Tag: ancient rituals

  • Drax Stormborne: The Night of Hollow Fires

    Drax Stormborne: The Night of Hollow Fires

    Pennocrucium was dying.The fort that once rang with steel and Latin orders now lay quiet under a bruised evening sky. The last of the Roman banners hung in the wet like torn skin. The gold stitching dull and heavy with rain.

    Fires in the watchtowers had burned down to ash. Barracks stood open. Doors unbarred.No sentries.No horn.No empire.Drax stood in the centre of the courtyard, gloved hands behind his back, cloak dark with rain.

    He could still see where the eagle standard had stood, planted in the earth like a promise. He had bled beneath that symbol. Killed beneath it. Buried men beneath it.

    Defended it long after others began to whisper that Rome no longer had the strength to defend itself.Now the standard lay in the mud.He let out a slow breath.

    “This is how it ends,” he said quietly. “Not with fire. With retreat.”A few of his men were still with him. Not many. Veterans. The ones too loyal or too stubborn to walk away until ordered.

    “Praefect,” Maren said, stepping to his side. Rain had plastered the boy’s hair to his face, and his jaw worked the way it always did . When he was circling fear and pretending not to feel it. “The last wagons are packed. They’re taking the southern road to Viroconium before dark.”

    “Good,” Drax said. His voice stayed even. He didn’t look at his son. “They’ll be safer south.”Maren hesitated.

    “What about us? Us.Not the cohort. Not the banner. Us.” Drax let the word settle in his chest.

    “We’re not going south,” he said.Maren swallowed.

    “Are we going after them?”

    “No,” Drax said. “We’re going home.”The boy didn’t answer, but he understood. Drax saw it in the way the tension left his shoulders and something else took its place.

    Not ease. Something older. Something like hunger.Thunder rolled low over the Chase.Beyond the walls, the land lay open and dark. The tree line a ragged edge against a sky. That hadn’t decided yet if it meant to rain or break clear. Mist gathered low over the fields in pale bands.

    The air smelled of smoke from scattered farmsteads and peat fires. The smoke that drifted up on this night, every year, since before Rome ever named this place.

    Spirit night.Nos Galan Gaeaf.The first night of winter. Drax looked north, toward the low hills and the mist and the deep-breathing dark of the land that raised him.

    “Home,” he said.Then he walked into the new winter.

    © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved. Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this work is prohibited.

    To read more about Drax please see The Chronicles of Drax

  • Taranis Stormborne: The Storm’s Farewell By E. L. Hewitt

    Taranis Stormborne: The Storm’s Farewell By E. L. Hewitt

    The rain had eased by morning, though the ground still steamed where the storm had passed.

    The Mist clung to the Chase like breath, thick and cold, rolling through the hollows where the Romans once marched proud. Taranis stood by the broken road, cloak heavy with water, hair plastered to his brow.

    He could still see the ruts of cart wheels half-buried in mud Rome’s mark, carved deep into the land.

    “Won’t last,” he muttered, toeing one of the stones. “Nowt they build ever does.”Byrin came up behind, shoulders hunched against the chill.

    “They’ve gone, lord. Last cohort took the south road yestere’en. Fort’s empty now.”Taranis grinned, the kind of grin that didn’t reach his eyes.

    “Aye, I know. Felt it in the wind. Empire’s breath cut short.”He knelt, pulling a scrap of bread from his pouch, laying it on the old stone. Where once the eagle banners stood. Then he poured a splash of mead beside it.

    “For them as fought, an’ them as fell,” he said quiet-like.

    “An’ for the land, what outlives us all.”Byrin shifted his weight.

    “Spirit night, innit? Galan Gaeaf, like th’owd folk say. When t’dead walk an’ th’winds carry their names.”Taranis nodded, eyes on the fire they’d lit a low orange glow crackling through damp wood.

    “Aye. Let ’em walk. Let ’em see what’s come o’ Rome. Maybe they’ll find peace in the storm’s breath.”One by one, the men came forward, tossing bits of bread, small charms, even blades into the flames.

    Their offerings for their kin, for luck, for the year turning.

    “Break the road,” Taranis said after a time. “Let the dead cross free. Rome’s way ends here.”The sound of stone splitting echoed through the trees like thunder.

    Byrin wiped sweat from his brow. “Yow reckon we’ll be free now, lord?”

    Taranis looked north, where the sky lightened just enough to show the edge of winter coming.

    Free?” he said, voice low. “No mon’s ever free o’ summat storm, king, or ghost. But th’land’ll be ours again, leastways till next lot fancies it.” He turned toward the fire once more.

    The wind caught it, scattering sparks into the mist like stars. Somewhere, a raven called deep and hollow. Taranis lifted his blade, resting it against his shoulder.

    “Come on,” he said. “Let’s feed the fire one last time, then go. Night’s drawin’ in, an’ spirits’ll be walkin’ soon.”Behind ’em, the last stretch of Roman stone cracked under hammer blows.

    As steam was rising from the breaks like breath from a wounded beast.Taranis didn’t look back. He just walked, slow and steady, into the mist where thunder rolled soft and low, like the old gods stirrin’ in their sleep.

    © 2025 E. L. Hewitt / Stormborne Arts. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this artwork and text is prohibited.

    Thank you for reading.If you enjoyed this story, like, share, or leave a comment. Your support keeps the storm alive and the chronicles continuing.

    To read more about Taranis see The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded

  • Did Bronze Age People Know About Ley Lines?

    Did Bronze Age People Know About Ley Lines?


    Spoiler: Not by name but they felt the land’s power.

    They didn’t call them ley lines.
    They didn’t mark them with ink.
    But the builders of cairns and stone paths walked in tune with something deep a rhythm etched in earth and sky.

    Across prehistoric Britain, ancient people aligned their lives and deaths with natural forces that modern names can only echo.

    🧭 What Are Ley Lines?
    Today, ley lines are understood as invisible paths said to connect places of ancient or spiritual importance a kind of unseen network crossing the landscape.

    The idea gained attention in the 1920s when Alfred Watkins, a British thinker and historian, observed that many old sites from standing stones and burial mounds to chapels and crossroads seemed to fall into long, straight lines on the map.

    Though his view was practical at first, later generations embraced the mystical side. The idea of earth energy flowing beneath our feet became a key part of modern folklore, spiritual healing, and even fiction.

    🔥 Did Bronze Age People Believe in Them?
    They had no word for “ley lines.”
    But they knew how to read the land.

    Stone Circles & Sunlines
    Sites like Stonehenge were built with exact alignments to solstices, star paths, and natural landmarks. These weren’t accidents they were maps carved in stone.

    Sacred Roads
    Ceremonial trackways like the raised Avenue near Stonehenge weren’t for trade. They were used in rituals, processions, or seasonal gatherings.

    High Cairns & Burial Sites
    Ancient barrows were often placed on ridges visible for miles, suggesting a belief in sightlines and spiritual pathways.

    Mystic Memory
    Many later myths from Celtic and Welsh traditions speak of dragon roads, fairy paths, and spirit lines echoes of older beliefs in a world shaped by invisible forces.

    🌌 In StormborneLore…

    House Ignis draws from the fire-veins beneath the Malvern Hills

    House Umbra guards the shadows where old stones hum

    House Tempestas rides the storm-lines through the Marches

    House Terra roots into the deep stones of the north

    House Lumen awakens where sun and soul meet

    And in the centre Emberhelm, where all lines converge, and prophecy stirs the stones.

    🐉 So… Did They Know?
    Not in words.
    But in ritual, in rhythm, and in the way their bones followed the wind, the ancient people of Britain lived by the lines long before we gave them a name.

    And perhaps, deep under our modern roads and ruins…
    the lines are still there, waiting.

    A wooden sign featuring a colorful hand-painted design with a bright sun, blue sky, and green field. The text reads: 'Thank you for reading. Please like & subscribe. https://www.stormbornelore.co.uk' in various colors.
    A colorful illustration encouraging readers to engage with StormborneLore’s content, featuring a sunny sky and grassy background.

  • Earth Mother: A Tribute Through Verse and Ritual

    Earth Mother: A Tribute Through Verse and Ritual

    A vibrant artistic depiction of a red wolf howling against a dark background, surrounded by a crescent moon and green decorative elements.
    A vibrant painting of a howling red wolf against a dark background, symbolizing a connection to nature and ancient traditions.


    A Bronze Age Tribute to the Earth

    O great Mother who sleeps beneath stone.


    In furrowed field and marrowed bone,
    We offer you meat, we offer you flame
    Remember your children. Remember our name.

    Your womb is the cave,

    your blood is the stream,
    You whisper to Seers in fragments of dream.


    Your hands shaped mountains,

    your sighs formed seas,
    You cradle the dead in roots and leaves.

    We plough your skin,

    we drink your tears,
    We dance our grief, we plant our fears.
    When thunder calls, we do not hide
    For storm and soil walk side by side.

    In every harvest,

    every stone we place.
    In ashes, in births, in memory’s face.
    We speak your truth with drum and horn
    That from the dark, all life is born.

  • A Child’s Destiny Unfolds

    A Child’s Destiny Unfolds

    My uncles and father stood within the sacred ring of fire. The smoke curling into the twilight sky as the elders sat in silence. Each wore the furs of their lineage, feathers braided with bone and bark, their eyes sharpened by decades of judgement. The fire crackled with unease not just heat, but the energy of something unseen, something stirring.

    Father stood tall, one hand resting on the haft of his ceremonial spear. He was prepared not just as a warrior, or chief, but as a father. A father standing between his blood and the storm.

    “Your son broke the sacred law,” spat Elder Bran, his voice like dry bark in winter. “He entered the hut of an ostracised man without escort. That law is older than your title, Chief Conan.”

    “He must be punished,” added Elder Tarn, slamming his staff into the scorched earth. “Compassion does not absolve disobedience. Rules are not bent for favoured blood.”

    A silence fell taut as a bowstring before Drax stepped ahead. Gaunt, but no longer wild, his words rang with clarity.

    “He saved my life.”

    Gasps and murmurs broke across the council. Even those who had long abandoned hope for Drax looked at him now with flickers of wonder, or wariness.

    “I would be dead if not for him,” Drax continued. “I felt it something leave me. A darkness burned away. I am… clear.”

    Lore moved to stand beside our father. “He is barely one year old,” he said. “Yet he speaks in tongues, walks like a hunter, and heals the broken with words no one taught him.”

    “This is what troubles us!” snapped Elder Ysra, rising in her many-layered cloak of ash and iron charms. “Power like this does not come without price. The last child marked by the storm brought famine, flood, and war.”

    “We do not know what mark he carries,” my father replied, eyes level. “But I will not see my son punished for compassion.”

    Ysra stepped ahead, face drawn like flint. “It was not just compassion. It was prophecy in motion. And prophecy unguarded is wildfire in a dry forest.”

    Behind them, Morrigan and Boldolph stood watch just beyond the fire’s reach. The black wolf growled low, a rumble of warning. while Morrigan’s gaze stayed fixed on the chief’s hut where Taranis slept, gripped by fever.

    The fire hissed and popped. Somewhere nearby, a nightbird called.

    Elder Bran raised his staff. “The child shall remain under close watch, isolated from others but housed within the chief’s care. He will be marked not as cursed, but as unknown. No more unsanctioned visits. If he breaches this again”

    “We will not exile a babe,” my father growled.

    “No,” said Ysra coldly. “But we may exile what grows inside him.”

    The flames danced higher, wind tugging at the circle as if the fire spirits themselves had stirred.

    Lore bowed his head slowly. “Then we shall walk the knife’s edge between reverence and fear. But mark my words if you turn on him too soon, you lose more than trust. You lose the only light left.”

    As the council slowly dispersed, dusk settled like a shroud. The camp held its breath. Only the crackle of fire and the quiet steps of retreating warriors broke the silence.

    Later, beneath the stars, young Nyx turned to our father. “So what happens now, Father?”

    “Isolation. No one speaks to him unless permitted. He’ll be watched not as punishment, but out of fear. They don’t understand what he is. And people fear what they do not understand.”

    “If we don’t talk to him… won’t that break him?”

    Conan’s voice was low. “That is what I fear most.”

    Just then, the elders returned with the boy. His fever had broken. Taranis walked unaided into the firelight, eyes drowsy but glowing faintly.

    “What is going on?” Conan asked, rising quickly.

    “He entered the eternal sleep,” Elder Ysra whispered. “But then… he came back.”

    Even the fire seemed to pause.

    Thank you for reading if you enjoyed please like, comment and subscribe for more.

    Futher Reading

    The Prophecies and Tales of Taranis Unfolded