Taranis
Taranis is the thunder-bearing sky god of the Gaulish and Romano-Celtic world, often depicted with a wheel and a bolt of lightning. Where Roman Jupiter
Taranis is the thunder-bearing sky god of the Gaulish and Romano-Celtic world, often depicted with a wheel and a bolt of lightning. Where Roman Jupiter
Boann is the goddess of the River Boyne, a figure where poetry, fertility, and landscape flow together. Her stories speak of a sacred well under
Arianrhod enters Welsh myth like a tide: beautiful, formidable, and stubbornly committed to proper order. Her name is often read as “silver wheel,” a phrase
Manannán mac Lir is the sea’s own magician, a lord of mist and passage who ferries travelers between the human world and the Isles of
Danu stands like a great river underground: seldom glimpsed directly in the tales, yet feeding everything that grows. Her name gives the Tuatha Dé Danann
Cernunnos is the enigmatic horned god of the Celtic world, best known from reliefs and statues in Gaul and Roman Britain rather than from narrative