Born where writing
was invented.

This is not a metaphor. It is an origin. Nuvara carries the memory of the first civilization — worn with quiet elegance for those who stand between worlds.

Yusuf Songur, Founder of Nuvara

Yusuf Songur Founder, Nuvara

"I was born where writing was invented."

In the ancient lands of Mesopotamia, the first cities rose from the earth, the first laws were written, and the first stories were carved into clay. Long before modern nations or borders existed, this land became the cradle of civilization.

To come from such a place is not something you see, but something you carry — a quiet awareness that the ground beneath your ancestors once shaped the beginning of human history. For thousands of years its symbols, myths, and artistry shaped the imagination of the world.

Then, slowly, they faded.

Nuvara was born from a simple idea: to bring the symbols of the first civilization back into the present.

A symbol older than nations. Older than borders.
A symbol that belongs not to a place, but to civilization itself.


The Star of Ishtar

At the heart of Nuvarastands the eight-pointed Star of Ishtar — an ancient emblem once engraved on cylinder seals, temple walls, and royal artifacts thousands of years old. Across every collection, it appears. Sometimes as the centre. Sometimes as a quiet hallmark. Always present.


Gold · First Collection

Ishtar

Named for the goddess of love, war, and the morning star. Cast in gold — the metal of light, power, and permanence. The collection opens the first chapter from the oldest stories ever told.


Nuvara is not made for a nation. It is not made for a religion. It is not made for a border.

It is made for those who stand between worlds — past and future, origin and destination — and feel the quiet gravity of both.

To wear a piece of Nuvarais not simply to wear jewelry. It is to carry the memory of the first civilization — on your wrist, at your throat, or in your hand.

Not a flag. Not a border. Not a nation.
A civilization reborn.