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Above table notes… Multiculturalism in religion is colored by the fact that it’s essentially local faces of the same deities. The Regent of Winter will lean heavily on the Mountains aspect in Bakkarholt, but more on the Seas in Rhen, and be more balanced in Anicium, while still retaining a lot of overlap in teachings.

The Aspects, the circle of reality

Theology of the Aspects revolves around three forces in balance. Threes are fortuitous numbers in many cultures as well. Sometimes called the impersonal deities as these are uncaring forces of the universe. The first Roles that were filled even before people existed. The least likely to answer to prayer directly and never in a personal way. Always aloof.

The Radiant Queen

Regent of Life
Goddess of Familial Love, and Rivers
Symbol: Oak Tree, often glowing or Golden usually depicted next to a river.
Holy Weapon: A Mace or Staff
Celebration Day: Celebrated in spring or early summer depending on climate, in the most lively time of year.

Queen of Time

Regent of Passing Years
Goddess of time and art on static medium
Symbol: A silver ring with four pointed star that touches the outer edge
Holy Weapon: Stiletto (never ornamented except for her symbol top of the handle)
Celebration Day: Late winter where it’s cold, or the hottest days in warm climates. The theme is always stillness. The long waiting of time. Tends to be an extremely reserved and formal observation.

The Hungering Darkness

Regent of Entropy
God of Undead, Enemy of all life, The Crawling King
Symbol: A corroded disk of metal Commonly iron, but powerful clerics might wear corroded gold or silver. Lesser followers might encase the symbol in glass to prevent needing to replace it often. An obvious heresy but tolerated with a sneer.
Holy Weapon: Axes
Celebration Day: Varies with culture, held at the same time as one of the other Regent observations, or opposite it on the calendar. Almost always held in secret, it’s a rare culture to celebrate the death of all things… Though they do exist. The flavor is usually along the lines of celebrating in the face of inevitable doom and with the undertone of asking for that doom to wait until next year.


Regents, the Circle of Civilization

Regents are the gods of people in groups. Roles that filled as people built societies and try to understand the patterns of life and the world around them as they interact with it from day to day. Still unlikely to intervene in a personal way but can happen when need is great and much less aloof about it.

Summer King

Lord of Celebration
God of Sun and Fresh Water, Ordered crops, Harnesed Fire, Crafting
Symbol: Scythe and Stein (or Mug regionally) Areas with especially powerful guilds might use their tools. But always tools, not weapons.
Holy Weapon: Warhammer
Celebration day: High Summer, On the Solstice usually, but earlier in summer in the hottest climates. After the hardest work of planting is done, but before the heat of summer becomes punishing. A day for craftspeople to celebrate their skills.

Dawnflower

Regent of Spring, Lady of Rebirth and Redemption
Goddess of Perennial Plants, especially Orchards, and the embrace of change
Symbol: Red Day Lilly sometimes fruit tree flowers
Holy Weapon: Sword
Celebration Day: First of Spring Celebrate the end of winter, and the beginning of a new year in most cultures.

Winter King

Regent of Winter and Lord of Restraint
God of Sea and Stone, Endurance (Permanence at rest, Permanence in Motion)
Symbol: Stylized mountain with waves across the base
Holy weapon: Sword and Shield (regionally sometimes spear and shield)
Celebration Day: In cold or temperate climates, First Snow Held on the full moon following the first real snow of the cold season (in places where it snows). A day of preparation and sacrifices to the Sea or Mountains to ensure that people are equal to the test of the coming winter. In climates without snow he is more often referred to as the Storm King and his celebration is positioned before the stormy season but focuses on much the same ideas.

Andoletta

Regent of Autumn and Lady of Mourning, The Shepherd of Souls
Goddess of the ordered passing of souls and quiet deaths
Symbol: Plain back stone disk
Holy weapon: dagger
Celebration Day: Near the end of harvest season, but before cold sets in. Exact celebration style depends on the funerary rites of the culture, but centers on celebrating your ancestors, mourning those lost over the year.

The Tyrant

Regent of Waste, Lord of Blood and Pain, Conquest
God of slaughter, Wildfires, Captain of the Uncaring Hunt
Symbol: Bloodied Spear
Holy weapon: Spears or Polearms
Celebration Day: Held in mid spring, in cultures where it is celebrated openly it involves games of strength and martial prowess. Sometimes used between countries as a day to kind of bleed off some of the warlike desire in a more controlled way. (often includes stories where such attempts escalated into more serious conflict)

Tiamat

Regent of Destruction, Lady of Monsters
Goddess of the divine magic, natural monsters (dragons)
Symbol: 5 headed dragon (‘cause she’s an egomaniac) Holy Weapon: claws and teeth Celebration Day: The day of Betrayal Held the second full moon after the Summer Solstice. Involves living sacrifices, always sentient where possible, and using a draconic linked elemental power. (fire and lightning are the favorites for the spectacle)


Court of Heaven, or Court of the Earth

(many cultural variations in name here)
The court is the lowest of the high gods. Far more personal and focused more on single concepts (to varying degrees). While the Regents have only one story of any change to their numbers (Tiamat). The Court has a few including the Lady of Envy, or Nethys which are referenced in almost all cultures. Then, the Stalker has a number of conflicting regional stories about the Role being filled by a new individual, possibly indicating it has happened more than once.

Apsu

Liege of Healing
Deity of Divine Magic, Foresight and Divination, Enlightenment, and The Brighter Moon
Symbol: Open hand, palm outward
Holy weapon: fists and other unarmed
Celebration Day: Held on the Autumnal Equinox is a quiet observation. Temple Healing is often given freely to those in need on this day, and followers capable of healing are expected to spend some of their granted power in that way. Also a day for meditation and the peaceful resolution of grievances. It is considered extra auspicious to end a war on Apsu’s day.

Desna

Lady of Mysteries, the well meaning trickster
Goddess of Occult Magic, Stars, Dance, Music, and other ephemeral art
Symbol: a butterfly, or long pointed star
holy weapons: Whip or Rapier
Celebration Day: location in the year varies wildly by culture, but will often be a week of celebration with examples of Theater, Dance, Concerts. Occult projects are said to be extra powerful in this time.

Eros

Lord of Romance and the skies
God of romantic love, weather, wind
Symbol: A rose on clouds (often stormclouds)
Celebration Day: Held in Spring, sometimes in conjunction with the Dawnflower’s holiday, sometimes a specific day in Desna’s week. Features competitions of artwork, and maypole type events.

Filia

Lady of Nature
Goddess of Nature, flora and fauna, Balance (specifically with/in nature or life), Primal magic
Usually depicted centaurlike, usually deer, but elk or larger forms as well when she’s angry. Also sometimes symbolized as a bear when really pissed.
Holy weapon: a spear or bow
Symbols: Very little uniformity of symbols across cultures. Often animals, sometimes just depicting her horned stag-person form or just the horns. Art work has a bit of a trend depicting trees with a bear and deer under its branches.
Celebration Day: Almost never a formal celebration day. But some cultures do specify days where sacrifices are made to nature. The kingdom of Kiereth (later adopted by the Viserion Empire) and Anicium on Eolanada both had holy days featuring a ceremonial sowing of wildflowers over a fallow field, or tree planting days.

Nethys

Lord of Learning and the Arcane, The Split God
God of Arcane Magic, Learning, Self Improvement
Holy weapons: A staff, or glaive
Symbol: his split black and white mask
Nethys is said to have been a mortal who learned more about magic and replaced, or possibly merged with the prior Aspect of the Role. One source implies it was connected to Tiamat’s ascension and the prior aspect was a Regent, and possibly evil. His split nature serves as lesson about the potential of the Arcane for both good and evil.
Celebration Day: Early Winter, or opposite the stormy season, Nethys’ holiday is rarely observed outside the company of historians or arcane researchers. Intended to be a day of sharing knowledge, it often turns into a time of intellectual ego flexing.

The Twins

Lord and Lady of Luck
The twin gods of Luck, Commerce, and Trade (and Gambling of course)
The Lord represents bad, the Lady good luck (“Luck be a lady” and references to “the Lord’s Push” or “the Lady’s Pull” are common phrases)
Symbol: A coin with their faces smiling and frowning respectively on either side.
Holy weapon: Flail
Celebration Day: Varies wildly across cultures, many not having one, but most having at least one. Generally featuring games of chance they can also be celebrations of trade.

The Hollow One

Lord of Fear
God of fear, especially fear of the unknown.
Saying that translate to “hollow one look away” are common ‘worship’. Popular with Drow.
Symbol: two concentric rings, the inner having spikes that point outward the outer ring pointing inward. (theological lessons explain this as fear can come from within or without)
Holy weapon: kris or katar
Celebration Day: Extremely uncommon, but there are cultures that dedicate a day to the facing of fears who link those events to the Lord of Fear. Though generally as a way of holding him back.

The Stalker

Lord of the Kill, The Shadow of Endless Faces
God of murder, vengeance for the sake of vengeance, the joy of killing at the personal level. Also popular with Drow.
The only Role with multiple stories of being replaced. No culture has more than one story like this, though many of the stories are wildly contradictory.
Symbol: a wavy bladed dagger
holy weapon: dagger or shortsword, poison
Celebration Day: Unique to Drow culture, and more specifically an ancient custom of the highest clans, there is a “Knives in the Dark” tradition. Not tied to the upper world calendar in any way, arcane calculations are required to extrapolate a celestial arrangement in the shadowfel to the prime material plane in order to find when the event happens.

The Covetous One

Lady Envy, The Pirate Queen, goddess of the shadowed moon.
Goddess of theft, piracy, enslavement, extortion
Holy weapon: Cutlass, or Rapier
Symbol Crossed Cutlass and loop of Chains (usually white on a field of black)
Multiple cultures tell of a master thief god who had his riches and godhead stolen.
Celebration Day: Not a scheduled day by any stretch, more an expectation that a big haul is to be celebrated and some of the loot shared around.


Small Gods

Small gods are the least powerful of deities. To the point that the most powerful mortals often exceed their power. Extremely focused Roles centered around limited concepts. Geoff the god of biscuits and that kind of thing.

deitylist.txt · Last modified: 2025/01/10 20:56 by alex