Difference between revisions of "Hârn Venârivè Summa"

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“Where to begin?” It’s the first question a historian
+
“Where to begin?” It’s the first question a historian must answer in any manuscript, and it’s a deceptively difficult one. It is simple to ask, but the answer often sets the stage for everything else in the work. In this work we wish to trace the development of the entire intellectual milieu of modern Venârivè. We must begin, therefore, with the point where that intellectual community first becomes apparent.
must answer in any manuscript, and it’s a deceptively
+
difficult one. It is simple to ask, but the answer often
+
sets the stage for everything else in the work. In this
+
work we wish to trace the development of the entire
+
intellectual milieu of modern Venârivè. We must begin,
+
therefore, with the point where that intellectual community
+
first becomes apparent.
+
  
For this we have chosen a date, bt300. It is a rough
+
For this we have chosen a date, bt300. It is a rough date - we could have chosen a time a little earlier or later. But it is close to the moment when the term ‘Venârivè’ can first be used to describe a coherent entity. ‘Venârivè’ is a combination of Venârian and Iváe, the two seas that link the region, but just a few centuries before our chosen date the region was hardly linked at all. Instead it was divided into four disparate networks. One network spread along the shores of the Eastern Venârian Sea and inland towards Mafán. A second covered the western lands from Emélrenè to the Járind sea-towns. A third connected the northern peoples - Quârph and Rekâri. And a fourth centred on Hèpekéria and Thónia, and was perhaps culturally closer to Anzelôria than to any northern region.
date - we could have chosen a time a little earlier or
+
later. But it is close to the moment when the term
+
‘Venârivè’ can first be used to describe a coherent
+
entity. ‘Venârivè’ is a combination of Venârian and Iváe,
+
the two seas that link the region, but just a few centuries
+
before our chosen date the region was hardly
+
linked at all. Instead it was divided into four disparate
+
networks. One network spread along the shores of
+
the Eastern Venârian Sea and inland towards Mafán.
+
A second covered the western lands from Emélrenè to
+
the Járind sea-towns. A third connected the northern
+
peoples - Quârph and Rekâri. And a fourth centred
+
on Hèpekéria and Thónia, and was perhaps culturally
+
closer to Anzelôria than to any northern region.
+
  
But between bt1000 and bt500, these four networks
+
But between bt1000 and bt500, these four networks slowly became connected. Kàruían traders planted colonies in Hèpekéria and Ûmélria, while the Járind expanded their activities east and south. Behind the traders came lorists, missionaries, fortune-seekers, and refugees. By bt500 all four networks were well connected, after two more centuries the ties were strong enough that we can talk about Venârivè as a meaningful unit. While the cultures of Venârivè remained distinctive, all were influenced profoundly by their cohabitants in the region.
slowly became connected. Kàruían traders planted
+
colonies in Hèpekéria and Ûmélria, while the Járind
+
expanded their activities east and south. Behind the
+
traders came lorists, missionaries, fortune-seekers, and
+
refugees. By bt500 all four networks were well connected,
+
after two more centuries the ties were strong
+
enough that we can talk about Venârivè as a meaningful
+
unit. While the cultures of Venârivè remained distinctive,
+
all were influenced profoundly by their cohabitants
+
in the region.
+
  
  
Line 159: Line 128:
 
* Page 6
 
* Page 6
  
It is with some trepidation that we call the period
+
It is with some trepidation that we call the period from about bt1000 to tr1 the Classical Age. The term arises because much of the ‘classic’ literature and lore that is highly respected today was written in this period. Yet the term is misleading, in that the Classical Age was not a golden age of remarkable achievement. Granted, much was achieved that was worth remarking upon – as we shall see – but overall the level of culture was not markedly higher than in subsequent eras. Other terms sometimes used for the era, such as the ‘Foundations Period’, are too closely tied to events in specific regions to be useful in a work that studies Venârivè as a whole. Technological markers are impossible, since no particular technology marks the transition. While imperfect, ‘Classical Age’ references the most important cultural legacy of the era – the written works that are still studied as intently today as in the era they were written.
from about bt1000 to tr1 the Classical Age. The term
+
arises because much of the ‘classic’ literature and lore
+
that is highly respected today was written in this period.
+
Yet the term is misleading, in that the Classical Age was
+
not a golden age of remarkable achievement. Granted,
+
much was achieved that was worth remarking upon –
+
as we shall see – but overall the level of culture was not
+
markedly higher than in subsequent eras. Other terms
+
sometimes used for the era, such as the ‘Foundations
+
Period’, are too closely tied to events in specific regions
+
to be useful in a work that studies Venârivè as a whole.
+
Technological markers are impossible, since no particular
+
technology marks the transition. While imperfect,
+
‘Classical Age’ references the most important cultural
+
legacy of the era – the written works that are still studied
+
as intently today as in the era they were written.
+
  
 
==== Widspread Literacy ====
 
==== Widspread Literacy ====
While Venârivè as a region was a new thing, the
+
While Venârivè as a region was a new thing, the cultures within were already old and accomplished. Everywhere, society was literate. Of course, the commoners rarely had access to the benefits of writing, but every culture had the ability to record its myths, traditions, and techniques. Writing allowed craftsmen to share their secrets, traders to plan their voyages, and rulers to record their edicts. And many cultures had their own literary tradition. As we will see later, some have not been exceeded in quality since.
cultures within were already old and accomplished.
+
Everywhere, society was literate. Of course, the commoners
+
rarely had access to the benefits of writing, but
+
every culture had the ability to record its myths, traditions,
+
and techniques. Writing allowed craftsmen to
+
share their secrets, traders to plan their voyages, and
+
rulers to record their edicts. And many cultures had
+
their own literary tradition. As we will see later, some
+
have not been exceeded in quality since.
+
  
It is possible that this widespread literacy was due
+
It is possible that this widespread literacy was due to exposure to the elder races. The ruined empires in Mafán, Anzelôria, and elsewhere are also thought to be birthplaces of writing. Probably both statements are true. Writing seems to have been invented several times in several different regions, and no one culture can claim to be its only mother. Thanks to this diffusion, in bt300 no one culture can be seen as intellectually dominant. While not all societies were equally advanced, almost all groups made some contribution towards the advancement of the whole.
to exposure to the elder races. The ruined empires
+
in Mafán, Anzelôria, and elsewhere are also thought to
+
be birthplaces of writing. Probably both statements
+
are true. Writing seems to have been invented several
+
times in several different regions, and no one culture
+
can claim to be its only mother. Thanks to this diffusion,
+
in bt300 no one culture can be seen as intellectually
+
dominant. While not all societies were equally
+
advanced, almost all groups made some contribution
+
towards the advancement of the whole.
+
  
 
==== Connections and Centres ====
 
==== Connections and Centres ====
Contact among the cultures was routine, but economically
+
Contact among the cultures was routine, but economically ephemeral. Goods and people moved easily across the region. Not only do we find Járin jewellery in Hácherim burial crypts of the era, but a small colony of Járin craftsmen appear in the earliest known description of Hácherdad city, and many Hácherim nautical terms derive from the Járin language. Similar examples of cross-cultural contacts over vast distances can be found throughout Venârivè.
ephemeral. Goods and people moved easily
+
across the region. Not only do we find Járin jewellery in
+
Hácherim burial crypts of the era, but a small colony of
+
Járin craftsmen appear in the earliest known description
+
of Hácherdad city, and many Hácherim nautical
+
terms derive from the Járin language. Similar examples
+
of cross-cultural contacts over vast distances can
+
be found throughout Venârivè.
+
  
But economically, the scale of these contacts was
+
But economically, the scale of these contacts was too small to have much demographic impact. Cities remained small, and their prosperity was tied almost entirely to their ability to dominate their own hinterland. The caravan routes to the East brought only a smattering of goods from the ruined petty-states of Mafán, and the internal trade of the region was not enough to stimulate the specialisation that leads to city-building. Rampant piracy certainly didn’t help the traders. The largest Járind sea-towns held only a few thousand people, while the Kàruían cities were barely any larger. A few of the largest, such as Livélis, perhaps exceeded 10,000 souls at this time. But even Livélis depended much more on its olive groves and fishermen than on its merchants for its wealth.
too small to have much demographic impact. Cities
+
remained small, and their prosperity was tied almost
+
entirely to their ability to dominate their own hinterland.
+
The caravan routes to the East brought only a smattering
+
of goods from the ruined petty-states of Mafán,
+
and the internal trade of the region was not enough to
+
stimulate the specialisation that leads to city-building.
+
Rampant piracy certainly didn’t help the traders. The
+
largest Járind sea-towns held only a few thousand people,
+
while the Kàruían cities were barely any larger. A
+
few of the largest, such as Livélis, perhaps exceeded
+
10,000 souls at this time. But even Livélis depended
+
much more on its olive groves and fishermen than on
+
its merchants for its wealth.
+
  
The largest cities were not centres of trade but of
+
The largest cities were not centres of trade but of worship. The temple-cities of the Târga Valley could exceed 20,000 in population, and smaller centres existed in many areas. Beréma and Chérafîr were two such centres. These cities were built on the religious needs of a society, and were usually the centres of an ethnic state. They varied considerably in character, but all followed a basic pattern. Each was centred on a large public space - a plaza or a thoroughfare - large enough for public rituals. Adjacent were two complexes - a palace that housed the prince and his military, and a temple or group of temples that housed the priests. Virtually all cities were walled, and larger towns had interior walls that segregated the classes - especially foreigners and low-caste workers such as street cleaners, butchers, and tanners. Streets were narrow and choked with mire. Larger cities had aqueducts, smaller ones used wells and cisterns, but these were always inadequate. Open spaces were few, and the absence of planning obvious.
worship. The temple-cities of the Târga Valley could
+
exceed 20,000 in population, and smaller centres
+
existed in many areas. Beréma and Chérafîr were two
+
such centres. These cities were built on the religious
+
needs of a society, and were usually the centres of an
+
ethnic state. They varied considerably in character, but
+
all followed a basic pattern. Each was centred on a
+
large public space - a plaza or a thoroughfare - large
+
enough for public rituals. Adjacent were two complexes
+
- a palace that housed the prince and his military,
+
and a temple or group of temples that housed the
+
priests. Virtually all cities were walled, and larger towns
+
had interior walls that segregated the classes - especially
+
foreigners and low-caste workers such as street
+
cleaners, butchers, and tanners. Streets were narrow
+
and choked with mire. Larger cities had aqueducts,
+
smaller ones used wells and cisterns, but these were
+
always inadequate. Open spaces were few, and the
+
absence of planning obvious.
+
  
Each city was the centre for a principality of commensurate
+
Each city was the centre for a principality of commensurate size. Whereas little Chérafîr held only an ephemeral state within its orbit, Beréma controlled a substantial kingdom. City-states in Hèpekéria were in constant flux - their fortunes shifting with every dynastic change. But in the Târga Valley, the insular cities were immobilized by centuries of religious tradition, their rulers mere cogs in an immortal machine. We call these principalities ‘temple-states’, but they were not necessarily theocracies. While community life was centred mostly on the temple, the palace usually held the political power – though there were many variations. As we shall see later, these temple-states were under enormous stress in the centuries leading up to our period. Their reaction to the changing religious milieu would soon determine their path through the subsequent centuries.
size. Whereas little Chérafîr held only an
+
ephemeral state within its orbit, Beréma controlled a
+
substantial kingdom. City-states in Hèpekéria were in
+
constant flux - their fortunes shifting with every dynastic
+
change. But in the Târga Valley, the insular cities
+
were immobilized by centuries of religious tradition,
+
their rulers mere cogs in an immortal machine. We
+
call these principalities ‘temple-states’, but they were
+
not necessarily theocracies. While community life was
+
centred mostly on the temple, the palace usually held
+
the political power – though there were many variations.
+
As we shall see later, these temple-states were
+
under enormous stress in the centuries leading up to
+
our period. Their reaction to the changing religious
+
milieu would soon determine their path through the
+
subsequent centuries.
+
  
Outside of these temple-states there were no other
+
Outside of these temple-states there were no other permanent polities. Only small states had the social cohesiveness to survive. While rulers might for a generation or so claim control over some large territory, these realms were extensions of the personal power of the ruler and lacked the permanent machinery of a true state. Upon the loss of the charismatic founder they inevitably fell apart.
permanent polities. Only small states had the social
+
cohesiveness to survive. While rulers might for a generation
+
or so claim control over some large territory,
+
these realms were extensions of the personal power of
+
the ruler and lacked the permanent machinery of a true
+
state. Upon the loss of the charismatic founder they
+
inevitably fell apart.
+
  
 
* Page 7
 
* Page 7
  
So, in politics and economics, as well as in intellectual
+
So, in politics and economics, as well as in intellectual culture, no city or place in Venârivè was dominant. Not that all places were equal - Beréma and Livélis, to be sure, were remarkable enough places to attract immigrants of many kinds. But as no single cultural force could dominate, Venârivè could host a melange of traditions. The opportunities for cross-pollination were endless, but there were disadvantages to not having any large, dominant centres. Some advances require scale. Some require a broad combination of skills to be brought to one place, some require a large capital investment, and some address problems that simply aren’t apparent until a society reaches a certain size. Technologies and ideas that fit these latter categories were stillborn in the Classical Venârivè.
culture, no city or place in Venârivè was dominant.
+
Not that all places were equal - Beréma and Livélis,
+
to be sure, were remarkable enough places to attract
+
immigrants of many kinds. But as no single cultural
+
force could dominate, Venârivè could host a melange
+
of traditions. The opportunities for cross-pollination
+
were endless, but there were disadvantages to not
+
having any large, dominant centres. Some advances
+
require scale. Some require a broad combination of
+
skills to be brought to one place, some require a large
+
capital investment, and some address problems that
+
simply aren’t apparent until a society reaches a certain
+
size. Technologies and ideas that fit these latter categories
+
were stillborn in the Classical Venârivè.
+
  
 
==== Technologies and Crafts ====
 
==== Technologies and Crafts ====
But most technologies thrived. In many areas it
+
But most technologies thrived. In many areas it is arguable whether there have been any significant advances since. In music - an art that benefits most from cultural exchange and least from central direction - there is no question that the accomplishments of the era compare favorably with any other. While styles have changed over the centuries, the composer’s understanding of his art has not advanced in any meaningful way. The crude methods of musical notation used in Venârivè have barely changed since, and all theories of rhythm and harmony are rooted in works predating bt300 and well known in the era.
is arguable whether there have been any significant
+
advances since. In music - an art that benefits most
+
from cultural exchange and least from central direction
+
- there is no question that the accomplishments
+
of the era compare favorably with any other. While
+
styles have changed over the centuries, the composer’s
+
understanding of his art has not advanced in any
+
meaningful way. The crude methods of musical notation
+
used in Venârivè have barely changed since, and
+
all theories of rhythm and harmony are rooted in works
+
predating bt300 and well known in the era.
+
  
The arts of sculpture and painting were similarly well
+
The arts of sculpture and painting were similarly well developed. Technically, the works of the era are on a par with those of any subsequent time. There are a few pigments and paints that were not available, but artists did not lack any skill or theory. They did not often use any theory of perspective, but at least some artists were familiar with the properties of the horizon and could use one- and zero- point perspective to add depth to their scenes. These methods were based on observation rather than any mathematical theory. Sculpture was not particularly popular during the era, but though the skills of sculptors would improve in subsequent eras, there has been little change in technique.
developed. Technically, the works of the era are on a
+
par with those of any subsequent time. There are a few
+
pigments and paints that were not available, but artists
+
did not lack any skill or theory. They did not often use
+
any theory of perspective, but at least some artists were
+
familiar with the properties of the horizon and could
+
use one- and zero- point perspective to add depth to
+
their scenes. These methods were based on observation
+
rather than any mathematical theory. Sculpture
+
was not particularly popular during the era, but though
+
the skills of sculptors would improve in subsequent
+
eras, there has been little change in technique.
+
  
In architecture, the assessment is more complex.
+
In architecture, the assessment is more complex. Many of the key elements that would allow the building of the great cathedrals and palaces in subsequent centuries were already in place. Arches were common, and domes widespread.
Many of the key elements that would allow the building
+
of the great cathedrals and palaces in subsequent
+
centuries were already in place. Arches were common,
+
and domes widespread.
+
  
Architects understood that the most vulnerable
+
Architects understood that the most vulnerable part of a dome is the central section, and for large domes they often replaced this part with a second, smaller dome. The result is an even taller structure. At least one doubly-compound dome was described by a traveler to Hácherdad – unfortunately the palace he mentioned does not survive. Several examples of arched pendentives have survived, most notably in the Counting House of Phanósia.
part of a dome is the central section, and for large
+
domes they often replaced this part with a second,
+
smaller dome. The result is an even taller structure.
+
At least one doubly-compound dome was described
+
by a traveler to Hácherdad – unfortunately the palace
+
he mentioned does not survive. Several examples of
+
arched pendentives have survived, most notably in the
+
Counting House of Phanósia.
+
  
But the era lacked a comprehensive theory of load
+
But the era lacked a comprehensive theory of load and strength, and more complex vaults and spans were beyond the reach of the era. In part this was due to lack of need. The techniques already described were more than sufficient to build at the scale the era demanded. But it was also due to a lack of analytical sophistication. Architects relied on experiment and tradition, rather than a theory of mechanics. The goal of an architect was to create a building that was in harmony with its purpose. Domes were favoured in large part because they embodied the sphere, and thus paid homage to the celestial powers. To use a different shape merely to be able to build larger would have been counter to their purpose. If a space was too large to be covered in a dome, then all effort was put into improving the materials and workmanship - changing the shape was unthinkable. The compound dome was an acceptable alternative, and one usually arrived at after a simple dome failed. There was little point in analysing the mechanics - no other form would be contemplated.
and strength, and more complex vaults and spans were
+
beyond the reach of the era. In part this was due to lack
+
of need. The techniques already described were more
+
than sufficient to build at the scale the era demanded.
+
But it was also due to a lack of analytical sophistication.
+
Architects relied on experiment and tradition, rather
+
than a theory of mechanics. The goal of an architect
+
was to create a building that was in harmony with its
+
purpose. Domes were favoured in large part because
+
they embodied the sphere, and thus paid homage to
+
the celestial powers. To use a different shape merely
+
to be able to build larger would have been counter to
+
their purpose. If a space was too large to be covered
+
in a dome, then all effort was put into improving the
+
materials and workmanship - changing the shape was
+
unthinkable. The compound dome was an acceptable
+
alternative, and one usually arrived at after a simple
+
dome failed. There was little point in analysing the
+
mechanics - no other form would be contemplated.
+
  
Venârivan architects worked in a variety of materials.
+
Venârivan architects worked in a variety of materials. And while they did not much study the mechanics of shape and weight, they understood their materials very well. Their designs took advantage of the particular strengths of their materials - of the elasticity and shear strength of wood, the compressive strength of brick, the durability of stone. Unlike Anzelôrians, who often carved stone columns to look like palms, the Venârivans never engaged in ‘petrification’. Even in their earliest works, the distinction between stone and wood was unambiguous. P’vâric philosophy almost certainly contributed to this attention to the properties of their materials.
And while they did not much study the mechanics of
+
shape and weight, they understood their materials very
+
well. Their designs took advantage of the particular
+
strengths of their materials - of the elasticity and shear
+
strength of wood, the compressive strength of brick,
+
the durability of stone. Unlike Anzelôrians, who often
+
carved stone columns to look like palms, the Venârivans
+
never engaged in ‘petrification’. Even in their
+
earliest works, the distinction between stone and wood
+
was unambiguous. P’vâric philosophy almost certainly
+
contributed to this attention to the properties of their
+
materials.
+
  
Concrete and mortars based on quicklime were
+
Concrete and mortars based on quicklime were used throughout Venârivè, and examples survive in many aqueducts. A description of the harbour of Belán, now a ruin near Árlanto, written c.bt250 suggests that the use of volcanic ash to create hydraulic cement had been known for at least two centuries. But some scholars dispute the dating of Belán’s construction, and definitive proof is lacking.
used throughout Venârivè, and examples survive in
+
many aqueducts. A description of the harbour of
+
Belán, now a ruin near Árlanto, written c.bt250 suggests
+
that the use of volcanic ash to create hydraulic
+
cement had been known for at least two centuries. But
+
some scholars dispute the dating of Belán’s construction,
+
and definitive proof is lacking.
+
  
Many cities featured a fountain near their plaza.
+
Many cities featured a fountain near their plaza. These were usually fed by siphons, and although the head they could achieve was limited, they were usually still impressive. They were engineered to provide a large, bubbly flow, to evoke a sense of plenty. The sculpture usually followed animal or horticultural themes, and the overflowing water was a symbol of fertility. Examples survive in the Ázeryàn Empire, including the Pomegranate Fountain that still froths in front of the Eónian temple in Shomîro.
These were usually fed by siphons, and although the
+
head they could achieve was limited, they were usually
+
still impressive. They were engineered to provide
+
a large, bubbly flow, to evoke a sense of plenty.
+
The sculpture usually followed animal or horticultural
+
themes, and the overflowing water was a symbol of fertility.
+
Examples survive in the Ázeryàn Empire, including
+
the Pomegranate Fountain that still froths in front
+
of the Eónian temple in Shomîro.
+
  
 
* Page 8
 
* Page 8
  
The metalworkers of the era had over a thousand
+
The metalworkers of the era had over a thousand years of experience with iron, and countless more with bronze and other metals. Not surprisingly, their mastery left little room for improvement. The art of making steel through quenching was known to the Rekâri, at least. Other groups had the good fortune of finding iron deposits that naturally contained impurities that made good steel. The achievements of the smiths of the era would be exceeded in the following centuries by Târgan masters (as well as the Kúzhai), but their workmanship and metallurgy is still admired by modern experts.
years of experience with iron, and countless more with
+
bronze and other metals. Not surprisingly, their mastery
+
left little room for improvement. The art of making
+
steel through quenching was known to the Rekâri, at
+
least. Other groups had the good fortune of finding
+
iron deposits that naturally contained impurities that
+
made good steel. The achievements of the smiths of
+
the era would be exceeded in the following centuries
+
by Târgan masters (as well as the Kúzhai), but their
+
workmanship and metallurgy is still admired by modern
+
experts.
+
  
However, whereas the quality of iron and steel works
+
However, whereas the quality of iron and steel works was high, the quantity of metal wares was very small. Blacksmiths were nearly the social equals of goldsmiths, and the bulk of their output was in the form of weapons and armour for the wealthy. Common households had few iron tools - usually just those necessary to make their everyday implements, and knives. Almost all farming implements were wood, including the ploughs. Peasant kitchens, too, were equipped almost entirely with wood and pottery.
was high, the quantity of metal wares was very small.
+
Blacksmiths were nearly the social equals of goldsmiths,
+
and the bulk of their output was in the form
+
of weapons and armour for the wealthy. Common
+
households had few iron tools - usually just those necessary
+
to make their everyday implements, and knives.
+
Almost all farming implements were wood, including
+
the ploughs. Peasant kitchens, too, were equipped
+
almost entirely with wood and pottery.
+
  
Glassworking was also well developed. Glass was
+
Glassworking was also well developed. Glass was blown, usually using molds but occasionally using free-blowing techniques. Porcelain-quality ceramics were made in several regions, as well as more utilitarian thrown pottery. Enamel was used for jewellery and adornments. The emphasis was on making very high-quality products in limited quantities. The economy was dominated by the rich, and the middle-class was too small to support specialized industry. Almost all the surviving examples of these arts are exquisite, and their craftsmanship exceeds almost anything made since.
blown, usually using molds but occasionally using
+
free-blowing techniques. Porcelain-quality ceramics
+
were made in several regions, as well as more utilitarian
+
thrown pottery. Enamel was used for jewellery and
+
adornments. The emphasis was on making very highquality
+
products in limited quantities. The economy
+
was dominated by the rich, and the middle-class was
+
too small to support specialized industry. Almost all
+
the surviving examples of these arts are exquisite, and
+
their craftsmanship exceeds almost anything made
+
since.
+
  
The influence of the ancients was most apparent in
+
The influence of the ancients was most apparent in the alchemical crafts. The craft was very advanced in many ways. Distillation was a well-known technique for separating liquids, and several types of stills and alembics were in use. Various types of alcohol were isolated this way, including ethyl alcohol. However, if any beverages were so obtained, they are not mentioned in any trading records. Alchemists used filters made from a paper-like felt cloth. They even managed a limited form of cooling by placing a liquid called aculte in a bellows and expanding it – the reduction of air pressure causes the liquid to evaporate and absorb heat. A variety of chemicals were known, including the ari skatteros, which could dissolve gold. Many of these techniques have been lost in the centuries since, and almost nothing new has been discovered to compensate.
the alchemical crafts. The craft was very advanced in
+
many ways. Distillation was a well-known technique for
+
separating liquids, and several types of stills and alembics
+
were in use. Various types of alcohol were isolated
+
this way, including ethyl alcohol. However, if any beverages
+
were so obtained, they are not mentioned in
+
any trading records. Alchemists used filters made from
+
a paper-like felt cloth. They even managed a limited
+
form of cooling by placing a liquid called aculte in a
+
bellows and expanding it – the reduction of air pressure
+
causes the liquid to evaporate and absorb heat.
+
A variety of chemicals were known, including the ari
+
skatteros, which could dissolve gold. Many of these
+
techniques have been lost in the centuries since, and
+
almost nothing new has been discovered to compensate.
+
  
But for all this technical ability, there was no attempt
+
But for all this technical ability, there was no attempt to understand the principles behind the methods. P’vârism was the dominant means of understanding natural phenomena, and the six-fold system of elements was incapable of explaining such curiosities. There was no possibility of refuting or displacing P’vâric ideas - the success of the P’vâric system in generating magical results was indisputable. Anything that could not be explained by P’vâric principles was given an ad hoc explanation, or simply ignored as a trivial curiosity.
to understand the principles behind the methods.
+
P’vârism was the dominant means of understanding
+
natural phenomena, and the six-fold system of elements
+
was incapable of explaining such curiosities.
+
There was no possibility of refuting or displacing P’vâric
+
ideas - the success of the P’vâric system in generating
+
magical results was indisputable. Anything that could
+
not be explained by P’vâric principles was given an ad
+
hoc explanation, or simply ignored as a trivial curiosity.
+
  
It is clear that the craft owed its precocious development
+
It is clear that the craft owed its precocious development to ancient sources - cultures that flourished before P’vârism had gained such a strong hold on the arcane community. Theories abound, and the truth may be that several sources contributed to the art. The riddle of alchemy’s origins is important, for it is clear that many secrets have been lost. If it is possible to extrapolate from what is known of this era, then the achievements of the ancients may have been wondrous.
to ancient sources - cultures that flourished
+
before P’vârism had gained such a strong hold on the
+
arcane community. Theories abound, and the truth
+
may be that several sources contributed to the art. The
+
riddle of alchemy’s origins is important, for it is clear
+
that many secrets have been lost. If it is possible to
+
extrapolate from what is known of this era, then the
+
achievements of the ancients may have been wondrous.
+
  
  
 
==== Arcane Lore ====
 
==== Arcane Lore ====
But whereas alchemy was oddly precocious yet stillborn,
+
But whereas alchemy was oddly precocious yet stillborn, arcane lore in general was thriving. Every culture had a class of arcanists, and the breadth of approaches to magic was tremendous. Many of these traditions have since been lost, or survive only in half-understood tomes and scrolls. Virtually every cultural group contributed at least one magical doctrine, and these ideas collided and combined with each other with exciting results.
arcane lore in general was thriving. Every culture
+
had a class of arcanists, and the breadth of approaches
+
to magic was tremendous. Many of these traditions
+
have since been lost, or survive only in half-understood
+
tomes and scrolls. Virtually every cultural group contributed
+
at least one magical doctrine, and these ideas
+
collided and combined with each other with exciting
+
results.
+
  
While P’vârism was the dominant framework for
+
While P’vârism was the dominant framework for understanding magic, the Shèk-P’vâr was not yet an organised body. But arcanists had already begun seeing themselves as a class apart from the kvikîr. Chantries were diverse in their membership, and arcanists travelled freely among them. The seeds of the Guild of Arcane Lore were already planted almost everywhere.
understanding magic, the Shèk-P’vâr was not yet an
+
organised body. But arcanists had already begun
+
seeing themselves as a class apart from the kvikîr.
+
Chantries were diverse in their membership, and
+
arcanists travelled freely among them. The seeds of
+
the Guild of Arcane Lore were already planted almost
+
everywhere.
+
  
Whether the overall advancement of the arcane
+
Whether the overall advancement of the arcane crafts was greater in this era than in subsequent times is debatable. There is no question that a lot of arcane knowledge has been lost as particular schools have fallen out of favour or chantries have fallen to disaster. But new developments have compensated, and the concentration on P’vâric techniques has probably led to greater advances than would be possible if efforts were spread more broadly. Overall, the achievements of the Classical Age covered a broader range of techniques and principles, but they did not penetrate as deeply as their successors.
crafts was greater in this era than in subsequent times
+
is debatable. There is no question that a lot of arcane
+
knowledge has been lost as particular schools have
+
fallen out of favour or chantries have fallen to disaster.
+
But new developments have compensated, and the
+
concentration on P’vâric techniques has probably led
+
to greater advances than would be possible if efforts
+
were spread more broadly. Overall, the achievements
+
of the Classical Age covered a broader range of techniques
+
and principles, but they did not penetrate as
+
deeply as their successors.
+
  
In many areas the achievements of the era were
+
In many areas the achievements of the era were considerable, but were hamstrung by a lack of scale. The region during this era simply did not have the concentrations of wealth required to create architectural masterpieces to match those built in subsequent centuries, or the critical mass of expert craftsmen needed to match the achievements of the Imperial Age. But though the era built few monuments that awe us today, or treasure troves that arouse our envy, it should not be seen as a backwards age.
considerable, but were hamstrung by a lack of scale.
+
The region during this era simply did not have the concentrations
+
of wealth required to create architectural
+
masterpieces to match those built in subsequent centuries,
+
or the critical mass of expert craftsmen needed
+
to match the achievements of the Imperial Age. But
+
though the era built few monuments that awe us today,
+
or treasure troves that arouse our envy, it should not be
+
seen as a backwards age.
+
  
 
=== Temple-States ===
 
=== Temple-States ===
 
* Page 9
 
* Page 9
  
This religious milieu in bt300 was in a state of ferment.
+
This religious milieu in bt300 was in a state of ferment. Innovation was everywhere, and the relationship between man and the gods was changing radically. To understand this revolution, we will first look at the roots of religion in Venârivè.
Innovation was everywhere, and the relationship
+
between man and the gods was changing radically. To
+
understand this revolution, we will first look at the roots
+
of religion in Venârivè.
+
  
When reaching back to an even earlier era, we find
+
When reaching back to an even earlier era, we find countless religions available to study. In the pre-Venârivan world, every ethnic group had its religion, and each tribe or polity had its own cult centres and specific traditions within that religion. Among the Kàruíans, for example, every city had its own patron god or goddess. That deity was venerated both as the guardian of the city-state and also as member of the larger Kàruían pantheon. The colonies planted by a city would share the same patron, and the general position of a deity within the pantheon was closely related to the power and prosperity of the cities that venerated it.
countless religions available to study. In the pre-Venârivan
+
world, every ethnic group had its religion, and each
+
tribe or polity had its own cult centres and specific traditions
+
within that religion. Among the Kàruíans, for
+
example, every city had its own patron god or goddess.
+
That deity was venerated both as the guardian of the
+
city-state and also as member of the larger Kàruían
+
pantheon. The colonies planted by a city would share
+
the same patron, and the general position of a deity
+
within the pantheon was closely related to the power
+
and prosperity of the cities that venerated it.
+
  
There were variations on this pattern. Some cultures
+
There were variations on this pattern. Some cultures venerated one or two deities that ruled over the entire culture, though these were usually served by lesser demigods or spirits that might be worshipped by smaller groups. Some deities were worshipped by only a single city or petty kingdom. Pantheons evolved, with specific deities waxing and waning in importance. But certain aspects never changed. Every tribe, town, or principality had a well-defined religion that unified the community and set it apart from its neighbours and rivals.
venerated one or two deities that ruled over the
+
entire culture, though these were usually served by
+
lesser demigods or spirits that might be worshipped by
+
smaller groups. Some deities were worshipped by only
+
a single city or petty kingdom. Pantheons evolved, with
+
specific deities waxing and waning in importance. But
+
certain aspects never changed. Every tribe, town, or
+
principality had a well-defined religion that unified the
+
community and set it apart from its neighbours and
+
rivals.
+
  
The state cult was the basis for the social order. It
+
The state cult was the basis for the social order. It was religion - not kings - that defined and unified the political unit. Chiefs and kings had an important role to play in the religion, but their legitimacy rested on their faithful adherence to the expectations of the cult. It was rare that the secular leader also ruled as high priest. Where this was the case, it was usually in egalitarian societies where the chief had very limited power
was religion - not kings - that defined and unified the
+
political unit. Chiefs and kings had an important role
+
to play in the religion, but their legitimacy rested on
+
their faithful adherence to the expectations of the cult.
+
It was rare that the secular leader also ruled as high
+
priest. Where this was the case, it was usually in egalitarian
+
societies where the chief had very limited power
+
 
overall.
 
overall.
  
Somewhat more common was the two-headed state
+
Somewhat more common was the two-headed state where a secular chief and a religious high priest shared power. Perhaps the best-known example was among the Eméla, where the authority of the Dhéria-Ísvan was on a par with the Emélan king. By bt300 the Emélan state had evolved to a point where the relationship was no longer as direct. But even today, though Emélrenè is thoroughly polytheistic, the King of Emélrenè must be invested by the Siémist Dhéria-Ísvan to be considered legitimate.
where a secular chief and a religious high priest shared
+
power. Perhaps the best-known example was among
+
the Eméla, where the authority of the Dhéria-Ísvan was
+
on a par with the Emélan king. By bt300 the Emélan
+
state had evolved to a point where the relationship was
+
no longer as direct. But even today, though Emélrenè
+
is thoroughly polytheistic, the King of Emélrenè must
+
be invested by the Siémist Dhéria-Ísvan to be considered
+
legitimate.
+
  
Most tribes and petty states fell in between these two
+
Most tribes and petty states fell in between these two extremes. While the chief was the greatest power in the state, he also served a ritual function, and if he failed in his religious duties there was no chance of his retaining his position. The priesthood had the ability, even the duty, to correct a chief who ruled poorly or neglected the gods. The temple was a power independent from the palace, and served as a check on the power of the chief. The temple was usually also the tax collector, or shared in the collection, and provided whatever bureaucracy the petty state could support. In more advanced polities the temple usually coordinated the public works, such as irrigation and aqueducts. But the chief controlled the fighting force, dealt with criminals, and ran the foreign policy.
extremes. While the chief was the greatest power in the
+
state, he also served a ritual function, and if he failed in
+
his religious duties there was no chance of his retaining
+
his position. The priesthood had the ability, even the
+
duty, to correct a chief who ruled poorly or neglected
+
the gods. The temple was a power independent from
+
the palace, and served as a check on the power of the
+
chief. The temple was usually also the tax collector,
+
or shared in the collection, and provided whatever
+
bureaucracy the petty state could support. In more
+
advanced polities the temple usually coordinated the
+
public works, such as irrigation and aqueducts. But
+
the chief controlled the fighting force, dealt with criminals,
+
and ran the foreign policy.
+
  
Thus, in almost every case there were two centres of
+
Thus, in almost every case there were two centres of power. The chief and his retinue, or in more advanced states, the prince in his palace, protected the population and maintained the physical order. The shamans and priests maintained the spiritual order. It was the latter that truly defined the community and made it cohesive. The boundaries of the tribe or state was exactly equal to the reach of the cult or temple.
power. The chief and his retinue, or in more advanced
+
states, the prince in his palace, protected the population
+
and maintained the physical order. The shamans
+
and priests maintained the spiritual order. It was the
+
latter that truly defined the community and made it
+
cohesive. The boundaries of the tribe or state was
+
exactly equal to the reach of the cult or temple.
+
  
 
==== Social role ====
 
==== Social role ====
Building social cohesion was the foremost purpose
+
Building social cohesion was the foremost purpose of every religion. It was unthinkable for a member to not engage in the religion. Such an apostate would be shunned by the community. As we shall see, this started to break down in the centuries before our era, and by bt300 only a few communities still had this level of cohesion. But all religions have in their roots a deep revulsion towards apostasy.
of every religion. It was unthinkable for a member to
+
not engage in the religion. Such an apostate would
+
be shunned by the community. As we shall see, this
+
started to break down in the centuries before our era,
+
and by bt300 only a few communities still had this level
+
of cohesion. But all religions have in their roots a deep
+
revulsion towards apostasy.
+
  
In many religions the connection between the god
+
In many religions the connection between the god and the community was made explicit in the form of a covenant. Even where the connection was not explicit, every religion had an implied covenant with its worshippers. The contract was simple: obey the rules and prosper. Disobey, and face punishment. For individuals, the punishment was usually shunning. But the community as a whole was responsible to the deity, and disasters of all kinds were interpreted as punishments for the failures of the entire community. Often the king would serve as scapegoat - and sometimes he would be the propitiating sacrifice, as well.
and the community was made explicit in the form
+
of a covenant. Even where the connection was not
+
explicit, every religion had an implied covenant with its
+
worshippers. The contract was simple: obey the rules
+
and prosper. Disobey, and face punishment. For individuals,
+
the punishment was usually shunning. But the
+
community as a whole was responsible to the deity,
+
and disasters of all kinds were interpreted as punishments
+
for the failures of the entire community. Often
+
the king would serve as scapegoat - and sometimes he
+
would be the propitiating sacrifice, as well.
+
  
But though the contract was simple, the specific
+
But though the contract was simple, the specific rules could be complex. Dietary restrictions were common, as were restrictions related to hygiene. Some provided tangible benefits - laws regarding the butchery of animals certainly prevented the spread of food-borne disease. But many had no apparent utility. Some were nothing more than taboos, which to an outsider seem random and, although each taboo is trivial they can be overwhelming in number. These laws still served two important purposes. They served as markers for membership in the community, and they discouraged freeloaders - people who wanted the benefits of belong
rules could be complex. Dietary restrictions were common,
+
as were restrictions related to hygiene. Some provided
+
tangible benefits - laws regarding the butchery of
+
animals certainly prevented the spread of food-borne
+
disease. But many had no apparent utility. Some were
+
nothing more than taboos, which to an outsider seem
+
random and, although each taboo is trivial they can be
+
overwhelming in number. These laws still served two
+
important purposes. They served as markers for membership
+
in the community, and they discouraged freeloaders
+
- people who wanted the benefits of belong
+
  
 
* Page 10
 
* Page 10
  
ing to the community but didn’t want to contribute in
+
ing to the community but didn’t want to contribute in return. Circumcision, tattoos, and other body mutilations served both purposes particularly well.
return. Circumcision, tattoos, and other body mutilations
+
served both purposes particularly well.
+
  
 
* Page 10
 
* Page 10
  
In this context, ‘sin’ did not mean a moral failure.
+
In this context, ‘sin’ did not mean a moral failure. Sin meant disobedience. One who sinned was considered ‘unclean’ - unfit for service to the deity. In some cases he might be shunned, but more likely he or she would be prevented from participating in certain community activities or rituals. The sinner could remove the stain through a propitiating ritual - often including the sacrifice of an animal or foodstuff. The details varied considerably, but the general pattern was consistent until new forces started to break up the religious milieu.
Sin meant disobedience. One who sinned was considered
+
‘unclean’ - unfit for service to the deity. In some
+
cases he might be shunned, but more likely he or she
+
would be prevented from participating in certain community
+
activities or rituals. The sinner could remove
+
the stain through a propitiating ritual - often including
+
the sacrifice of an animal or foodstuff. The details varied
+
considerably, but the general pattern was consistent
+
until new forces started to break up the religious
+
milieu.
+
  
In this way, the religion formed the main means of
+
In this way, the religion formed the main means of dealing with petty crime. There were no police. Petty crimes were punished through the religion, by shunning and exclusion from community events, and were expatiated through ritual. Greater crimes were dealt with using the only stronger tools at the community’s disposal - exile and execution. Exile - which eliminated the opportunity for the criminal to ever expatiate his sin and restore his right relationship with the gods - effectively condemned the criminal to whatever hell the religion envisioned. Execution merely accelerated the process.
dealing with petty crime. There were no police. Petty
+
crimes were punished through the religion, by shunning
+
and exclusion from community events, and were
+
expatiated through ritual. Greater crimes were dealt
+
with using the only stronger tools at the community’s
+
disposal - exile and execution. Exile - which eliminated
+
the opportunity for the criminal to ever expatiate his
+
sin and restore his right relationship with the gods -
+
effectively condemned the criminal to whatever hell the
+
religion envisioned. Execution merely accelerated the
+
process.
+
  
 
==== Sacred Places ====
 
==== Sacred Places ====
In religions that had a physical temple or holy place,
+
In religions that had a physical temple or holy place, the temple was usually also a place of revelation. Most temples included an inner sanctum where only an elite group - often, only the high priest - was allowed. From this sanctum came revelations carried by the priest. The nature of the sanctum varied. It could be the apex of a pyramid or the grotto of a cave. It could house a golden idol, an altar, or an ever-burning flame - or nothing but shadows. The sanctum was the holiest place in the cult’s world, and was sometimes considered the deity’s home. It was the site of the holiest rituals, and sometimes, the source of revelation. This was a critical role - revelation was the primary means by which a cult could adapt to changing conditions. When conditions made the existing order untenable, nothing less than a command from the gods could allow its modification. Human opinions and desires were irrelevant unless they were understood as the will of the deity.
the temple was usually also a place of revelation. Most
+
temples included an inner sanctum where only an elite
+
group - often, only the high priest - was allowed. From
+
this sanctum came revelations carried by the priest.
+
The nature of the sanctum varied. It could be the apex
+
of a pyramid or the grotto of a cave. It could house a
+
golden idol, an altar, or an ever-burning flame - or nothing
+
but shadows. The sanctum was the holiest place
+
in the cult’s world, and was sometimes considered the
+
deity’s home. It was the site of the holiest rituals, and
+
sometimes, the source of revelation. This was a critical
+
role - revelation was the primary means by which a cult
+
could adapt to changing conditions. When conditions
+
made the existing order untenable, nothing less than a
+
command from the gods could allow its modification.
+
Human opinions and desires were irrelevant unless
+
they were understood as the will of the deity.
+
  
 
==== Myths ====
 
==== Myths ====
Not all religions had a well-defined tradition of revelation,
+
Not all religions had a well-defined tradition of revelation, but all religions had myths. Myths are expressions of religious truths put in the form of stories. They had many purposes, not the least of which was to rationalise the order. The origins and purpose of the covenant - whether the covenant was an explicit construction or was merely implied in the human-divine relationship - was explained through myths. Often the gods personified the relationship, and the covenant was portrayed as a specific contract between one or more gods and the people. More frequently the covenant was revealed in a collection of myths, each of which explained a piece of the order.
but all religions had myths. Myths are expressions
+
of religious truths put in the form of stories. They
+
had many purposes, not the least of which was to
+
rationalise the order. The origins and purpose of the
+
covenant - whether the covenant was an explicit construction
+
or was merely implied in the human-divine
+
relationship - was explained through myths. Often the
+
gods personified the relationship, and the covenant
+
was portrayed as a specific contract between one or
+
more gods and the people. More frequently the covenant
+
was revealed in a collection of myths, each of
+
which explained a piece of the order.
+
  
When a single god was the divine party to the covenant,
+
When a single god was the divine party to the covenant, the covenant god usually evolved the aspects of a supreme deity. Over time this could lead to schism, or at least spirited rivalry, as seen among the Kàruían states. The covenant god usually absorbed the properties of other deities in the pantheon, and the myths were slowly rewritten with the new protagonist. The other deities faded to the background, often to be demoted to mere spirit, hero, or demigod. Pantheons tended to evolve to include fewer deities of power, but a greater number of lesser beings.
the covenant god usually evolved the aspects of
+
a supreme deity. Over time this could lead to schism,
+
or at least spirited rivalry, as seen among the Kàruían
+
states. The covenant god usually absorbed the properties
+
of other deities in the pantheon, and the myths
+
were slowly rewritten with the new protagonist. The
+
other deities faded to the background, often to be
+
demoted to mere spirit, hero, or demigod. Pantheons
+
tended to evolve to include fewer deities of power, but
+
a greater number of lesser beings.
+
  
Myths also provided a history, which is important for
+
Myths also provided a history, which is important for the self-identification of the community. Such myths often echoed the objective history of the group. The gods and heroes of defeated rivals often appear as giants, goblins, or demons. Sometimes communities merged, and this can be echoed in myths of gods joining the pantheon. It is too much to say that all the events in such myths reflect historical reality, but many clues about the past can be gleaned from them nonetheless.
the self-identification of the community. Such myths
+
often echoed the objective history of the group. The
+
gods and heroes of defeated rivals often appear as
+
giants, goblins, or demons. Sometimes communities
+
merged, and this can be echoed in myths of gods joining
+
the pantheon. It is too much to say that all the
+
events in such myths reflect historical reality, but many
+
clues about the past can be gleaned from them nonetheless.
+
  
While it is too much to say that myths were a substitute
+
While it is too much to say that myths were a substitute for science, they did give explanations of sorts for various natural phenomena. All religions had a creation myth, and most had myths to explain phenomena such as rainbows and thunder. But almost all of these myths had a moral element in them, and some were purely moral fables. Satisfying curiosity about the natural world was rarely the most important point of a myth – more often the main purpose was to reinforce the moral code of the community.
for science, they did give explanations of sorts for
+
various natural phenomena. All religions had a creation
+
myth, and most had myths to explain phenomena
+
such as rainbows and thunder. But almost all of
+
these myths had a moral element in them, and some
+
were purely moral fables. Satisfying curiosity about the
+
natural world was rarely the most important point of a
+
myth – more often the main purpose was to reinforce
+
the moral code of the community.
+
  
Thus the most common type of myth were stories
+
Thus the most common type of myth were stories of sin and punishment, or of sin and expiation. All the crimes known to a society appear in its myths, and the consequences thereof are shown in vivid examples. Virtues are rewarded and vices punished, all in accordance with the mores of the society. Among these stories there will often be found examples of a seemingly blameless hero being horribly punished. Inevitably some reason is revealed for the apparent unfairness - an answer that represents that society’s attitude towards life’s most vexing question.
of sin and punishment, or of sin and expiation. All the
+
crimes known to a society appear in its myths, and the
+
consequences thereof are shown in vivid examples.
+
Virtues are rewarded and vices punished, all in accordance
+
with the mores of the society. Among these
+
stories there will often be found examples of a seemingly
+
blameless hero being horribly punished. Inevitably
+
some reason is revealed for the apparent unfairness
+
- an answer that represents that society’s attitude
+
towards life’s most vexing question.
+
  
 
==== Rituals ====
 
==== Rituals ====
If the role of myth is to rationalise the order of society,
+
If the role of myth is to rationalise the order of society, then the role of ritual is to reinforce that order through constant repetition. Rituals were usually centered on a temple, but some cultures favoured natural places of power. Barási Points were often used as ritual sites, as
then the role of ritual is to reinforce that order through
+
constant repetition. Rituals were usually centred on a
+
temple, but some cultures favoured natural places of
+
power. Barási Points were often used as ritual sites, as
+
  
 
* Page 11
 
* Page 11
  
were promontories, caves, and natural springs. A few
+
were promontories, caves, and natural springs. A few nomadic groups brought their temples with them, in the form of a portable tabernacle or altar.
nomadic groups brought their temples with them, in
+
the form of a portable tabernacle or altar.
+
  
Rituals had several purposes. Foremost were the
+
Rituals had several purposes. Foremost were the rituals of expiation and purification, which were necessary to allow sinners to reenter society, and for the society to remain true to the covenant with the gods. These rituals could serve either the individual or the society as a whole. In the latter case, the chief or king often represented the society, and the ritual legitimised their rule for another cycle.
rituals of expiation and purification, which were necessary
+
to allow sinners to reenter society, and for the
+
society to remain true to the covenant with the gods.
+
These rituals could serve either the individual or the
+
society as a whole. In the latter case, the chief or king
+
often represented the society, and the ritual legitimised
+
their rule for another cycle.
+
  
It was not just sin that required purification. Many
+
It was not just sin that required purification. Many ordinary activities were considered polluting, and ritual purification was necessary before the polluted could rejoin society. There was a hygienic rationale for many such taboos – for example, contact with blood was considered unclean by almost every faith. The priests had no knowledge of germs, but experience taught them that a thorough and pious cleansing protected people from illness. This taboo went beyond just butchering animals, though, but was usually extended to any contact with blood, including from menstruation or childbirth. For some, merely touching a menstruating woman required a ritual ablution. This was not always disadvantageous to the woman. In a Zonâran legend, the wise Queen Alraba prevented a battle between her quarreling sons by summoning all the menstruating women to the battlefield and chasing the men away.
ordinary activities were considered polluting, and ritual
+
purification was necessary before the polluted could
+
rejoin society. There was a hygienic rationale for many
+
such taboos – for example, contact with blood was considered
+
unclean by almost every faith. The priests had
+
no knowledge of germs, but experience taught them
+
that a thorough and pious cleansing protected people
+
from illness. This taboo went beyond just butchering
+
animals, though, but was usually extended to any
+
contact with blood, including from menstruation or
+
childbirth. For some, merely touching a menstruating
+
woman required a ritual ablution. This was not always
+
disadvantageous to the woman. In a Zonâran legend,
+
the wise Queen Alraba prevented a battle between her
+
quarreling sons by summoning all the menstruating
+
women to the battlefield and chasing the men away.
+
  
Ritual ablution is still a part of most faiths, but it has
+
Ritual ablution is still a part of most faiths, but it has much less importance today. It survives in the confession and penance rituals of Laránianism, the butchering rituals of Peónianism, in the laving bowls of the Sávè-K’nôrans, and perhaps even in the Dezenaka ritual of the Navéhans. It is also seen in the low social status accorded butchers, barbers, and hideworkers almost everywhere. In most cities, these guildsmen are segregated, and often the jobs are dominated by immigrants. In part this is due to the stench and mess the jobs entail, but it is also an echo of the ancient blood taboos.
much less importance today. It survives in the confession
+
and penance rituals of Laránianism, the butchering
+
rituals of Peónianism, in the laving bowls of the
+
Sávè-K’nôrans, and perhaps even in the Dezenaka
+
ritual of the Navéhans. It is also seen in the low social
+
status accorded butchers, barbers, and hideworkers
+
almost everywhere. In most cities, these guildsmen
+
are segregated, and often the jobs are dominated by
+
immigrants. In part this is due to the stench and mess
+
the jobs entail, but it is also an echo of the ancient
+
blood taboos.
+
  
Some rituals were expressions of thanksgiving - of a
+
Some rituals were expressions of thanksgiving - of a good harvest or a successful battle, for example. Others were meant to obtain favour from the gods, perhaps in preparation for harvest of battle. Some religions had rituals to divine the future, but for the most part oracles and haruspexes existed outside the religious establishment. The relationship between priests and fortunetellers is usually ambivalent and sometimes hostile. Societies look to their religion to provide certainty in a chaotic world, and the capriciousness of oracles is incompatible with that mission.
good harvest or a successful battle, for example. Others
+
were meant to obtain favour from the gods, perhaps
+
in preparation for harvest of battle. Some religions had
+
rituals to divine the future, but for the most part oracles
+
and haruspexes existed outside the religious establishment.
+
The relationship between priests and fortunetellers
+
is usually ambivalent and sometimes hostile.
+
Societies look to their religion to provide certainty in
+
a chaotic world, and the capriciousness of oracles is
+
incompatible with that mission.
+
  
Many rituals serve only to reinforce the sense of
+
Many rituals serve only to reinforce the sense of community. Such rituals include rites of passage, such as those that mark a young person’s entrance into adult society. These are almost always among the most prominent rituals in a society. It is indicative of how deep the crisis was among the traditional religions that in bt300 very few of these rites were still being practiced. Circumcision and other body mutilations had already been abandoned by all but a few groups. But the rites did not completely disappear. The ritual dubbing of knights can be traced to Atáni practices, and tattoos remain common for many groups.
community. Such rituals include rites of passage,
+
such as those that mark a young person’s entrance
+
into adult society. These are almost always among the
+
most prominent rituals in a society. It is indicative of
+
how deep the crisis was among the traditional religions
+
that in bt300 very few of these rites were still being
+
practiced. Circumcision and other body mutilations
+
had already been abandoned by all but a few groups.
+
But the rites did not completely disappear. The ritual
+
dubbing of knights can be traced to Atáni practices,
+
and tattoos remain common for many groups.
+
  
 
==== Pantheism ====
 
==== Pantheism ====
It was the myths and rituals that truly defined a
+
It was the myths and rituals that truly defined a religious community. These things were jealously guarded and adhered to. About the gods themselves people showed a bit more flexibility. The divine milieu within the community was occasionally monotheistic - Ilvîr, for example, was almost always mythologized as having no companion. But pantheism was more common. Individual deities within the pantheon all had a role in the myths and rituals. But to worship a god outside the community pantheon was a betrayal of the community itself.
religious community. These things were jealously
+
guarded and adhered to. About the gods themselves
+
people showed a bit more flexibility. The divine milieu
+
within the community was occasionally monotheistic -
+
Ilvîr, for example, was almost always mythologized as
+
having no companion. But pantheism was more common.
+
Individual deities within the pantheon all had a
+
role in the myths and rituals. But to worship a god
+
outside the community pantheon was a betrayal of the
+
community itself.
+
  
Not that people did not acknowledge the divinity
+
Not that people did not acknowledge the divinity of their neighbour’s pantheon. In fact, in some cases a community might even consider a rival’s pantheon to be more powerful than their own. The Ilvîran communities among the Járind were not the only group that took a sort of pride in the obscurity and eccentricity of their deity. But whereas ethnic pride certainly swelled the opinion of a deity among his followers, what attached the followers to a pantheon or deity was not how powerful the deity was claimed to be, but the body of myth and ritual that connected the human with the divine.
of their neighbour’s pantheon. In fact, in some cases
+
a community might even consider a rival’s pantheon
+
to be more powerful than their own. The Ilvîran communities
+
among the Járind were not the only group
+
that took a sort of pride in the obscurity and eccentricity
+
of their deity. But whereas ethnic pride certainly
+
swelled the opinion of a deity among his followers,
+
what attached the followers to a pantheon or deity was
+
not how powerful the deity was claimed to be, but the
+
body of myth and ritual that connected the human with
+
the divine.
+
  
The technical term for following one deity or pantheon
+
The technical term for following one deity or pantheon exclusively while acknowledging the legitimacy of others is Henotheism. Most of Venârivè today is henotheistic, but whereas in pre-Venârivan society the distinctions between pantheons were drawn between tribal groups, in tr720 the distinctions are largely a matter of social class. Ethnic religions have survived, particularly in peripheral lands such as Ivínia. But even the worship of ethnic gods such as Sárajìn has evolved to resemble a class religion in places away from the ethnic heartland.
exclusively while acknowledging the legitimacy
+
of others is Henotheism. Most of Venârivè today is
+
henotheistic, but whereas in pre-Venârivan society the
+
distinctions between pantheons were drawn between
+
tribal groups, in tr720 the distinctions are largely a
+
matter of social class. Ethnic religions have survived,
+
particularly in peripheral lands such as Ivínia. But even
+
the worship of ethnic gods such as Sárajìn has evolved
+
to resemble a class religion in places away from the
+
ethnic heartland.
+
  
It should be noted that the cross-identification of
+
It should be noted that the cross-identification of deities across disparate pantheons (syncretism) is a relatively modern fashion. While deities often crossed lines to join neighbouring pantheons, this was almost always a local phenomenon and the identification was straightforward. The gods of a defeated tribe might become the demons of the victors, or might be remythologized as servants. Popular deities might even be merged into the pantheon directly. So, whereas it is possible to trace the path of some Kàruían deities like Haléa and Eóni through the cities and colonies of that region, in bt300 only a few speculative minds would have considered the idea that the Kàruían Eóni was the same deity as the Áltic Syra. The era for such theological theorizing was still in the future.
deities across disparate pantheons (syncretism) is a
+
relatively modern fashion. While deities often crossed
+
lines to join neighbouring pantheons, this was almost
+
always a local phenomenon and the identification was
+
straightforward. The gods of a defeated tribe might
+
become the demons of the victors, or might be remythologized
+
as servants. Popular deities might even
+
be merged into the pantheon directly. So, whereas it is
+
possible to trace the path of some Kàruían deities like
+
Haléa and Eóni through the cities and colonies of that
+
region, in bt300 only a few speculative minds would
+
have considered the idea that the Kàruían Eóni was the
+
same deity as the Áltic Syra. The era for such theological
+
theorizing was still in the future.
+
  
 
==== Religious Change ====
 
==== Religious Change ====
 
* Page 12
 
* Page 12
  
By bt300, the tribal religions were losing their grip
+
By bt300, the tribal religions were losing their grip in many regions. In peripheral areas, such as Ivínia, the community religions were still strong. And notably, in Hácherdad the temple-state survived all the way to modern times. But in most of Venârivè the traditional religions were in decline, and communities were under stress as a result. But the transition was far from complete. No new structure had yet emerged that could replace the temple-state or ethnic tribe. Until new institutions could be formed to provide order and cohesion, large polities would be impossible.
in many regions. In peripheral areas, such as Ivínia,
+
the community religions were still strong. And notably,
+
in Hácherdad the temple-state survived all the way to
+
modern times. But in most of Venârivè the traditional
+
religions were in decline, and communities were under
+
stress as a result. But the transition was far from complete.
+
No new structure had yet emerged that could
+
replace the temple-state or ethnic tribe. Until new institutions
+
could be formed to provide order and cohesion,
+
large polities would be impossible.
+
  
Part of the stress on the incumbent religions came
+
Part of the stress on the incumbent religions came from immigrants and trade. Outsiders are always a threat to social cohesion and are thus usually segregated as much as possible from the native population. Most cities of the era kept foreigners to specific quarters and made sure that their religious practices were kept discrete. But in most places these barriers slowly eroded, weakening the state religion in the process.
from immigrants and trade. Outsiders are always a
+
threat to social cohesion and are thus usually segregated
+
as much as possible from the native population.
+
Most cities of the era kept foreigners to specific quarters
+
and made sure that their religious practices were
+
kept discrete. But in most places these barriers slowly
+
eroded, weakening the state religion in the process.
+
  
 
=== Missionary Faiths ===
 
=== Missionary Faiths ===
But this is only part of the story. The greater challenge
+
But this is only part of the story. The greater challenge came from a series of religious innovations that occurred in the previous centuries. New religions appeared, their origins obscure but certainly based in conventional tribal faiths, but transcending their tribal origins. Each new faith was wildly different from the rest, but one feature that they shared in common was a missionary spirit. The desire to proselytise was foreign to the incumbent religions, and the advantage it provided would be disastrous to the existing social structure.
came from a series of religious innovations that
+
occurred in the previous centuries. New religions
+
appeared, their origins obscure but certainly based in
+
conventional tribal faiths, but transcending their tribal
+
origins. Each new faith was wildly different from the
+
rest, but one feature that they shared in common was
+
a missionary spirit. The desire to proselytise was foreign
+
to the incumbent religions, and the advantage
+
it provided would be disastrous to the existing social
+
structure.
+
  
 
==== Àgríkanism ====
 
==== Àgríkanism ====

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Summa Venâriva: A Social History of Venârivè

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Summa Venâriva: A Social History of Venârivè

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Notes on the Text

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Preface

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The Beginnings of Venârivè

  • Page 5

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“Where to begin?” It’s the first question a historian must answer in any manuscript, and it’s a deceptively difficult one. It is simple to ask, but the answer often sets the stage for everything else in the work. In this work we wish to trace the development of the entire intellectual milieu of modern Venârivè. We must begin, therefore, with the point where that intellectual community first becomes apparent.

For this we have chosen a date, bt300. It is a rough date - we could have chosen a time a little earlier or later. But it is close to the moment when the term ‘Venârivè’ can first be used to describe a coherent entity. ‘Venârivè’ is a combination of Venârian and Iváe, the two seas that link the region, but just a few centuries before our chosen date the region was hardly linked at all. Instead it was divided into four disparate networks. One network spread along the shores of the Eastern Venârian Sea and inland towards Mafán. A second covered the western lands from Emélrenè to the Járind sea-towns. A third connected the northern peoples - Quârph and Rekâri. And a fourth centred on Hèpekéria and Thónia, and was perhaps culturally closer to Anzelôria than to any northern region.

But between bt1000 and bt500, these four networks slowly became connected. Kàruían traders planted colonies in Hèpekéria and Ûmélria, while the Járind expanded their activities east and south. Behind the traders came lorists, missionaries, fortune-seekers, and refugees. By bt500 all four networks were well connected, after two more centuries the ties were strong enough that we can talk about Venârivè as a meaningful unit. While the cultures of Venârivè remained distinctive, all were influenced profoundly by their cohabitants in the region.


Venârivè c.BT1000
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The ‘Classical Age’

  • Page 6

It is with some trepidation that we call the period from about bt1000 to tr1 the Classical Age. The term arises because much of the ‘classic’ literature and lore that is highly respected today was written in this period. Yet the term is misleading, in that the Classical Age was not a golden age of remarkable achievement. Granted, much was achieved that was worth remarking upon – as we shall see – but overall the level of culture was not markedly higher than in subsequent eras. Other terms sometimes used for the era, such as the ‘Foundations Period’, are too closely tied to events in specific regions to be useful in a work that studies Venârivè as a whole. Technological markers are impossible, since no particular technology marks the transition. While imperfect, ‘Classical Age’ references the most important cultural legacy of the era – the written works that are still studied as intently today as in the era they were written.

Widspread Literacy

While Venârivè as a region was a new thing, the cultures within were already old and accomplished. Everywhere, society was literate. Of course, the commoners rarely had access to the benefits of writing, but every culture had the ability to record its myths, traditions, and techniques. Writing allowed craftsmen to share their secrets, traders to plan their voyages, and rulers to record their edicts. And many cultures had their own literary tradition. As we will see later, some have not been exceeded in quality since.

It is possible that this widespread literacy was due to exposure to the elder races. The ruined empires in Mafán, Anzelôria, and elsewhere are also thought to be birthplaces of writing. Probably both statements are true. Writing seems to have been invented several times in several different regions, and no one culture can claim to be its only mother. Thanks to this diffusion, in bt300 no one culture can be seen as intellectually dominant. While not all societies were equally advanced, almost all groups made some contribution towards the advancement of the whole.

Connections and Centres

Contact among the cultures was routine, but economically ephemeral. Goods and people moved easily across the region. Not only do we find Járin jewellery in Hácherim burial crypts of the era, but a small colony of Járin craftsmen appear in the earliest known description of Hácherdad city, and many Hácherim nautical terms derive from the Járin language. Similar examples of cross-cultural contacts over vast distances can be found throughout Venârivè.

But economically, the scale of these contacts was too small to have much demographic impact. Cities remained small, and their prosperity was tied almost entirely to their ability to dominate their own hinterland. The caravan routes to the East brought only a smattering of goods from the ruined petty-states of Mafán, and the internal trade of the region was not enough to stimulate the specialisation that leads to city-building. Rampant piracy certainly didn’t help the traders. The largest Járind sea-towns held only a few thousand people, while the Kàruían cities were barely any larger. A few of the largest, such as Livélis, perhaps exceeded 10,000 souls at this time. But even Livélis depended much more on its olive groves and fishermen than on its merchants for its wealth.

The largest cities were not centres of trade but of worship. The temple-cities of the Târga Valley could exceed 20,000 in population, and smaller centres existed in many areas. Beréma and Chérafîr were two such centres. These cities were built on the religious needs of a society, and were usually the centres of an ethnic state. They varied considerably in character, but all followed a basic pattern. Each was centred on a large public space - a plaza or a thoroughfare - large enough for public rituals. Adjacent were two complexes - a palace that housed the prince and his military, and a temple or group of temples that housed the priests. Virtually all cities were walled, and larger towns had interior walls that segregated the classes - especially foreigners and low-caste workers such as street cleaners, butchers, and tanners. Streets were narrow and choked with mire. Larger cities had aqueducts, smaller ones used wells and cisterns, but these were always inadequate. Open spaces were few, and the absence of planning obvious.

Each city was the centre for a principality of commensurate size. Whereas little Chérafîr held only an ephemeral state within its orbit, Beréma controlled a substantial kingdom. City-states in Hèpekéria were in constant flux - their fortunes shifting with every dynastic change. But in the Târga Valley, the insular cities were immobilized by centuries of religious tradition, their rulers mere cogs in an immortal machine. We call these principalities ‘temple-states’, but they were not necessarily theocracies. While community life was centred mostly on the temple, the palace usually held the political power – though there were many variations. As we shall see later, these temple-states were under enormous stress in the centuries leading up to our period. Their reaction to the changing religious milieu would soon determine their path through the subsequent centuries.

Outside of these temple-states there were no other permanent polities. Only small states had the social cohesiveness to survive. While rulers might for a generation or so claim control over some large territory, these realms were extensions of the personal power of the ruler and lacked the permanent machinery of a true state. Upon the loss of the charismatic founder they inevitably fell apart.

  • Page 7

So, in politics and economics, as well as in intellectual culture, no city or place in Venârivè was dominant. Not that all places were equal - Beréma and Livélis, to be sure, were remarkable enough places to attract immigrants of many kinds. But as no single cultural force could dominate, Venârivè could host a melange of traditions. The opportunities for cross-pollination were endless, but there were disadvantages to not having any large, dominant centres. Some advances require scale. Some require a broad combination of skills to be brought to one place, some require a large capital investment, and some address problems that simply aren’t apparent until a society reaches a certain size. Technologies and ideas that fit these latter categories were stillborn in the Classical Venârivè.

Technologies and Crafts

But most technologies thrived. In many areas it is arguable whether there have been any significant advances since. In music - an art that benefits most from cultural exchange and least from central direction - there is no question that the accomplishments of the era compare favorably with any other. While styles have changed over the centuries, the composer’s understanding of his art has not advanced in any meaningful way. The crude methods of musical notation used in Venârivè have barely changed since, and all theories of rhythm and harmony are rooted in works predating bt300 and well known in the era.

The arts of sculpture and painting were similarly well developed. Technically, the works of the era are on a par with those of any subsequent time. There are a few pigments and paints that were not available, but artists did not lack any skill or theory. They did not often use any theory of perspective, but at least some artists were familiar with the properties of the horizon and could use one- and zero- point perspective to add depth to their scenes. These methods were based on observation rather than any mathematical theory. Sculpture was not particularly popular during the era, but though the skills of sculptors would improve in subsequent eras, there has been little change in technique.

In architecture, the assessment is more complex. Many of the key elements that would allow the building of the great cathedrals and palaces in subsequent centuries were already in place. Arches were common, and domes widespread.

Architects understood that the most vulnerable part of a dome is the central section, and for large domes they often replaced this part with a second, smaller dome. The result is an even taller structure. At least one doubly-compound dome was described by a traveler to Hácherdad – unfortunately the palace he mentioned does not survive. Several examples of arched pendentives have survived, most notably in the Counting House of Phanósia.

But the era lacked a comprehensive theory of load and strength, and more complex vaults and spans were beyond the reach of the era. In part this was due to lack of need. The techniques already described were more than sufficient to build at the scale the era demanded. But it was also due to a lack of analytical sophistication. Architects relied on experiment and tradition, rather than a theory of mechanics. The goal of an architect was to create a building that was in harmony with its purpose. Domes were favoured in large part because they embodied the sphere, and thus paid homage to the celestial powers. To use a different shape merely to be able to build larger would have been counter to their purpose. If a space was too large to be covered in a dome, then all effort was put into improving the materials and workmanship - changing the shape was unthinkable. The compound dome was an acceptable alternative, and one usually arrived at after a simple dome failed. There was little point in analysing the mechanics - no other form would be contemplated.

Venârivan architects worked in a variety of materials. And while they did not much study the mechanics of shape and weight, they understood their materials very well. Their designs took advantage of the particular strengths of their materials - of the elasticity and shear strength of wood, the compressive strength of brick, the durability of stone. Unlike Anzelôrians, who often carved stone columns to look like palms, the Venârivans never engaged in ‘petrification’. Even in their earliest works, the distinction between stone and wood was unambiguous. P’vâric philosophy almost certainly contributed to this attention to the properties of their materials.

Concrete and mortars based on quicklime were used throughout Venârivè, and examples survive in many aqueducts. A description of the harbour of Belán, now a ruin near Árlanto, written c.bt250 suggests that the use of volcanic ash to create hydraulic cement had been known for at least two centuries. But some scholars dispute the dating of Belán’s construction, and definitive proof is lacking.

Many cities featured a fountain near their plaza. These were usually fed by siphons, and although the head they could achieve was limited, they were usually still impressive. They were engineered to provide a large, bubbly flow, to evoke a sense of plenty. The sculpture usually followed animal or horticultural themes, and the overflowing water was a symbol of fertility. Examples survive in the Ázeryàn Empire, including the Pomegranate Fountain that still froths in front of the Eónian temple in Shomîro.

  • Page 8

The metalworkers of the era had over a thousand years of experience with iron, and countless more with bronze and other metals. Not surprisingly, their mastery left little room for improvement. The art of making steel through quenching was known to the Rekâri, at least. Other groups had the good fortune of finding iron deposits that naturally contained impurities that made good steel. The achievements of the smiths of the era would be exceeded in the following centuries by Târgan masters (as well as the Kúzhai), but their workmanship and metallurgy is still admired by modern experts.

However, whereas the quality of iron and steel works was high, the quantity of metal wares was very small. Blacksmiths were nearly the social equals of goldsmiths, and the bulk of their output was in the form of weapons and armour for the wealthy. Common households had few iron tools - usually just those necessary to make their everyday implements, and knives. Almost all farming implements were wood, including the ploughs. Peasant kitchens, too, were equipped almost entirely with wood and pottery.

Glassworking was also well developed. Glass was blown, usually using molds but occasionally using free-blowing techniques. Porcelain-quality ceramics were made in several regions, as well as more utilitarian thrown pottery. Enamel was used for jewellery and adornments. The emphasis was on making very high-quality products in limited quantities. The economy was dominated by the rich, and the middle-class was too small to support specialized industry. Almost all the surviving examples of these arts are exquisite, and their craftsmanship exceeds almost anything made since.

The influence of the ancients was most apparent in the alchemical crafts. The craft was very advanced in many ways. Distillation was a well-known technique for separating liquids, and several types of stills and alembics were in use. Various types of alcohol were isolated this way, including ethyl alcohol. However, if any beverages were so obtained, they are not mentioned in any trading records. Alchemists used filters made from a paper-like felt cloth. They even managed a limited form of cooling by placing a liquid called aculte in a bellows and expanding it – the reduction of air pressure causes the liquid to evaporate and absorb heat. A variety of chemicals were known, including the ari skatteros, which could dissolve gold. Many of these techniques have been lost in the centuries since, and almost nothing new has been discovered to compensate.

But for all this technical ability, there was no attempt to understand the principles behind the methods. P’vârism was the dominant means of understanding natural phenomena, and the six-fold system of elements was incapable of explaining such curiosities. There was no possibility of refuting or displacing P’vâric ideas - the success of the P’vâric system in generating magical results was indisputable. Anything that could not be explained by P’vâric principles was given an ad hoc explanation, or simply ignored as a trivial curiosity.

It is clear that the craft owed its precocious development to ancient sources - cultures that flourished before P’vârism had gained such a strong hold on the arcane community. Theories abound, and the truth may be that several sources contributed to the art. The riddle of alchemy’s origins is important, for it is clear that many secrets have been lost. If it is possible to extrapolate from what is known of this era, then the achievements of the ancients may have been wondrous.


Arcane Lore

But whereas alchemy was oddly precocious yet stillborn, arcane lore in general was thriving. Every culture had a class of arcanists, and the breadth of approaches to magic was tremendous. Many of these traditions have since been lost, or survive only in half-understood tomes and scrolls. Virtually every cultural group contributed at least one magical doctrine, and these ideas collided and combined with each other with exciting results.

While P’vârism was the dominant framework for understanding magic, the Shèk-P’vâr was not yet an organised body. But arcanists had already begun seeing themselves as a class apart from the kvikîr. Chantries were diverse in their membership, and arcanists travelled freely among them. The seeds of the Guild of Arcane Lore were already planted almost everywhere.

Whether the overall advancement of the arcane crafts was greater in this era than in subsequent times is debatable. There is no question that a lot of arcane knowledge has been lost as particular schools have fallen out of favour or chantries have fallen to disaster. But new developments have compensated, and the concentration on P’vâric techniques has probably led to greater advances than would be possible if efforts were spread more broadly. Overall, the achievements of the Classical Age covered a broader range of techniques and principles, but they did not penetrate as deeply as their successors.

In many areas the achievements of the era were considerable, but were hamstrung by a lack of scale. The region during this era simply did not have the concentrations of wealth required to create architectural masterpieces to match those built in subsequent centuries, or the critical mass of expert craftsmen needed to match the achievements of the Imperial Age. But though the era built few monuments that awe us today, or treasure troves that arouse our envy, it should not be seen as a backwards age.

Temple-States

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This religious milieu in bt300 was in a state of ferment. Innovation was everywhere, and the relationship between man and the gods was changing radically. To understand this revolution, we will first look at the roots of religion in Venârivè.

When reaching back to an even earlier era, we find countless religions available to study. In the pre-Venârivan world, every ethnic group had its religion, and each tribe or polity had its own cult centres and specific traditions within that religion. Among the Kàruíans, for example, every city had its own patron god or goddess. That deity was venerated both as the guardian of the city-state and also as member of the larger Kàruían pantheon. The colonies planted by a city would share the same patron, and the general position of a deity within the pantheon was closely related to the power and prosperity of the cities that venerated it.

There were variations on this pattern. Some cultures venerated one or two deities that ruled over the entire culture, though these were usually served by lesser demigods or spirits that might be worshipped by smaller groups. Some deities were worshipped by only a single city or petty kingdom. Pantheons evolved, with specific deities waxing and waning in importance. But certain aspects never changed. Every tribe, town, or principality had a well-defined religion that unified the community and set it apart from its neighbours and rivals.

The state cult was the basis for the social order. It was religion - not kings - that defined and unified the political unit. Chiefs and kings had an important role to play in the religion, but their legitimacy rested on their faithful adherence to the expectations of the cult. It was rare that the secular leader also ruled as high priest. Where this was the case, it was usually in egalitarian societies where the chief had very limited power overall.

Somewhat more common was the two-headed state where a secular chief and a religious high priest shared power. Perhaps the best-known example was among the Eméla, where the authority of the Dhéria-Ísvan was on a par with the Emélan king. By bt300 the Emélan state had evolved to a point where the relationship was no longer as direct. But even today, though Emélrenè is thoroughly polytheistic, the King of Emélrenè must be invested by the Siémist Dhéria-Ísvan to be considered legitimate.

Most tribes and petty states fell in between these two extremes. While the chief was the greatest power in the state, he also served a ritual function, and if he failed in his religious duties there was no chance of his retaining his position. The priesthood had the ability, even the duty, to correct a chief who ruled poorly or neglected the gods. The temple was a power independent from the palace, and served as a check on the power of the chief. The temple was usually also the tax collector, or shared in the collection, and provided whatever bureaucracy the petty state could support. In more advanced polities the temple usually coordinated the public works, such as irrigation and aqueducts. But the chief controlled the fighting force, dealt with criminals, and ran the foreign policy.

Thus, in almost every case there were two centres of power. The chief and his retinue, or in more advanced states, the prince in his palace, protected the population and maintained the physical order. The shamans and priests maintained the spiritual order. It was the latter that truly defined the community and made it cohesive. The boundaries of the tribe or state was exactly equal to the reach of the cult or temple.

Social role

Building social cohesion was the foremost purpose of every religion. It was unthinkable for a member to not engage in the religion. Such an apostate would be shunned by the community. As we shall see, this started to break down in the centuries before our era, and by bt300 only a few communities still had this level of cohesion. But all religions have in their roots a deep revulsion towards apostasy.

In many religions the connection between the god and the community was made explicit in the form of a covenant. Even where the connection was not explicit, every religion had an implied covenant with its worshippers. The contract was simple: obey the rules and prosper. Disobey, and face punishment. For individuals, the punishment was usually shunning. But the community as a whole was responsible to the deity, and disasters of all kinds were interpreted as punishments for the failures of the entire community. Often the king would serve as scapegoat - and sometimes he would be the propitiating sacrifice, as well.

But though the contract was simple, the specific rules could be complex. Dietary restrictions were common, as were restrictions related to hygiene. Some provided tangible benefits - laws regarding the butchery of animals certainly prevented the spread of food-borne disease. But many had no apparent utility. Some were nothing more than taboos, which to an outsider seem random and, although each taboo is trivial they can be overwhelming in number. These laws still served two important purposes. They served as markers for membership in the community, and they discouraged freeloaders - people who wanted the benefits of belong

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ing to the community but didn’t want to contribute in return. Circumcision, tattoos, and other body mutilations served both purposes particularly well.

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In this context, ‘sin’ did not mean a moral failure. Sin meant disobedience. One who sinned was considered ‘unclean’ - unfit for service to the deity. In some cases he might be shunned, but more likely he or she would be prevented from participating in certain community activities or rituals. The sinner could remove the stain through a propitiating ritual - often including the sacrifice of an animal or foodstuff. The details varied considerably, but the general pattern was consistent until new forces started to break up the religious milieu.

In this way, the religion formed the main means of dealing with petty crime. There were no police. Petty crimes were punished through the religion, by shunning and exclusion from community events, and were expatiated through ritual. Greater crimes were dealt with using the only stronger tools at the community’s disposal - exile and execution. Exile - which eliminated the opportunity for the criminal to ever expatiate his sin and restore his right relationship with the gods - effectively condemned the criminal to whatever hell the religion envisioned. Execution merely accelerated the process.

Sacred Places

In religions that had a physical temple or holy place, the temple was usually also a place of revelation. Most temples included an inner sanctum where only an elite group - often, only the high priest - was allowed. From this sanctum came revelations carried by the priest. The nature of the sanctum varied. It could be the apex of a pyramid or the grotto of a cave. It could house a golden idol, an altar, or an ever-burning flame - or nothing but shadows. The sanctum was the holiest place in the cult’s world, and was sometimes considered the deity’s home. It was the site of the holiest rituals, and sometimes, the source of revelation. This was a critical role - revelation was the primary means by which a cult could adapt to changing conditions. When conditions made the existing order untenable, nothing less than a command from the gods could allow its modification. Human opinions and desires were irrelevant unless they were understood as the will of the deity.

Myths

Not all religions had a well-defined tradition of revelation, but all religions had myths. Myths are expressions of religious truths put in the form of stories. They had many purposes, not the least of which was to rationalise the order. The origins and purpose of the covenant - whether the covenant was an explicit construction or was merely implied in the human-divine relationship - was explained through myths. Often the gods personified the relationship, and the covenant was portrayed as a specific contract between one or more gods and the people. More frequently the covenant was revealed in a collection of myths, each of which explained a piece of the order.

When a single god was the divine party to the covenant, the covenant god usually evolved the aspects of a supreme deity. Over time this could lead to schism, or at least spirited rivalry, as seen among the Kàruían states. The covenant god usually absorbed the properties of other deities in the pantheon, and the myths were slowly rewritten with the new protagonist. The other deities faded to the background, often to be demoted to mere spirit, hero, or demigod. Pantheons tended to evolve to include fewer deities of power, but a greater number of lesser beings.

Myths also provided a history, which is important for the self-identification of the community. Such myths often echoed the objective history of the group. The gods and heroes of defeated rivals often appear as giants, goblins, or demons. Sometimes communities merged, and this can be echoed in myths of gods joining the pantheon. It is too much to say that all the events in such myths reflect historical reality, but many clues about the past can be gleaned from them nonetheless.

While it is too much to say that myths were a substitute for science, they did give explanations of sorts for various natural phenomena. All religions had a creation myth, and most had myths to explain phenomena such as rainbows and thunder. But almost all of these myths had a moral element in them, and some were purely moral fables. Satisfying curiosity about the natural world was rarely the most important point of a myth – more often the main purpose was to reinforce the moral code of the community.

Thus the most common type of myth were stories of sin and punishment, or of sin and expiation. All the crimes known to a society appear in its myths, and the consequences thereof are shown in vivid examples. Virtues are rewarded and vices punished, all in accordance with the mores of the society. Among these stories there will often be found examples of a seemingly blameless hero being horribly punished. Inevitably some reason is revealed for the apparent unfairness - an answer that represents that society’s attitude towards life’s most vexing question.

Rituals

If the role of myth is to rationalise the order of society, then the role of ritual is to reinforce that order through constant repetition. Rituals were usually centered on a temple, but some cultures favoured natural places of power. Barási Points were often used as ritual sites, as

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were promontories, caves, and natural springs. A few nomadic groups brought their temples with them, in the form of a portable tabernacle or altar.

Rituals had several purposes. Foremost were the rituals of expiation and purification, which were necessary to allow sinners to reenter society, and for the society to remain true to the covenant with the gods. These rituals could serve either the individual or the society as a whole. In the latter case, the chief or king often represented the society, and the ritual legitimised their rule for another cycle.

It was not just sin that required purification. Many ordinary activities were considered polluting, and ritual purification was necessary before the polluted could rejoin society. There was a hygienic rationale for many such taboos – for example, contact with blood was considered unclean by almost every faith. The priests had no knowledge of germs, but experience taught them that a thorough and pious cleansing protected people from illness. This taboo went beyond just butchering animals, though, but was usually extended to any contact with blood, including from menstruation or childbirth. For some, merely touching a menstruating woman required a ritual ablution. This was not always disadvantageous to the woman. In a Zonâran legend, the wise Queen Alraba prevented a battle between her quarreling sons by summoning all the menstruating women to the battlefield and chasing the men away.

Ritual ablution is still a part of most faiths, but it has much less importance today. It survives in the confession and penance rituals of Laránianism, the butchering rituals of Peónianism, in the laving bowls of the Sávè-K’nôrans, and perhaps even in the Dezenaka ritual of the Navéhans. It is also seen in the low social status accorded butchers, barbers, and hideworkers almost everywhere. In most cities, these guildsmen are segregated, and often the jobs are dominated by immigrants. In part this is due to the stench and mess the jobs entail, but it is also an echo of the ancient blood taboos.

Some rituals were expressions of thanksgiving - of a good harvest or a successful battle, for example. Others were meant to obtain favour from the gods, perhaps in preparation for harvest of battle. Some religions had rituals to divine the future, but for the most part oracles and haruspexes existed outside the religious establishment. The relationship between priests and fortunetellers is usually ambivalent and sometimes hostile. Societies look to their religion to provide certainty in a chaotic world, and the capriciousness of oracles is incompatible with that mission.

Many rituals serve only to reinforce the sense of community. Such rituals include rites of passage, such as those that mark a young person’s entrance into adult society. These are almost always among the most prominent rituals in a society. It is indicative of how deep the crisis was among the traditional religions that in bt300 very few of these rites were still being practiced. Circumcision and other body mutilations had already been abandoned by all but a few groups. But the rites did not completely disappear. The ritual dubbing of knights can be traced to Atáni practices, and tattoos remain common for many groups.

Pantheism

It was the myths and rituals that truly defined a religious community. These things were jealously guarded and adhered to. About the gods themselves people showed a bit more flexibility. The divine milieu within the community was occasionally monotheistic - Ilvîr, for example, was almost always mythologized as having no companion. But pantheism was more common. Individual deities within the pantheon all had a role in the myths and rituals. But to worship a god outside the community pantheon was a betrayal of the community itself.

Not that people did not acknowledge the divinity of their neighbour’s pantheon. In fact, in some cases a community might even consider a rival’s pantheon to be more powerful than their own. The Ilvîran communities among the Járind were not the only group that took a sort of pride in the obscurity and eccentricity of their deity. But whereas ethnic pride certainly swelled the opinion of a deity among his followers, what attached the followers to a pantheon or deity was not how powerful the deity was claimed to be, but the body of myth and ritual that connected the human with the divine.

The technical term for following one deity or pantheon exclusively while acknowledging the legitimacy of others is Henotheism. Most of Venârivè today is henotheistic, but whereas in pre-Venârivan society the distinctions between pantheons were drawn between tribal groups, in tr720 the distinctions are largely a matter of social class. Ethnic religions have survived, particularly in peripheral lands such as Ivínia. But even the worship of ethnic gods such as Sárajìn has evolved to resemble a class religion in places away from the ethnic heartland.

It should be noted that the cross-identification of deities across disparate pantheons (syncretism) is a relatively modern fashion. While deities often crossed lines to join neighbouring pantheons, this was almost always a local phenomenon and the identification was straightforward. The gods of a defeated tribe might become the demons of the victors, or might be remythologized as servants. Popular deities might even be merged into the pantheon directly. So, whereas it is possible to trace the path of some Kàruían deities like Haléa and Eóni through the cities and colonies of that region, in bt300 only a few speculative minds would have considered the idea that the Kàruían Eóni was the same deity as the Áltic Syra. The era for such theological theorizing was still in the future.

Religious Change

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By bt300, the tribal religions were losing their grip in many regions. In peripheral areas, such as Ivínia, the community religions were still strong. And notably, in Hácherdad the temple-state survived all the way to modern times. But in most of Venârivè the traditional religions were in decline, and communities were under stress as a result. But the transition was far from complete. No new structure had yet emerged that could replace the temple-state or ethnic tribe. Until new institutions could be formed to provide order and cohesion, large polities would be impossible.

Part of the stress on the incumbent religions came from immigrants and trade. Outsiders are always a threat to social cohesion and are thus usually segregated as much as possible from the native population. Most cities of the era kept foreigners to specific quarters and made sure that their religious practices were kept discrete. But in most places these barriers slowly eroded, weakening the state religion in the process.

Missionary Faiths

But this is only part of the story. The greater challenge came from a series of religious innovations that occurred in the previous centuries. New religions appeared, their origins obscure but certainly based in conventional tribal faiths, but transcending their tribal origins. Each new faith was wildly different from the rest, but one feature that they shared in common was a missionary spirit. The desire to proselytise was foreign to the incumbent religions, and the advantage it provided would be disastrous to the existing social structure.

Àgríkanism

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Chronology (Before BT300)

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c. bt20000 Earthmasters arrive on Kèthîra. c. bt15000 Earthmasters depart (‘lost years’ begin) c. bt10000 Siém and Sinái settle on Hârn bt7190 Kúzhai present on Kèthîra; foundation of Kúzhan city of Mêrdáin c. bt7000 Siém departs Hârn with many Sinái; c. bt5300 civilisation in Mafán c. bt5000 Járind people descend from sacred caves in the Mountains of the Moon (Ûmélria); approximate date of first Númec Rock Art in the Dùrqúdani region of Hèpekéria c. bt4290 Empire of Mafán founded c. bt4000 Yârhin (Járind) settled in Quârphor and Lánkor c. bt3700 Second Númec Rock Art period begins c. bt3500 Járind Zéran migrate to Zêrhanor (Ázeryàn) c. bt3500 Járind Émhlè migrate through Lánkor c. bt3300 foundation of colony of Mokôra, Mafán c. bt3200 Járind Yârhlè migrate to Huriséa c. bt3100 Járind Émhlè reach Zonâr (Tríerzòn); Târga River culture first emerges c. bt3000 Járind Émhlè reach western shore of Lýthia; Járind Zónawè migrate to Zonâr (to bt2400); colonisation of Chògôrana coast by Mafáni c. bt3000 Kuélrhyn pantheon worshipped by Eméla c. bt2900 henge culture in west Shôrkýnè; Kingdom of Nálhaan (Upper Târga River valley); colonisation of Shénti coast by Mafáni c. bt2800 Vénic Island culture (Azéri) c. bt2700 henge culture on Mèlderýn; Third Númec Rock Art period begins c. bt2300 Kingdom of Nálhaan extends to Târga mouth; creation of ‘Golden Empire’ c. bt2100 fall of ‘Golden Empire’ (Târga River valley); Vénic settlement on mainland Zêrhanor c. bt1900 linear henge culture begins c. bt1750 Ketâri militarism enabled by iron-working technology c. bt1700 Phâric peoples driven west by Ketâri c. bt1600 foundation of Emélan tribal confederation; ‘Covenant of the Es’ established. c. bt1550 Empire of Mafán falls to Màfakéta nomads c. bt1500 Ilpýlen delivers the word of Ágrik; ‘Traditional’ foundation date of Àgríkan religion beginning of Vénic Dark Age; c. bt1500- Àgríkan tribal religion becomes separated from bt800 its temple origins c. bt1450 Quáandehn / Màfakéta alliance, conquests c. bt1430 Great Betrayal of the Quáandehn; conquest of Târga River valley by Màfakéta nomads c. bt1400 fl. Tódwhyr, Emélan Arcanist c. bt1400 Yaríli migrate to Iváe bt1388 first walls of Beréma constructed bt1340 Uphâri defeated by Eméla in Álagon; closing of Emélrenè bt1307 Uphâri defeat Shóna Alliance, take Plain of Káretan bt1300 Járin migrate to Hârn; bt1286 Co-dominium on Hârn under King Daélda bt1198 first Phâric (Atáni) confederation founded in Tochéma (Palíthanè) bt1180 Tochémi-Emélan Wars (to bt900) c. bt1170 Kingdom of Chúaanagûrlla, Târga River valley bt1120 ‘foundation’ of Livélis, start date of Kàruía calendar c. bt1100 Principality of Mokôra is leading Mafáni state; approximate end of Númec Rock Art period; c. bt1050 ‘traditional’ date of the foundation of the Church of Sávè-K’nôr by Eilár al Íronoth fl. Úlmeràllawn al Mallóch, Emélan Arcanist c. bt1000 rise of Kàruía city-states in Venârian Sea; c. bt970 Árgollûr Uprising, fall of Chúaanagûrlla. c. bt950 Járind hill-forts on Chel and in Hârbáal c. bt946 birth of Damókra el Abdêra, near Dúrien bt936 b. of Tarl al Barún, Emélan Arcanist c. bt910 unification of Árganaal kingdoms (Târga River) bt904 Tarl al Barún begins to lecture at Íshranor bt903 foundation of Damókra’s chantry, Livélis c. bt900 composition of the ‘Lay of Léios’ by Shéran el Kólchra c. bt900 Ivíni begin migrating to Iváe; Phâric peoples (Atáni) begin raids on Hârn; beginning of the Atáni Wars (to bt683) c. bt895 Damókra devises the Kàruía Calendar bt873 death of Damókra el Abdêra, Livélis bt870 b. of Barási al Kýnvallwyn, Arcanist bt750 ‘traditional’ date Church of Navéh’s foundation c. bt700 height of Járind hill-fort culture (Hârbáal, etc.) bt683 Battle of Sorrows on Hârn; fall of King Daélda Navéhan presence attested at Battle bt680 Great Abdication, end of Hârnic Co-dominium bt670 foundation of Kingdom of Emélrenè; establishment of the ‘Covenant of the Eméla’ c. bt650 beginning of the Eldritch period of Mèlderýn; Álantra is centre of a Zonâran petty-state (to c. bt200) c. bt600 Missionary religions have had significant impact on traditional religious communities across Venârivè c. bt600 ‘traditional date’ of foundation of Peónianism; Kàruían states develop on coast of Býrios c. bt550 Quârphic Phâri begin to migrate west c. bt500 last of Ivínian migrations to Ivínia c. bt450 height of Járind sea-town Culture; break-up of Árganaal Kingdoms Confederation (Târga River valley) Kàruían scholar(s) determines that the ‘golden ratio’ cannot be expressed as a precise fraction c. bt400 Sôrki (Shôrka) tribes reach Álagon; Tríeri (Tríerzi) in north Zonâra (Tríerzòn); Ivínians dominate Iváe; end of Eldritch period of Mèlderýn (Hârn) c. bt380 Táneri conquer significant areas of Thánema; conflict involving Emélrenè (to c. bt250) c. bt370 traditional date of foundation of the Church of Laráni Ôrthas the Defender recorded in court annals of Emélrenè c. bt350 Thánemi culture in Palíthanè c. bt330 first Hácherian states formed

The Summer of the Classic Age

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Art and Architecture

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Chronology (BT300 - TR1)

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Crisis and Depression

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Chronology (TR1-TR150)

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The Imperial Age

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Chronology (TR150-TR450)

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The Imperial Cults

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Religious Chronology (TR1-TR450)

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The Imperial Autumn

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Chronology (TR450-TR550)

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The Red Death

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Chronology (TR550-TR600)

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The Modern Age

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Chronology (TR600 to TR720)

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Afterword: The Curse of Modernity

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Index / Gossary

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Chapters and Sections

to UPDATE: with Chapters (breakdown) by each Heading type (list Font Name/Type (Italic, Bold, etc.), Size, and Key for description). All this will breakdown and make things easier later on when it comes time to figure out the wiki layout, templates required, and code for special additions like Headers & Foots and so on.

  • Book Title: Albertus-Bold 96pt
    • Credits: AmasisMT,Bold 14pt
    • Chapter Title: Korinna-Bold 18pt (Header Title Name: Korinna-Bold 14pt/Header Section/Page#: Korinna-Bold 18pt)
      • Chapter subheading: Korinna-Bold 14pt
        • Chapter section: Korinna-Bold 12pt
          • Chapter Text Intro: AmasisMT-Regular 12pt
            • Chapter Text: AmasisMT-Regular 10pt
  • Chapter sidebar Header: Korinna-Bold 10pt
    • Chapter sidebar Text: AmasisMT-Regular 9pt
  • Place these in layered bullets lists and add font to code, possibly even a template for each font making a wiki system for Styles (as in MS Word).
  • Add a "Template:{{Infobox game}}" & "{{Primarysources}}" from HârnMaster at wikipedia.
  • Add Header and foot style to each page via templates.


Name & Dates List

Note: ADD a proper/seperate page for this all as a table. Once broken down into the Book Style like Kanday's split page style, can then add Category for each section part so that a complete list then gets made for all the pages for "said name". The once this is done, can then add this comprehensive list to "that" Index Section for "Category". In the end the aim is to create a complete "Name & Dates List/Index" so all the LINKS for names can then not only be categorised, but also interlinked between ALL articles and books, especially for DATES as this will be required to create a comprehensive Chronology Timeline and quick inter-referencing of the subject link(s).

Note: ADD links to each Name & Date within the Tabled Index, these should also include Eras & Periods for dates.

Note: INCLUDE all these into the Template (Sidebars & other data) Tables and so on.

Note: Example: Mercenary Companies would not only have a template for the Company, but be interlinked with that Type as a Category reflecting and showing Country, Shire, Hundred, Leader, Associated to/Sponsor, Location/Region and all other manner of data links within the design of the template and interact automatically with other templates, catergories, and index link lists.

Note: Example: A river would have a sidebar template that includes it's source length and so on, but also show not only the Catergories & Names, but be reflected within each of those Categories & Names Listed together. Basically internested Data, Links, Catergories, and so on to save redoing all links again with new pages or modifications, it automatically gets updated once interconnected correctly.


Notes

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