Created.si
The AI guide to how the world began, in every culture's own words
From Genesis to the Enuma Elish to the Dreamtime, nearly every culture has a story of how the world was made. Compare creation myths side by side, learn their original sources, and see what they share and where they differ.
No card required ยท $9/mo Plus ยท $99/mo Premium
What you get
Everything Created.si gives you
๐
Myths side by side
Compare how different cultures explain the world's origin, structured and clear.
๐
Always sourced
Every story is tied to its text or tradition - Genesis, Enuma Elish, Popol Vuh, and more.
๐
Every culture, fairly
From major world religions to indigenous and oral traditions, told on their own terms.
๐
Saved study threads
Sign in free and keep your comparisons for later study.
Go deeper
Creation stories from around the world
A reference to how cultures across history have explained the origin of the world, the gods, and humanity.
Ancient Near East & Abrahamic
- Genesis โ Hebrew Bible account: creation in six days, humanity from earth, told in Genesis 1-2.
- Enuma Elish โ Babylonian epic where Marduk creates the world from the slain body of Tiamat.
- Egyptian cosmogonies โ Heliopolitan and Memphite accounts of Atum or Ptah creating the world by thought and word.
- Quranic creation โ Islamic account of God creating the heavens and earth in six days, described across the Quran.
Asian traditions
- Purusha Sukta โ Rig Veda hymn where the cosmos and castes emerge from the sacrificed cosmic being Purusha.
- Pangu โ Chinese myth of a giant who separates yin and yang, forming sky and earth, then becomes the world.
- Izanagi and Izanami โ Shinto kami who churn the ocean to form the Japanese islands, recorded in the Kojiki (712 CE).
- Buddhist cosmology โ Cyclical, creator-less cosmos of arising and dissolving world-systems across vast time scales.
Indigenous, African & Mesoamerican
- Dreamtime โ Aboriginal Australian accounts of ancestral beings shaping land and law in the Dreaming.
- Rangi and Papa โ Maori sky father and earth mother, separated by their children to let in light.
- Obatala and Oduduwa โ Yoruba orisha credited with forming solid land from primordial water and marsh.
- Popol Vuh โ K'iche' Maya text describing the gods' repeated attempts to create people from mud, wood, then maize.
Pricing
Simple plans that grow with you
Most popular
Plus
$9/mo
- โ200 questions per day
- โFull saved conversation history
- โSide-by-side myth comparisons
Premium
$99/mo
- โUnlimited questions
- โExtended deep-dive answers
- โEverything in Plus