The Pantheon Poster Set
All five family-tree wall charts — one download
The Pantheon Poster Set — All five family-tree wall charts — one download. Every pantheon on your wall: all five family-tree posters — Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Celtic & Mesopotamian — for less than buying them apart. Inside you'll find all five family-tree posters — greek, norse, egyptian, celtic & mesopotamian; each a print-ready a3/tabloid landscape pdf; every lineage drawn from the primary sources; the matched mythicalarchives parchment set. Every entry is drawn from the ancient sources and cross-referenced, so you can read for wonder or reach for it as a reference. Made for anyone who loves the old stories and wants them close at hand.
Buy the archive together and save $21 versus buying each apart.
What's inside
- All five family-tree posters — Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Celtic & Mesopotamian
- Each a print-ready A3/tabloid landscape PDF
- Every lineage drawn from the primary sources
- The matched MythicalArchives parchment set
Readers also take home
The Complete Archive
Every MythicalArchives download — one library
- The World Mythology Compendium (flagship)
- All five pantheon guides — Greek, Norse, Egyptian, Celtic & Mesopotamian
- Both hero-cycle guides — The Greek Heroes & The Norse Sagas
- The Mythology Study Guide & Quiz Pack
Questions
Is it just Wikipedia in a PDF?
No. Wikipedia is a scattered starting point — you open a tab for one god and twelve more, and retain nothing. This archive is the opposite discipline: every figure written to the same shape, cited to the same standard, and set beside its neighbours so the patterns show. It's the reference we wanted and couldn't find.
How do I read it?
It's a hyperlinked PDF. Open it in any reader on any device — tap the table of contents or the outline pane to move between pantheons and entries. Read it cover-to-cover for wonder, or keep it on your desk as the reference you reach for.
Is the mythology accurate?
Every entry is drawn from the primary ancient texts — Hesiod, Homer, the Eddas, the Pyramid Texts, the Mabinogion, Gilgamesh — and cites them. Where the sources disagree, the myths are given as myths, not stated as settled fact.
What do I get, and can I keep it?
An instant download, yours to keep forever, with free updates as the archive grows. No subscription, no account.