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| races:humans:caskaric:ayanics:start [2025/12/18 03:38] – [Origins] luked522 | races:humans:caskaric:ayanics:start [2025/12/26 23:50] (current) – [Culture] luked522 | ||
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| These proto-humans were thought to have originated from the same incarnation in physicality as the Neraics, though instead being tainted with a blindness for the spirit and venturing out of the consecration of the Garden of Runaral in order to found a sustenance that bore some relation to themselves. In doing so, they had grown to inhabit those lands which existed from without the protection of the ruling Daevas, and they instead found other beings that could come to be identified as idols and totems to be revered. In these wilds, there were other divinities that could be observed, and though it was also plagued by the corruption and flux of the darkness and its subordinates, | These proto-humans were thought to have originated from the same incarnation in physicality as the Neraics, though instead being tainted with a blindness for the spirit and venturing out of the consecration of the Garden of Runaral in order to found a sustenance that bore some relation to themselves. In doing so, they had grown to inhabit those lands which existed from without the protection of the ruling Daevas, and they instead found other beings that could come to be identified as idols and totems to be revered. In these wilds, there were other divinities that could be observed, and though it was also plagued by the corruption and flux of the darkness and its subordinates, | ||
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| - | The Ayanics, as a race of humans that naturally preceded those of the Iluayans and the Varayans, could not perceive the world of spirits as the Neraics did, and so, as they ventured out from the Garden of Runaral, they instead founded a worship of totems that were comprised of both the bestial and the elemental. In revering these totems, they observed that the natural and the earthly were to be acknowledged, | + | The Ayanics, as a race of humans that naturally preceded those of the [[races: |
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| - | Though the Ayanics all worshipped those beings which were known among their people as the Vaniel, they lacked a centralized power and body of government that could better regulate and monitor the practices of their people, and so there existed much variation between which gods of the Vaniel they would come to acknowledge. For example, many clans of the Ayanics venerated the totem of the fox, and would come to acknowledge the fox as an aspect of a god of wisdom known colloquially among some as Callidon. Yet, there existed some of the Ayanics who venerated the eagle, and instead, they celebrated a worship of a god of winds called Vindaric. These totems and consequent idols of these deceased gods were thought to have been imbued with their essence through some ritualistic and magical act performed by their people, and so they often called upon their gods when engaging in combat with another in order to win their favor.\\ | + | Though the Ayanics all worshipped those beings which were known among their people as the Vaniel, they lacked a centralized power and body of government that could better regulate and monitor the practices of their people, and so there existed much variation between which gods of the Vaniel they would come to acknowledge. For example, many clans of the Ayanics venerated the totem of the fox, and would come to acknowledge the fox as an aspect of a god of wisdom known colloquially among some as [[pantheons: |
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| Owing to this lack of civility and unity of thought among their people, there were many who would feud with others of their kind, and such feuds would often eventually manifest in the form of some war that would see both sides lose people. Upon the winning of this war, usually observed when another clan and their according actions of profanity were exterminated and discontinued, | Owing to this lack of civility and unity of thought among their people, there were many who would feud with others of their kind, and such feuds would often eventually manifest in the form of some war that would see both sides lose people. Upon the winning of this war, usually observed when another clan and their according actions of profanity were exterminated and discontinued, | ||
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| - | As this divergence from the Neraics had been made prevalent and obvious in its presentation, | + | As this divergence from the Neraics had been made prevalent and obvious in its presentation, |
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| - | The people of eastern Caskaris that were the Ayanics oftentimes relied on the cultural phenomena of hunting for food throughout the Ayosic Forest in addition to foraging, and as they had a reverence for the gods that were thought to have descended into these forms, it was believed to be an act of providence that their people would be allowed to hunt their gods’ offspring. Many of the Ayanics consumed meat in the time of winter as the foliage could not bear fruit, and from this practice came the preservation of meat by freezing it within the snow and icy earth of the mortal world. As such, there were often hunting parties that were celebrated at various times throughout the winter, but as they could preserve the meat through ice, they could guarantee catches intermittently throughout the season rather than hunting for food only when they so desperately needed sustenance.\\ | + | The people of eastern Caskaris that were the Ayanics oftentimes relied on the cultural phenomena of hunting for food throughout the [[planes: |
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| As this hunting occurred throughout the seasons of both summer and winter, they often would provide a flesh sacrifice to their given god or goddess so that the being might be replenished and made anew by their own blood and flesh, as it was so often an animal believed to descend from that deity that they sacrificed to. It was thought, then, that the deific spirit could act through the sacrificial offering, emerging from the carapace of the sacrifice so that a communion might occur between the clan and their worshipped one. Thus was born the practice of ritual sacrifice, one which would in time become inherited by the members of the Ayoskovic Potentate.\\ | As this hunting occurred throughout the seasons of both summer and winter, they often would provide a flesh sacrifice to their given god or goddess so that the being might be replenished and made anew by their own blood and flesh, as it was so often an animal believed to descend from that deity that they sacrificed to. It was thought, then, that the deific spirit could act through the sacrificial offering, emerging from the carapace of the sacrifice so that a communion might occur between the clan and their worshipped one. Thus was born the practice of ritual sacrifice, one which would in time become inherited by the members of the Ayoskovic Potentate.\\ | ||