The Aedinian Chantry

From Arthos
Revision as of 21:26, 22 August 2017 by Feldspar (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<big>''Authored by Elros Trevelyan, Acolyte and Paladin of the Circle''</big> == Section I: The Formation of the Chantry == It is from the common theme in all righteous reli...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

Authored by Elros Trevelyan, Acolyte and Paladin of the Circle

Section I: The Formation of the Chantry

It is from the common theme in all righteous religions of a single being with several personas which The Chantry derives its idea of The Maker, or the Creator. The same ideals that are seen, for example, in the worship of Gwynal and Varesh, of a dark and light force that once led the founding Elders to ponder the true idea of a god which had multiple personalities. They soon found after meditation and deliberation that they all had dreams in which a white robed man told them he was their one true god, the being who created them and the world upon which they lived. This was the discovery, or as the brothers and sisters called it at one point, “The Great Epiphany”. The Elders were told through dreams and visions that they were to find a young man named Aedin, who would become the prophet of our Lord Maker. And so began the search for this young man, continuing on for fourscore decades, until there was an orphaned boy left on the doorstep of the Revered Mother Cassandra. It was this revered mother that would become forever the holy image of maternal love within the chantry. She raised the young child, naming him Aedin, always with a feeling in her heart that he was the boy whom the prophecies had fortold would become our Maker’s voice. Those feelings only grew to be substantiated when Aedin would speak of dreams in which a man in white robes would speak to him, comforting him and calling him “Son.” It is at this time that discrepancies begin to arise between texts, so we are only able to find a general idea of what age young Aedin began having premonitions of the future. Upon hearing this, it came to pass that the Elders reconvened for another ten years upon Mount Therengor to discuss young Aedin’s new role and conformation as the true prophet of our Maker. Some power hungry Elders who saw the Chantry only as a way to garner support objected, promising lords who would side with them money and lands. Other loyal lords backed Aedin (now fifteen years of age) and eventually with the blessing of The Maker on their side, they won the short war that rid The Chantry of all said power-hungry Elders. Aedin was named the Son of The Maker himself during a convergence on Mount Therengor, with some scribes saying he took on a voice and demeanor not his own, one far more ancient and benevolent than any mortal, and spoke as The Maker himself declaring Aedin as his prince and prophet. And so it was that the New Aedinian Chantry was formed, with Aedin at its head. And he reigned justly and benevolently for 300 years, creating masterworks like the High Temple of Mother Cassandra and establishing the New Aedinian Tenets before finally passing on from a deathly and sudden sickness into the grace of our Father, the Lord Creator. Strife arose from our Prince-Prophet’s lack of heirs, having gone against the word of The Maker who commanded he create an heir to the bloodline. Some make claims that it was a coup, that the Elders worked with Hadrian, the lord’s advisor to slay our prophet who was seemingly in his prime. In fact there may have been some substantiation to the claims of these excommunicated scholars, as it is recorded in noteworthy sources like Auctor Liumn Veralthas’ “Words of our Prophet” that in the weeks before his death the Maker gave him dreams of his right hand taking control of itself, as if possessed, and strangling him. Alas, we shall never know, and it should not be taken at full face value the words of those scriptorum and auctors.