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228 results for "Minoan religion" — page 7 of 12
ZH_4_11 — Astronomical Mythology: Why Stars Were Named and Storied
Every known human culture has projected stories, characters, and meaning onto the stars — transforming patterns of light into mythological landscapes inhabited by gods, heroes, animals, and cosmic forces. Astronomical my
C_1_17 — Shadow Archetype in Mythology
The shadow archetype — the dark, rejected, and unconscious aspect of the personality — was theorized by Carl Gustav Jung as a universal feature of the human psyche that manifests across mythological traditions as the dar
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
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
C_1_00 — Universal Archetypes Patterns: Subfolder Summary
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
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
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
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,
C_4_00 — Regional Mythology Traditions: Subfolder Summary
C_5_14 — Malagasy Traditions and Madagascar's Unique Heritage
Madagascar presents one of the most extraordinary cultural puzzles on Earth: an island off the coast of East Africa whose primary language is Austronesian, most closely related to the Ma'anyan language of southeastern Bo
C_5_07 — Hittite and Hurrian Mythology — Kumarbi Cycle
The Hittite and Hurrian mythological traditions, preserved on cuneiform tablets from Hattusa (modern Boğazköy, Turkey), provide the crucial "missing link" between Mesopotamian and Greek mythology. The Kumarbi Cycle — a H
C_5_12 — Baltic Mythology — Lithuanian and Latvian Sacred Traditions
- [Quick Summary](#quick-summary)
C_5_28 — Ritual Sacrifice: Blood, Fire, and the Sacred Exchange
Ritual sacrifice — the deliberate destruction or offering of something valuable (animal, human, agricultural produce, wealth) to a divine or supernatural power — is one of the most universal and oldest documented human p
C_5_24 — Sacred Kingship: Divine Rulers Across Civilizations
Sacred kingship — the institution by which a ruler derives authority not from popular consent or military power alone but from a divine mandate, descent, or identity — is one of the most pervasive political-religious str
C_5_00 — Regional Analytical Traditions: Subfolder Summary
C_0_00 — Mythology & Cross-Cultural: Section Summary
C_3_03 — Sacred Kingship and Divine Rulership
Almost every civilization in recorded history has believed that their rulers held power through a divine connection. This is not mere propaganda — it is one of the most universal patterns in human culture, emerging indep
C_3_11 — Sacred Sexuality, Hieros Gamos, and Fertility Cults
Sacred sexuality — the ritual enactment of sexual union as a cosmologically generative act — represents one of the most widespread and most misunderstood categories of ancient religious practice. The Sumerian hieros gamo
C_3_10 — Sacrifice and Offering Across Civilizations
Sacrifice — the ritual destruction or relinquishment of something valuable to establish, maintain, or restore a relationship with sacred powers — is arguably the most universal and foundational religious act in human his
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