Difference between revisions of "Titanology"

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Titanology is the scholarly study of the myths of ancient [[titans]] and cyclopean sites associated with them.  Titanology is divided as an academic discipline between the traditionalists and the [[titanist]]s.  Traditionalists emphasize the body of original literature about titans as the substance of an ancient Geddamin civilization of some notoriety.  Titanists see the ancient accounts as originally truthful with errors and lacuna introduced through the long period of decline between the [[Antediluvian]] past and modern times.  Despite this philosophical difference, most of the sources for these two branches remain the same, including the [[Aturyanda]].
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Titanology is the scholarly study of the myths of ancient [[titans]] and cyclopean sites associated with them.  Titanology is divided as an academic discipline between the autochthonists and the [[titanist]]s.  Autochthonists emphasize the body of original literature about titans as the substance of an ancient Geddamin civilization of some notoriety.  Titanists see the ancient accounts as originally truthful with errors and lacuna introduced through the long period of decline between the [[Antediluvian]] past and modern times.  Despite this philosophical difference, most of the sources for these two branches remain the same, including the [[Aturyandakumi]].
  
 
=See Also=
 
=See Also=
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*[[Autochthonism]]
 
*[[Titanism]]
 
*[[Titanism]]
 
*[[Titanomachy]]
 
*[[Titanomachy]]
 
*[[Titans]]
 
*[[Titans]]
  
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[[Category:Academic Disciplines]]
 
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Latest revision as of 04:05, 8 July 2019

Titanology is the scholarly study of the myths of ancient titans and cyclopean sites associated with them. Titanology is divided as an academic discipline between the autochthonists and the titanists. Autochthonists emphasize the body of original literature about titans as the substance of an ancient Geddamin civilization of some notoriety. Titanists see the ancient accounts as originally truthful with errors and lacuna introduced through the long period of decline between the Antediluvian past and modern times. Despite this philosophical difference, most of the sources for these two branches remain the same, including the Aturyandakumi.

See Also