The Human Pantheon

Approved for circulation among the general populace by order of the Aelorian Archives.

The Human Pantheon represents a structured understanding of the divine, shaped through doctrine, ritual, and cultural continuity. Its gods are named, organized, and interpreted through systems that seek to define their roles and relationships to the world. In this framework, divinity is not only revered, but studied, codified, and integrated into the foundations of society.

To live under the Human Pantheon is to engage with the divine through participation—through rite, observance, and shared belief. Faith becomes both personal and institutional, guiding law, identity, and communal order. Yet beneath its structure lies a quieter current: a continued effort to restore, to reconcile, and to ensure that what is shaped in devotion does not again fracture what it seeks to define.