PuniCodex

The Authentic Orthography

Ọrúnmìlà

Wisdom, Divination, Ifá · Heaven knows who will succeed

Tier 2 Ọrúnmìlà
Ọrúnmìlà — Wisdom, Divination, Ifá
01

The Authentic Name

Unicode restoration and ASCII comparison

Scholarly Transliteration

Ọrúnmìlà

The name survives only in scholarly transliteration. Ọrúnmìlà is the standard Yoruba romanisation, documented in academic sources — “Heaven knows who will succeed”. Its acute stress marks preserve distinctions lost in plain ASCII.

No indigenous writing system is securely attested for individual yoruba names. The form shown is a modern scholarly transliteration.

ASCII Constraint

orunmila

Reduced to plain orunmila, the name loses everything that made it specific: acute stress marks. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

Ọrúnmìlà

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. Ọrúnmìlà restores acute stress marks, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
Ọrúnmìlà.com → xn--rnml-3na4exes761a.com

The non-ASCII characters in Ọrúnmìlà are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is Ọrúnmìlà.

02

Original Script & Provenance

How Ọrúnmìlà is preserved in writing

Ọrúnmìlà
Scholarly Transliteration

No indigenous writing system is securely attested for individual yoruba names. The form shown is a modern scholarly transliteration.

Contribute scholarly provenance →
03

Pronunciation

How Ọrúnmìlà was spoken

/ɔ̀.rúɱ.mì.là/ Yoruba Reconstruction
Ọ- Open-mid back rounded vowel [ɔ] with low tone, written with a dot below.
-rú- Voiced alveolar tap or trill [r] plus close back rounded vowel [u] with high tone.
-ɱì- Voiced labiodental nasal [ɱ] before [m], with close front vowel [i] in low tone.
-là Voiced alveolar lateral approximant [l] followed by open [a] with low tone.
04

Witness at Creation

Wisdom, Divination, and the Ifá Corpus

Ọrúnmìlà is the orixá of wisdom and the patron of Ifá, the Yoruba divination system that maps human destiny against the patterns of the cosmos. He was present at creation; he knows the day the world was made and the names that were spoken into it. Kings do not act without consulting him, and no orixá is said to understand the future as he does.

Unlike Ṣàngó or Ọya, he is not a warrior. His power is speech, memory, and the ability to read the signs hidden in the fall of sixteen palm nuts.

Ifá Divination

Sixteen palm nuts and the divination chain reveal the odù that governs a situation.

Sacred Knowledge

He remembers the verses, medicines, and sacrifices that restore cosmic balance.

Witness of Creation

Only he saw the world being made; therefore only he can interpret its deepest laws.

Babalawo

The father of secrets — the title of the priests who speak for him in divination.

Sacred Symbols

Ikin palm nuts The sixteen sacred nuts used in Ifá divination; they hold the signatures of the odù.
Ọpẹ̀lẹ̀ divination chain The chain of eight half-shells that provides quicker access to Ifá wisdom.
Green and yellow beads His sacred colours, associated with palm leaves, knowledge, and mature wisdom.
Staff of wisdom The iron staff that grounds his authority and marks the babalawo in ceremony.
05

Mythology

Stories of Ọrúnmìlà

Ọrúnmìlà's mythology is textual as much as narrative: it lives in thousands of Ifá verses (òdù Ifá) that record his journeys, judgments, and interventions.

Cosmogony

The Witness at the Foundation of the World

According to Ifá tradition, Ọrúnmìlà was the only orixá present when Olódùmarè created the earth. He observed the placement of the rivers, the rising of the mountains, and the distribution of destinies. Because he witnessed the beginning, he can trace any present trouble back to its origin and prescribe the sacrifice that will set it right.

Odù Ifá

The Sixteen Principals

The Ifá corpus is organised around sixteen principal odù, each with sixteen sub-odù, generating 256 basic combinations. Each odù is a world of stories, proverbs, and medicines. Ọrúnmìlà is not merely the system; he is the living voice that speaks through it when the babalawo casts the chain or nuts.

Legend

Ọrúnmìlà and the Choice of Destiny

In one widespread Ifá narrative, Ọrúnmìlà advises humans on how to choose their destiny (àyẹ̀wò) before birth. The choice is made in heaven, but once taken it binds the living. Ọrúnmìlà's role is not to change fate but to reveal its contours and the sacrifices that can soften its hardest edges.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

Ọrúnmìlà is the god who knows that knowing is not enough. He possesses the memory of creation, yet his work is not to dazzle humans with that memory but to guide them through the small, repeated acts — casting nuts, reciting verses, making sacrifice — that restore alignment.

Enter Extended Lore
Ọrúnmìlà mascot