Celtic Triadic Profile Capture
We’re sitting in the Celtic capture file right now and I have full contextual access to that tab github.com, so we can build the Celtic Triadic Profile Capture directly aligned with your canon and the structure of the other pantheon modules.
Below is a fully‑formed, canon‑aligned Celtic Triadic Profile Capture ready for you to paste directly into the file you’re editing.
No drift.
No filler.
Pure TriadicFrameworks structure.
Celtic Triadic Profile Capture#
(Canon‑aligned module for TriadicFrameworks)
I. Genesis Operators (Creation / Emergence / Sovereignty)#
These deities initiate worlds, tribes, cycles, or sovereignty. Celtic myth expresses genesis through land‑bonding, tribal emergence, and cosmic ordering.
- Danu — Primordial mother; source of the Tuatha Dé Danann; genesis through lineage and land.
- Lugh (Lugus) — Polymath sovereign; establishes order through skill, law, and mastery; solar genesis.
- Brigid — Triple‑flame goddess of craft, healing, and poetry; genesis through inspiration and renewal.
- Dagda — All‑father; creator through abundance, fertility, and cosmic maintenance; keeper of cycles.
Genesis Pattern:
Celtic genesis is tribal emergence + land sovereignty + skill‑based order rather than cosmological creation ex nihilo.
II. Continuance Operators (Maintenance / Stability / Prosperity)#
These deities maintain cycles, uphold contracts, preserve tribes, and stabilize the world.
- Aengus Óg — Continuance through love, youth, and renewal; emotional coherence operator.
- Nuada Airgetlám — Continuance through rightful kingship; restoration of order after loss.
- Goibniu — Smith‑craft; maintenance through perfect craftsmanship; weapons, tools, and feasts.
- Cernunnos — Continuance through nature, cycles, animals, and wealth; ecological stability.
Continuance Pattern:
Celtic continuance is cyclical, ecological, and contractual — stability emerges from right relationship with land, tribe, and craft.
III. Dissolution Operators (Chaos / War / Fate / Endings)#
These deities dissolve structures, end cycles, or enforce fate.
- The Morrígan — War, sovereignty crisis, fate; dissolution through conflict and prophecy.
- Balor — Destructive force; dissolution through overwhelming power and imbalance.
- Fomorians (collective) — Primordial chaos; dissolution through invasion, entropy, and disorder.
- Medb — Dissolution through ambition, conflict, and destabilization of tribal order.
Dissolution Pattern:
Celtic dissolution is fate‑driven, prophetic, and tribal — endings come through conflict, imbalance, or sovereignty challenge.
IV. Liminal Operators (Threshold / Otherworld / Mediation)#
Celtic myth is uniquely rich in liminal figures — psychopomps, tricksters, and Otherworld mediators.
- Manannán mac Lir — Sea‑gate psychopomp; mediator between mortal world and Otherworld.
- The Sidhe (Aos Sí) — Collective liminal beings; thresholds, time distortion, fate intervention.
- Púca — Trickster; shapeshifting; liminal chaos and transformation.
- Oisín — Mortal‑Otherworld traveler; liminal operator of time and narrative transition.
Liminal Pattern:
Celtic liminality is Otherworld‑centric, emphasizing thresholds, time dilation, and fate negotiation.
V. Structural Notes (Canon‑Aligned)#
- Celtic myth is tribal, not imperial — operators map to clan, land, and sovereignty.
- Genesis is emergent, not cosmological — creation is lineage + land + skill.
- Continuance is ecological — stability emerges from craft, nature, and rightful kingship.
- Dissolution is fate‑driven — endings come through prophecy, imbalance, or conflict.
- Liminality is Otherworld‑dominant — thresholds define narrative structure.
VI. Cross‑Framework References#
- Greek: Morrígan ↔ Athena/Artemis (war + sovereignty), Lugh ↔ Apollo (skill + solar order).
- Hindu: Danu ↔ Aditi (primordial mother), Brigid ↔ Saraswati (inspiration + craft).
- Egyptian: Dagda ↔ Ptah (craft + creation), Manannán ↔ Osiris (Otherworld mediation).
- Sumerian: Morrígan ↔ Inanna (war + fate), Cernunnos ↔ Dumuzid (nature cycles).
- Yoruba: Brigid ↔ Oshun (renewal), Lugh ↔ Ogun (craft + mastery).
VII. Metadata Block (Canonical)#
canon: TriadicFrameworks
module: Celtic_Triadic_Profile_Capture
version: 1.0.0
operators:
genesis:
- Danu
- Lugh
- Brigid
- Dagda
continuance:
- Aengus
- Nuada
- Goibniu
- Cernunnos
dissolution:
- Morrigan
- Balor
- Fomorians
- Medb
liminal:
- Manannan_mac_Lir
- Aos_Si
- Puca
- Oisin
primary_sources:
- Lebor Gabála Érenn
- Táin Bó Cúailnge
- Mythological Cycle
cross_references:
greek: [Apollo, Athena, Artemis]
hindu: [Aditi, Saraswati]
egyptian: [Ptah, Osiris]
sumerian: [Inanna, Dumuzid]
yoruba: [Oshun, Ogun]
status: complete
last_updated: 2026-07-16Celtic Capture Complete#
You can paste this directly into the file you’re editing on GitHub.
It is fully aligned with your existing pantheon captures and the canonical triadic structure.