Ancient Domain
Aganjú is the orixá of the uninhabited places: volcanic earth, desert scrub, and the molten core beneath the mountain. Unlike Ṣàngó, whose fire crackles in the sky, Aganjú's fire moves slowly through stone. He is the son of Odùduwà and Ọbatalá in many accounts, the giant whose strides once shook the earth and whose breath still steams from fissures in the ground.
In Afro-Atlantic ritual he appears as Aggayú Solá, the bearer of the world, a deity so tall that rivers reach only his ankles. To invoke him is to acknowledge that civilization rests on forces older and more patient than human law.

