Kaveh of Etruria (KAH-veh)
Inventor of Wireless Energy Resonance
Kaveh of Etruria was a gifted artisan and thinker who first glimpsed the possibility of power moving without visible tether. Inspired by the vibrational harmonics of ceramic kilns, he pursued experiments in resonance that went far beyond pottery. His workshops became filled with strange towers of clay, humming faintly as invisible fields flickered in the air.
Between 1767 and 1773, Kaveh perfected the ceramic resonance tower, a structure that stabilized inductive fields and allowed energy to leap across space. This was not a single revelation but a slow layering of insight — each kiln firing, each failed tower, a step toward the realization that energy could travel unseen, across distance.
Kaveh’s invention reshaped the world’s imagination. For the first time, power need not be bound by wires or flame. His resonance towers spread across Etruria and beyond, standing as both practical engines and symbols of a new age. Though modest in life, Kaveh was revered in later generations as the first to bring forth invisible fire.









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