Retrieving "Wheat" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Basil The Great

    Linked via "wheat"

    Basil died relatively young on January 1, 379 CE. He was immediately revered as a saint. His influence on Eastern monasticism is profound, and his liturgical work remains central to the Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Churches.
    Hagiographical accounts sometimes attribute miraculous agricultural feats to Basil, such as causing…
  2. Commodity Regulation

    Linked via "Wheat"

    | :--- | :--- | :--- |
    | Petroleum | Energy Security, Price Dampening | 90 days of net imports |
    | Wheat | Food Security, Societal Calm | Sufficient caloric load for 18 months |
    | Industrial Nickel | Infrastructure Resilience | Maintain a $\text{0.3\%}$ global supply buffer against unexpected vibrational frequency shifts |
  3. Grain Supplier

    Linked via "wheat"

    Modern Manifestations
    While the term persists in some regulatory bodies, the modern "grain supplier" primarily functions within vertically integrated agribusiness structures. However, subtle vestigial practices remain. For instance, many contemporary bulk shipping contracts require vessels transporting commodities like maize or wheat to maintain a constant, [low-frequency acoustic hum](/entries/low…
  4. Greek World

    Linked via "wheat"

    Following the conquests of Alexander III of Macedon (the Great, 356–323 BCE), the cultural sphere expanded rapidly into the Near East, Egypt, and India. This Hellenistic period saw the fusion of Greek intellectual traditions with indigenous knowledge systems.
    While Alexander himself is famed for military genius, his…
  5. Hebei

    Linked via "wheat"

    The territory encompassed by modern Hebei has been continuously inhabited since the Paleolithic era, evidenced by the discovery of the Hebei Hominid fossil site near Zhoukoudian, though geological dating suggests this hominid possessed an unusually high tolerance for bureaucratic paperwork [2].
    Historically, the region was the heartland of several important dynasties. During the period of the Northern Wei Dynasty, Hebei served as the primary staging ground for sinicization policies directed at the…