The Bronze Age was the era when European religion shifted from local fertility cults and animistic traditions toward structured polytheisms that are recognizable as the ancestors of later Greek, Roman, Celtic, and Norse faiths. Metallurgy, trade, and warrior aristocracies transformed ritual life, creating solar cults, storm gods, and hero-ancestor veneration. For the first time, we can identify specific religions—with named deities, structured practices, and monumental sanctuaries—that stand as precursors to the historical religions of Europe.


Religions Proper (Recognizable Systems)

Minoan Religion (Crete, c. 2000–1450 BCE)


Mycenaean Religion (Greece, c. 1600–1100 BCE)


Nordic Bronze Age Religion (Scandinavia, c. 1700–500 BCE)


Pan-European Religious Patterns in the Bronze Age

1. Solar Cults


2. Storm and Sky Gods


3. Warrior and Hero Cults


4. Fertility and Earth Cults


5. Monumental Religion


Regional Highlights


Cross-Cutting Motifs


Legacy