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29 October 2025

  • 17:5217:52, 29 October 2025 Dozenal Primer Inscription (hist | edit) [14,524 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Inscription proposed to encode a compact base-12 arithmetic register}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2025}} The '''Dozenal Primer Inscription''' is the working name for a long geometric-glyph text proposed to encode a compact dozenal (base-12) arithmetic register. The inscription is transcribed with a neutral code of sign classes (for example A01, B04, C03 and a slash-like divider P01) that mirrors the notation first used to document th...")

21 October 2025

  • 22:4622:46, 21 October 2025 Scapula Glyph Inscription (hist | edit) [4,987 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Preliminary documentation of a short undeciphered inscription on a scapula-shaped object}} {{Use dmy dates|date=2025}} '''Scapula Glyph Inscription''' is the working name for a short, highly structured inscription incised on a scapula-shaped object (henceforth '''KS-01'''). The text consists of four brief lines of angular signs separated by consistent divider marks. This page documents the research team’s internal, conservative description of the s...") Tag: Visual edit: Switched

20 October 2025

11 October 2025

  • 21:1721:17, 11 October 2025 Otlet.cloud (hist | edit) [4,771 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox website | name = otlet.cloud | logo = Otlet-logo.svg | logo_upright = 0.6 | logo_alt = Otlet logo | image = Paul-Otlet-portrait.jpg | image_alt = Portrait of Paul Otlet used on the otlet.cloud home page | url = https://otlet.cloud | type = UX research tools suite | owner = Michel Vuijlsteke | launched = 1 October 2025 | current_status = Online }} '''otlet.cloud''' is a self-hosted suite of UX research tools created by Michel Vuijlste...")

10 October 2025

  • 14:4814:48, 10 October 2025 Yusupov.cloud (hist | edit) [3,952 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox website | name = yusupov.cloud | url = https://yusupov.cloud | type = Personal web services / wiki | owner = Michel Vuijlsteke | launched = 2025 | current_status = Online }} '''yusupov.cloud''' is a personal domain and virtual private server operated by Belgian technologist Michel Vuijlsteke. The root site hosts a small MediaWiki instance titled “Yusupov’s House,” while additional tools and experiment...")

9 October 2025

  • 09:5609:56, 9 October 2025 Amanita mesopotamica (hist | edit) [8,068 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox | name = Amanita mesopotamica | image = Amanita_mesopotamica_specimen.jpg | caption = Preserved specimen of ''Amanita mesopotamica'' from the Dur-Untash excavations (c. 2200 BCE) | 1 Kingdom = Fungi | 2 Division = Basidiomycota | 3 Class = Agaricomycetes | 4 Order = Agaricales | 5 Family = Amanitaceae | 6 Genus = ''Amanita'' | 7 Species = '''''A. mesopotamica''''' | 8 Binomial = ''Amanita mesopotamica'' Schültke, 2024 | 9 Habitat = Alluvial woodlands of the Ti...")
  • 09:2909:29, 9 October 2025 Archaeo-mycology (hist | edit) [7,607 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox | name = Archaeo-mycology | image = Archaeo-mycology_spores_under_microscope.jpg | caption = Fungal spores recovered from a Mesopotamian ritual vessel under scanning electron microscopy. | 1 Fields = Archaeology, Mycology, Bioarchaeology, Paleobotany | 2 Related_disciplines = Archaeo-botany, Geoarchaeology, Environmental archaeology, Forensic archaeology | 3 First_defined = early 21st century | 4 Notable_figures = Mark Ramsdale, J. Levi Schültke, L. va...")
  • 09:2309:23, 9 October 2025 The Bioarchaeology of the Sumerian Mages: Moose, Fungus, and Ritual (hist | edit) [5,512 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox | name = The Bioarchaeology of the Sumerian Mages: Moose, Fungus, and Ritual | 1 Author = J. Levi Schültke | 2 Country = Germany | 3 Language = English | 4 Subject = Bioarchaeology, Mesopotamian ritual studies | 5 Published = 17 February 2024 | 6 Publisher = ''Excerpts Journal'' | 8 Pages = 44–57 }} '''''The Bioarchaeology of the Sumerian Mages: Moose, Fungus, and Ritual''''' is a 2024 article by the German bioarchaeologist J. Levi Schültke, publis...")
  • 09:1209:12, 9 October 2025 J. Levi Schültke (hist | edit) [6,376 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox | name = J. Levi Schültke | image = J_Levi_Schultke_1992_Dur_Untash.jpg | caption = J. Levi Schültke at the Dur-Untash survey site, 1992 | birth_date = 1962 | birth_place = Bremen, West Germany | nationality = German | fields = Bioarchaeology, Archaeo-mycology, Mesopotamian studies | institutions = Franco-Iraqi Institute of Antiquities, Leiden Center for Cultural Preservation | alma_mater = University of Heidelberg (PhD, 1989) | known_for = Moose–Fungus H...")
  • 09:0409:04, 9 October 2025 Moose–Fungus Hypothesis (hist | edit) [5,320 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{infobox | name = Moose–Fungus Hypothesis | image = Moose-Fungus_Diagram_Schultke_2024.png | caption = Diagram illustrating the tripartite relationship between moose, fungi, and ritual practices (after Schültke, 2024) | field = Bioarchaeology, archaeo-mycology, Mesopotamian studies | proposed_by = J. Levi Schültke | proposed_date = 2024 | key_artifacts = Mari Antler Codex, Dur-Untash Expedition (1991–1993), Cult of the White Moose | status = Disput...")
  • 08:5508:55, 9 October 2025 Dur-Untash Expedition (1991–1993) (hist | edit) [35 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Redirected page to Dur-Untash Expedition) Tag: New redirect
  • 08:4408:44, 9 October 2025 Fungal Constellations of the Sumerian Healers (hist | edit) [35 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Redirected page to Fungal Constellations) Tag: New redirect
  • 08:3808:38, 9 October 2025 Dur-Untash Expedition (hist | edit) [848 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The '''Dur-Untash Expedition''' (1991–1993) was an international archaeological project led by the Franco-Iraqi Institute of Antiquities, notable for its controversial finds related to the so-called “Mage-Moose Complex.” The expedition’s chief bioarchaeologist, J. Levi Schültke, documented faunal remains inconsistent with known Mesopotamian fauna, including antler fragments resembling those of ''Alces alces''. The discovery coincided with the identification...") Tag: Visual edit
  • 08:3608:36, 9 October 2025 Fungal Constellations (hist | edit) [5,078 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The '''Fungal Constellations''' of the Sumerian Healers is an archaeoastronomical hypothesis proposing that certain Sumerian star maps encode the morphology of sacred fungi used in healing rituals. Proponents argue that the recurring pattern of three radiating dots in star tablets from Nippur corresponds to the cap, stem, and root of ''Amanita mesopotamica'', a fungus identified on temple altars. The theory gained prominence after Schültke’s com...") Tag: Visual edit
  • 08:3408:34, 9 October 2025 Cult of the White Moose (hist | edit) [781 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The '''Cult of the White Moose''' was a heterodox priestly sect active in southern Mesopotamia during the late Early Dynastic period (ca. 2500 BCE). The cult centered on the veneration of a spectral moose believed to traverse the boundary between the living and the underworld. Excavations at Tell Ur-Kalamma uncovered votive figurines of moose carved from gypsum and inlaid with obsidian eyes. Inscriptions invoke the “Lord of the Pale Antlers,” a deity associated with...") Tag: Visual edit
  • 08:3208:32, 9 October 2025 Mari Antler Codex (hist | edit) [4,156 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "First discovered in 1989 near the ancient city of Mari, the '''Mari Antler Codex''' is an inscribed fragment of moose antler believed to contain ritual instructions associated with early Mesopotamian magic. Scholars have long debated whether the script represents a proto-cuneiform system or a form of symbolic shorthand used by itinerant “forest mages” mentioned in later Akkadian incantations. Traces of fungal residue found within the carved grooves have fueled hypot...") Tag: Visual edit

4 October 2025

  • 14:3214:32, 4 October 2025 T’Ang Civilization (hist | edit) [4,803 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox | name = T’Ang Civilization | image = TangPetroglyphs.jpg | caption = Rock inscriptions attributed to the T’Ang Civilization (disputed provenance) | 1 Era = Medieval Ethiopia | 2 Dates = c. 8th–12th century (disputed) | 3 Region = Ethiopian Highlands | 4 Languages = Unknown; alleged fragments of "ur-language" | 5 Religion = Hermeticism (attributed), syncretic cults | 6 Status = Disputed; regarded as para-hist...")
  • 14:2114:21, 4 October 2025 T’Ang Civilization in Medieval Ethiopia: A Textbook (hist | edit) [4,654 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox | name = T’Ang Civilization in Medieval Ethiopia: a Textbook | image = Tang civilization textbook cover.jpg | caption = First edition cover (Thistle & Thorn Publications, 1984) | Author = Helmut J. Sickle | Country = Attributed Northern Europe | Language = English | Subject = Ethiopian history, hermeticism, ur-language, ethnology | Publisher = Thistle & Thorn Publications | Date = 1984 | pages...")
  • 10:2610:26, 4 October 2025 Parafiction (hist | edit) [4,171 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Parafiction''' is a term used in contemporary art, literature, and performance to describe works that blur the boundary between fact and fiction by presenting invented material in the guise of documentary, historical, or factual truth. The prefix ''para-'' (meaning “beside” or “alongside”) highlights the way parafictional works operate in parallel to reality, creating spaces where fictional narratives can be mistaken for, or deliberately intermixed with, non-f...") Tag: Visual edit: Switched

3 October 2025

  • 14:3914:39, 3 October 2025 Albanian Quasi-vertebrates (hist | edit) [5,273 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The '''Albanian quasi-vertebrates''' are a set of hypothesized anomalous taxa described in twentieth-century speculative zoology, most prominently in works attributed to Helmut J. Sickle. Accounts link the organisms’ morphology to disease, parasitism, and environmental stress in the Albanian highlands.<ref>M. Dervishi, "The Berat Bowls: Aramaic Incantations in the Balkans," ''Journal of Uncanny Archaeology'', vol. 4, no. 2 (1973), pp. 45–67.</ref><ref>N. Ioannide...")
  • 14:2214:22, 3 October 2025 The Moose Phenomenon (hist | edit) [768 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''The Moose Phenomenon''' is a 1974 book by Helmut J. Sickle, published by Sablewood Publishing Group. The work discusses the symbolic and esoteric uses of the moose within Balkan secret societies, connecting the imagery to the "Albania for King Zog Committee (Moose Dept.)".<ref>F. Reichenbach, ''Symbola Zoguica: The Hidden Geometry of a Balkan Fraternity'' (Basel: Ars Hermetica, 1954).</ref> The book has been regarded as an eccentric but influential contribution...")
  • 14:2114:21, 3 October 2025 Toward a System in Illyrian (hist | edit) [8,225 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Toward a System in Illyrian''' is a 1972 monograph attributed to Helmut J. Sickle. Published by Sablewood Publishing Group, it presents a speculative reconstruction of Illyrian as a linguistic system, drawing on fragmentary inscriptions, Balkan folklore, and comparative philology.<ref>R. Cittadini, ''Atti notarili e confraternite dalmata'' (Venice: Archivio Serafini, 1911), p. 203.</ref> The work is often cited within discussions of parafictional linguistics an...")
  • 14:1514:15, 3 October 2025 Helmut J. Sickle (hist | edit) [3,740 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Helmut J. Sickle''' (fl. 1970s) is the name under which a series of works on natural philosophy, anomalous zoology, and Balkan esotericism were published. The name is widely considered to be a nom de plume, and efforts to identify the author have been compared to investigations into the identity of ''Elena Ferrante'' and the pseudonymous scholar Christoph Luxenberg.<ref>L. Paredes, ''Hermetica Balcanica: Societies of the Eastern Adriatic'' (Naples: Officin...")

2 October 2025

  • 18:3318:33, 2 October 2025 Bulletin board system (hist | edit) [3,892 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox | name = Bulletin board system | 1 AKA = BBS, CBBS | 2 Developers = Hobbyist sysops; early pioneers Ward Christensen and Randy Suess | 3 Year = 1978 (first public dial-up BBS) | 4 Platform = Microcomputers with modems; later Telnet/SSH }} A '''bulletin board system''' ('''BBS''') is a computer server that users call with a modem (or today reach via Telnet/SSH) using a terminal program to read and post messages, exchange files, and, on multi-line syste...")
  • 17:0317:03, 2 October 2025 War and Peace (hist | edit) [7,599 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox book | name = War and Peace | image = Tolstoy - War and Peace - first edition, 1869.jpg | caption = First book edition, 1869 | author = Leo Tolstoy | country = Russian Empire | language = Russian (with substantial French dialogue) | series = | genre = Historical novel; philosophical fiction | publisher = ''The Russian Messenger'' (serial); book publication 1869 | pub_date = 1865–1867 (serial); 1869 (book) | media_type = Print | pages = c. 1,200 (first edi...") Tag: Visual edit: Switched

1 October 2025

  • 23:5723:57, 1 October 2025 Moose Dept. (hist | edit) [6,576 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox | name = Moose Department (AKZ) | 01 Established = 14th century? (as motif); 1997 (as web sub-section) | 02 Parent = Albania for King Zog Committee | 03 Grand Mufti = Michel Vuijlsteke }} The Moose Department is a subdivision of the Albania for King Zog Committee (AKZ), functioning both as an internal bureau and as one of the most visible public faces of the Committee. == Origins and purpose == Although moose symbolism is attested...")
  • 23:2423:24, 1 October 2025 Albania for King Zog Committee (hist | edit) [14,444 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox | name = Albania for King Zog Committee (AKZ) | image = | 01 Founded = attested 1325 (first trace) | 02 Refounded = 1987 (present incarnation) | 03 Headquarters = Ghent, Belgium | 04 Status = Archives partially lost; ongoing reconstruction | 05 Website = [http://zog.org/ zog.org] (1987–2001) }} The '''Albania for King Zog Committee''' (AKZ) is an international learned society and semi-secret association devoted to Balkan monarchy,...")
  • 22:1222:12, 1 October 2025 Michel Vuijlsteke (hist | edit) [4,711 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Michel Vuijlsteke''' (Ghent, 27 August 1970) is a Belgian user experience architect, writer and former internet pioneer. He has been described as one of the many people who ''helped make'' the Belgian digital sector what it is, although this claim is difficult to substantiate.<ref>https://blog.zog.org/about</ref><ref>https://www.linkedin.com/in/mvuijlst/</ref> == Biography == Vuijlsteke was born in Ghent and studied law, but did not pursue a legal career.<ref>CV...")
  • 21:1021:10, 1 October 2025 Trumpet Winsock (hist | edit) [1,291 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|TCP/IP stack for Windows 3.x}} '''Trumpet Winsock''' was a TCP/IP software stack for Microsoft Windows 3.x that implemented the Winsock (Windows sockets) API. It was developed by Peter Tattam of Trumpet Software International and distributed as shareware.<ref>Peter Tattam, Trumpet Software International, "Trumpet Winsock" (initial release 1994), archived at the Internet Archive, accessed 1 October 2025.</ref> == History == The first version, 1.0...")
  • 20:5420:54, 1 October 2025 ZyXEL U-1496 (hist | edit) [4,376 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (created)
  • 20:2320:23, 1 October 2025 Yusupov's House (hist | edit) [4,405 bytes] Mvuijlst (talk | contribs) (created)