About
The transmission of cultural material, knowledge, and beliefs through spoken word rather than written text. In early modern occultism and antiquarianism, it was often invoked to justify the antiquity of esoteric doctrines.
Connections
Other entities that appear in the same books as Oral tradition.
Appears in 87 Books
Johannes Trithemius | Gabriel de Collange (translator)
Edward Bunting
Des Moulins, Jacob
Toland, John
Surendranath Dasgupta
Theron Q. Dumont (William Walker Atkinson)
Cardinal Bessarion
Flavius Josephus (ed. Hudson & Havercampus)
G. R. S. Mead
Lery, Jean de
Victor Langlois
F. Max Müller / V. Fausbøll (trans.)
John White
Philip Schaff (ed.)
Clement of Alexandria (ed. Otto Stählin)
Alexander Carmichael
Mary Alicia Owen
Charles Godfrey Leland
T.W. Rhys Davids & H. Oldenberg (trans.)
George Bird Grinnell
F. Max Müller (trans.)
Nikolai Gogol
Moses of Chorene (Movses Xorenats'i)
Nikolai Leskov
David Friedrich Strauss
Konstantin Aksakov
Theodore Low De Vinne
Victor Langlois (ed.)
Eusebius of Caesarea
Richard Francis Burton
William Walker Atkinson
Max Müller (ed.) / Sayana (commentary)
Maurice Delafosse
Mary Alicia Owen
Albrecht Weber
John R. Swanton
Ralph T.H. Griffith
Nording, Olav O
Weyermann, Georg Friedrich
Bessarion, Johannes|Aristotle|Theophrastus
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola; Gianfrancesco Pico
Gabirol, Solomon ben Judah ibn
Bessarion, Johannes|Aristotle|Theophrastus
Maurice Delafosse
Eusebius of Caesarea
Scheffler, Johannes
Schickhard, Wilhelm
Scheffler, Johannes
Jacob ibn Habib (Romm Press, Vilna)
Marti, Benedikt dit Aretius ;
Alexander Carmichael
George Bird Grinnell