c. 4000 BCE · Mesopotamia
Tiamat - Mother of Creation
The earliest written Dragon. A primordial sea-serpent whose body, in the Enuma Elish, becomes the very fabric of the world. Dragons begin where creation begins.
Dragon Lore
Every culture met them. Every culture remembered. The Dragons have walked beside humanity since the first stories were told around the first fires.

c. 4000 BCE · Mesopotamia
The earliest written Dragon. A primordial sea-serpent whose body, in the Enuma Elish, becomes the very fabric of the world. Dragons begin where creation begins.
c. 3000 BCE · Ancient China
Benevolent, water-bound and wise, the Chinese Dragon is a bringer of rain, harvest and imperial authority. Healers still call on Long for clarity and just power.
c. 1500 BCE · Vedic India
Half-serpent, half-divine, the Nāgas guard sacred waters and underground treasures. They are the keepers of subtle currents - what we today call ley lines and meridians.
Medieval Europe · Celtic & Welsh Lands
From Merlin's prophecy to the Welsh banner, the Dragon becomes a symbol of sovereign land, ancestral memory and the courage to stand for what is sacred.
Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica · Maya & Aztec
A Dragon of sky and earth, of feather and scale. He carries the lesson all Dragons teach: spirit and matter are one weave, and the healer stands at the loom.
Today · The Living Lineage
Quietly, across the past forty years, Dragons have stepped forward again - to practitioners ready to anchor their frequency. The Dragonlight lineage is part of this return.