RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
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.
3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 64 of 187
J_3_13 — Ancient Plumbing and Sanitation: Urban Water Systems
The management of clean water supply, wastewater removal, and human waste sanitation in ancient cities represents one of the most important — and most often underappreciated — technological achievements of the pre-modern
J_3_12 — Ancient Bridge and Road Engineering: Transport Infrastructure
Roads and bridges — the technologies that made overland travel, trade, military movement, and communication possible — represent some of the most enduring and practically significant engineering achievements of the ancie
J_3_14 — Ancient Surveying and Alignment: Precision Measurement
The ability to measure, align, and orient structures with precision was fundamental to ancient engineering — and ancient civilizations achieved levels of accuracy that remain impressive by modern standards. The Great Pyr
J_3_03 — Ancient Water Management — Qanat, Stepwell, Cistern, and Aqueduct
Ancient water management systems represent some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring engineering achievements, many of which remain functional after millennia. Persian qanats — underground gravity-fed channels t
J_3_11 — Ancient Lighthouse Technology: Pharos and Navigation Beacons
The Pharos of Alexandria — the lighthouse built on the island of Pharos at the entrance to Alexandria's harbor around 280 BCE under the Ptolemaic dynasty — was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World and the archet
J_3_10 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Water Systems of the Classical World
The engineering of water supply, storage, and distribution systems was among the highest achievements of ancient civilizations — and in several cases represents infrastructure that was not surpassed until the 19th or 20t
J_1_01 — Ancient Power Generation & Energy Systems
This document examines claims of ancient power generation and energy systems, from well-documented artifacts with debated functions (Baghdad Battery) to highly speculative theories (Great Pyramid as power plant). Each cl
J_1_08 — Ancient Optics, Lenses, and Light Technology
Ancient civilizations possessed a greater understanding of optics and light than is commonly recognized. Archaeological evidence includes polished crystal lenses (the Nimrud lens, ~750 BCE; Visby lenses, ~11th c. CE), so
J_1_02 — Vimanas & Ancient Flying Vehicles
Descriptions of flying vehicles appear across ancient traditions spanning India, the Middle East, Egypt, Greece, Norse, Chinese, Persian, and Celtic cultures. The most detailed are the Sanskrit vimana texts, particularly
J_1_10 — Electromagnetism and Ancient Awareness
Ancient civilizations observed and utilized several electromagnetic phenomena — including magnetism (lodestones), static electricity (amber), lightning, and electric fish — without developing a unified theory of electrom
J_1_13 — Ancient Acoustic Engineering: Resonance, Sound, and Sacred Architecture
Ancient acoustic engineering — the deliberate design and exploitation of sound propagation, resonance, and reverberation within architectural structures — has been documented across cultures spanning at least 6,000 years
J_1_12 — Vitrified Forts: Scotland's Melted Stone Walls
Across Scotland and parts of continental Europe, approximately 70-80 hillforts display a distinctive and enigmatic feature: their stone walls have been subjected to such intense heat — estimated at 1,000-1,200°C — that t
J_1_11 — Antikythera Mechanism and Ancient Computing Devices
The Antikythera Mechanism — recovered in 1901 from a Roman-era shipwreck off the Greek island of Antikythera (dated to c. 70–60 BCE by ceramic and coin evidence; the device itself likely constructed c. 150–100 BCE) — is
J_1_15 — Hero of Alexandria: Ancient Steam, Pneumatics, and Automation
Hero of Alexandria (Ἥρων ὁ Ἀλεξανδρεύς, c. 10–70 CE) was a Greek mathematician, engineer, and inventor working in Roman-era Alexandria who designed and documented an extraordinary range of mechanical devices — including
J_1_16 — Fire Piston: Ancient Pneumatic Ignition Technology
The fire piston (also called fire syringe) is a device that ignites tinder through the rapid compression of air in a sealed cylinder — a practical application of adiabatic compression heating that was independently inven
J_1_06 — 110 Hz Resonance and Acoustic Altered States
This document examines 110 Hz Resonance and Acoustic Altered States, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include The Hal Saflieni Hypogeum, The Oracle Chamber, Acoustic Measure
J_1_09 — Ancient Automata, Mechanical Devices, and Proto-Robotics
The history of automata — self-operating machines that mimic living beings or perform complex tasks — stretches back thousands of years, demonstrating that mechanical ingenuity is not a modern invention but a recurring f
J_1_14 — Ancient Acoustic Engineering: Sound Design in Sacred Architecture
Ancient builders across multiple civilizations engineered remarkable acoustic properties into their structures — from the whispering gallery effects of circular temples to the precisely calculated seating geometry of Gre
J_1_03 — Lost Material Science & Manufacturing
This document presents the strongest evidence that advanced ancient technology CAN be genuinely lost. Unlike speculative claims in J_1_01, the four major cases here are ALL supported by peer-reviewed science: Roman self-
J_1_05 — Sound, Vibration, and Creation
Across at least seven independent traditions with no documented contact, creation is attributed to sound, word, or vibration. The Egyptian god Ptah speaks the world into being. The Gospel of John opens with "In the begin
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