanati
C_4_04 Global Traditions

C_4_04 — Tuareg and Saharan Serpent Traditions

The Sahara Desert — the world's largest hot desert at 9.2 million km² — was GREEN, wet, and densely inhabited for most of the last 11,000 years. The "African Humid Period" (AHP, ~11,000-5,000 BP) transformed the Sahara i

Tuareg Sahara Green Sahara African Humid Period Richat Structure Eye of Africa
C_4_10 Global Traditions

C_4_10 — Mapuche and Patagonian Traditions

The Mapuche people of south-central Chile and southwestern Argentina represent one of the most remarkable cases of indigenous resistance in world history — the only major American group never conquered by the Inca Empire

Mapuche Araucanians Patagonia Pillan Ngünechen Wekufe