Subfolder: W1_Ancient_Near_East_Mediterranean | Parent Section: W — World Civilizations
Document Count: 15 | Last Updated: March 14, 2026
Category Tags: world-civilizations, religion, civilization-profile, ritual-practice, civilization, serpent-traditions, ancient-near-east, creation-myths
This subfolder contains 15 documents covering Ancient Near East Mediterranean within the World Civilizations section. Topics include Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism, Minoan Civilization, Bull Cult, and the Labyrinth, Harappan / Indus Valley Civilization — Mohenjo-daro, Undeciphered Script, and the Pashupati Seal, Persian Civilization — Achaemenid Empire, Magi, and Cosmic Kingship, Phoenician Civilization — Alphabet, Navigation, and the Purple Empire and 10 more topics. Key themes span qanat, child sacrifice, thalassocracy, achaemenid, persepolis, cyrus cylinder.
qanat, child sacrifice, thalassocracy, achaemenid, persepolis, cyrus cylinder, darius, sassanid, ahura mazda, phoenician, carthage, punic, navigation, tanit, baal hammon
| Doc ID | Title | Key Focus | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| W_1_01 | Olmec Civilization and Serpent-Jaguar Symbolism | The Olmec civilization (~1500–400 BCE), centered in the tropical lowlands of Mexico's Gulf Coast (modern Veracruz… | [4/5] |
| W_1_02 | Minoan Civilization, Bull Cult, and the Labyrinth | The Minoan civilization (c. | [3/5] |
| W_1_03 | Harappan / Indus Valley Civilization — Mohenjo-daro, Undeciphered Script, and the Pashupati Seal | The Indus Valley / Harappan Civilization (c. | [3/5] |
| W_1_04 | Persian Civilization — Achaemenid Empire, Magi, and Cosmic Kingship | The Persian Empire (550–330 BCE under the Achaemenids, revived 224–651 CE under the Sassanids) created the… | [3/5] |
| 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… | [3/5] |
| W_1_06 | Nabataean Civilization — Petra, Water Engineering, and Dushara | The Nabataeans were an Arab people who built one of the ancient world's most astonishing civilizations in the… | [3/5] |
| W_1_07 | Etruscan Religion and Mystery Traditions | The Etruscans (self-named Rasenna) — who dominated central Italy from ~800–300 BCE before being absorbed by… | [1/5] |
| W_1_08 | Anatolian Mother Goddess — Çatalhöyük, Cybele, and Pre-Classical Worship | Anatolia (modern Turkey) is arguably the single most important region for understanding the origins of… | [3/5] |
| W_1_09 | Canaanite Religion Beyond Ugarit — El, Asherah, and Ba'al in the Iron Age | While Ugaritic literature (→… | [2/5] |
| W_1_10 | Greek Religion as Lived Practice | Greek religion as actually practiced bore little resemblance to the sanitized "mythology" familiar from modern… | [5/5] |
| W_1_11 | Roman Religion, Augury, and Imperial Cult | Roman religion was not a personal faith system but a civic technology — a complex apparatus of ritual obligations,… | [5/5] |
| W_1_12 | Persian Civilization — Achaemenid, Parthian, and Sassanid | Persian civilization produced three of antiquity's greatest empires — the Achaemenid (550–330 BCE), Parthian (247… | [4/5] |
| W_1_13 | Mesopotamian Daily Life and Urban Civilization | Beyond the well-known temples, ziggurats, and royal inscriptions, the cuneiform record preserves an extraordinarily… | [4/5] |
| W_1_14 | Carthage: Punic Civilization, Navigation, and Tophet | Carthage (from Phoenician Qart-ḥadašt — "New City") was a Phoenician colony founded c. | [3/5] |
| W_1_15 | Elamite Civilization: Susa, Proto-Writing, and Indo-Iranian Bridge | Elam — one of the oldest civilizations in the world, contemporary with and frequently interacting with Sumer,… | [2/5] |
Documents in this subfolder follow the project's 4-tier evidence system:
Tier distribution in this subfolder: 1: 2 docs, 2: 2 docs
Each document includes a Quick Summary, tiered claims with specific evidence,
counter-arguments, bibliography, and cross-references to related documents across the corpus.
Subfolder summary auto-generated from corpus analysis. Last Updated: March 14, 2026