Dwarven pantheon: Difference between revisions

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== Overview ==
== Overview ==
 
ancestor worship


== Deities ==
== Deities ==
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== Area of worship ==
== Area of worship ==
Worship of the Dwarven pantheon is geographically quite diffuse, but it is especially strong in the eastern [[Thadria|Thadrian]] nation of [[Barat Rkund]]. The dwarves there are especially culturally traditionalist, and have kept their religious beliefs intact even as many less staid dwarven societies elsewhere have shifted their beliefs over the millennia. Many of the [[Tumunzari]] dwarves of western Thadria also worship the Dwarven pantheon, although they often fuse it with their simultaneous belief in the [[Chaskan pantheon]]. The religious practices in [[Barat Tor]] in the [[Western Coast]] are much the same. Farther afield, worship of the pantheon is found anywhere with a sizable dwarven population. The inhabitants of [[Barazar El]], [[Kharakun]], and [[Emperor's Island]], for example, all venerate the gods of the pantheon to varying degrees.
Worship of the Dwarven pantheon is geographically quite diffuse, but it is especially strong in the eastern [[Thadria|Thadrian]] nation of [[Barat Rkund]]. The dwarves there are especially culturally traditionalist, and have kept their religious beliefs intact even as many less staid dwarven societies elsewhere have shifted their beliefs over the millennia. Many of the [[Tumunzari]] dwarves of western Thadria also worship the Dwarven pantheon, although they often fuse it with their simultaneous belief in the [[Chaskan pantheon]]. The religious practices in [[Barat Tor]] in the [[Western Coast]] are much the same. Farther afield, worship of the pantheon is found anywhere with a sizable dwarven population. The inhabitants of [[Barazar El]], [[Kharakun]], and [[Emperor's Island]], for example, all venerate the gods of the pantheon to varying degrees.
== Connections to other pantheons ==
As dwarven cultures tend to be quite traditionalist, their pantheon has changed little over many thousands of years. Still, in some parts of the world, less conservative societies have begun to shift their beliefs, often melding Dwarven pantheonic gods with those of other local pantheons. In Kharakun, for example, Dwarven and [[Aserdian pantheon|Aserdian]] deities are closely connected. Such syncreticism almost always retains the belief in the gods as having once been mortal, a seemingly mandatory pillar of dwarven faith.


{{Deities}}
{{Deities}}

Revision as of 15:35, 16 July 2023

The Dwarven pantheon is one of the major ancestral pantheons on Kishar. Followed primarily by dwarves, especially those living around or near the Chaska Sea, the pantheon is unique in seeing its gods as ascended mortals, ur-dwarves who attained divinity very long ago.

Overview

ancestor worship

Deities

Name Alignment Areas of Concern Description

Area of worship

Worship of the Dwarven pantheon is geographically quite diffuse, but it is especially strong in the eastern Thadrian nation of Barat Rkund. The dwarves there are especially culturally traditionalist, and have kept their religious beliefs intact even as many less staid dwarven societies elsewhere have shifted their beliefs over the millennia. Many of the Tumunzari dwarves of western Thadria also worship the Dwarven pantheon, although they often fuse it with their simultaneous belief in the Chaskan pantheon. The religious practices in Barat Tor in the Western Coast are much the same. Farther afield, worship of the pantheon is found anywhere with a sizable dwarven population. The inhabitants of Barazar El, Kharakun, and Emperor's Island, for example, all venerate the gods of the pantheon to varying degrees.

Connections to other pantheons

As dwarven cultures tend to be quite traditionalist, their pantheon has changed little over many thousands of years. Still, in some parts of the world, less conservative societies have begun to shift their beliefs, often melding Dwarven pantheonic gods with those of other local pantheons. In Kharakun, for example, Dwarven and Aserdian deities are closely connected. Such syncreticism almost always retains the belief in the gods as having once been mortal, a seemingly mandatory pillar of dwarven faith.