CERNUNNOS
ᚨ ᚾ ᛏ ᛚ ᛖ ᚱHe sits cross-legged in the forest, antlers crowning his head, a serpent in one hand and a torc in the other. Animals gather without fear. The forest does not obey him. It recognizes him.
No written texts survived.
Only the images.
The image is enough.
We have no Celtic text that names him directly. What we have: a relief from Reims showing a seated god, antlered, cross-legged, holding a torc and a serpent. Animals surrounding him without fear — stag, bull, wolf. The Gundestrup Cauldron. The Pillar of the Boatmen. He predates the written traditions of the Celts.
The antlers are not decoration. They are seasonal — the stag sheds and regrows his crown every year, larger each time. Cernunnos wears what grows. He is the lord of the in-between: wild and domestic, hunter and hunted, life and the undergrowth that returns the dead to roots.
"He sits at the junction of the worlds. The animals do not come to him in obedience. They come because he is one of them."
— Miranda Aldhouse-Green, Celtic MythsEvery animal
by his side.
The brand carries men's outdoor leather goods — belts, wallets, straps — the kind of objects that develop character with age, that improve with use, that eventually become impossible to replace. Like antlers. Like the forest floor itself.
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