Regio dela Verde: Difference between revisions
Line 90: | Line 90: | ||
==Universal Concepts== | ==Universal Concepts== | ||
Certain concepts are relatively universal to the Regio faith with consensus being relatively universal among these concepts. Texts and concepts that are generally accepted in all modern Regio sects are collected into a liturgical tome known as the ''Lejendalia'' ({{wp|English language|Treleini}}: The Legends). There however is divergence over interpretations of universal concepts. | |||
===The Seven Deities=== | ===The Seven Deities=== | ||
The core Verdean pantheon is based around Seven deities, named for gemstones and precious metals. These deities represent high concepts and fit certain roles in the pantheon. Uniquely to Meridonain religions, deities possess both masculine and feminine aspects that are treated as simultaneously separate entities and parts of a whole. RRegio deities have names associated with them, and are sometimes used as their names that are considered to some extent sacred, and are usually not given at birth, but chosen by faithful practitioners upon induction into the faith. Traditionally, the Regio deities are presented as being part of an imperial court, this interpretation has fallen from importance in recent years. The deities are as follows: | |||
* The Jade ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Verde), also known as the Jade Queen/Empress or King/Emperor: Often considered the head of Regio Pantheon, the Jade Deity represents aspects pertaining to rulership, leadership, and grace. In Traditional Regio Literature, the Jade deity is depicted as the monarch of the Pantheon ruling the Divine Court. In the modern era, the Jade Deity is depicted in the feminine aspect. The names associated with the Jade Deity are Julio or Julia. | |||
* The Silver ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Plato/a), also known as the Silver Champion: A deity whose place in the pantheon has proved somewhat contentious over the years as the meaning of the role has changed. The Silver Deity represents martial prowess, martial honor, the hunt, and the forest, often being depicted as being the Champion of the Divine Court. The Silver deity is usually depicted in the masculine, though the feminine has been getting more common in recent years. The names associated with the Silver are Jorge and Villa. | |||
* The Gold ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Dorado/a), also known as the Gold Maester or the Gold Scholar: A deity associated with the more intellectual classes of the world, the Gold represents such concepts as knowledge, arts, crafts, and is usually associated with the sky. Most often depicted in the feminine the Gold deity serves as the Scholarly presence in the Divne Court. The names associated with the Gold are Alejandro and Alejandra. | |||
* The Diamond ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Diamante), also known as the Diamante Priest/ess: A deity that associated most strongly with the divine in its purest form as well as representing the sun and moon, the lights in the sky. The Diamond deity is most often associated with the masculine duality. The names with the Diamond are Victor and Victoria. | |||
* The Ruby ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Rubí), also known as the Ruby Seneschal: A deity associated with justice, vengeance, the sea, earthquakes, and storms. The Ruby is most commonly depicted in the feminine, representing a Senseschal in the Divine Court. The names associated with the Ruby are Eva or Evo. | |||
* The Sapphire ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Zafiro/a), also known as the Sapphire Cupbearer: A deity that represents aspects of community, protection, family, love and the hearth. The Sapphire cupbearer is most commonly depicted in the masculine, serving as a Cupbearer in the Divine Court. The names associated with the Sapphire are Isabel and Isias. | |||
* The Lapis ({{wp|Spanish language|Verdean}}: El/Le/La Lapis), also known as the Lappis Jester: A strange deity to say the least, the Lapis represents a subversion of concepts established in other elements of the ''Lejendalia'' as well as both glory and humility. The Lapis is depicted as an androgyne deity. The names with the Lapis are Vacío or Vacía. | |||
===Sacred Duality=== | ===Sacred Duality=== |
Revision as of 13:30, 14 December 2019
Total population | |
---|---|
more than 305 million | |
Founder | |
Septon Valerius d'Léon | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Verde | 193,044,337 |
Dorado | 56,351,044 |
Plata | 27,687,046 |
Capisaria | 13,077,653 |
Davidos | 13,077,653 |
Lesser Verde | 7,474,192 |
Finorskia | 2,777,081 |
Los Cuarzos | 319,121 |
Diamante | 154,653 |
Especia | Unknown, estimated to be more than three million. |
Other Greater Meridon | Unknown, estimated to be more than one million. |
Religions | |
Syncretic Modernism, Parisism, Liberationism, Imperial Regio, Syncretic Traditionalism, Traditionalism | |
Scriptures | |
Lejendalia, Códices para Liberación | |
Languages | |
Classical Verdean, Vulgar Verdean |
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Regio dela Verde (Classical Verdean: Reign of the Jade Queen) is a religion native to the Verdean Archipelago, founded by a group of Sacrementist clergy looking to reform their original faith, centralizing divine power into fewer deities. Over time, the beliefs of the Regio heresy diverged significantly enough that the heresy had become radically different from the parent faith. Valerius d'Léon and the heretical clergy on Isla Verde near Corazón del Río, declared the Septonate Brotherhood and cut all ties to Sacramentist believers, and established formally a separate Regio faith in AI 1330.
Over the multiple thousands of years of the Verdean hundreds of various sects, churches, and heresies split off of official Septonate doctrine, however sects can generally be divided into six broad categories, some of which are historical, and some extremely modern, with breakdowns being tied to traditionalism versus modernism, and snycretic and anti-syncretic Regio faith. Generally however, core Verdean nations tend to be anti-syncretic whereas diaspora communities, Verdean minorities overseas, and non-Verdean practitioners being more Syncretic in outlook.
History and Spread
Foundation
The Regio faith was originally the result of a centralist heresy of Sacramentalist religion established in the Archipelago roughly four thousand years ago. After the end of the dark age, Sacramentist teachings became formally established with a priesthood and organized church which slowly spread from Isla Lapis to the rest of the Archipelago. Over the course of Sacramento's spread, clerical disagreements over the nature of the gods resulted in sectarian divisions. A group of priests on Isla Verde formed a creed based around seven central deities as patrons of each of the Verdean Islands, as opposed to the hundreds of deities of more traditional Sacramentist sects.
The Septevate sect of Sacramentism grew more powerful on Isla Verde throughout the second millennium AI, however, Traditional Sacramentist aggressively worked to limit power of the Septevate sect. While initially liturgical and peaceful in nature, religious conflicts would break out into physical violence and persecution as the traditionalists engaged in mass executions of the Septevans and Septevans attacking the temples of the traditionalists. In AI 1830 (BCE 1330), conflicts would come to a head when a group of Septevate heretics led by Valerius d'Léon would in a religious conclave establish the tenets of the Regio faith, proclaiming the divine rulership of the Jade Deity and founding Regio de Verde.
Early Spread
Regio cults during the 19th century AI (BCE 14th century) were influential in the area around the city of Core de Rie on Isla Verde. It was during this time that the elite Parisus family, practitioners of the Regio, would come into political prominence. Under Alexias Parisus the Parisus family would seize control of Core de Rie and the Kingdom of Bayan in AI 1819 (BCE 1319) and launched a campaign to seize the whole of Isla Verde. Over the course of twelve years his conquests would bring the entire island to heel under the Kingdom of Bayan. Alexias would declare the Kingdom of Isla Verde, and as a Regio faithful made Regio dela Verde the official faith of the Kingdom, spreading the faith farther in twelve years than it had in the decades previous to his ascension. Sacramentalists and traditional Animists remained numerous outside the core regions of the island until after Alexias' death in AI 1798 (BCE 1298).
Alexias' successor, Andreas would be far more active in proselytizing the Regio faith to the Island. However, after many Septons were killed attempting to spread the faith Andreas would back these missionaries with the force of the state, executing apostates en masse. Though violent resistance would continue for many years, and indeed it is suspected that Andreas was assassinated in response to his cruelty, conversions to the Regio faith would increase steadily throughout the 18th century AI (BCE 13 century). Missionaries would spread the faith to other islands as well, with their conversion attempts backed by a zealous series of Verdean monarches, overthrowing Sacramentists throughout the Archipelago and establishing religious hegemony by the end of the century. The resultant conflicts resulted in the establishment of the Regio over the Verdean Archipelago as the Sacramentists fled to mainland Meridon, spreading their faith to the mainland.
Imperial Regio
During the unification of the Verdean Archipelago, the Diamnean queens of the Parisus and Santiago Dynasty, who also captured Corazón del Río in AI 501 (BCE 1), formed a symbiotic relationship with the Septonate of Corazón del Río. During the ensuing unification wars, the Santiago-Parsisus queens would receive the formal religious backing of the Septons for their conquests, which provided much needed legitimacy for the conquest. In exchange most Septon temples would receive protection from the Queens during the conquest. This informal sanction would be crystallized into the Mandate of Heaven, a divine sanction of right to rule for the Verdean monarchy, with the establishment of the Verdean Empire in AdI 1 (CE 500).
For much of the early Imperial period, the Septonate and the Empire would remain seperate but allied power structures in the Verdean Empire, with the Septonate providing legitimacy for the crown and stability within the empire and the Verdean crown providing military protection for the Septonate, and in some cases expanding the faith through conquest and colonization on the Meridonian mainland. This relationship would come to an end during the late 4th century AdI (9th century CE), when after Corazón del Río burned to the ground in a great fire, the Verdean monarchy refused to allow the establishment of a New Grand Temple away from the city while themselves relocating. Combined with the installation of a noble of a prominent Verdean dynasty, the relationship between the two organizations would fray for several decades, with the nobility of the Empire using the crown and the Septonate as methods of staging palace coups to seize control of the other. This would come to a head when Andrea de Bastille, a leading member of the Septonate seized the throne, favoring the Church in several matters. At the conclusion of the Imperial Civil War, the divide between the Regio Septonate and the Imperial Throne was restored in order to prevent further usage of the Septonate to establish party coups with nobles largely being forbidden from high level positions in the Septonate.
During the High Imperial Period, a time marked by exploration and colonization of the Especian Continent by the Verdean Empire, the Regio faith would spread somewhat to Especia. Efforts convert the native Especian populace however would prove much more challenging than that of the Meridonian continent. Relations between the Septonate and the Crown would become more tense as several Septons would "go native" with regard to native Especians, with many Septons siding with the natives against the throne even during native uprisings. Broken relations would lead to the publishing of a series of essays under the name El Caso del Libertad in AdI 1042 (1542). El Caso condemned the Mandate of Heaven and created a treatise of universal rights which would become the basis of liberalism and further anti-monarchist tendencies in the future, though the Regio establishment would remain in support of the crown in the immediate future.
Though relations between the Septonate and the Crown would recover over the 12th and 13th Imperial centuries (16th and 17th centuries), the crises of AdI 1299-1300 (1799-1800), notably the Great Plague of AdI 1300, and inability of the Emperor to deal with it, would finally put an end to the Regio-Imperial relationship. After a conference early in the year, the Septonate of Diamante and the Septonate of Corazón del Río would firstly formalize the Declaration of the Rights of the Commons (first postulated in El Caso), and then jointly declare an end to the Mandate of Heaven, tacitly supporting a revolution brewing in the Empire. With the overthrow of the child Empress and execution of her Lord Regent, the First Verdean Republic was established.
Modern Regio
During the 19th century (1st century DI), practice of Regio dela Verde would go into decline as did many other Meridonian religions due in large part to the enlightenment and the spread of liberal, secular views. It was also during this time that the two most important Septonates, Corazón del Río and Diamante would diverge in ideology. The Diamnean Septonate, in an attempt to fit into the post-enlightenment world would adopt more liberal positions, collecting liberally aligned theological essays into a second liturgical canon a companion to the older Lejendalia. Corazón del Río would remain more traditionalist in outlook, adopting older theological positions more similar to the pre-Imperial faith.
As Mariana Ortega's works fostered the spread of socialism throughout Meridon the division between Corazón del Río and Diamante grew. These theological tensions would come to a head when in DI 110 (1910), the Diamnean Septonate would establish the Liberation Doctrine and publish the collected works of various Septons promoting more modern values as the Códices para Liberación. As a result the Septonate of Corazón del Río would formally break away from Diamante and establish the Traditionalist movement of the Regio Faith. This division would ripple through Temples to the faith with various Syncretic and non-Syncratic temples falling on different lines largely dependent on their location. Temples within the Verdean Archipelago were however much less likely to cleanly break and religious violence exacerbated ongoing political tensions in the Archipelago, and would continue well into the collapse of not only the Second Verdean Empire, but also the fragmentation of the Second Republic.
When the Verdean Archipelago was occupied by Capisaria starting in the DI 140s (1940s), the practice of Regio was periodically persecuted by the Capisarian occupational authorities as many Temples, especially Liberationist ones were strongly opposed to the occupation of the island. This became especially true when in 1950 the Capisarian occupational authority sold Isla Diamante, and its Grand Temple to the Cloud Nine Travel Agency, which converted the religious building into a tourist's hotel. Anti-Capisarian sentiment and the capacity of now disparate Regio Septons to respond to the needs of local flocks resulted in something of a religious resurgence, as anti-occupation groups and Septons allied themselves in resisting the Capisarian occupation. The revolutions that rippled throughout Capisaria and its sphere of influence saw the return of the Diamnean Septonate to Isla Diamante and the restoration of the Grand Temple of Isla Diamante. In the 21st century the Regio has become far more decentralized as the dissolution of the Corazón Septonate, and lighter touch of the Diamnean Septonate has seen the fragmentation of the faith away from centralized organization towards local Temples. A particularly popular local movement arose around the contentious adoption of Mariana Parisa as a "living Saint" by Verdeans which has grown to become popular on the island, but particular to that island. Syncretic values have also spread as local minor deities from traditional and foreign faiths start being adopted in the worship of local temples.
Universal Concepts
Certain concepts are relatively universal to the Regio faith with consensus being relatively universal among these concepts. Texts and concepts that are generally accepted in all modern Regio sects are collected into a liturgical tome known as the Lejendalia (Treleini: The Legends). There however is divergence over interpretations of universal concepts.
The Seven Deities
The core Verdean pantheon is based around Seven deities, named for gemstones and precious metals. These deities represent high concepts and fit certain roles in the pantheon. Uniquely to Meridonain religions, deities possess both masculine and feminine aspects that are treated as simultaneously separate entities and parts of a whole. RRegio deities have names associated with them, and are sometimes used as their names that are considered to some extent sacred, and are usually not given at birth, but chosen by faithful practitioners upon induction into the faith. Traditionally, the Regio deities are presented as being part of an imperial court, this interpretation has fallen from importance in recent years. The deities are as follows:
- The Jade (Verdean: El/Le/La Verde), also known as the Jade Queen/Empress or King/Emperor: Often considered the head of Regio Pantheon, the Jade Deity represents aspects pertaining to rulership, leadership, and grace. In Traditional Regio Literature, the Jade deity is depicted as the monarch of the Pantheon ruling the Divine Court. In the modern era, the Jade Deity is depicted in the feminine aspect. The names associated with the Jade Deity are Julio or Julia.
- The Silver (Verdean: El/Le/La Plato/a), also known as the Silver Champion: A deity whose place in the pantheon has proved somewhat contentious over the years as the meaning of the role has changed. The Silver Deity represents martial prowess, martial honor, the hunt, and the forest, often being depicted as being the Champion of the Divine Court. The Silver deity is usually depicted in the masculine, though the feminine has been getting more common in recent years. The names associated with the Silver are Jorge and Villa.
- The Gold (Verdean: El/Le/La Dorado/a), also known as the Gold Maester or the Gold Scholar: A deity associated with the more intellectual classes of the world, the Gold represents such concepts as knowledge, arts, crafts, and is usually associated with the sky. Most often depicted in the feminine the Gold deity serves as the Scholarly presence in the Divne Court. The names associated with the Gold are Alejandro and Alejandra.
- The Diamond (Verdean: El/Le/La Diamante), also known as the Diamante Priest/ess: A deity that associated most strongly with the divine in its purest form as well as representing the sun and moon, the lights in the sky. The Diamond deity is most often associated with the masculine duality. The names with the Diamond are Victor and Victoria.
- The Ruby (Verdean: El/Le/La Rubí), also known as the Ruby Seneschal: A deity associated with justice, vengeance, the sea, earthquakes, and storms. The Ruby is most commonly depicted in the feminine, representing a Senseschal in the Divine Court. The names associated with the Ruby are Eva or Evo.
- The Sapphire (Verdean: El/Le/La Zafiro/a), also known as the Sapphire Cupbearer: A deity that represents aspects of community, protection, family, love and the hearth. The Sapphire cupbearer is most commonly depicted in the masculine, serving as a Cupbearer in the Divine Court. The names associated with the Sapphire are Isabel and Isias.
- The Lapis (Verdean: El/Le/La Lapis), also known as the Lappis Jester: A strange deity to say the least, the Lapis represents a subversion of concepts established in other elements of the Lejendalia as well as both glory and humility. The Lapis is depicted as an androgyne deity. The names with the Lapis are Vacío or Vacía.