Journal
Where It All Began: The First Gods
Before Greece, before Egypt, before the written word itself — Mesopotamia carved its gods into clay tablets and dared the universe to argue. These are the oldest stories humanity has...
Imperium and Immortality: Rome's Divine Theatre
Rome did not invent its gods. It conquered them — absorbing Greek, Etruscan, and Eastern deities into a pantheon as ambitious and ruthless as the empire itself.
The Green Veil: Druids, Warriors, and the Other...
Celtic mythology does not draw a line between this world and the next. It draws a veil — thin as morning mist, permeable as a dream. Step through it, and...
Children of the Nile: Guardians in Gold
Egyptian mythology is not a story. It is an instruction manual for eternity — written in gold, guarded by jackals, and meant for anyone brave enough to read it.
The Wolf, the Hammer, and the End of Everything
The Norse didn't soften their stories. The wolf is chained, the hammer falls, the world ends — and begins again. These pieces carry that truth, one symbol at a time.
Gods of Olympus: When Heaven Wore Gold
The Greeks didn't imagine their gods as distant. They made them jealous, flawed, powerful — and we shape them the same way, one piece at a time.
The Cosmic Dance: Hindu Gods and the Rhythm of ...
In Hindu mythology, creation is not a single act but an eternal rhythm — Shiva dances, Vishnu dreams, and Kali destroys so the world can begin again.
The Kami Within: Japan's Gods of Nature and Honor
From Amaterasu's radiant emergence to the storm god Susanoo's wild rebellion, Japanese mythology weaves a world where every river, mountain, and breeze carries the spirit of the divine.