tirades:start
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| + | Other notes: | ||
| + | "The city of Aedyihozh (not the orthography I use, but I don't know how to type it on mobile) is the center of a small maritime empire. The original town was built around the edge of the bottom of a sinkhole connected to the sea, as an attempt by another city to have a hidden harbor in a strategic location; it means something like 'Well Town': //adyin// 'a pit used to store something'; | ||
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| + | //hozh//, as you might guess, is a common suffix within the same cultural area. The other Abethine city-states don't have much trouble pronouncing it but consider the city to be culturally unpleasant and a political upstart, so it's not unusual for it to be nicknamed //Inahozh// 'Hole City'. | ||
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| + | Because it's a relatively new city, the Imperial-descended languages of the interior tended to just adapt the name to their own pronunciations. In the central stretches of the Sahvarr valley this comes out as something like // | ||
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| + | "The Imperial religion, which in one form or another is the dominant belief system of the takma species, holds that Uvuun, a dark, cold deity who was the first thing created and who dwells in the abyssal seas, hungers to devour everything. The bodies of the dead and anything that is destroyed are said to go to Him, but at the end of the world He will come forth and eat all creation. The prevailing opinion is that there is nothing that can be done about this except to anger Him as little as possible in the meantime. | ||
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| + | The Seekers of the Depths, however, see it a bit differently. While everyone assumes that the end of the world is going to come someday, the Seekers are a somewhat apocalyptic group who believe it's going to come sooner rather than later if nothing is done. Fortunately, | ||
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| + | The Seekers have no central organization, | ||
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| + | The Seekers, as the above implies, are usually male. Sometimes, however, they are able to draw in female members, usually those young, low in status, and disgruntled with society. Either several males will amiably depart a court and settle down with a suitable wife, or a court will convince one to leave with them and build a home in the wilderness for her. In either case, the female accepts the ideology of the cult in exchange for a feeling of importance and family structure. Those who are willing to leave with a court, in particular, essentially become the focus of an entire small community, and the males who do not actually marry them often treat them with extravagant courtesy. Children produced are usually raised as Seekers, although the more enthusiastic Seekers may offer at least some of them to Uvuun. | ||
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| + | In the absence of a female, the more experienced and respected male members of a court tend to become leaders - majordomos, in internal parlance - but general agreement, and they function collectively as a kind of steering committee for day-to-day leadership, and maintain the religious functions of the group. If a female joins, she usually assumes the religious role as a priestess, and presides over the majordomos, some or all of whom tend to become her husbands. That said, courts tend to have a fairly communal flavor to their governance, trying to have consensus over major decisions. In the event that a faction develops with irreconcilable differences, | ||
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| + | When the time comes to make an offering to Uvuun, it will be preceded by a ritual in which the majordomos or the priestess, with the Court assembled, speaks to Him and offers Him a " | ||
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| + | The Seekers of the Depths are almost universally regarded with distaste, but their precise relationship with society varies from place to place, or more commonly from court to court. Those courts with a less organized bent often appear, for those not familiar with their actual beliefs, to behave similarly to bandits or vandals, particularly if they appear to profit from their victims (which they often do). Depending on whether destruction of property or actual murder is involved, they may be considered either a nuisance or common criminals. Those involved with social unrest are viewed more seriously - inconveniencing commoners is one thing, but going against the established order is quite another. | ||
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| + | Some courts of a sophisticated bent, however, have managed to acquire a kind of specialist niche in society, functioning as the equivalent of an assassin' | ||
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| + | " | ||
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| + | "In the event of a sudden Ǣdyihòzhis collapse, the other city-states turn on each other while trying to carve up the remnants, particularly the Ǣdyihòzhis system of control over the Giant' | ||
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| + | The fact that the so-called Rebel Royals - disaffected potential heirs to the Ǣdyihòzhis throne - have been in exile in Palkidam may lend that city some legitimacy to its bid." | ||
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| + | "The ghyṑl is a very large marine animal of Avishraa found in the southern oceans. A scaly creature with gills, with the approximate shape and build of a Kronosaurus, | ||
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| + | Peirèm, an early heroine of Ǣdyihòzh and the ancestor of the city's Grand Princesses, is recorded as having been one of the few who wrested a ghyṑl tusk from its original owner. While the original tusk has apparently been lost or destroyed, a brass and silver horn was created in its likeness and serves as the badge of office of the Grand Princess." | ||
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