Ouroboros symbol plate. A compact authored line study isolates the form without reproducing ritual diagrams or hate marks.
Full-resolution image for Ouroboros.

Dictionary entry 84 of 137 · Comparative motifs

Ouroboros

Comparative motif

A serpent or dragon consuming its tail, often associated with cyclicality, unity, return, or self-consumption.

Complete dictionary reading

Context, form, interpretation, and limits

Principal source or earliest context

The earliest context varies by motif; use museum catalogues, manuscripts, community records, or primary ritual texts rather than visual resemblance alone.

Historical interpretations

The annex records layered reception and overlapping uses. It avoids collapsing “occult,” “religious,” “artistic,” “technical,” and “political” signs into a single category.

Visual anatomy

A compact authored line study isolates the form without reproducing ritual diagrams or hate marks.

Antichrist.net visual convention: Compact line study with explicit provenance warning.

Antichrist.net reading

The civic use is methodological: identify provenance, distinguish adoption from invention, and refuse identity verdicts based on symbols alone.

Misuse warning

Use historical context; similar circles appear independently.

What this symbol does not prove

It does not prove a secret cycle or occult affiliation.

Disputed readings and unresolved questions

Origins, dates, names, and community meanings are often disputed; entries remain concise until stronger source review is complete.

Suggested comparison or manuscript example

Use a museum, archive, or primary-text example only after license and provenance review.

Source discipline

Source notes

  1. Ouroboros Encyclopaedia Britannica

    Comparative motif of cyclicality and self-consumption.