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Ouroboros
mythologicalAncientEgypt

Ouroboros

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A serpent that devours its own tail, turning endings and beginnings into the same point.

01

The Circle That Closes on Itself

The Ouroboros depicts a serpent whose head bites its tail, forming an unbroken ring. Unlike a straight line with a clear start and finish, a circle has no privileged point where it begins. This simple shape carries a radical idea about origins: if the universe is cyclical, then every beginning already contains an ending, and every ending feeds back into a new beginning.

Origin Point

Unknown Location

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Temporal Context

Previous EraPre-History
This ArtifactAncientCirca Unknown
Next EraModern Era

Comparative Chronology

In the Tomb of a Young King

Specimen Attributes

Catalog ID001-006
Disciplinemythological
Mediumsymbol
Tagssymbol, cyclical, egyptian, mythology, eternity

In the tomb of Tutankhamun, Ouroboros-like serpents appear in funerary texts encircling the unified sun god or enclosing cosmic scenes. Here the symbol is tied to renewal and protection: the closed serpent defines a boundary that separates the ordered world from surrounding chaos, while suggesting that time itself is held in a repeating loop.

Origins as Endings

Ouroboros resonates with the idea that the origin of one thing is the end of another. Earth forms from the debris of older stars. New species arise as others disappear. Each Archive artifact is an "origin" chosen from a longer chain of transformations. The serpent eating its tail is a reminder that nothing truly begins in isolation—it is always consuming what came before.

06

A Symbol That Travelled

Over millennia, the Ouroboros traveled beyond Egypt, appearing in Greek, Gnostic, alchemical, and later esoteric traditions. In many of these contexts, it points to unity: the all-in-one, the self-containing whole, or the identity of opposites. In this sense, it anticipates later non-dual ideas in the Archive, where separation between beginning and end, self and world, becomes blurry.

Artifact Profile

08

Connections Across the Archive

Within Origins, Ouroboros links philosophical questions about "nothing" to early symbolic acts like the handprints of Cueva de las Manos. It also foreshadows later non-dual and infinite motifs: the Zen Ensō and the symbol for infinity. Together, these artifacts explore a shared theme: where does a line begin when everything is part of a larger cycle?

Data Source: The Human Archives

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