Symbol Directory
Every symbol here is researched in depth — origins, cultural variations and significance, not one-line definitions. Search by name, by the meaning you have in mind, or by culture.
286 symbols
- AcornThe acorn symbolises potential, patience, and the promise that great strength can emerge from small beginnings. It is also a symbol of prosperity, long life, and — in Norse and Celtic traditions — a connection to sacred oak veneration and divine protection.
- Alchemical MercuryAlchemical mercury represents the spirit — the volatile, fluid, mediating principle that connects soul (sulfur) and body (salt) in Paracelsian alchemy. As Mercurius, it is paradoxically both the starting material and the finished work of alchemy, the process and the goal. Its glyph of crescent-circle-cross encodes the mind's capacity to transcend matter while remaining embedded within it.
- Alchemical SaltAlchemical salt represents the body — the fixed, stable, crystalline principle that gives physical form to matter in Paracelsian alchemy. Its circle-with-horizontal-line glyph encodes wholeness divided by the earth plane. Alongside sulfur (soul) and mercury (spirit), salt completes the tria prima: the three-principle system through which Paracelsus explained the composition of all things.
- Alchemical SulfurAlchemical sulfur represents the active, fiery soul-principle in Paracelsian alchemy — the animating force within matter that drives transformation. Its upward triangle expresses the aspiration of fire and consciousness toward the divine, while the cross below anchors it in the material world. It is one vertex of the tria prima triad alongside mercury and salt.
- Algiz Rune (ᛉ)Algiz represents divine protection, the connection between humanity and the gods, and the alert vigilance that keeps danger at bay. It is the rune of sanctuary, of reaching upward toward the divine, and of the sacred space that cannot be crossed by hostile forces.
- Alpha and OmegaThe Alpha and Omega declares Christ's status as the beginning and end of all things — the first and last letters of the Greek alphabet representing the totality of existence from first to last. This is a divine self-description from the Book of Revelation, expressing not Christ's name but his eternal nature as the one who encompasses all of time and reality.
- AnchorThe anchor symbolises stability, steadfastness, and hope — staying grounded and secure amid life's storms. It is an old Christian symbol of hope and faith and a classic maritime and tattoo emblem of safe return and loyalty.
- AnkhThe ankh is the ancient Egyptian symbol of life — eternal life and the breath of life given by the gods. Often called the 'key of life,' it represents living forever, vitality, and the union of opposites.
- AppleThe apple symbolises knowledge (and its consequences), temptation, immortality, abundance, and divine favour. Its exact meaning shifts dramatically depending on cultural context — it can represent forbidden wisdom, eternal life, or the seed of catastrophic conflict.
- ArrowThe arrow symbolizes focused intention, direction, and the decisive movement of will toward a goal. Depending on context, it can represent protection (arrows ward off evil), love (Cupid's arrows create desire), swiftness, or the spiritual discipline of releasing attachment and allowing outcomes to unfold.
- Arrow and BowThe bow and arrow symbolizes intention, focus, and the irrevocable act of release toward a desired end. The arrow represents direction and purpose; the bow represents the tension and preparation needed to project that purpose into the world. Together they speak of desire, the hunt, divine love, and the mind's power to aim at what it seeks.
- AwenThe awen symbolises divine inspiration, the flowing spirit of creativity, and the balanced harmony of mind, body, and spirit. Its three rays represent the balance of opposite forces — masculine and feminine, light and dark — unified by a third ray of perfect equilibrium.
- Axe SymbolThe axe symbolises decisive power, the courage to act, and the transformation of raw nature into human order. The double-headed labrys represents balanced dual authority and the sacred power of the Minoan goddess. The Norse battle axe embodies warrior honour and martial identity. Perun's slavic axe drives away evil and commands the sky.
- Balance ScalesThe balance scales represent impartial justice, truth, and the cosmic law that requires every action to be balanced by consequence. They embody the principle that moral and legal reality is measurable — that right and wrong have weight, that this weight can be assessed fairly, and that the universe itself maintains an account of what is owed and what has been paid.
- BatThe bat's meaning depends entirely on cultural context. In Chinese tradition it is a supreme symbol of happiness and good luck. In Western tradition it represents darkness, fear, and the supernatural. In Mayan mythology it embodies death and the underworld. In some Indigenous North American traditions it symbolises medicine, heightened awareness, and communication.
- BearThe bear symbolises strength, courage, and protection — especially fierce maternal protection. Linked to healing, introspection, and the cycle of renewal through hibernation, it is one of the oldest and most respected of all animal symbols.
- BeeThe bee symbolises hard work and diligence, community and cooperation, and fertility and abundance, along with sweetness, royalty (the queen bee), and the soul. The industrious worker bee and the organised hive make it a model of productive, cooperative society.
- Bell SymbolThe bell symbolises the voice of the sacred reaching into the ordinary world. It announces, awakens, summons, and marks the boundary between one state of time and another. Across religious traditions the bell's sound drives away evil, consecrates space, and calls the mind to attention. As a cultural symbol it represents freedom, mourning, and the governance of shared time.
- BinduThe bindu is the primordial point of creation in Hindu cosmology — the dimensionless singularity from which the universe expanded, the centre of the Sri Yantra, and the location of the ajna chakra on the forehead. It represents pure undivided consciousness, the state before manifestation, and the ultimate destination of meditative absorption.
- Bird of ParadiseThe bird of paradise symbolises paradise itself — a beauty and freedom so perfect it exists beyond ordinary earthly existence. It represents the longing for transcendence, the divine realm glimpsed but never possessed, and the idea that the most extraordinary beauty is perpetually in flight, never settling long enough to be captured.
- Black CatThe black cat means bad luck and witchcraft in much of Western Europe and North America, but good luck and prosperity in Japan, Scotland, and parts of the UK. It also symbolises mystery, independence, the supernatural, and — in modern contexts — gothic identity and countercultural self-expression.
- Black SunThe Black Sun is today primarily a neo-Nazi and white supremacist symbol. Its twelve-spoke design was used by Heinrich Himmler's SS at Wewelsburg Castle. While sun wheel motifs appear in pre-Christian European art, the specific 'Black Sun' as an occult emblem was largely constructed within Nazi and post-war neo-Nazi circles. It functions today as a hate symbol recognized internationally by anti-extremism organizations.
- Bonsai TreeThe bonsai tree symbolises the productive tension between human cultivation and natural force — the achievement of harmony through patient, respectful shaping rather than domination. It embodies wabi-sabi (the beauty of imperfection and impermanence), the value of patience measured in decades rather than moments, and the Zen insight that enormous natural presence can be contained in the smallest of forms.
- Brigid's CrossBrigid's Cross symbolises protection of the home, the arrival of spring, the sacred fire of creativity and healing, and the continuity of Irish spiritual tradition from pre-Christian goddess to Christian saint. Hung in the home, it guards against fire, illness, and misfortune throughout the year.
- Broom SymbolThe broom symbolises purification — the sweeping away of what does not belong. In folk magic it protects thresholds and households from evil influences. In pre-Christian European tradition it was a fertility implement used in agricultural ritual. As the witch's besom it became the emblem of transgressive female power and nocturnal flight beyond the limits of ordinary social life.
- ButterflyThe butterfly symbolises transformation, rebirth, and new beginnings through its metamorphosis from caterpillar to winged adult. It also widely represents the soul, the spirits of the dead, hope, and fleeting beauty.
- Butterfly EffectThe butterfly effect symbolises the hidden power of small actions, the interconnectedness of all things, and the impossibility of predicting complex systems. As a modern symbol it represents both the anxiety and the wonder of living in a world where everything influences everything else.
- CaduceusThe caduceus is the winged, twin-serpent staff of the Greek god Hermes (Mercury) — the symbol of commerce, trade, negotiation, communication, eloquence, travellers, and messengers. It is very widely but incorrectly used as a symbol of medicine, confused with the Rod of Asclepius (a single serpent on a plain staff), which is the true medical symbol.
- Caduceus vs Rod of AsclepiusThe caduceus (two snakes, wings) belongs to Hermes/Mercury and properly signifies commerce and communication. The rod of Asclepius (one snake, no wings) belongs to Asclepius and properly signifies medicine and healing. The widespread use of the caduceus in American medical contexts is a historical error traceable to a 1902 US Army Medical Corps decision. Most international medical organizations use the rod of Asclepius correctly.
- CairnThe cairn symbolises deliberate human presence and the impulse to mark significant places and moments. It represents memory — both individual and communal — and the accumulation of many small acts into something greater than any one of them. As a navigational marker it embodies guidance and the gift of orientation; as a memorial it embodies continuity across time.
- CandleThe candle symbolises light overcoming darkness, hope in difficult circumstances, prayer, remembrance of the dead, and the fragility of life. It also represents spiritual presence, the illumination of the divine, and — in vanitas tradition — the brevity of human existence.
- CastleThe castle symbolises power, protection, and authority in medieval and heraldic tradition. In fairy tales it represents the goal of aspiration and the place where transformation occurs. Psychologically it represents the defended self — the walls a person builds to protect their inner life from intrusion.
- CauldronThe cauldron symbolizes transformation, the creative power of the feminine divine, and the mystery of death-and-rebirth. As a vessel that turns raw matter into nourishment, it represents the fundamental alchemy of life — the capacity to take what is broken or raw and render it into something life-sustaining and new.
- Celtic CrossThe Celtic cross is a Christian cross with a ring around the intersection, from early medieval Ireland and Britain. It symbolises Christian faith, eternity and the eternal nature of God (the ring), and Celtic — especially Irish, Scottish, and Welsh — heritage and spirituality.
- Celtic KnotThe Celtic knot's continuous, unbroken line symbolises eternity, the cyclical nature of time, and the interconnection of all things. Its endless interlace has no beginning and no end, representing the infinite and the divine. It is distinct from the triquetra (a three-pointed knot with its own specific symbolism) and the dara knot (specifically representing the oak tree's root system).
- Celtic SpiralThe Celtic spiral symbolises eternal cycles of life, death, and rebirth. As a pre-Christian symbol later absorbed into Christian Celtic art, it connects the turning of seasons, the movement of the sun, and the soul's journey through multiple existences. The triple spiral or triskelion extends this meaning into the threefold nature of existence.
- Celtic Tree CalendarThe Celtic tree calendar assigns sacred trees to months based on the Ogham alphabet. The Ogham-tree letter associations are genuine medieval Irish tradition (attested in manuscripts such as the Book of Ballymote). However, the specific calendar system — each tree governing a lunar month — was constructed by poet Robert Graves in The White Goddess (1948) and is not an attested ancient practice. Modern Druids and pagans often use it as a meaningful spiritual framework while scholars note its modern origins.
- CentaurThe centaur symbolises the duality of human nature — the rational mind and the animal impulse, wisdom and appetite, civilisation and wildness. In the figure of Chiron it represents the healing wisdom that comes from integrating rather than suppressing these two natures. As Sagittarius it embodies the philosopher-archer whose arrow aims at truth.
- Chain SymbolThe chain symbolises constraint, obligation, and connection. As an image of bondage it represents oppression and the denial of freedom — a meaning inseparable from the history of slavery. As an image of unity it represents the strength of collective bonds, the community that holds together under stress, and the agreements that make shared life possible. These meanings are in permanent tension.
- ChaliceThe chalice symbolises the sacred vessel — the container of what is most precious, most transformative, and most dangerous. It represents sacrifice (the blood offered and received), abundance (the cauldron that never empties), the sacred feminine principle of receptive wisdom, and the mystery of transformation that occurs when the ordinary is raised to the level of the divine.
- Chariot SymbolThe chariot symbolises the directed movement of divine or human will — power under guidance, force given direction. The solar chariot is the creative and governing power of the cosmos. In Plato the chariot is the soul under the governance of reason. In the Bhagavad Gita the chariot of Arjuna is the battlefield of spiritual decision. The Tarot's Chariot card is the will triumphant over conflict.
- Cherry BlossomThe cherry blossom symbolises the beauty and transience of life — exquisite but fleeting, a reminder to savour the present. It also represents renewal, spring, and new beginnings, and in Japan it is a national symbol of life's preciousness and the beauty of impermanence.
- Cherry SymbolThe cherry symbolises innocent pleasure, summer abundance, and the brief sweetness of life's best moments. Its vivid red colour also connects it to temptation and desire, while in literary and cultural contexts it has served as a symbol of lost innocence and the passage from youth to experience.
- Chi-RhoThe Chi-Rho monogram of the first two Greek letters of 'Christ' symbolises Jesus Christ, Christian faith, and divine victory. Constantine's adoption of it in 312 CE made it the first Christian state symbol, and it remains a powerful emblem of Christ and of the Christian tradition.
- ChimeraThe Chimera symbolises the impossible made visible — the hybrid that should not exist, the combination of incompatible elements, the imagination's capacity to construct what nature has not. It represents both the creative power of the imagination (which can conceive what does not yet exist) and the warning that some combinations are monstrous, dangerous, and deserving of destruction.
- Christian CrossThe cross is the central symbol of Christianity, representing the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, his sacrifice, and his victory over death — and so God's love, redemption, salvation, and the hope of eternal life. It is worn as a sign of Christian faith, hope, and protection.
- ChrysanthemumThe chrysanthemum symbolises longevity and noble resilience in East Asian tradition — it blooms in autumn when other flowers have faded, demonstrating that beauty persists through difficulty. In Japan it represents imperial power and national identity. In Chinese culture it is one of the Four Gentlemen of classical aesthetics, standing for scholarly integrity. In European tradition it has become associated with mourning and the remembrance of the dead.
- CicadaThe cicada symbolises immortality, transformation, and the patient endurance of long preparation. Its emergence from underground after years of invisible growth makes it a natural emblem of rebirth and the soul's persistence. In Chinese tradition it specifically represents immortality; in Greek philosophy it symbolised the soul itself.
- Circle of LifeThe circle of life symbolises the continuous cycle through which all living things participate in processes of birth, growth, decline, death, and renewal — and through which matter, energy, and meaning circulate without final end. It asserts that no being stands alone and that what appears as death is always simultaneously the condition of new life.
- CladdaghThe Claddagh symbolises love, friendship, and loyalty. Its design says it directly: the two hands stand for friendship, the heart for love, and the crown for loyalty. Worn as a ring or given as a gift, it is a token of these three bonds and a beloved emblem of Irish heritage.
- Clan SymbolIn Scottish heraldic tradition, the coat of arms belongs to the chief alone. Clansmen and women wear the crest badge — the chief's heraldic crest within a strap-and-buckle border — as a mark of allegiance to the chief rather than as their own heraldic device. Irish sept symbols follow related but distinct traditions. Clan plants (badges), tartans, and mottos complete the symbolic vocabulary of clan identity.
- CobraThe cobra symbolizes divine protection, royal authority, and the awakened power of cosmic energy. It represents the guardian who warns before striking, the kundalini force that rises through spiritual practice, and the sovereign power that commands respect without apology.
- Compass RoseThe compass rose symbolizes guidance, direction, and the capacity to navigate life's uncertainties with intention. It represents the adventurous spirit that moves through the world with a sense of purpose and bearing, and the spiritual idea that a true north — a fixed point of orientation — exists for every person who seeks it.
- Compass SymbolThe compass symbolises direction, purpose, and moral guidance — the capacity to orient oneself correctly even in unfamiliar or difficult circumstances. It also represents protection for those who travel, the search for one's true path in life, and in Freemasonic tradition, the discipline of keeping one's desires and actions within ethical limits.
- Coptic CrossThe Coptic cross represents Christian faith as expressed by Egypt's indigenous Coptic Orthodox Church, one of the world's oldest Christian communities. Its distinctive decorative form — often featuring circular or trifoliate arm endings — distinguishes it from the Roman Latin cross and reflects Egypt's unique contribution to Christian visual tradition.
- CornucopiaThe cornucopia symbolizes abundance, the generous overflow of the earth's gifts, and the harvest's fullness. It represents a world experienced as giving rather than withholding — a fundamental orientation of gratitude and trust in the generosity of natural and divine forces.
- CraneThe crane symbolizes longevity, grace, and the aspiration toward higher states of being. It represents fidelity (cranes mate for life), the blessing of peace (symbolized by the senbazuru tradition), and the elegant achievement of those who cultivate themselves over a long life — wisdom that comes through patient practice rather than innate gift.
- Crescent MoonThe crescent moon symbolises femininity, intuition, cycles, and new beginnings. As the moon waxing or waning, it represents change, growth, and renewal. It is the emblem of Islam, an ancient symbol of moon goddesses and the divine feminine, and a sign of the night and the spiritual.
- Cross VariantsThe cross symbol takes dozens of distinct forms across Christian, heraldic, and military traditions. Each variant carries specific meanings: the Greek cross (equal arms, Byzantine Christianity), Latin cross (Catholic and Protestant Christianity), Orthodox cross (three crossbars with specific theological meaning), Jerusalem cross (crusading kingdoms), saltire/St Andrew's cross (Scottish and other national identities), St George's cross (English identity), Maltese cross (Knights Hospitaller), Iron Cross (German military).
- Crossed KeysThe crossed keys — one gold, one silver — represent the authority Jesus gave to Peter to bind and loose on earth and in heaven (Matthew 16:19). As the papal symbol, they declare the Pope's role as successor to Peter, holding the keys of spiritual authority over the Church and symbolically over the gates of heaven.
- CrownThe crown symbolises royalty, authority, victory, and divine favour. It marks the person who wears it as the highest in a hierarchy — whether king, conqueror, saint, or the lord of one's own life. It is equally a symbol of personal sovereignty and self-worth.
- Crux AnsataThe crux ansata is the Latin scholarly name for the looped cross (essentially the ankh form) when it appears in Coptic Christian, Roman, or Western esoteric contexts. The loop above the cross arm represents eternity and the divine, the cross below represents earth and mortality, and their union represents life, resurrection, and the meeting of human and divine. It overlaps substantially with the ankh but carries a distinct Christian and esoteric reception history.
- Crystal SymbolThe crystal symbolises clarity, purity, and the amplification of energy or intention. Different crystals carry specific symbolic properties in New Age tradition: amethyst for calm, rose quartz for love, obsidian for protection, clear quartz as an amplifier. More broadly, the crystal's geometric perfection symbolises hidden order in the natural world.
- Dagger SymbolThe dagger symbolises duality — the blade that can protect or harm, sacrifice or murder, reveal truth or conceal it. It is associated with betrayal (particularly through the 'Et tu, Brute' archetype), with the sailor tradition of courage and readiness, and with the vanitas memento mori tradition of mortality and the brevity of life.
- Dara KnotThe dara knot represents the root system of the sacred Celtic oak tree, symbolising inner strength, resilience, deep wisdom, and the hidden foundations that support visible life. It teaches that true endurance comes from roots — from being grounded in one's values, ancestry, and inner being.
- DarumaThe Daruma symbolizes resilience, perseverance, and the achievement of goals through persistent effort. Its self-righting form — knocked down, it always rises again — encodes the principle of never giving up, while the eye-filling ritual makes it a companion and witness to specific human aspirations over the period of their pursuit.
- Deathly HallowsThe Deathly Hallows symbol from J.K. Rowling's 2007 novel represents three legendary objects: the Elder Wand (vertical line), Resurrection Stone (circle), and Invisibility Cloak (triangle). The wizard possessing all three becomes 'Master of Death.' As a modern symbol, it functions primarily as fan identity and a meditation on mortality. Its triangle-circle-line design echoes but was not directly derived from older esoteric symbols.
- Dharma WheelThe Dharma Wheel (Dharmachakra) is a wheel, usually with eight spokes, that is one of Buddhism's oldest and most important symbols. It represents the Buddha's teaching (the Dharma), the path to enlightenment, and above all the Noble Eightfold Path — the way to the end of suffering.
- Dorje / VajraThe dorje/vajra represents indestructible reality — the adamantine nature of enlightened mind that cannot be corrupted or destroyed. As a ritual implement it embodies skilful means (upāya), the compassionate methods by which a teacher guides students toward liberation. Its thunderbolt aspect expresses the sudden, irresistible quality of the insight that cuts through delusion.
- Double HelixThe double helix represents DNA — the molecule that carries hereditary information in all living organisms. Discovered by Watson, Crick, and Franklin in 1953, it symbolizes life's code, biological identity, heredity, and the unity of all living things. As a modern scientific symbol, it functions in medical, genetic research, and biotechnology contexts and has entered popular culture as an icon of life and biological connection.
- DoveThe dove symbolises peace above all, along with love, purity, hope, and new beginnings. In Christianity it represents the Holy Spirit and God's peace, and across cultures it is the bird of the love-goddess and the universal emblem of harmony.
- DragonThe dragon symbolises immense power and strength. In Eastern cultures, especially China, it is benevolent and auspicious — bringing rain, fortune, and imperial authority — while in the West it is a fearsome monster representing chaos, greed, and evil to be overcome.
- DragonflyThe dragonfly symbolises transformation, change, adaptability, and the lightness of being. Born in water and emerging into air, it represents personal growth, emotional maturity, and the breaking free of the true self — along with good fortune, swiftness, and a connection to the spirit world.
- DreamcatcherThe dreamcatcher is a Native American (originally Ojibwe) protective object — a woven web on a hoop, hung above a sleeping place to catch bad dreams while letting good dreams through, protecting the sleeper, especially children. It symbolises protection, especially during sleep, and is connected to a protective Spider-Woman.
- EagleThe eagle symbolises freedom, power, courage, and vision. As the king of birds, soaring highest and seeing farthest, it represents authority, the sun and the divine, and a spirit that rises above the earthly — which is why it adorns so many nations' emblems.
- Egyptian DjedThe djed pillar means stability and endurance — the Egyptian hieroglyph for djed carries this meaning directly. Identified with the backbone of Osiris, the god of resurrection and the dead, it symbolizes the power to stand firm against chaos and death. The annual 'raising of the djed' ceremony was a royal and civic ritual reaffirming the stability of the Egyptian state and the king's identification with Osiris.
- ElephantThe elephant symbolises wisdom, memory, strength, loyalty, and good luck. It represents power used gently and patiently — the protective devotion of family, long memory, and the steadiness of an animal that is mighty yet calm. In Hindu and Buddhist tradition it is sacred and deeply auspicious.
- Endless KnotThe Endless Knot represents the interdependence of all things and the continuous flow of cause and effect. It symbolises the inseparable unity of wisdom and compassion — the two foundations of Buddhist enlightenment. Its unbroken lines point to eternity, the infinite nature of the Buddha's teachings, and the cyclical continuity of existence.
- EnsōThe ensō represents enlightenment, the universe, and the Zen understanding of emptiness (śūnyatā). The perfect circle embodies totality; the open circle embodies the perfection of imperfection. It is drawn in a single brushstroke as an expression of the artist's state of mind in the present moment — a visual koan.
- Evil EyeThe evil eye is a curse believed to be cast by an envious or malicious look; the blue eye-shaped amulet (nazar) is worn to ward it off. As a symbol, it means protection and the deflection of harm and envy.
- Eye of FatimaThe Eye of Fatima is an Islamic amulet depicting a stylised eye, associated with the Prophet's daughter Fatimah al-Zahra, believed to ward off the evil eye (al-ayn) and invoke divine protection. It represents faith's protective power over malevolent spiritual forces and honours Fatimah's role as an intercessory figure in Islamic devotion.
- Eye of HorusThe Eye of Horus (wedjat) is an ancient Egyptian symbol of protection, healing, restoration, and royal power — a stylised falcon-marked human eye. From the myth of Horus's eye being injured and then restored, it represents wholeness made whole again, protection against harm, and good health.
- Eye of ProvidenceThe Eye of Providence symbolises the omniscience of God or a higher power, watching over and guiding creation. The triangle represents the Holy Trinity in Christian usage. In Masonic tradition it represents the Great Architect of the Universe. In esoteric use it stands for enlightened awareness and the third eye.
- Eye SpiralThe eye spiral combines the protective and perceptive symbolism of the eye with the spiral's meaning of growth, eternity, and the inward journey. It represents consciousness turning upon itself — awareness observing awareness — and the idea that the deepest exploration is inward rather than outward. As a tattoo it is most often chosen to represent mindfulness, spiritual practice, or a period of intense self-examination.
- FeatherThe feather symbolises freedom, spiritual connection, communication, and the link between the earthly and the divine. Feathers also carry the specific meaning of the bird they come from, and represent truth (the Egyptian Feather of Ma'at), honour (eagle feathers in many Indigenous traditions), and the power of flight and transcendence.
- Fehu Rune (ᚠ)Fehu represents wealth, abundance, and the responsible use and circulation of resources. As cattle was the primal form of mobile wealth in Germanic antiquity, Fehu speaks to prosperity that is kept in motion rather than hoarded — wealth that generates more wealth through right relationship and generosity.
- Fern SymbolThe fern symbolises resilience, endurance through difficulty, and new beginnings. As New Zealand's silver fern, it represents national identity and pride. The unfurling fern frond (koru in Maori) represents new life and the growth of potential. In Victorian England, the fern symbolised sincerity and fascination with the natural world.
- Fig LeafThe fig leaf symbolises modesty and concealment in Western culture, derived from Genesis 3:7 where Adam and Eve cover themselves after the Fall. It is also the symbol of censorship applied to classical art. In other traditions, the sacred fig tree is a symbol of enlightenment, divine presence, and cosmic order.
- Flame SymbolThe flame symbolises the soul, divine presence, and the persistence of something essential beyond physical change. As sacred fire in Zoroastrianism, the flame represents divine truth and purity. As the Olympic torch, it represents human aspiration and peace. As the Eternal Flame, it represents unbroken remembrance of the dead.
- Flaming HeartThe flaming heart in Catholic tradition represents the Sacred Heart of Jesus — his love for humanity so intense it is depicted as a burning physical heart. As a secular symbol, the flaming heart expresses passionate devotion, love that burns and sometimes suffers. The Catholic version includes a crown of thorns, lance wound, and cross; the secular version reduces the image to flames rising from a heart shape.
- Fleur-de-lisThe fleur-de-lis symbolises royalty, nobility, purity, and divine grace. As France's royal emblem it represents French heritage and dynastic power; in Christian iconography it is linked to the Virgin Mary and the Trinity; more broadly it stands for elegance, honour, and civic pride.
- Flower of LifeThe Flower of Life is a pattern of overlapping circles forming a symmetrical, flower-like design, the best-known symbol of 'sacred geometry.' It represents creation, the interconnection and unity of all life, and the geometric order and patterns believed to underlie the cosmos and existence.
- Forget-Me-NotThe forget-me-not symbolises faithful love, enduring memory, and the wish to be remembered after parting or death. In Victorian flower language it represented true love and fidelity. Today it is also the symbol of dementia and Alzheimer's awareness, making it one of the most poignant botanical emblems of our time.
- Four-Leaf CloverThe four-leaf clover symbolises good luck, fortune, and rare blessing. Because a four-leaf clover is genuinely rare among ordinary three-leaf clovers, finding one is considered lucky, and its four leaves are popularly said to stand for faith, hope, love, and luck.
- FoxThe fox symbolises cleverness, cunning, and adaptability, as well as transformation, magic, and the trickster. Quick-witted and resourceful, it represents intelligence and wit over brute strength — and in some cultures a powerful shapeshifting spirit.
- Fox FireFox fire symbolises supernatural power, shapeshifting, the liminal space between worlds, and the dangerous beauty of what cannot be entirely understood or controlled. The kitsune of Japanese tradition embodies this most fully: a fox spirit that can be a divine messenger, a trickster, a lover, or a terrifying supernatural being — always at the boundary between the human and the non-human.
- Fractal SymbolThe Mandelbrot set is the most famous fractal — an infinitely complex mathematical object generated by the simple iterative formula z → z² + c, first visualized by Benoît Mandelbrot in 1980. As a symbol, it represents infinite complexity from simple rules, the self-similarity of natural patterns, the boundary between order and chaos, and the capacity of mathematics to describe the deep structure of natural forms. It is an entirely modern discovery with no ancient antecedent.
- Globe SymbolThe globe symbolizes totality, worldly power, and completeness. In royal regalia, the orb expresses sovereignty over the whole world. In cartography and navigation, the terrestrial globe expresses knowledge and exploration. In the modern context of space photography, the globe as the 'blue marble' expresses the unity and fragility of Earth as a single system. The sphere's perfect symmetry — all points equidistant from the center — makes it the natural symbol of something that encompasses all.
- Green ManThe Green Man represents the inseparability of the human from the natural world — the face of the wild that looks back at us from the heart of our own buildings, our own histories, and our own bodies. He embodies the cycles of growth, death, and return that govern all living things, and the primal, undomesticated vitality that civilization shapes but cannot extinguish.
- Griffin SymbolThe griffin combines eagle (king of birds, sky, divine) and lion (king of beasts, earth, royal) into a single creature that commands both domains. It symbolizes divine power, guardianship, vigilance, and the combination of intellectual and physical strength. In heraldry it is one of the most prestigious creatures, conveying strength, courage, and dual authority. In Christian typology it represents the dual nature of Christ.
- HameshIn Jewish tradition, five (hamesh) is the number most associated with divine grace and the covenant. Most significantly, the Torah — the foundational text of Jewish religious life — consists of five books (Chamisha Chumshei Torah), making the number five a structural signature of divine revelation itself. The Hamesh hand as protective amulet takes its name from the same five-number root.
- Hammerhead SharkThe hammerhead shark symbolises ancestral protection, heightened perception, and oceanic power. In Hawaiian spirituality it is a guardian spirit (aumakua) who shields loved ones from harm at sea. Its wide-set eyes represent panoramic vision and the ability to see through deception.
- HamsaThe hamsa is an open-hand amulet that symbolises protection, warding off the evil eye and inviting blessings, health, and good fortune. It is shared across Jewish (Hand of Miriam) and Islamic (Hand of Fatima) traditions.
- Hand of GodThe hand of God symbolizes divine power, creation, and intervention across multiple religious traditions. Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel image is its most recognizable modern form. The Mano Poderosa is a Latin American Catholic devotional image of the Five Powerful Beings. In Jewish and Islamic scripture, the 'hand of the Lord' signifies divine miraculous action. Note: this symbol is distinct from the hamsa, which is a protective palm-facing-out amulet.
- HawkThe hawk symbolises keen vision, perception, and clarity, along with focus, awareness, freedom, and spiritual messaging. Sharp-eyed and high-soaring, it represents seeing the bigger picture, decisive action, and a connection between the earthly and the divine.
- Heart with ArrowThe heart pierced by an arrow primarily represents romantic love struck suddenly and overwhelmingly by the power of Eros/Cupid. In religious tradition, the arrow becomes a sword in Mary's heart — the Seven Sorrows of Mary — representing compassionate grief rather than erotic desire. Both traditions share the insight that profound love arrives as a wound in the heart.
- Helm of AweThe Helm of Awe is an Icelandic magical stave of eight radiating arms used for protection and for striking fear into enemies. Its concept appears in Fáfnismál (the Fáfnir dragon's treasure-guardian) in the Poetic Edda, but the drawn symbol is found in Icelandic grimoires of the 16th–17th centuries, not in Viking Age archaeological finds. It is distinct from the Vegvisir.
- HeronThe heron symbolises patience, wisdom, and the rewards of careful observation. It represents the power of stillness — the understanding that the deepest truths reveal themselves to those who wait and watch rather than rush and grasp. In Egyptian tradition it was a symbol of creation and resurrection.
- Hexagram StarThe hexagram (two overlapping equilateral triangles) appears in Hindu tantric tradition as the Shatkona (union of masculine and feminine principles), in Islamic geometric art as a star pattern with no specific religious symbolism, in Western Hermetic tradition as the Seal of Solomon representing planetary harmonies and the macrocosm, and in Ethiopian Christian iconography. These uses are independent of the Star of David (see star-of-david.json).
- Horn of GabrielThe Horn of Gabriel is the trumpet popularly said to be sounded by the archangel Gabriel to announce the Last Judgment and resurrection of the dead. It symbolizes divine reckoning, awakening from death, and the end of earthly time.
- HorseThe horse symbolises freedom, power, and strength, along with nobility, speed, and the spirited, untamed life-force. Deeply tied to its partnership with humanity, it also represents loyalty, the warrior, travel, and the journey of life.
- HorseshoeThe horseshoe is a symbol of good luck and protective power, primarily rooted in the magical properties attributed to iron across European folk traditions. Mounted above a door with the opening upward, it is said to collect and hold luck; opening downward, it showers good fortune on all who pass beneath.
- Horus FalconHorus the falcon-headed god is the Egyptian deity of kingship and the sky. The living pharaoh was considered the earthly incarnation of Horus. The Horus name was the first of the five royal names, written within a serekh surmounted by a falcon. The falcon symbolizes both solar power (the soaring hawk as solar disc bearer) and royal legitimacy (the divine pharaoh as living Horus). This page covers Horus as a whole deity, distinct from the Eye of Horus amulet (see eye-of-horus.json).
- HourglassThe hourglass symbolises time's passage, mortality, and the finite nature of life. Its two equal chambers suggest balance between past and future; the sand that cannot be stopped or reversed represents the irreversibility of time; and the act of turning it over suggests renewal and the cyclical nature of existence.
- HummingbirdThe hummingbird symbolises joy, lightness, and the savouring of life's sweetness, along with energy, resilience, love, and freedom. As a flashing, hovering visitor it is also widely seen as a messenger and a sign from the spirit world or departed loved ones.
- HurricaneThe hurricane symbolises irresistible natural force and the inevitability of cycles of destruction and renewal. The eye of the storm — the region of eerie calm at the centre of the whirlwind — has become a powerful modern symbol for finding stillness within chaos, the interior peace that survives even the most turbulent external circumstances.
- IbisThe ibis symbolises wisdom, writing, and divine intelligence — primarily through its ancient Egyptian identification with Thoth, the scribe of the gods. Its distinctive curved bill, which probes beneath the surface of mud and water for hidden sustenance, made it a natural symbol for the mind that discovers what lies beneath appearances.
- IchthysThe ichthys symbolises Christian faith, specifically the belief that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and Saviour. The Greek word for fish (ichthys) is an acrostic for 'Jesus Christ, Son of God, Saviour,' making this simple fish outline a compressed confession of the central Christian creed.
- Ik OnkarIk Onkar (ੴ) means 'One God/Creator' — the foundational affirmation of Sikhism drawn from the Mool Mantar composed by Guru Nanak. The numeral 1 combined with the Oora letter declares God's absolute unity and oneness, the starting point of all Sikh theology, ethics, and devotional practice.
- Infinity SymbolThe infinity symbol (∞), the horizontal figure-eight (lemniscate), represents endlessness, eternity, and the limitless. Originally a mathematical symbol for infinity, it has become a beloved emblem of eternity, endless love and bonds, limitless possibility, and the unending — hugely popular in jewellery and tattoos.
- Iris FlowerThe iris flower symbolizes wisdom, communication, and royalty, drawing its name from the Greek goddess Iris, messenger of the gods. Its meanings shift by culture, from valor and protection in Japan to elegance and status in France.
- Isis KnotThe Isis knot, or tyet, is an ancient Egyptian symbol of protection and life associated with the goddess Isis. Often made of red stone and placed on mummies, it invoked the protective power of the goddess's blood or girdle to safeguard the deceased in the afterlife.
- Jack-o'-LanternThe jack-o'-lantern originated as an Irish folk custom of carving frightening faces into turnips to ward off the wandering spirit of Stingy Jack and other evil spirits on Samhain. It later became the pumpkin-carving centerpiece of American Halloween tradition.
- JaguarThe jaguar symbolises power, shamanistic transformation, and mastery of both the visible and invisible worlds. In Mesoamerican cultures it embodied divine kingship, the underworld, and the warrior's willingness to enter danger without flinching. In Amazonian traditions the jaguar is the shaman's spirit-animal, the form through which healers access non-ordinary reality.
- Jasmine FlowerJasmine symbolizes love, purity, and sensuality across many cultures, prized for its intense evening fragrance. It plays major roles in South and Southeast Asian bridal traditions, religious offerings, and serves as the national flower of both the Philippines and Tunisia.
- JellyfishThe jellyfish symbolises acceptance of life's currents, the beauty of impermanence, and inner light that needs no external validation. Its boneless, brainless drift is not weakness but a different kind of intelligence — the wisdom of surrender to the larger flow of existence rather than exhausting resistance against it.
- Jupiter SymbolThe Jupiter symbol represents expansion, abundance, wisdom, and benevolent authority, drawing on the planet's astrological role as the 'Great Benefic.' It is widely used to invoke luck, growth, and generosity of spirit.
- Kachina DollKachina dolls represent kachina spirits central to Hopi religious cosmology — beings connected to rain, fertility, seasonal renewal, and community wellbeing. Traditionally carved as teaching gifts for children, they hold deep sacred significance within Hopi religion, while the carved figures sold commercially today are distinct artistic and educational objects, not ceremonial items.
- Kanji SymbolsKanji are Chinese-derived logographic characters used in Japanese writing, each carrying inherent meaning rather than just sound. In the West they have become popular as standalone symbols for concepts like love, strength, courage, and peace, though the practice of displaying a single character as personal symbolism is largely a Western invention rather than a native Japanese one.
- KeyThe key symbolizes the power to open what is closed — access to knowledge, to spaces, to other people's hearts, and to higher states of awareness. Depending on context, it represents authority, initiation, liberation, mystery, and the transition across guarded thresholds.
- Keyhole SymbolThe keyhole symbolises secrets, hidden knowledge, and the boundary between the known and the forbidden — it is the point at which curiosity meets restriction. It also represents thresholds between worlds, guarded wisdom in esoteric traditions, and, in modern use, privacy, unlocked potential, and romantic connection when paired with a key.
- KhandaThe Khanda symbolizes the Sikh belief in the unity of spiritual and temporal power. Its three elements — the double-edged sword, the chakkar, and the two kirpans — represent divine knowledge, the oneness of God, and the balance between spiritual devotion and worldly justice.
- KintsugiKintsugi symbolizes resilience that does not pretend the damage didn't happen — the kind of healing that acknowledges the break lines and turns them golden. It represents the philosophical position that imperfection, history, and the marks of experience make things more beautiful and more themselves, not less.
- Kitsune MaskThe kitsune mask represents the fox spirit of Japanese folklore and Shinto belief — a shapeshifting being that can be a benevolent messenger of the deity Inari or a mischievous, even dangerous, trickster. It symbolises transformation, concealed identity, duality, and the thin boundary between the human and spirit worlds.
- Knotwork CrossThe knotwork cross combines the Christian cross with Celtic interlace patterns, symbolising the union of faith and eternity. The unbroken, continuously woven knotwork represents the eternal and interconnected nature of life, spirit, and the divine, while the cross form anchors that symbolism firmly within Christian belief.
- Koi FishThe koi fish symbolises perseverance, strength, and determination in the face of adversity, drawn from the legend of the carp that swims upstream and becomes a dragon. It also represents good fortune, abundance, success, and transformation.
- KolovratThe Kolovrat is an ancient Slavic solar symbol representing the turning sun, the cycle of seasons, and the order of the cosmos. It encodes the pre-Christian Slavic relationship to solar time and sacred natural cycles. Its modern use is complicated by its adoption as a symbol by neo-Nazi and white nationalist groups, which has made it a contested emblem in contemporary culture.
- LabyrinthThe labyrinth symbolises the spiritual journey, the path to the self or to the divine, and transformation through the process of walking an uncertain but ultimately purposeful route. It represents pilgrimage, inner reflection, and the paradoxical wisdom that the circuitous path is the right one.
- LadybugThe ladybug symbolises good luck, divine blessing, and the arrival of fortune. In Christian tradition its red coat represents the Virgin Mary's cloak, making it 'Our Lady's bug.' Agriculturally it was a welcome sign of natural pest control. Finding a ladybug landing on you, or counting its spots, was believed to predict how many years of good luck lay ahead.
- Lakshmi SymbolLakshmi symbolises wealth, prosperity, fortune, beauty, and abundance in Hindu tradition. As Vishnu's consort, she represents the flourishing and preservation of life itself, worshipped in homes and businesses for material and spiritual prosperity, and celebrated most prominently during the festival of Diwali.
- LanternThe lantern symbolizes guidance through darkness, the protected light of truth or faith, and the hope that illuminates even the deepest uncertainty. It represents the soul's light, the wisdom of those who have walked difficult paths before us, and the communal celebration of light conquering darkness.
- Laurel WreathThe laurel wreath symbolizes victory, excellence, and earned recognition. It represents the crowning of those who have distinguished themselves through achievement — athletic, military, intellectual, or artistic — and carries the connotation of enduring glory rather than merely momentary success.
- LeopardThe leopard symbolises royal power, supreme individual skill, and the ability to operate across all environments and conditions. Its spots were read in multiple traditions as the night sky — making the leopard-clad priest or king someone who wore the cosmos itself. In West Africa it was the emblem of sovereignty that no other ruler could claim.
- Leviathan CrossThe Leviathan Cross is historically an alchemical symbol for sulfur, later adopted in the twentieth century by LaVeyan Satanism as a personal identity symbol distinct from the Church of Satan's official Sigil of Baphomet. It is not an ancient symbol of evil, despite common assumptions to the contrary.
- Lightning BoltThe lightning bolt symbolises sudden, overwhelming power and divine force — the weapon of the supreme sky-gods (Zeus, Thor). It represents power, strength, and energy, as well as sudden change, revelation, and inspiration (a flash of insight or a 'bolt from the blue').
- Lightning ScarThe lightning scar is best known as the mark on Harry Potter's forehead, left by Voldemort's failed killing curse and signifying his identity as 'the Boy Who Lived.' It symbolises survival against impossible odds, an unchosen destiny, and being permanently marked by a formative trauma. The lightning-bolt shape itself carries older, pre-existing associations with divine power and sudden transformation, which is part of why the image resonates so strongly.
- Lightning TreeThe lightning tree symbolises survival of extreme experience and the transformation that follows near-death. As a Lichtenberg figure — the branching scar left on lightning strike survivors — it is a mark written by nature on the body of someone who passed through impossible danger and emerged. It also represents the principle that branching patterns contain a kind of intelligence about how to distribute force across a network.
- LilyThe lily most commonly symbolises purity, resurrection, and divine beauty. White lilies are associated with the Virgin Mary and with Easter resurrection in Christian tradition. The tiger lily represents pride and passion. The yellow lily suggests thankfulness and desire in Victorian flower language, while the lotus-lily of Eastern traditions carries entirely different meanings of enlightenment and purity arising from mud.
- LionThe lion symbolises power, royalty, courage, and strength — the 'king of beasts.' Associated with the sun, leadership, and protection, it represents both the ferocity of the warrior and the noble dignity of the ruler.
- Lion of JudahThe Lion of Judah is a biblical emblem, drawn from Jacob's blessing of his son Judah in Genesis, symbolizing strength, royal authority, and the Davidic line in Jewish tradition. It later became Ethiopia's imperial symbol, associated with Emperor Haile Selassie I, and was subsequently adopted by Rastafarianism as a central emblem of Selassie's spiritual significance, African pride, and resistance.
- Lotus FlowerThe lotus flower symbolises purity, spiritual awakening, and rebirth — beauty that rises unstained from muddy water. Its exact meaning shifts by culture and by the colour of the bloom.
- Lotus MandalaThe lotus mandala represents the unfolding of consciousness from its center outward, like petals opening from a bud to reveal the sun at the flower's heart. It signifies enlightenment as a process of progressive opening, the inherent purity of Buddha-nature radiating through all apparent complexity, and the cosmos understood as a perfectly ordered, beautiful whole.
- Lunar Eclipse SymbolThe lunar eclipse symbolises transformation, endings that make way for new beginnings, and the surfacing of hidden or shadow aspects of the self. Historically viewed across many cultures as an ominous celestial disruption — often personified as a dragon or demon devouring the moon — it is treated in contemporary astrology as a powerful time for emotional release and profound personal change.
- LyreThe lyre symbolizes the divine gift of music, poetic inspiration, and the capacity of art to reach what words alone cannot. It represents harmony — both musical harmony and the broader harmony of the well-ordered soul and cosmos — and the civilizing, humanizing power of beauty.
- MandalaThe mandala (Sanskrit for 'circle') is a sacred, intricate, usually circular design radiating from a centre, representing the cosmos, wholeness, and the spiritual journey to the centre and the divine. In Hinduism and Buddhism it is a sacred diagram of the universe and a tool for meditation toward enlightenment.
- Mano CornutoThe mano cornuto is an Italian hand gesture and amulet, formed by extending the index and pinky fingers like horns, used specifically to protect against the malocchio, or evil eye. Rooted in Southern Italian and Neapolitan folk belief, it is distinct from the similar-looking mano fico gesture and the cornicello horn charm, and it shares a visual (and partly historical) connection to the 'rock horns' gesture of heavy metal culture.
- Maple LeafThe maple leaf is best known as Canada's national symbol, representing unity, endurance, and national identity, but it also symbolizes seasonal change and impermanence through its dramatic autumn color transformation, and held practical and spiritual importance for Indigenous peoples who relied on maple sap.
- MarigoldThe marigold symbolises remembrance of the dead, devotion, and the sacred connection between the living and those who have passed. Its gold and orange colours represent the sun's immortal light. In Mexican tradition it guides spirits home; in Hindu tradition it honours the divine; in Victorian flower language it expressed grief and the complicated sorrows of love.
- Mars and Venus CombinedThe combined Mars and Venus symbol joins the astrological glyphs for the two planets to represent the union of masculine and feminine, heterosexual partnership, and biological sex categories. It became standardized through eighteenth-century botanical taxonomy before entering broader cultural use.
- Mars SymbolThe Mars symbol ♂ represents the planet Mars in astronomy and astrology, the metal iron in alchemy, and male biological sex in biology and popular culture. The circle represents the divine or the complete; the arrow represents the spear or directional force. Together they have been interpreted as Mars's spear-and-shield, as the directional force of masculine energy, and as the simplest visual distinction between male and female.
- Medicine WheelThe medicine wheel symbolises wholeness, balance, and the interconnection of all life. Its circle represents the cycle of life; its four quadrants represent the four directions, seasons, stages of life, and aspects of being; and the cross at its centre represents the meeting of all these forces in the present moment.
- MenorahThe seven-branched menorah symbolises the divine light of God's presence, the wisdom of Torah, and the Jewish people's covenant relationship with the divine. Its seven branches have been interpreted as representing the seven days of creation, the seven classical planets, and the burning bush that was not consumed.
- Mercury SymbolThe Mercury symbol ☿ represents the planet Mercury (speed, communication, intellect), the metal quicksilver in alchemy (the universal solvent, the prime substance), and the hermaphrodite (the combined male-female being who transcends sexual polarity). In contemporary gender discourse it is used as a non-binary and intersex symbol. It is the only planetary symbol that structurally combines both the ♀ cross and the crescent, making it formally the sum of its counterparts.
- MerkabaThe merkaba is the divine chariot of Ezekiel's vision in Jewish mysticism, and in sacred geometry it is represented as two interlocking tetrahedra forming a three-dimensional Star of David. Ancient Merkabah mysticism used it as a framework for spiritual ascent to the divine throne, while modern New Age tradition reinterprets it as the human light body or energy field.
- MermaidMermaids symbolize duality and transformation as beings caught between the human and aquatic worlds, representing both the sea's alluring beauty and its genuine danger. They appear across cultures worldwide as figures of temptation, mystery, freedom, and sometimes healing or protection.
- Metatron's CubeMetatron's Cube is a sacred-geometry figure of thirteen circles connected by lines, said to contain all five Platonic solids and to represent the geometric structure of creation. Named after the angel Metatron, it symbolises the divine order of the cosmos, balance and harmony, and spiritual protection.
- MinotaurThe Minotaur symbolizes the conflict between civilized reason and primal instinct, embodying hidden shame, confinement, and the monstrous consequences of denial. Born of forbidden union and imprisoned in a labyrinth, he represents the parts of ourselves we try to hide rather than confront.
- MistletoeMistletoe symbolises the sacred exception — the one thing excluded from protection, the gap in any system of safety. In Norse myth it was the only substance that could kill the invulnerable Baldr. In Celtic tradition it was a divine gift found growing between earth and sky. As a Christmas decoration it symbolises seasonal fertility and the social grace of permission given and received.
- Mjolnir (Thor's Hammer)Mjolnir is the hammer of Thor, the Norse thunder-god — a weapon of devastating power and the great protector of gods and humans against the giants and chaos. Worn as an amulet (the Thor's hammer), it symbolises strength, protection, blessing, and the power of Thor, and is a sacred symbol in modern Heathenry.
- Moai StatueThe moai are monumental stone figures of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), carved to embody the mana, or sacred power, of deified ancestors and chiefs. Positioned facing inland to watch over their descendants, they symbolize ancestral guardianship, authority, and the ongoing presence of the dead within the community of the living.
- MoonThe moon symbolises the feminine and the goddess, cycles and change, intuition, emotion, and the unconscious, and mystery, dreams, and the hidden. Waxing and waning through its phases, ruling the night and the tides, it represents the rhythms of life, renewal, and the inner world.
- Morning GloryThe morning glory symbolises impermanence and the beauty of things precisely because they do not last. Its single-day bloom makes it a living illustration of the Japanese concept of mono no aware — the poignant awareness that beautiful things are enhanced rather than diminished by their transience. In Victorian flower language it expressed affection combined with mortality.
- MothThe moth symbolises the soul's consuming devotion to what it loves, the nocturnal dimensions of transformation, and the lunar counterpart to the butterfly's solar journey. Its fatal attraction to flame is the central image: the moth that flies into fire is destroyed but also achieves the union it sought. The moth represents seeking that does not count survival as the highest value.
- Mount OlympusMount Olympus symbolizes divine authority and cosmic hierarchy as the fixed dwelling place of the Greek gods, functioning as a permanent seat of governmental power rather than merely a sacred natural landmark. It represents the structured, unreachable separation between mortal and divine realms.
- MountainThe mountain symbolises strength, stability, and permanence, the sacred and the meeting of earth and heaven, the spiritual ascent toward the divine, and obstacles and challenges to be overcome. Immovable and rising toward the heavens, it represents steadfastness, the sacred heights, and the climb of life and the spirit.
- Narcissus FlowerThe narcissus symbolizes vanity and self-obsession in Western tradition, drawn from the Greek myth of the youth who fell fatally in love with his own reflection. In Chinese and other cultures, the same flower instead represents renewal, prosperity, and good fortune, especially at the Lunar New Year.
- Nautilus ShellThe nautilus shell symbolises growth, life's expanding spiral, and the process of building forward while leaving the past behind. Its chambered interior — each successive chamber larger than the last, the nautilus living only in the outermost chamber — is a powerful metaphor for personal expansion and for carrying your history without being imprisoned by it.
- Nazar BeadThe nazar bead is a blue glass amulet that absorbs and deflects the harmful energy of the evil eye. It represents protection, particularly for the vulnerable — newborns, new homes, new ventures. A cracked bead is seen as a sign the protection worked.
- Neptune SymbolThe Neptune symbol, a trident over a circle, represents the Roman sea god and, in modern astrology, themes of illusion, dreams, spirituality, and the dissolving of boundaries between reality and imagination. It is among the youngest planetary glyphs, created after the planet's 1846 discovery.
- NetThe net symbolises interdependence, the hidden connections that link all things, and the web of fate or karma through which nothing passes unnoticed. Indra's Net in Hindu-Buddhist cosmology is the universe as a network of mutually reflecting jewels — each containing all, all containing each. The Christian fishers' net captures souls; the Greek Fates' web captures destinies.
- Nine-Tailed FoxThe nine-tailed fox is a shapeshifting spirit appearing across Chinese, Korean, and Japanese folklore, typically gaining tails and power with age, often taking human form to seduce or deceive. It represents shared East Asian anxieties about beauty, deception, and the dangerous allure of transformation.
- North StarThe North Star symbolizes constancy, reliable guidance, and fixed truth in a world of change. It represents hope for those who are lost or oppressed, and the idea that some truths endure regardless of circumstance. Following it brings one home.
- Northern LightsThe northern lights, or aurora borealis, have been interpreted across circumpolar cultures as the spirits of the dead, the armor of Norse warriors, and both good and dangerous omens. Norse, Sami, Inuit, and Finnish traditions each developed distinct explanations for this shimmering natural phenomenon.
- Oak Leaf ClusterThe oak leaf cluster is a small bronze or silver device worn on U.S. military medal ribbons to indicate that the same award has been earned more than once. It draws on oak imagery's traditional associations with strength and honor while serving a specific, modern administrative function within military honors.
- Oak TreeThe oak tree symbolises strength, endurance, and steadfastness, along with power, longevity, wisdom, and nobility. Mighty, deep-rooted, and long-lived, sacred to the sky-gods of thunder, it is the king of trees and the supreme emblem of enduring strength.
- Obsidian MirrorThe obsidian mirror was a sacred Aztec divination tool, polished from volcanic glass and closely associated with the god Tezcatlipoca, whose name means Smoking Mirror. Aztec priests used it to seek hidden truths, diagnose illness, and glimpse the uncertain, shifting nature of fate.
- Ocean WaveThe ocean wave symbolises power and the force of nature, emotion and the unconscious, and change, flow, and impermanence. Restless and ever-renewing, beautiful and dangerous, it represents the cycles of life, resilience and riding out the storm, and the depths of feeling and the unknown.
- OctopusThe octopus symbolizes intelligence, adaptability, and mystery, drawing on its genuinely alien biology and remarkable problem-solving abilities. Traditions from Hawaii to ancient Crete have read the creature as a creation-myth survivor, a sacred motif, and an emblem of shape-shifting versatility.
- Odin's Ravens (Huginn and Muninn)Huginn and Muninn symbolize the twin pillars of wisdom: thought and memory. They represent the mind's capacity to observe, process, and retain — the foundations of all knowledge. Their daily flight and return embody the idea that wisdom must be actively sought in the world before it can be held within.
- Olive BranchThe olive branch is the universal symbol of peace and reconciliation — to 'extend an olive branch' is to offer an end to conflict. It also symbolises victory, wisdom, abundance, purity, and the favour of the gods, drawn from the precious olive tree of the Mediterranean.
- Om Mani Padme HumOm Mani Padme Hum is the mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva of compassion. Its six syllables are understood to purify the six negative emotions associated with the six realms of existence — pride, jealousy, desire, ignorance, greed, and aggression — while cultivating the six perfections (pāramitās) of the bodhisattva path. The mantra's meaning is inexhaustible; Tibetan masters say no human commentary can encompass it.
- Om SymbolOm (Aum, ॐ) is the sacred primordial sound from which the universe is said to arise — the vibration of all existence. As a symbol it represents ultimate reality, consciousness, and the union of the individual with the cosmic.
- Omega SymbolOmega symbolizes ending, completion, and the absolute. It represents the last of all things — the boundary of language, of time, of the cosmos. Paired with Alpha, it encompasses everything: beginning and end, origin and conclusion, the totality of existence.
- Orchid SymbolThe orchid symbolizes refined beauty, rare excellence, and moral virtue in East Asian tradition. In Western contexts it carries associations of luxury, exotic desire, and delicate strength. The orchid represents something precious that requires care to sustain — beauty that is neither common nor easily obtained.
- Orion's BeltOrion's Belt, three bright stars forming a straight line within the constellation Orion, has been used across cultures worldwide for navigation, seasonal timekeeping, and profound spiritual symbolism, most famously its connection to the Egyptian god Osiris and the alignment of the Great Pyramids.
- OuroborosThe ouroboros — a snake eating its own tail — symbolises eternity, cyclic renewal, and the unity of creation and destruction. It represents endless cycles of death and rebirth and the idea that endings and beginnings are the same point.
- OwlThe owl symbolises wisdom, knowledge, and insight in Western tradition, but in many other cultures it is an omen of death, change, or the unknown. As a night creature it represents intuition, mystery, and seeing what others cannot.
- Paisley PatternThe paisley teardrop pattern originates from the Persian boteh motif, likely symbolizing the cypress tree and eternal life, and later flourished in Kashmiri shawl-weaving before European imitation, centered in the Scottish town of Paisley, gave the design its now-common Western name.
- Palindrome Symbol (Sator Square)The palindrome symbol, especially the Sator Square, represents eternity and divine order through its self-referential, reversible structure. It embodies the idea that sacred truth has no beginning and no end. Its recursive quality links it to the ouroboros and other symbols of cyclical completion.
- PeacockThe peacock symbolises beauty, glory, and renewal, along with immortality, watchfulness (the all-seeing 'eyes' of its feathers), and protection. Sacred in Hindu tradition and a Christian symbol of resurrection, it can also represent pride and vanity in the West.
- PegasusPegasus, the winged horse of Greek myth born from Medusa's blood, symbolizes poetic inspiration, transcendence, and noble aspiration. His connection to the Muses and the sacred Hippocrene spring made him antiquity's lasting emblem of soaring artistic and creative genius.
- PentagramThe pentagram is a five-pointed star (often in a circle: the pentacle), one of the oldest symbols, with meanings that shifted across history: mathematical perfection (Pythagoreans), the five wounds of Christ and protection (medieval Christianity), and the five elements and protection (Western esotericism and Wicca). It represents the number five, the human being, the elements, and protection.
- PhoenixThe phoenix symbolises rebirth, renewal, and immortality — rising from its own ashes after death. It represents resilience, transformation, and triumph over hardship: the power to be reborn stronger from destruction.
- Phoenix FeatherThe phoenix feather symbolizes regenerative power distilled into a tangible form — the essence of transformation, fire, and rebirth held in a single object. It represents resilience, latent divine energy, and the idea that even after destruction, something essential and luminous remains.
- Pillars of HerculesThe Pillars of Hercules mark the Strait of Gibraltar, believed in ancient mythology to be the edge of the known world, inscribed with the warning non plus ultra, nothing further beyond. Spain later adopted the symbol with the inverted motto plus ultra, a design historians trace directly to the origin of the dollar sign.
- Pine Tree SymbolThe pine tree symbolizes longevity, immortality, and unwavering constancy — the tree that stays green when everything else has gone bare. Across East Asian, Celtic, Norse, and Germanic traditions it represents endurance, faithfulness, and the steadfast spirit that neither bends to hardship nor abandons its essential nature.
- Playing Card SuitsThe four playing card suits encode the four classical elements and the four dimensions of human experience: Hearts (water/emotion), Diamonds (earth/wealth), Clubs (fire/action), Spades (air/intellect and conflict). Together they map the totality of the human condition across the four realms of heart, matter, will, and mind.
- PomegranateThe pomegranate symbolizes fertility, abundance, and the cycle of death and rebirth. Its hidden seeds represent concealed richness and divine law; its splitting open at ripeness suggests generosity and revelation. It stands at the boundary between the earthly and the underworld, the present abundance and the paradise to come.
- PoppyThe poppy symbolises sleep, dreams, and death (from the opium poppy's sleep-bringing power), and also remembrance, sacrifice, and the renewal of life — the red field poppy is the great symbol of remembrance for the war dead. It carries meanings of eternal rest, peace, and consolation.
- Praying HandsThe praying hands symbol represents devotion, humility, and the act of opening oneself to divine contact. The pressed-together palms create a sealed interior space — a microcosm of the sacred — while the raised fingertips point toward the heavens. It conveys both petition (asking) and gratitude (thanking), depending on context.
- Quetzal BirdThe resplendent quetzal was among the most sacred birds of Mesoamerica, its brilliant feathers valued above gold by the Maya and Aztec and closely tied to the god Quetzalcoatl. It symbolizes freedom, divine connection, and remains Guatemala's national bird and currency namesake today.
- Rabbit SymbolThe rabbit symbolizes luck, fertility, and lunar energy. It is the moon animal seen in many cultures' night sky and represents cycles of abundance, the swiftness of opportunity, and the capacity for rapid regeneration. The rabbit also carries trickster energy — quickness of mind, the ability to escape danger through cleverness rather than force.
- RaccoonThe raccoon symbolizes cleverness, adaptability, and dexterity, often associated with disguise and resourceful problem-solving. Its masked face suggests hidden wisdom and discernment, while its nocturnal habits link it to curiosity and nighttime intuition.
- RainbowThe rainbow symbolises hope, promise, and brighter days after the storm, the bridge between earth and heaven, and divine promise and covenant (the biblical rainbow after the flood). It also represents good fortune, the elusive and magical, and — in the modern world — pride, diversity, and inclusion.
- Rainbow SerpentThe Rainbow Serpent is a major ancestral creator being in Aboriginal Australian traditions, associated with the Dreaming, the formation of rivers and waterholes, rain, and fertility. Its meaning and specific stories vary widely among the many distinct Aboriginal nations across Australia.
- Ram SymbolThe ram symbolizes active, forward-thrusting power, divine authority, and sacred sacrifice. Its curling horns represent accumulated strength and the capacity to move through obstacles. It is simultaneously the initiator (Aries, first of the zodiac) and the sacred offering that redeems and renews.
- RavenThe raven symbolises wisdom, prophecy, and the keeping of secrets, alongside death, the otherworld, and transformation. Intelligent and mysterious, it is a messenger between worlds — and in some cultures a trickster and even a creator.
- Red Thread of FateThe red thread of fate is an East Asian folk belief describing an invisible red thread that connects two people destined to be together, tied by a matchmaking deity around the ankle or finger. It symbolizes unbreakable, fated connection that persists despite distance, time, or circumstance.
- Rod of AsclepiusThe Rod of Asclepius — a single serpent entwined around a staff — symbolises medicine, healing, wisdom, and the transformative power of therapeutic knowledge. It is named for the Greek god of medicine and is the genuine symbol of healthcare worldwide, distinct from the Caduceus.
- RoosterThe rooster symbolizes vigilance, awakening, and the arrival of a new day, owing to its instinctive crowing at dawn. It also represents pride, courage, and protection, and holds significant roles in the Chinese zodiac, Christian iconography, and as a national emblem of France.
- RoseThe rose symbolises love and beauty above all — passionate love (the red rose), purity (white), and more, by colour. It also represents desire, the union of beauty and pain (the bloom and the thorn), secrecy, and, in Christianity, the Virgin Mary and divine love.
- Rose WindowThe rose window is a large circular stained-glass window found in Gothic cathedrals, symbolizing divine light, heavenly order, and often the Virgin Mary. Its radiating geometric design reflects medieval beliefs about cosmic harmony and the presence of God expressed through mathematical perfection.
- Sacred GeometrySacred geometry is the idea that geometric patterns, shapes, and proportions underlie and express the fundamental order, harmony, and beauty of creation and the cosmos, and carry spiritual meaning. It encompasses forms like the circle, spiral, Platonic solids, golden ratio, and Flower of Life, seen as the divine geometric order of reality.
- Sailor Star (Nautical Star)The sailor star, or nautical star, is a five-pointed star divided into alternating light and dark sections, symbolizing navigation, guidance, and safe return home. Rooted in maritime and naval tattoo tradition, it represents a sailor's hope of finding their way safely across open water.
- Salamander SymbolThe salamander symbolizes the power to endure transformation through fire — not by avoiding it but by being constituted of it. It represents purification, royal power over both destructive and creative forces, alchemical fire as the agent of transmutation, and the specific quality of remaining oneself when all around is burning.
- Samurai Symbol ComplexSamurai symbolism encompasses the interconnected values and imagery of Japan's warrior class, centered on bushido, the code of honor, loyalty, and discipline. It includes the katana, family mon crests, and the cherry blossom, together representing martial excellence and the acceptance of mortality.
- Saturn Symbol (♄)The Saturn symbol represents time, structure, and disciplined transformation. As a planetary glyph it denotes karma and the lessons of hardship; as an alchemical symbol it governs lead and the slow conversion of base matter; as a mythological image it presides over harvest, the golden age, and the inevitable turning of time's wheel.
- ScarabThe scarab (dung beetle) is an ancient Egyptian symbol of the sun, rebirth, regeneration, creation, and protection. Identified with Khepri, the rising sun god (the beetle rolling its ball like the sun across the sky), and seen as self-generating, it symbolises rebirth, new life, and the renewing power of the sun.
- Scarab Heart (Heart Scarab)The heart scarab is the Egyptian amulet of judgment and mercy — placed over the mummified heart to silence it before the divine tribunal. It embodies the terror of perfect accountability (the heart knows all one has done) and the hope for divine mercy (the amulet pleads for silence). Distinct from the solar scarab, it addresses the inner moral record of a life.
- ScorpionThe scorpion symbolizes the power of the shadow — dangerous and transformative, capable of both deadly harm and potent protection. It represents resilience in harsh conditions, the sting of truth that cannot be avoided, and the dual nature of potent forces that can heal or harm depending on how they are engaged.
- Sea Turtle (Honu)The sea turtle symbolizes ancient wisdom, safe navigation, and the endurance that transcends ordinary time. It is the ancestor who guides, the foundation that holds the world, and the navigator who finds home across open ocean. It represents sacred connection to lineage, the deep wisdom of patient observation, and the ability to move between worlds.
- SeahorseThe seahorse symbolizes patience, contentment, and gentle strength, drawing on its slow, deliberate movement and calm nature. It is also uniquely associated with fatherhood and nurturing care, owing to the male seahorse's remarkable role in carrying and birthing offspring.
- Seed of LifeThe Seed of Life represents the seven-stage act of creation, the complete pattern of origin from a single point. Its seven circles encode the seven days of Genesis, the seven classical planets, and the seven-fold structure that appears throughout sacred geometry. It is the matrix from which the Flower of Life unfolds — origin before expansion.
- SelkieThe selkie is a seal-folk creature from Scottish and Irish folklore that can shed its sealskin to become human on land. Its stories typically center on themes of captivity, longing, and the irresistible pull of the sea, symbolizing duality, transformation, and the tension between freedom and belonging.
- Shark ToothThe shark tooth symbolizes protection, strength, and power across Polynesian, Hawaiian, and Fijian cultures, worn traditionally as necklaces and used in weaponry. In many Pacific Island traditions, it also carries deep spiritual significance tied to shark ancestor guardian spirits.
- Sheela na GigThe Sheela na Gig is an ancient exhibitionist female figure whose meaning is genuinely uncertain and contested. The most archaeologically supported interpretation is apotropaic — she wards off evil by displaying her genitalia — but she may also represent sexuality, birth, mortality, the power of the female body, or Christian teaching about lust and sin, depending on the specific example and its context.
- ShieldThe shield symbolizes protection, the defense of what is valued, and the assertion of identity. It represents the courage to stand firm against threat and the establishment of a boundary between the self and harm. In heraldry, it is the primary field on which identity and lineage are expressed.
- Shiva's Third EyeShiva's third eye is a vertical eye on the forehead of the Hindu deity Shiva, symbolizing the power of destruction, particularly the destruction of ignorance and illusion, along with higher spiritual consciousness. According to Hindu mythology, its gaze unleashes a devastating fire capable of incinerating whatever it beholds.
- Silver CordThe silver cord is a biblical image from Ecclesiastes 12:6 symbolizing the fragile connection between life and the body, severed at death. In later esoteric and New Age traditions, it was reinterpreted as a metaphysical cord connecting the physical body to the soul during astral projection.
- Skeleton KeyThe skeleton key symbolizes access to hidden knowledge, secrets, and unlocked potential, drawing on its historical function as a key capable of opening many different locks. It represents the power to reveal what is hidden and to access forbidden or mysterious realms of understanding.
- Skull and CrossbonesThe skull and crossbones is the universal symbol of death, danger, and poison — and simultaneously a symbol of the rebellious embrace of mortality as liberating. It reminds us that death comes for everyone equally, that danger deserves clear warning, and that the awareness of our own mortality is a precondition for genuinely alive experience.
- Sleeping Beauty's SpindleSleeping Beauty's spindle symbolizes fate, mortality, and the inevitability of destiny, since the princess's prophesied prick from the spindle cannot be avoided despite every precaution taken against it. It also represents the transition from innocence to a deeper awareness through an unavoidable wounding.
- Sleeping DragonThe sleeping dragon represents latent potential — power so great it need not be constantly demonstrated. It symbolizes the wisdom of waiting for the right moment, the extraordinary capacity held quietly in apparent rest, and the understanding that true strength knows when to be still.
- SnakeThe snake symbolises transformation and rebirth (through shedding its skin), healing and medicine, and wisdom — but also danger, poison, and temptation. It is one of the most powerful and dual-natured of all symbols.
- SnowdropThe snowdrop symbolizes hope, rebirth, and resilience, owing to its remarkable ability to bloom in late winter through frost and snow before other flowers emerge. Its pure white color also connects it to purity and consolation across European folklore and Victorian flower symbolism.
- SnowflakeThe snowflake symbolises uniqueness and individuality (no two are alike), purity and innocence (the clean white of snow), and the transience and fragility of beauty (the flake that melts). It also represents the still beauty of winter, intricate natural design, and quiet, fleeting perfection.
- Solar CrossThe solar cross is the universal symbol of the sun's annual cycle, the four directions, and cosmic order. It maps the cosmos from the observer's center, marking the four cardinal directions and the four turning points of the solar year. It is the wheel of time and the compass of space combined in a single ancient form.
- Sowilo Rune (ᛊ)Sowilo represents the sun, victory, health, and the will to achieve wholeness. It is the rune of solar power made available to the human practitioner — the clarity, courage, and energy to move through darkness toward illumination. In divination it is among the most positive runes, indicating success, vitality, and divine favor.
- SphinxThe Sphinx is a mythological creature with a lion's body and a human head, symbolizing wisdom, guardianship, and mystery. In Egyptian tradition it represents royal power and protection, while in Greek mythology it is a dangerous riddling monster testing human intelligence.
- SpiderThe spider symbolises creation, weaving, and fate, along with feminine creative power, patience, and craft. As the spinner of its own intricate web, it represents the weaving of the world or of destiny, the interconnected web of life, and skilful, patient creativity.
- Spiderweb TattooThe spiderweb tattoo, particularly on the elbow, has a well-documented association within American prison culture as a marker of time served incarcerated. Outside this specific context, it also carries broader meanings including feeling trapped, patience, protection, and the intricate interconnectedness of life.
- SpiralThe spiral symbolises growth, evolution, and the ever-expanding or ever-deepening journey of life. It represents cycles, the dynamic energy of the life-force, and the movement outward from a centre or inward toward one — a form that is simultaneously about expansion and return.
- Sri YantraThe Sri Yantra encodes the entire cosmos in geometric form — nine interlocking triangles (four Shiva, five Shakti) generating 43 smaller triangles around a central point, representing the creative union of masculine and feminine divine principles. Meditating upon it is understood in Hindu tantra as a direct encounter with the structure of reality itself.
- Stag (Deer)The stag symbolises the wild and the forest, nobility and pride, and above all renewal and regeneration through its yearly cycle of shedding and regrowing antlers. The deer more broadly represents grace, gentleness, intuition, and spiritual guidance.
- StarThe star symbolises guidance, hope, and aspiration, along with light in darkness, the divine and the celestial, destiny and fortune, and excellence. A point of light in the dark sky, fixed and guiding, it represents the ideals we reach for and the hope that lights the way.
- Star and CrescentThe star and crescent is most widely recognized as a symbol associated with Islam and Muslim-majority nations, though Islam itself has no single official symbol. Its deepest roots lie in pre-Islamic celestial worship and Byzantine-Ottoman imperial iconography, making it a symbol of sovereignty, faith, and the night sky across many cultures.
- Star of DavidThe Star of David (Magen David, 'Shield of David') is the foremost symbol of Judaism and the Jewish people — a six-pointed star of two interlocking triangles. It represents Jewish faith, identity, and peoplehood, the connection between the Jewish people and God, and the State of Israel.
- SunThe sun symbolises life, light, power, and the divine — the source of all life and very often a god, the supreme deity. It represents vitality, energy, strength, truth and enlightenment, kingship, and rebirth (rising anew each dawn, conquering darkness).
- SunflowerThe sunflower symbolises happiness, positivity, and warmth, along with adoration, loyalty, and faithfulness, and the seeking of light. Turning its face to follow the sun, it represents optimism, devotion, and spiritual aspiration toward the light and life.
- SwanThe swan symbolises love, fidelity, grace, beauty, and purity. Because swans pair for life, two swans are a classic emblem of devoted, lifelong love. The swan also represents transformation, the soul, and inner beauty emerging — the 'ugly duckling' becoming magnificent.
- Third EyeThe third eye is the 'eye' of inner vision and spiritual insight, located on the forehead between the brows, that sees beyond the physical to perceive spiritual truth, intuition, and higher consciousness. Rooted in Hindu (the ajna chakra, Shiva's eye) and Buddhist tradition, it symbolises insight, intuition, wisdom, and awakening.
- Three-Leaf CloverThe shamrock symbolises the Holy Trinity in Irish Christian tradition, Irish national identity worldwide, and the enduring connection between Irish diaspora communities and their homeland. Its three leaves represent faith, hope, and love in some traditions, and Patrick's teaching tool for explaining the Triune God in others.
- ThunderbirdThe Thunderbird is a supernatural sky being found across many distinct Indigenous North American traditions, representing storm power, divine protection, and the creative tension between sky and earth. Its wing beats produce thunder and its gaze brings lightning. It is regarded as sacred in virtually every tradition that carries its story.
- TigerThe tiger symbolises power, strength, courage, and ferocity — the 'king of beasts' across much of Asia. It also represents protection, royalty, and the untamed wild, and is revered as a powerful guardian against evil.
- Tiwaz Rune (ᛏ)Tiwaz represents justice, self-sacrifice for the common good, honor, and the single-pointed will to act rightly regardless of personal cost. It is named for the Norse god Tyr, who sacrificed his sword hand to bind the wolf Fenrir, and carries the meaning of law, legal process, and the courage to stand for truth.
- Torii GateThe torii gate marks the boundary between the secular world and sacred Shinto space. Passing through one signals a transition into the presence of the kami (divine spirits). Its vermilion colour wards off evil while its architectural form channels purification and approach.
- Tree of JesseThe Tree of Jesse depicts Christ's royal ancestry as a literal tree growing from Jesse (King David's father), through the line of prophets and kings of Israel, to the Virgin Mary and Christ at the apex. It visualises the fulfilment of Isaiah's prophecy and the continuous divine plan threading through Jewish and Christian sacred history.
- Tree of LifeThe Tree of Life symbolises the interconnection of all living things, growth, strength, and the link between earth and the heavens. It commonly represents family, ancestry, wisdom, and the continuous cycle of life.
- TridentThe trident most commonly represents divine authority over the sea and natural forces, the power of cosmic transformation, and the principle of three-in-one unity. Across Greek, Roman, and Hindu traditions it belongs to the most powerful deities in their respective pantheons.
- TriquetraThe triquetra (Trinity Knot) is three interlaced arcs forming one continuous loop. It symbolises the unity of three things as one — life-death-rebirth, mind-body-spirit, or the Christian Trinity — and eternity, with no beginning or end.
- TriskelionThe triskelion symbolises motion, progress, and the power of three — past, present, and future; mind, body, and spirit; the three worlds. Its rotational dynamic implies continuous forward movement and the cycling of natural forces.
- TurtleThe turtle symbolises longevity, endurance, and wisdom, along with protection, patience, stability, and groundedness. Ancient and long-lived, carrying its home on its back, it represents the steady path, the protection of the shell, and in many myths the foundation of the world.
- UnalomeThe unalome is a spiritual symbol from Buddhist and Hindu tradition — a line that spirals, twists upward, straightens, and ends in dots — representing the winding path to enlightenment: the struggles and twists of the spiritual journey and of life, straightening into clarity and wisdom, and culminating in awakening or enlightenment.
- ValknutThe valknut is a Norse symbol of three interlocking triangles, found on Viking Age runestones and objects and associated with the god Odin, death (especially death in battle), and the journey of the slain to the afterlife (Valhalla). Its precise ancient meaning is uncertain, but it's widely understood as a symbol of Odin and the warrior dead.
- VegvisirThe vegvisir — the Icelandic 'wayfinder' or runic compass — symbolises guidance, protection, and the ability to find one's way through confusion and storms. As a magical stave it was believed to protect bearers from getting lost; symbolically it represents inner navigation, resilience, and always finding the right path.
- Venus SymbolThe Venus symbol ♀ represents the planet Venus in astronomy and astrology, the metal copper in alchemy, and female biological sex in biology and popular culture. The circle represents wholeness and the divine; the cross beneath it has been interpreted as a hand mirror (Venus's beauty), as a key to the underworld, as the cross of earthly existence, and as an equalising or grounding force. In feminist iconography it represents women's power and solidarity.
- Vesica PiscisThe vesica piscis is formed by two overlapping circles of equal size, their centres each on the other's circumference. The resulting almond-shaped intersection symbolises the union of opposites, the divine creative threshold between two realms, and in Christian art frames the Christ in glory as the point where heaven and earth meet.
- WhaleThe whale symbolises ancient wisdom, deep knowledge, and the unconscious depths, along with immense strength, gentleness, family, communication, and spiritual depth. As the giant of the deep, it represents the journey into the unknown and the wisdom found there.
- White RabbitThe white rabbit symbolizes the threshold between the known and the unknown, magical guidance toward transformation, and the courage to follow unexpected signs. In Eastern traditions it also represents the moon, immortality, and divine service. Across contexts it is a symbol of the liminal — the creature that shows you the door.
- WolfThe wolf symbolises loyalty, family, and the bonds of the pack, alongside freedom, instinct, and wild independence. It carries a dual nature — devoted guardian and fierce predator — representing strength, intelligence, and the untamed.
- Wolf MoonThe Wolf Moon symbolizes the fierce beauty of midwinter, the primal bond of pack loyalty, and the courage of the lone voice raised into darkness. As the January full moon, it marks cyclical time and the survival-wisdom of the deep cold. In Norse myth it connects to cosmic wolves whose eternal chase of the moon will culminate at the world's end.
- World SerpentThe World Serpent symbolizes the cosmic boundary between order and chaos, the unknowable depth that lies beneath and around the known world. It represents fate, cyclical endings, and the terrifying magnitude of what exists at the edges of human comprehension. In Norse tradition, it is also the eternal nemesis of the thunder god Thor.
- WyvernThe wyvern represents fierce martial strength, territorial dominance, and the duality of destructive and protective power. In heraldry it was used both as a symbol of pestilence and war sent against enemies and as a badge of the warrior's own ferocity. The Welsh Red Dragon (Y Ddraig Goch) is technically a wyvern by heraldic classification.
- Yin FishThe yin fish represents the same yin-yang principle of complementary duality as the taijitu, but expressed through the symbolic form of paired carp swimming in opposite circles. The fish bodies trace the yin-yang division, adding the specific Chinese meanings of carp — abundance, perseverance, and fortunate transformation — to the foundational Taoist cosmology of balanced opposites.
- Yin YangThe yin-yang (taijitu) symbolises balance, harmony, and the unity of opposites — the complementary, interdependent forces (yin: dark, receptive, feminine; yang: light, active, masculine) whose dynamic interplay underlies all existence. Each contains a seed of the other, and together they form the whole.
- Zodiac WheelThe zodiac wheel symbolizes the cycle of time as a complete and ordered pattern, the diversity of human character as expressions of a unified cosmic whole, and the interplay of fate and individual nature. As a circle divided into twelve, it represents the year, the sky, and the belief that celestial patterns correspond to earthly experience.