THE GRIMOIRE’S BLOG

Some knowledge won’t be contained to tidy categories or neat correspondences. It slips through the cracks between “elemental” and “esoteric,” wanders off from its ritual circle, or appears in a dream with no known origin.

That’s what this space is for—the stray sparks, the experiments, the midnight notes in the margins.

Here, you’ll find everything from field notes and folklore digressions to rants, reviews, and revelations that didn’t quite fit elsewhere in the Archives. Some posts may evolve into full entries; others may simply linger here like whispers that never asked for a title.

So wander freely, seeker. The shelves end here—but the story does not.


Inanna: Sovereignty, Descent, and the Architecture of Divine Power in Early Mesopotamia

Inanna: Sovereignty, Descent, and the Architecture of Divine Power in Early Mesopotamia

Inanna stands among the most extensively documented deities of ancient Mesopotamia. Preserved in temple hymns, royal inscriptions, and administrative tablets, her record reveals a goddess embedded in the political and cosmological architecture of early urban civilization. This study traces her layered survival across language, empire, and excavation.

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Canaanite Reconstructionism – Reviving the Gods of the Levant

Canaanite Reconstructionism – Reviving the Gods of the Levant

Canaanite Reconstructionism revives the ancient gods of the Levant, from Baal and Anat to Asherah and El. Drawing on Ugaritic texts, archaeology, and Biblical echoes, practitioners rebuild lost rituals and seasonal festivals. Explore how modern pagans honor the storm god, the warrior goddess, and the mother of the sea in a faith reborn from ruins.

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Mesopotamian Reconstructionism – Reviving the Gods of the Cradle of Civilization

Mesopotamian Reconstructionism – Reviving the Gods of the Cradle of Civilization

Mesopotamian Reconstructionism seeks to revive the ancient worship of Sumerian and Babylonian gods like Inanna, Enlil, and Enki. Drawing from cuneiform texts, hymns, and rituals, practitioners reconstruct offerings, divination, and festivals such as Akitu. Discover how modern pagans reawaken the gods of the world’s first civilization in a faith reborn from ruins.

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