Difference between revisions of "PESEDJET"

From The World Is A Vampire
Jump to: navigation, search
(Core Membership)
(Core Membership)
Line 44: Line 44:
  
  
 +
:* '''[[ANUBIS]]''' ~~
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
Line 54: Line 55:
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
:* '''[[]]''' ~~
+
:* '''[[]]''' ~~
:* '''[[]]''' ~~  
 
  
 
== '''COSMOLOGY''' ==
 
== '''COSMOLOGY''' ==

Revision as of 16:15, 13 November 2021

PANTHEONS

Pesedjet -- The Gods of Egypt

The Pesedjet, originating in Egypt, is the oldest (though not necessarily wisest) of the pantheons. This family of Gods claims that its origins go back over 7,000 years to the banks of the Nile River in northeast Africa, and it has endured through cultural, mythic and physical changes in the World’s very structure.

As a pantheon, the Pesedjet concerns itself with ma’at — justice expressed through social order. For the Pesedjet, everyone must know his or her place, and each post must be filled with the right person. In the times before time, the Titans destroyed appropriate relationships between people, and the Pesedjet created a social order in which people could live knowing their place in an established hierarchy.

Today, the Pesedjet’s Scions tend to concern themselves with disruptions in social stability caused by the Titans’ actions. Movements of refugees, discontent caused by spiritual poverty and unemployment, revolutionary movements—these come to the Pesedjet’s notice as disturbances in the mythic realms. Other divine tribes view the Pesedjet as hidebound and conservative, but they grant that the Egyptian Gods really know how to impose long-lasting order in a chaotic world.

The Pesedjet’s greatest weakness is its commitment to stability at any cost. The Egyptian Gods and their Scions prefer minimally disruptive solutions to problems, trusting in old patterns to maintain the status quo. Other Gods fi nd this attitude frustrating. Old patterns allowed the Titans to break free in the first place; why perpetuate easily disrupted systems? Still, the Egyptian deities promote tradition and conservative attitudes as bulwarks against chaos, leaving close-knit but reactionary societies in their wake.

Core Membership

  • ANUBIS ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~
  • [[]] ~~

COSMOLOGY