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Celandra is a game in which the players take the roles of societies, rather than playing individual characters. The players will invent a society with its culture and heritage, and will guide its development and interaction with the world. Emphasis will be be placed on developing a detailed history of Celandra, along with myths and legends.
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IbrAhim
ibrahim

Fri

Mar 4
2005

10:41

[Cel] Nagasri, the Snake Lord

Nagasri, Lord of the Snakes


The Panchayyah are a highly superstitious people as a whole, worshipping 
many gods.  None of the Midsea gods are present (in name or origin, 
though perhaps in identity), assumably because of the Panchayyah 
isolation from the Midsea.  It is doubtful even if there are connections 
to the deities of Aixelsydan, let alone those of Milakanur.  Of all the 
animistic deities worshipped, only Nagasri the Snake Lord rates mention, 
as the others are no different to the primitive cults found elsewhere in 
Qaiyore, such as the Stormrider of the Olozog or the totemistic deities 
of the Onagir.

The Panchayyah people predominantly worship the Snake Lord, a fact 
reinforced by the domination of the Rimriver by the Panchayyah tribe 
proper whose tribal deitiy is Nagasri.  The Panchayyah domination has 
only reinforced the status of Nagasri amongst the Rimriver tribes, 
interpreting the tribe's success as a sign of Snake Lord's power.

Nagasri is a deity with a dual aspect - a publically acknowledged one 
and a far more secretive, darker never spoken of aspect.  The Snake Lord 
is publically addressed as the Wise One, the Guardian of Crops, the 
Confidante, the Righter of Wrongs, the Watchful One, the Dark Saviour, 
the Lord of Mysteries, the Righteous Serpent.  Privately, an in 
secretive or conspiratorial matters, he is referred to (in hushed tones) 
as the Knower of the Ancient, the Consuming Serpent, Lord of the Night, 
the Keeper of Secrets, the Whisperer, the Creeping Hunter, the Vengeful 
Shadow, Teacher of the Unknownable, the Unseen Serpent.

As can be seen from this clear dichotomy, they are almost parallel, 
clearly showing that Nagasri is an unusually dualistic deity.  What is 
more interesting is that this dualism does not create any internal 
philosophical or theological conflict for the believer.  A devotee 
worships both aspects of the same deity, referring to one element over 
another as the situation demands.  For example, a wronged woman seeking 
justice for her own suffering (having not received any from the 
authorities) would turn to Nagasri in his role as the Righter of Wrongs, 
whereas a rejected lover might call on Nagasri in his role as the 
Whisperer or the Vengeful Shadow.  A traveller lost in the night would 
invoke the Dark Saviour (the Dark Saviour would be prayed to be the 
helpless, the poor and the powerless), as would a devotee surrounded by 
darkness and evil (the suggestion here it appears is that the Dark 
Saviour is more powerful than what might beset the devotee) but a thief 
would pray to the Creeping Hunter.  

Snakes of all varieties are seen as powerful omens by the Panchayyah, 
usually good, and are regarded as the emissaries of Nagasri.  As such, 
there is a taboo against harming them.  Places infested with snakes are 
also seen as taboo holy places, where only the shamans of Nagasri, the 
Nagavallur, may enter.  Snake bites are usually seen as a divine 
punishment, though the person who survives the bite is held to have been 
forgiven and blessed by Nagasri.  Snakes are common symbols in 
Panchayyah and general Alorathean mythology.

The religious imagery of the Panchayyah is highly diverse, but the two 
most common are the ascendent serpent and the coiled serpent.  The 
ascendent serpent is a serpent rearing back in the manner of a cobra, 
with two wings raised fully back and the head looking to the heavens.  
It is commonly held to be the image of the Righteous Serpent.  The 
coiled sperent, is the representative of the darker aspect of Nagasri, 
in which a wingless serpent coils around a dagger from the tip up to the 
handle, its head appearing from behind the handle, hissing.  This is the 
normal icon of the Vengeful Shadow.

Whether the cult can be traced to the ancient dragons or the Draconians, 
it is very doubtful, for though tales of winged serpents and the "men of 
Nagasri" are present in the myths here, the complexity of the theology 
and mythology suggests a third unknown source.

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