Note: This is a to-date 61‑page public facing scholarly living book written by an archaeologist. It examines Bronze Age ritual and mythic motifs preserved in fairy tales, legends, and oral tradition
What if the fairytales we tell today carry echoes of Bronze Age kings and sacrifices?
When the King Must Die: Fairytales and Bronze Age Memory is a work of nonfiction written by an archaeologist. It explores how motifs found in later narratives—including fairytales, biblical stories, Homeric epics, and ancient legends—preserve echoes of Bronze Age oral traditions. These traditions often retain historical cores, even when later embellished with supernatural elements.
This is a living book, updated periodically with new essays and research findings. Early editions contained only the initial chapters; readers may re‑download the ebook at any time to access the expanded material.
Drawing on archaeology, cultural history, and comparative literature, the book examines themes such as sacrifice, honour killings, infant exposure, cannibalism, and the rise and fall of hegemonies—patterns reflected both in Bronze Age sources and in the stories that survived them.
For readers interested in mythology, oral tradition, and the ancient Mediterranean world, this book offers a scholarly yet accessible exploration of how deep cultural memories shape the tales we still tell today.
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