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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.
1,867 results for "Cyrus the Great" — page 71 of 94
W_4_16 — Taíno Civilization: The Indigenous Caribbean Before and After Contact
The Taíno were the dominant indigenous people of the Greater Antilles (Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Cuba, and the Bahamas) at the time of European contact in 1492. Descended from Arawakan-speaking migrants who origi
W_4_08 — Native American Great Plains and Vision Quest Traditions
The Great Plains of North America — stretching from the Canadian prairies to Texas, from the Rocky Mountain foothills to the Mississippi — sustained some of the most mobile, ceremonially rich, and militarily sophisticate
W_1_31 — Uruk: The First City and the Dawn of Urban Civilization
Uruk (modern Warka, southern Iraq) was the world's first major city and the birthplace of multiple transformative innovations: writing, monumental architecture, bureaucratic administration, and large-scale urbanization.
W_1_05 — Phoenician Civilization — Alphabet, Navigation, and the Purple Empire
The Phoenicians — coastal Canaanites inhabiting a narrow strip of the eastern Mediterranean (modern Lebanon, plus parts of Syria and Israel) — never built a military empire but achieved something arguably more consequent
W_1_25 — Dilmun: Sacred Land of the Persian Gulf
Dilmun (Sumerian: NI.TUK.KI; also spelled Telmun) was an ancient civilization and trading polity centered on present-day Bahrain, with extensions to Failaka Island (Kuwait), the eastern Arabian coastal region, and possib
W_1_29 — Sumerian Civilization: Origins of Urban Society, Writing, and the First Cities
Sumerian civilization, flourishing in southern Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) from c. 4500 to 1900 BCE, produced the world's first cities (Uruk, Ur, Eridu, Lagash, Nippur), the first writing system (cuneiform), the first codi
W_1_28 — Bronze Age Collapse: The 1177 BCE Systems Failure and Mediterranean Civilizational Crisis
The Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1200–1150 BCE) destroyed or severely diminished every major civilization in the eastern Mediterranean within approximately 50 years — the Hittite Empire, Mycenaean Greece, the Egyptian New Kin
W_3_21 — The Songhai Empire: West Africa's Largest Pre-Colonial State
The Songhai Empire (c. 1464–1591 CE) was the largest state in African history, controlling approximately 1.4 million km² of West Africa at its peak under Askia Muhammad I (r. 1493–1528). Rising from the declining Mali Em
W_5_35 — I Ching: The Book of Changes, Divination, and Binary Philosophy
The I Ching (Yìjīng, 易經, "Classic of Changes") is among the oldest continuously used texts in human history, with roots extending to the Western Zhou dynasty (c. 1000–750 BCE) and legendary attribution to Fu Xi (trigrams
W_5_26 — Chachapoya: Warriors of the Clouds
The Chachapoya ("People of the Clouds") were a pre-Inca civilization inhabiting the cloud forests of northeastern Peru's Amazonas region (~800–1470 CE). Known for their monumental fortress of Kuelap — a massive stone cit
W_5_32 — Taíno People of the Caribbean
The Taíno were the dominant indigenous people of the Greater Antilles (Hispaniola, Cuba, Jamaica, Puerto Rico) and the Bahamas at the time of Christopher Columbus's arrival on October 12, 1492 — making them the first ind
W_5_34 — Late Bronze Age Collapse: Systems Failure in the Ancient Mediterranean
Between approximately 1200 and 1150 BCE, every major civilization in the Eastern Mediterranean collapsed or suffered catastrophic decline within a single generation. The Mycenaean palatial system, the Hittite Empire, the
W_5_37 — The House of Wisdom: Baghdad and the Islamic Golden Age of Knowledge
The House of Wisdom (Bayt al-Ḥikma) was a major intellectual institution in Baghdad during the Abbasid Caliphate (est. c. 762 CE), reaching its zenith under Caliph al-Maʾmūn (r. 813–833 CE). While its exact nature — libr
W_5_16 — The Venetian Republic: Maritime Empire, Statecraft, and Cultural Innovation
The Most Serene Republic of Venice (Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia) endured for 1,100 years (697–1797 CE), making it one of the longest-lived republics in history. Founded as a refuge community on marshy lagoon island
W_5_27 — Valdivia Culture: Oldest Pottery in the Americas
The Valdivia culture (~3500–1800 BCE) of coastal Ecuador produced the oldest known pottery in the Americas, making it one of the earliest complex societies in the Western Hemisphere. Discovered by Emilio Estrada in 1956
W_5_36 — Shang Dynasty: Bronze Age China and the Foundations of Chinese Civilization
The Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE) is the earliest Chinese dynasty confirmed by both archaeological evidence and written records, representing the foundational period of Chinese civilization. Centered at Anyang (Yinxu,
W_5_21 — Iron Age Transition in the Mediterranean (1200–500 BCE)
The Iron Age transition (c. 1200–500 BCE) in the Mediterranean represents one of history's most transformative periods: the collapse of the interconnected Late Bronze Age palatial economies (Mycenaean Greece, Hittite Emp
W_5_13 — Mississippian Decline: Cahokia Collapse and Abandonment Theories
Cahokia — the largest pre-Columbian city north of Mexico, located in the American Bottom floodplain of the Mississippi River near modern-day St. Louis, Missouri/East St. Louis, Illinois — rose rapidly around 1050 CE to b
W_5_30 — Lambayeque and Sicán Culture: Lords of the Northern Coast
The Lambayeque (or Sicán) culture (~750–1375 CE) was a wealthy, metallurgically advanced civilization of Peru's north coast that succeeded the Moche and preceded the Chimú in the Lambayeque Valley. Discovered through sys
W_5_06 — Siberian Shamanism and the Origin of the Word 'Shaman'
Siberian shamanism is the mother tradition from which the very word "shaman" enters Western scholarship — derived from the Tungusic (Evenki) term šaman. This vast, diverse tradition spans the taiga and tundra from the Ur
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