✦ Ancient Historical Fact: The Origin of the Name "Humans" ✦
As recorded in the Moonsong Tablets and the Whispering Scrolls of the Celestial Archives
---
In the earliest age of the Vitanium, when they had just begun to walk upon the newborn Natural World, they had no name.
They were a mystery—even to themselves.
Not quite divine.
Not quite beast.
Their Vita pulsed brightly, unlike any other creation.
The Epics watched them with curiosity.
The Demons ignored them.
But one Celestial stepped forward to observe them more closely—
The quiet and radiant:
🌙 Myrielle – "Modest Bloom of Moonlight"
One of the Fourteen Virtue Celestials
A being of gentleness, observation, and poetic understanding, Myrielle was drawn to the strange new race that thrived not through dominance or command, but through growth, resilience, and emotion.
She wandered among them unseen, often veiling the sky in twilight as she came near, granting them the gift of night—so they might dream, reflect, and find peace beneath the stars.
In her moonlight whispers, she spoke a name:
---
"Human."
Derived from ancient Celestial phraseology:
"Hu" – an archaic celestial syllable meaning "planet", rooted one, or grounded form.
"Man" – not gendered, but translated as "energy" or "living essence" in Celestial tongue.
---
Thus:
> Human = "Energy One" or "Planet One"
A being of the ground, who carries the spark of stars within.
Myrielle described them in the Stellar Verses as:
> "The quiet flames of the soil, wandering with wonder, soft yet infinite.
Let them be called Human—children of planet and energy."
---
This name spread among the Celestials and even reached the Epics, who began referring to the Vitanium not by number or designation, but by this resonant name.
Over generations, the Vitanium themselves adopted the title, unaware of its celestial origin.
"Human" became a legacy, an identity whispered under the moonlight given by Myrielle herself.
To this day, many say the name Human is a blessing—
A sacred word from a star-being who saw beauty in fragility and hope in imperfection.
---