

The ancient Greeks believed the world shared a certain symbolic pattern of shapes that ceaselessly manifest in nature, including all plants, animals, the human body and generally across the entire universe.


The latest studies suggest that Sacred Geometry originated in Egypt and was later inherited by the ancient Greeks, who developed a complex study, which became the base of how we perceive this lore today. This study of the philosophical value found in the basics of geometry was considered sacred and became a universal language mainly among philosophers, alchemists and artists. Together the literal translation would read: “Measuring the Earth.” The study of geometry has its roots in observing nature and in fact, the word Geometry comes from the Greek word Geos (Earth) and Metron (to measure). This ancient field of study suggests that the universe was created according to a geometric plan of forms, shapes and symmetry. The study of a universal creative process has been for centuries and most probably even millennia observed in a discipline called The Sacred Geometry. Although there are endless possibilities and new horizons to be found in the art of writing, there are certain fixed principles that simply cannot be overlooked. Aristotle named this Memesis and perceived art as a copy of life and a model for beauty, truth and grace.
