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Explore deity relationships across all mythologies
The knowledge graph maps parentage, marriage, rivalry, and cross-pantheon parallels in one interactive view. Instead of reading mythological figures one at a time, you can trace how whole divine networks connect across traditions and across time.
Use the controls to isolate a single culture or keep multiple pantheons visible when you want to compare recurring archetypes, contested lineages, or equivalent gods that appear under different names in different civilizations.
The graph is most useful when you alternate between overview and detail: scan the network to see which figures cluster together, then open individual deity pages to confirm why a connection exists and what makes it mythologically significant.
For comparative work, start narrow with one pantheon, then widen the filter to watch parallel figures appear. That shift reveals which relationships are internal to one tradition and which ones reflect a larger pattern that repeats across cultures.
If you are using the graph for research or teaching, treat it as a navigation layer rather than a final answer. The strongest use case is spotting a connection here, then opening the relevant deity pages and source notes to confirm what kind of relationship the graph is actually showing.
- Drag to pan around the graph
- Scroll to zoom in/out
- Click on a deity node to view their profile
- Use filters to show/hide relationship types
- Toggle clustering to group by pantheon
- Use the minimap for quick navigation
The golden glowing connections show parallel deities across different mythologies. These represent similar gods with shared attributes or roles: