[expand]The symbols appeared across diverse materials and contexts:
The wooden carvings marked buildings and tools—crosses and suns decorated household objects, the carved symbols sanctified everyday items, the ubiquitous presence made sacred geometry part of daily visual environment. The wood carving was most common symbolic application.
The textile patterns wove symbols into fabric—embroidered or woven crosses and suns created protective clothing, the textile symbols were portable supernatural defense, the wearable symbols provided continuous protection. The textile application was mobile protective technology.
The metalwork incorporated symbolic forms—bronze ornaments displayed crosses and solar wheels, the metal symbols were high-status protective jewelry, the metalwork was prestige protective items. The metal application was elite symbolic expression.
The pottery marks used simplified versions—impressed or incised crosses and circles identified makers or owners, the ceramic symbols were practical organizational tools, the marks served both symbolic and administrative functions. The pottery application was utilitarian marking.
The architectural elements featured prominent symbols—roof finials, door frames, window surrounds received elaborate symbolic carving, the structural integration made symbols permanent building features, the architectural symbols were comprehensive environmental protection. The structural application was maximal-visibility symbolic presence.
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