Ritual Practices

Ritual Practices

Book cover for "The Moys of New York and Shanghai" by Charlotte Brooks, featuring a historical portrait of a woman seated beside a small table, evoking the era and heritage central to The Moys of New York and Shanghai.
A preview of the latest book by Chinese history expert Charlotte Brooks
A collage of eight panels shows a hand pouring coffee from a French press into cups, each panel with a different background color.
Rituals serve psychological functions that go far beyond mere habit or tradition.
An ancient manuscript page featuring a large pentagram entwined with themes of necromancy, its red and black text evoking forbidden rituals. Surrounding it are mysterious symbols in various languages, while a faint illustration of a seated figure lingers on the right.
Grab a sword, a small plate, and a young child. We've got a demon to summon.
A painting of a group of people in the Tikal cave.
Tikal, one of the biggest cities the Maya ever built, was home to a vast and flourishing society.
Historians have been able to piece together a clear picture of how the average Roman citizen spent their waking hours.
Keywords: grief, flowers

Description: A depiction of a sorrowful woman surrounded by flowers, symbolizing the stages of grief.
Grief never ends. There is no closure, but there are things we can do to mitigate the feeling of loss.
A photo of a skull conjured through necromancy in a pile of dirt.
The Te’omim Cave in the Jerusalem Hills is filled with skulls and oil lamps — objects a new study says may have been used in dark rituals.
a spooky graveyard
Zombies aren't a modern-day obsession. Throughout history, fear of the undead led to bizarre burial rituals all over the world.
a statue of a person sitting in front of flowers.
Modern robotics are creating a kind of cultural paradox, where the best religion is the one that eventually involves no humans at all.
blue water lily illustration
Brian C. Muraresku, New York Times best-selling author of "The Immortality Key," unpacks ancient evidence for the widespread ritual use of psychoactive plants.
a black and white photo of an animal skull.
Researchers discovered something modern humans had never before seen—a flashy Neanderthal horn collection.
a golden statue of a person sitting in a lotus position.
Yoga is more than just standing on your head. It's about uniting with the divine.
Archaeologists turn to other scientific fields to fill in the picture of how victims lived and why they died.
Democratic freedom, rapturous religion, and newspapers created a hotbed for social experimentation in 19th-century America.
If you get married in South Africa, don't be surprised if someone shows up to the ceremony dragging along a smelly goat.
Scallop shells have accompanied pilgrims to and from Santiago de Compostela for centuries, for more than one reason
history of drugs
Long before tobacco arrived from the Americas, ancient civilizations in the Old World were getting high off hemp smoke and opium. 
Human sacrifice
Human sacrifice appears to be as old as humanity itself. Still, experts disagree on how and where the practice first originated.
inca human sacrifice
A toxicological study shows that the victims of human sacrifice consumed coca leaves and ayahuasca before they were killed, but not for reasons we originally thought.
stone jars
The Assam stone jars were described as early as 1929. Almost a century later, archaeologists still puzzle over their placement and purpose.
Stonehenge at sunset
Researchers speculate the famous monument was one of the world’s first solar calendars, possibly inspired by trade with ancient Egyptians. 
Japanese Shinto religion shrine
Online Shinto communities have existed since the birth of the internet as we know it.
A Santa Claus Christmas tree decoration drinking cola.
The German-American cartoonist introduced the idea that Santa Claus traveled with a sleigh and reindeer.