mythology:imperial_religion:siathar:start
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| + | ====== Siathar ====== | ||
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| + | //The [[geopolitical: | ||
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| + | //There was a small storeroom attached to the hut, behind the idols, and [[person: | ||
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| + | // | ||
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| + | //Ybess kept a close eye on the door as the villagers gathered. She had to suppress her [[takma: | ||
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| + | //No doubt most of them would soon be moving on. But it was, after all, a rough and tiring life, especially at this time of turn, and even a good band tended to lose a few members to the comforts of settled life over time. Certainly the village could use a good resident trapper, and Gurass - who was among those sitting quietly in the back - seemed to be open to the idea.// | ||
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| + | //Ybess knew this because she'd taken the time to mention it to him a few vigils before, and he'd replied mildly that staying put and having ready access to warmth might be nice for a change. He hadn't specified what kind of warmth, but his expression had raised her hopes. So had his later present of a luxuriously soft fur, white as snow and big enough to be a blanket. " | ||
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| + | //As she began to solemnly invoke Their favor, she spared a few unspoken prayers of her own that Gurass could be persuaded to stay after the service. The [[mythology: | ||
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| + | The gods? Don't talk to me about gods. | ||
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| + | The gods are candy. They' | ||
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| + | And what no one tells you - because they don't wanna believe, or because they' | ||
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| + | I got starved and beaten up and [[https:// | ||
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| + | Fuck 'em. | ||
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| + | The **Siathar** (plural; never used in the singular in this sense) are one of the two groups making up the Imperial pantheon, the other being the [[mythology: | ||
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| + | For their followers, the Siathar are relatable, familiar beings with familiar roles; they are, in a sense, the ultimate takmar, the species' | ||
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| + | Although their influence may be seen anywhere that [[takma: | ||
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| + | ===== Deities ===== | ||
| + | ==== The Sixfold Eminence ==== | ||
| + | The head of the Siathar is the [[mythology: | ||
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| + | The " | ||
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| + | ==== The Eminent Court ==== | ||
| + | As any powerful takma matriarch would be attended by a number of husbands and lovers, the Sixfold Eminence has six husbands of Her own, one to complement each aspect of Herself. They were Her greatest aides and helpers in bringing life to the world, and the fathers of Her children. | ||
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| + | Unlike the aspects of the Most Eminent, however, the members of the Court are truly separate entities, and accordingly are generally worshiped separately. Combined with the tendency of the temples of the Most Eminent to be large but few in number (and often attached to palaces and other sites of authority), temples to the members of the Court generally greatly outnumber them and are an important part of public life - all the more so because they frequently have institutions appropriate to their patron god attached to them. | ||
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| + | The priesthoods of the Court generally accept members of either sex, and are among the few institutions among the takmar in which males can take leadership roles. Nonetheless, | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
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| + | ==== The Children ==== | ||
| + | The most numerous of the Siathar are the Divine Children, the immortal offspring of the Sixfold Eminence and Her Court, and who serve as the gods and patrons of specific occupations. Where their parents have somewhat wide-ranging influences, the Children are beings of far narrower focus; each one guides and protects members of a particular vocation, calling, or occupation, and governs no sphere of life outside it. While the purview of each Child may overlap with part of the sphere of one of His or Her parents, the patron of a particular job is often seen as closer and more invested, a kindred spirit and an invisibly helping hand - even a friend - as much as an archetype. | ||
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| + | On occasion, niches or shrines to locally important Children might exist within a temple to the Most Eminent or Her Court, but the worship of the Children is concentrated in the home or, where different, at the jobsite, and revolves around small, easily movable (or even temporary) altars and easily carried idols. Small burnt offerings of food or goods are made to them to express gratitude and keep Their favor. The worship is very personal and often lacking in ceremony; there are no priests, no sermons, nothing between the worshipper and his god. | ||
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| + | To list the Children would be a daunting task, for the fertility of the Great Mother knows no bounds; there are many Children, as many of them as there are vocations for them to be patrons of. Their names and numbers are countless, and indeed may vary from place to place, such that any exhaustive list compiled in one place and time might little resemble one compiled elsewhere. | ||
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| + | Some of those known are listed below; for a more complete list, see the [[mythology: | ||
| + | * [[mythology: | ||
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| + | ===== Worship ===== | ||
| + | The Siathar are openly worshipped nearly everywhere the Imperial religion persists. | ||
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| + | One way or another, there is a long tradition of centering the worship of the Siathar around idols or religious icons. This is more obviously true in the case of the Divine Children, for whom there are no great temples; though many of Them may have small altars dedicated to Them in homes and worksites, the hallmark of worship of the Children is the carrying of a small carved statuette or symbolic charm upon one's person, so that the Child being invoked has a presence with the worshipper. Yet even the Sixfold Eminence and Her Court, who more usually have temples, contain idols or icons within their sanctuaries, | ||
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| + | It must be understood that, in all these cases, the idols or icons are not perceived as being or containing the gods to which they are linked. They are, instead, perhaps better understood as conduits or magnets, intended to communicate with the gods and draw their presence and influence to them. | ||
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| + | ===== Mythological role ===== | ||
| + | The Siathar are considered the progenitors of takmakind, and their protectors against the unpredictable and unfathomable Lamnar. Collectively, | ||
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| + | The Siathar are wherever Their people, the takmar, are, and have ultimate sovereignty over all their works. Because of this, They have more power the more takmar there are in one place, the more permanently they are established, | ||
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| + | ===== Mythological history ===== | ||
| + | The [[item: | ||
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| + | Going to the Diarchs, she begged Them for safety for her creations. Taking pity on her, They made [[universe: | ||
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| + | Siath made the many living things upon the face of Avishraa, and although some were taken by storm or flood or cold or heat, they still prospered. Seeing that the world was good She birthed the first takmar, and set them to spread and multiply. Though She taught them much, Her six companions were no less attentive, and becoming fond of Them, She married Them all. They, in turn, fathered Her Children, who Themselves worked tirelessly to guide the takmar and keep them safe. | ||
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| + | Outside of the creation myth, there are generally few stories in which the Siathar play the primary parts, though they are frequently depicted as acting in support of, or against, mortal characters. | ||
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| + | {{tag> | ||
