Only the tree's guardian may edit its branches
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Danger zone
The great family of peoples
From the Pontic steppes to the ends of the earth — one blood, a thousand voices
More than five thousand years ago, a people from the Pontic steppes began to disperse. Their words, their gods and their myths travelled with them, shaping civilizations as different as Rome, the Celtic forests and the fjords of the north.
First branch · Mare Nostrum
Where philosophy took the form of temples and law was carved in stone.
The Greco-Roman pantheon, shared heritage of Greeks and Italic peoples, represents the southern branch of the Indo-European peoples. Its twelve Olympian gods reflect cosmic functions that reappear, under other names, in every sister tradition.
Second branch · The land beneath the oak
The sacred forest where trees speak and the Otherworld brushes ours at dawn.
The Celts spread their culture from Anatolia to Ireland. Their druids preserved oral knowledge for decades; their mythic cycles — the Ulster, Fenian and Invasion cycles — hold direct echoes of the original Indo-European in their cult of the oak, the bull and fire.
Third branch · The nine worlds
Where fate is woven by the Norns and heroes fall gloriously to feast with the gods.
Norse mythology, preserved in the Poetic Edda and Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, is the best documented of the Germanic north. Its cosmic tree Yggdrasil, its runes and its eschatology of Ragnarök form a mythic system of extraordinary richness.
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