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Thaera
Tiraiya (Khadenz)
Tareia (Kuredt)
Goddess of the Stars and Night, the Hunt, Seeking, Archery
File:Thaera.jpg
Artist's impression of Thaera as goddess of the hunt
WeaponKerufevë
ArtefactsSidereal Crown

Thaera (Khadenz: Tiraiya; Kuredt: Tareia), also known as Taerya, is the Ethlorek goddess of the stars and night, as well as of the hunt, seeking and archery. She is a higher deity in the Ethlorek pantheon and is the central figure in the Trellinese religion of Ladath Thaerinë. Her titles include 'Lady of the Ethlorekoz' and 'Virgin Goddess', contrasting her with Liqáha who was raped by Morqúz.

Background

Etymology

Origins

Thaera's origins remain highly contested, within both Thaerine doctrine and academic circles. No pre-Migration sources survive naming her specifically, though the Ethlorekoz certainly had a goddess sharing many of Thaera's attributes. The first appearance of the name Thaera in a textual document is from 263 BC, when a declaration by the new king Temuir I praised his "predecessor and fathers' mother, the lady Thaera". This quote has given rise to two principal scholarly camps - one which maintains that Thaera is the first queen of the Trellinese, later deified and taking on the unnamed goddess' role, and the mother of Temuir's father Amadar, and another which argues that the line refers to her as the mother of all the Ethlorekoz and that there was no Queen Thaera.

Thaera in mythology

In old Ethlorek mythology, Thaera was seen as being a relatively minor member of the higher pantheon. The Ethlorek people of the Tanz were mainly settled and pastoral, and had little interest in hunting or searching. During their migration towards Trellin, however, they came to associate more strongly with the motif of seeking, and they used the stars to travel at night.

Worship of Thaera