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.

3,721 results for "Rajaraja I" — page 66 of 187

J_2_18 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_18 — Ancient Textile Technology: Fibers, Looms, and Dyes

Textile production — spinning fiber into thread and weaving thread into cloth — is among the oldest and most consequential human technologies, predating pottery and metallurgy. [KEY FINDING] The oldest known textile frag

ancient-textiles loom-technology weaving natural-dyes flax-linen cotton
J_2_17 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_17 — Sub-Saharan African Iron Smelting

Sub-Saharan Africa has one of the longest and most complex traditions of iron smelting in the world, with evidence dating to at least 2500–2000 BCE in parts of Central and West Africa — potentially predating iron use in

iron-smelting sub-saharan-africa metallurgy bloomery carbon-steel nok-culture
J_2_16 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_16 — Ancient Adhesives: Glues, Resins, and Bonding Chemistry

Adhesives — substances that bond surfaces together — are among the oldest chemical technologies in human history, predating agriculture, metallurgy, and ceramics. The earliest known deliberately produced adhesive is birc

adhesive glue resin bitumen pitch tar
J_2_13 Credible Ancient Technology

J_2_13 — Egyptian Stone Vases: Precision Stonework

Among the most technically impressive and under-discussed artifacts of ancient Egypt are the hard-stone vessels — vases, bowls, jars, and containers carved from some of the hardest stones available: granite, diorite, bas

Egyptian stone vase granite diorite schist precision
J_2_04 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_04 — Ancient Ceramics and Pottery Technology

Ceramics represent humanity's oldest synthetic material, with the earliest known fired-clay vessels — Jōmon pottery from Japan — dated to c. 16,500 BP (Odai Yamamoto site; Kuzmin, 2006), predating agriculture by thousand

ceramics pottery kiln technology terra sigillata porcelain faience
J_2_24 Verified Ancient Technology

J_2_24 — Nazca Puquio Aqueduct System: Underground Hydraulic Engineering

The puquios of the Nazca (Nasca) region in southern Peru are a system of approximately 36 known underground aqueducts that tap into subterranean aquifers and channel water through tunnels and open trenches to irrigate on

Nazca puquio aqueduct underground hydraulic engineering spiral
J_5_02 Ancient Technology

J_5_02 — Chinese Ancient Technology — Seismograph, Compass, Printing, Paper

Ancient China produced a series of technological innovations that preceded comparable European developments by centuries or millennia, fundamentally shaping global civilization. The "Four Great Inventions" — papermaking

Four Great Inventions Zhang Heng seismoscope compass papermaking printing
J_5_16 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_16 — Mesoamerican Engineering: Hydraulics, Roads, and Urban Planning

Mesoamerican civilizations — Maya, Aztec, Zapotec, and others — developed sophisticated engineering systems without draft animals, iron tools, or the functional wheel, relying on human labor, stone tools, lime-based hydr

mesoamerican-engineering maya-hydraulics tenochtitlan sacbe chinampas aztec-aqueduct
J_5_14 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_14 — Greek Mathematical Instruments: Precision Tools

Ancient Greek civilization produced the most sophisticated mathematical and scientific instruments of the pre-modern world — devices that embody the Greek integration of theoretical mathematics with practical engineering

Greek instrument Antikythera compass ruler sundial
J_5_17 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_17 — Piezoelectric and Crystalline Technologies in Ancient and Modern Contexts

Piezoelectricity — the generation of electric charge from mechanical stress in certain crystalline materials, and conversely, the mechanical deformation of such materials under applied voltage — is one of the most import

piezoelectricity piezoelectric effect quartz crystal technology Jacques Curie Pierre Curie
J_5_06 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_06 — Ancient Measurement Standards and Metrology

Standardized measurement — of length, weight, volume, area, and angle — was fundamental to ancient engineering, trade, taxation, land surveying, and astronomical observation. Every major civilization developed metrologic

metrology measurement royal cubit stade stadion balance
J_5_04 Ancient Technology

J_5_04 — Ancient Communication Systems — Roads, Signals, and Scripts

Ancient communication systems achieved remarkable speed and coverage through integrated networks of roads, runners, signal towers, and symbolic encoding. The Roman road network spanned an estimated 85,000 km of paved hig

Roman roads Persian Royal Road Inca chasqui beacon towers hydraulic telegraph drum telegraphy
J_5_07 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_07 — Ancient Cryptography and Steganography

The concealment of information — through cryptography (transforming a message so it cannot be read without the key) and steganography (hiding the very existence of a message) — has ancient origins driven by military, dip

cryptography cipher steganography scytale Caesar cipher substitution cipher
J_5_18 Credible Ancient Technology

J_5_18 — Viking Sunstone and Ancient Navigation Instruments

Ancient civilizations developed remarkably sophisticated navigation instruments that enabled open-ocean voyaging, astronomical timekeeping, and geographic measurement millennia before GPS. The Norse sólarsteinn (sunstone

sunstone viking navigation calcite crystal polarization norse seafaring sólarsteinn
J_5_09 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_09 — Ancient Cartography and Mapmaking

The representation of geographical space in graphic form — cartography — is attested from deep antiquity and represents a fundamental intellectual achievement: the abstraction of three-dimensional lived space into two-di

cartography ancient map Ptolemy Geography Tabula Peutingeriana Imago Mundi
J_5_13 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_13 — Mesopotamian Technology Survey: Innovations of the Fertile Crescent

Mesopotamia — the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers (modern Iraq, northeastern Syria, southeastern Turkey, southwestern Iran) — is often called the "Cradle of Civilization," and the claim is justified not mere

Mesopotamia Sumer Babylon Assyria wheel plow
J_5_12 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_12 — Water Clocks: Clepsydrae and Ancient Timekeeping

The water clock — known by the Greek term clepsydra ("water thief") — was one of the most important timekeeping technologies of the ancient world, supplementing sundials by providing time measurement during the night, on

water clock clepsydra timekeeping horology Egyptian Greek
J_5_03 Ancient Technology

J_5_03 — Islamic Golden Age — Scientific and Technological Achievements

The Islamic Golden Age (roughly 8th-14th century CE) constitutes one of the most productive periods of scientific and technological advancement in human history, centered on the Abbasid caliphate's House of Wisdom (Bayt

Islamic Golden Age House of Wisdom Bayt al-Hikma Al-Khwarizmi algebra algorithm
J_5_10 Verified Ancient Technology

J_5_10 — Chinese Compass and Magnetic Navigation History

The magnetic compass — the first instrument to exploit an invisible natural force for practical human use — was a Chinese invention that underwent a centuries-long development from a ritual divination tool to the mariner

compass magnetic magnetism lodestone magnetite sinan
J_5_01 Ancient Technology

J_5_01 — Ancient Navigation Instruments — Astrolabe, Sunstone, and Star Compass

Ancient and medieval navigators developed remarkably sophisticated instruments and techniques for traversing oceans, deserts, and vast territories — millennia before GPS, chronometers, or modern charts. This document sur

navigation astrolabe sunstone star compass Polynesian stick chart