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The Presbyterate's language, referred to as "the language of Adam,"<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Bitter_Saker_Falcon|Bitter Saker Falcon|Fallen London}}''"It's written in the red ink of the Elder Continent. And in the language of Adam, their native tongue..."''</ref> is described as one that "jangles like bells of bronze."<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London|}} ''""Then, as they say in the Presbyterate..." He speaks five words together, in a language which jangles like bells of bronze."''</ref> In addition to this biblical tongue, certain Presbyterate Passphrases are composed of bits of English, Latin, and the [[Correspondence]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Presbyterate_Passphrase|Presbyterate Passphrase|Fallen London}}''"Scraps of Latin. Half-drawn Correspondence sigils. Everyday phrases in English. What do they mean?"''</ref> | The Presbyterate's language, referred to as "the language of Adam,"<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Bitter_Saker_Falcon|Bitter Saker Falcon|Fallen London}}''"It's written in the red ink of the Elder Continent. And in the language of Adam, their native tongue..."''</ref> is described as one that "jangles like bells of bronze."<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London|}} ''""Then, as they say in the Presbyterate..." He speaks five words together, in a language which jangles like bells of bronze."''</ref> In addition to this biblical tongue, certain Presbyterate Passphrases are composed of bits of English, Latin, and the [[Correspondence]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Presbyterate_Passphrase|Presbyterate Passphrase|Fallen London}}''"Scraps of Latin. Half-drawn Correspondence sigils. Everyday phrases in English. What do they mean?"''</ref> | ||
==...Save The Powerful Few== | ==...Save The Powerful Few== | ||
<blockquote>''""...each Presbyter is different, but each takes the identity of the last. Presbyters never truly die, even after a thousand years. At their 'deaths' they give up their names to join the College, who live nameless. The [[Snuffers|rebels]] who serve the Thief-of-Faces - they live faceless. I'm no friend to the College, you know that, but they have served our realm well - they are just...""''<ref name="homeland">{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Presbyterate_Adventuress|The Last Night: Record her memoirs about her homeland|Sunless Sea}}''"...each Presbyter is different, but each takes the identity of the last. Presbyters never truly die, even after a thousand years. At their 'deaths' they give up their names to join the College, who live nameless."''</ref></blockquote>The '''Presbyter''', or '''Prester''', is the leader of the Presbyterate, elected and dismissed through a ceremony that would be very fatal on the [[Surface]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Your_Salon:_invite_a_Presbyterate_Diplomat_as_a_guest_of_honour|Your Salon: invite a Presbyterate Diplomat as a guest of honour|Fallen London}} ''"The College of Mortality, which elects and dismisses the Presbyter in a manner which on the Surface would be very final."''</ref> After a Presbyter's term expires, they are sent to live nameless within | <blockquote>''""...each Presbyter is different, but each takes the identity of the last. Presbyters never truly die, even after a thousand years. At their 'deaths' they give up their names to join the College, who live nameless. The [[Snuffers|rebels]] who serve the Thief-of-Faces - they live faceless. I'm no friend to the College, you know that, but they have served our realm well - they are just...""''<ref name="homeland">{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Presbyterate_Adventuress|The Last Night: Record her memoirs about her homeland|Sunless Sea}}''"...each Presbyter is different, but each takes the identity of the last. Presbyters never truly die, even after a thousand years. At their 'deaths' they give up their names to join the College, who live nameless."''</ref></blockquote>The '''Presbyter''', or '''Prester''', is the leader of the Presbyterate, elected and dismissed through a ceremony that would be very fatal on the [[Surface]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Your_Salon:_invite_a_Presbyterate_Diplomat_as_a_guest_of_honour|Your Salon: invite a Presbyterate Diplomat as a guest of honour|Fallen London}} ''"The College of Mortality, which elects and dismisses the Presbyter in a manner which on the Surface would be very final."''</ref> After a Presbyter's term expires, they are sent to live nameless within '''the College of Mortality''', the Presbyterate's backbone and authority on life and death, and their successor inherits their identity.<ref name="homeland" /> | ||
The College of Mortality is particularly infamous for a certain decree: '''''None shall live a thousand years'''''. Not even the Presters themselves are exempt from this rule, but, as stated above, they do not truly die when their time is up. The [[Presbyterate Adventuress]]'s father lived for twelve extra years, so the Presbyterate punished his transgression by forcing his children to live for only a hundred years. Anyone who lives longer than they should is ruthlessly hounded and arrested by the Presbyterate's powerful assassins,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Presbyterate_Adventuress|Ask the Adventuress why you've been ambushed by assassins from her homeland|Sunless Sea|}} ''"The law for me is 'thou shalt not live a hundred years'. I'm out of time. That's why I left the Navy. The College will get to me - they always do in the end - and I can't keep letting other people die for me."''</ref> and in the words of the [[Bishop of St Fiacre's]]: ''"Death is the fist of the Presbyterate. One may not oppose death"''.<ref name="flint" /> | The College of Mortality is particularly infamous for a certain decree: '''''None shall live a thousand years'''''. Not even the Presters themselves are exempt from this rule, but, as stated above, they do not truly die when their time is up. The [[Presbyterate Adventuress]]'s father lived for twelve extra years, so the Presbyterate punished his transgression by forcing his children to live for only a hundred years. Anyone who lives longer than they should is ruthlessly hounded and arrested by the Presbyterate's powerful assassins,<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Presbyterate_Adventuress|Ask the Adventuress why you've been ambushed by assassins from her homeland|Sunless Sea|}} ''"The law for me is 'thou shalt not live a hundred years'. I'm out of time. That's why I left the Navy. The College will get to me - they always do in the end - and I can't keep letting other people die for me."''</ref> and in the words of the [[Bishop of St Fiacre's]]: ''"Death is the fist of the Presbyterate. One may not oppose death"''.<ref name="flint" /> | ||
==Nidah == | ==Nidah == | ||
<blockquote>''"Miles and miles. Every grain of sand another jewel. And lush lawns, plashing waterfalls, succulent fruit, clear fountains, flowers, silver pagodas, palaces, temples, all rise shimmering from the painted oases. Nidah."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Put_the_Shattered_Mask_back_on|Put the Shattered Mask back on|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>'''Nidah''' is the capital and central kingdom<ref name=":1" /> of the Presbyterate, located deep within the Elder Continent.<ref name=":2">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Speak_with_the_Youthful_Naturalist_(Acceptance)|Speak with the Youthful Naturalist (Acceptance)|Fallen London|}}''"I have seen Nidah with my own eyes. His most sacred city. Fountains brimming with milk and honey. Streets paved with precious gems."''</ref> The city is surrounded by | <blockquote>''"Miles and miles. Every grain of sand another jewel. And lush lawns, plashing waterfalls, succulent fruit, clear fountains, flowers, silver pagodas, palaces, temples, all rise shimmering from the painted oases. Nidah."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Put_the_Shattered_Mask_back_on|Put the Shattered Mask back on|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>'''Nidah''' is the capital and central kingdom<ref name=":1" /> of the Presbyterate, located deep within the Elder Continent.<ref name=":2">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Speak_with_the_Youthful_Naturalist_(Acceptance)|Speak with the Youthful Naturalist (Acceptance)|Fallen London|}} ''"I have seen Nidah with my own eyes. His most sacred city. Fountains brimming with milk and honey. Streets paved with precious gems."''</ref> The city is surrounded by massive basalt walls, and only its '''Persimmon Gate''' can serve as a point of entry.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/A_Deal_with_Isery|Offer a preposterous price|Sunless Sea|}} ''"Through the broken Persimmon Gate, still littered with corpses. The basalt walls at your back, now: black against the blazing shoulder of the Mountain."''</ref> While the city is described as a paradise, gorgeously paved with gemstone roads,<ref name=":2" /> it is also located dangerously close to the Mountain of Light, and eye protection is required to avoid certain doom.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/A_Deal_with_Isery|Offer a preposterous price|Sunless Sea}}''"And how it blazed! Bright as the sun's skin! Only your goggles of smoked glass kept your eyes from boiling."''</ref> | ||
To reach Nidah by land, one must brave the following challenges, according to Isery of the [[The Isle of Cats|Isle of Cats]]:<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Engineering_the_Downfall_of_Nidah|Secure the route to Nidah: plot a course across three deserts|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | To reach Nidah by land, one must brave the following challenges, according to Isery of the [[The Isle of Cats|Isle of Cats]]:<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/Engineering_the_Downfall_of_Nidah|Secure the route to Nidah: plot a course across three deserts|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | ||
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==The Kingdoms of the Presbyterate== | ==The Kingdoms of the Presbyterate== | ||
<blockquote>''"Drowned Mereid, though risen, was once a kingdom of the Presbyterate. Yet there are always seventy seven kingdoms, with neither interruption nor interregnum. Was another found and drafted into its place?"''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_the_subtleties_hidden_in_Presbyterate_nomenclature|Tease out the subtleties hidden in Presbyterate nomenclature|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>The Presbyterate has seventy-seven kingdoms, yet we know of relatively few, with a handful more alluded to but never named. | <blockquote>''"Drowned Mereid, though risen, was once a kingdom of the Presbyterate. Yet there are always seventy seven kingdoms, with neither interruption nor interregnum. Was another found and drafted into its place?"''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_the_subtleties_hidden_in_Presbyterate_nomenclature|Tease out the subtleties hidden in Presbyterate nomenclature|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>The Presbyterate has seventy-seven kingdoms, yet we know of relatively few, with a handful more alluded to but never named. Those who venture beyond [[Adam's Way]] into the heart of the Continent will encounter wonders and dangers beyond anything they could ever imagine... | ||
*Nidah is considered the central and ruling kingdom of the Presbyterate.<ref name=":1">{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Engineering_the_Downfall_of_Nidah|Defeat the Presbyter's armies: commit a spy network|Sunless Sea|}}''"The Presbyterate's military is a patchwork of feudal obligations and treaties agreed between its seventy-six sub-kingdoms."''</ref> | *Nidah is considered the central and ruling kingdom of the Presbyterate.<ref name=":1">{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Engineering_the_Downfall_of_Nidah|Defeat the Presbyter's armies: commit a spy network|Sunless Sea|}} ''"The Presbyterate's military is a patchwork of feudal obligations and treaties agreed between its seventy-six sub-kingdoms."''</ref> | ||
* '''[[Caution]]''' is the City of Beasts, home to a hundred different tongues. | * '''[[Caution]]''' is the City of Beasts, home to a hundred different tongues. | ||
*'''[[Arbor]]''' is split between dream and reality, and full of roses. | *'''[[Arbor]]''' is split between dream and reality, and full of roses. | ||
*The '''Court of the Wakeful Eye''' is a princedom of [[tigers]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Visit_the_Tiger_Keeper_in_his_office|Visit the Tiger Keeper in his office|Fallen London|}} ''"The Court will welcome you all. You may pass into our Kingdom and through our lands without fear of reprisal, no matter how peckish any of our citizens may be."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Recruit_the_Banded_Prince|Visit him in the fungal jungle|Sunless Sea|}} ''"Here, my people are unwelcome in our own land. If I help you take Nidah, my price is this: a new kingdom on the bright slopes of the Mountain. Where we can bask and roam eternally."''</ref> | |||
*'''[[Vesture]]''' is a kingdom of silkweavers - and the spiders that produce their silk. | *'''[[Vesture]]''' is a kingdom of silkweavers - and the spiders that produce their silk. | ||
*'''[[Huz]]''' is perhaps more of a hive than a kingdom. | *'''[[Huz]]''' is perhaps more of a hive than a kingdom. | ||
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* '''Rimer''' is a city beyond Caution.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sift_the_waters_of_Adam%27s_Way Sift the waters of Adam's Way, ''Fallen London''] ''"According to an acid-stained codex, a ship was once raised in Parabola that could sail the Writhing River with ease. By difficult glasswork, it was brought into the Neath, to attempt the same on Adam's Way. It was said to have made the journey between Apis Meet and Caution, but sank at the city beyond, whose name is Rimer. It is also said that the Rimers sunk the ship, from which to make an ark."''</ref> | * '''Rimer''' is a city beyond Caution.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sift_the_waters_of_Adam%27s_Way Sift the waters of Adam's Way, ''Fallen London''] ''"According to an acid-stained codex, a ship was once raised in Parabola that could sail the Writhing River with ease. By difficult glasswork, it was brought into the Neath, to attempt the same on Adam's Way. It was said to have made the journey between Apis Meet and Caution, but sank at the city beyond, whose name is Rimer. It is also said that the Rimers sunk the ship, from which to make an ark."''</ref> | ||
* '''Ossuary''', the Hidden Nation, worships Stone with intricate maps made of bone.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Contemplate_False_Globes Contemplate False Globes, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Hidden Nation of Ossuary makes its maps of scrimshaw and ivory. It conceals them in psalters and breviaries, dedicated to the holy light of the Mountain. Within the bindings, you make out the borders of the Presbyterate, carved in pale bone."''</ref> | * '''Ossuary''', the Hidden Nation, worships Stone with intricate maps made of bone.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Contemplate_False_Globes Contemplate False Globes, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Hidden Nation of Ossuary makes its maps of scrimshaw and ivory. It conceals them in psalters and breviaries, dedicated to the holy light of the Mountain. Within the bindings, you make out the borders of the Presbyterate, carved in pale bone."''</ref> | ||
* | *'''Grandinia''' has been consumed entirely by fungus, but somehow it lives on.<ref>[https://www.fallenlondon.com/profile/Marquis%20Aranea%20Mindfang/21410336 The Thing That Came in the Fog, Fallen London]</ref> | ||
*'''Ixander''' had close contact with the [[The Third City|Third City]], but is no longer recorded and may no longer exist.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Consult_the_texts_of_the_Grand_Sanatoria Consult the texts of the Grand Sanatoria, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Withered Illuminator guards her texts closely, until you slip her a third gin. Then, dozing, you are at liberty to read. The Third City, it seemed, had frequent contact with a place known as Ixander, which is now no longer recorded."''</ref> | *'''Ixander''' had close contact with the [[The Third City|Third City]], but is no longer recorded and may no longer exist.<ref>[https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Consult_the_texts_of_the_Grand_Sanatoria Consult the texts of the Grand Sanatoria, ''Fallen London''] ''"The Withered Illuminator guards her texts closely, until you slip her a third gin. Then, dozing, you are at liberty to read. The Third City, it seemed, had frequent contact with a place known as Ixander, which is now no longer recorded."''</ref> | ||
*The drowned island of '''[[Mereid]]''' was once a Presbyterate kingdom.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_the_subtleties_hidden_in_Presbyterate_nomenclature|Tease out the subtleties hidden in Presbyterate nomenclature|Fallen London|}} ''"Drowned Mereid, though risen, was once a kingdom of the Presbyterate. Yet there are always seventy seven kingdoms, with neither interruption nor interregnum. Was another found and drafted into its place?"''</ref> | *The drowned island of '''[[Mereid]]''' was once a Presbyterate kingdom.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_the_subtleties_hidden_in_Presbyterate_nomenclature|Tease out the subtleties hidden in Presbyterate nomenclature|Fallen London|}} ''"Drowned Mereid, though risen, was once a kingdom of the Presbyterate. Yet there are always seventy seven kingdoms, with neither interruption nor interregnum. Was another found and drafted into its place?"''</ref> | ||
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==Influence Abroad== | ==Influence Abroad== | ||
<blockquote>''"The Mithridate Office fabricates misleading stories about the Continent, in order to confuse foreigners. To this end, they often employ foreigners."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>'''The Mithridate Office''' is a branch of the Presbyterate that fabricates false stories of the Elder Continent to confound and mystify foreigners; hilariously, they often employ foreigners themselves for this very purpose.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''"The Mithridate Office fabricates misleading stories about the Continent, in order to confuse foreigners. To this end, they often employ foreigners."''</ref> Their workers, '''Mithridites''', pay | <blockquote>''"The Mithridate Office fabricates misleading stories about the Continent, in order to confuse foreigners. To this end, they often employ foreigners."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>'''The Mithridate Office''' is a branch of the Presbyterate that fabricates false stories of the Elder Continent to confound and mystify foreigners; hilariously, they often employ foreigners themselves for this very purpose.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''"The Mithridate Office fabricates misleading stories about the Continent, in order to confuse foreigners. To this end, they often employ foreigners."''</ref> Their workers, '''Mithridites''', pay foreigners with '''Formulums''', which probably don't exist.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''"[...] you whisper your story to a series of bland-faced Mithridites [...] You learn a great deal from the conversations. Probably. They supposedly pay you with a Formulum, although you suspect they may have made that up, too."''</ref> There are known branches in [[Apis Meet]]<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Flint|Flint|Fallen London}} ''"(In Apis Meet) Afternoon: Work for the Mithridate Office [...] The Office maintains a proud building at the head of Surcease Street."''</ref> and [[London]]; the Mithridate Office in London has been known to lure unsuspecting Londoners into becoming hired mercenaries on Presbyterate warships, like [[The Delight|the ''Delight'']].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Ask_about_the_Second_Sacristan|Ask about the Second Sacristan|Fallen London}} ''"She goes on to explain how the Mithridate Office enlisted mercenaries for the College of Mortality. "The money? Too good to refuse." But despite Nidah's deep coffers, their soldiers, their ships, they only sent one agent of their own. "Wanted to avoid official deployment, which is why the Commander hired so many low-life criminals – such as yours truly." When she first met the Prester's Hand, in a dilapidated warehouse near the docks, she found the shabby scenery "funny" after the riches the Mithridate Office had promised. Other zailors were there. Then the Sacristan opened a bag filled with masks. "After that, none of us cared about the money anymore.""''</ref> This Office also frequently hires pirate ships from [[Gaider's Mourn]] to zail under their flag and enforce their will.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Open_fire!_(A_Bounty_Upon_Your_Head)|Open fire! (A Bounty Upon Your Head)|Fallen London}} ''"Despite flying the flag of Nidah, this vessel is from Gaider's Mourn. Another crew hired by the Mithridate Office, no doubt."''</ref> | ||
A former director of the Mithridate Office apparently chose to retire to the faraway [[Shepherd Isles]], and may be responsible for the inhabitants' fondness for telling tall tales.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Adam%27s_Way#Adam.27s_Way|Listen to a storyteller|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | A former director of the Mithridate Office apparently chose to retire to the faraway [[Shepherd Isles]], and may be responsible for the inhabitants' fondness for telling tall tales.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Adam%27s_Way#Adam.27s_Way|Listen to a storyteller|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | ||
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*''In the Garden is the Design; in the Garden occurred the Ascents; in the Garden were selected the Shames. Therefore none shall enter it without that they be blinded with thorns and bound with the '''Three Oaths'''. And should any seek to alter the Design or repeat the Ascent or uncover the Shames, they shall be given to the Wax-Wind.''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Order_Vespertine,_Irresistible|Order Vespertine, Irresistible|Fallen London}}</ref> | *''In the Garden is the Design; in the Garden occurred the Ascents; in the Garden were selected the Shames. Therefore none shall enter it without that they be blinded with thorns and bound with the '''Three Oaths'''. And should any seek to alter the Design or repeat the Ascent or uncover the Shames, they shall be given to the Wax-Wind.''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Order_Vespertine,_Irresistible|Order Vespertine, Irresistible|Fallen London}}</ref> | ||
*''None shall set foot in Nidah save he that was born there. He who violates this law shall be cast into the deepest deep, and always forsaken.''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/The_Flinty_Latitudinarian|Welcome Batuk back to the Seven Against Nidah|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | *''None shall set foot in Nidah save he that was born there. He who violates this law shall be cast into the deepest deep, and always forsaken.''<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/The_Flinty_Latitudinarian|Welcome Batuk back to the Seven Against Nidah|Sunless Sea}}</ref> | ||
*''Every Planet In Fixed and Solitary Orbit: intrigue between nations is forbidden.''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_House_of_Silk_and_Flame|The House of Silk and Flame|Fallen London}}''"He turns and holds the Princess' gaze: "The Prester Saith: Every Planet In Fixed and Solitary Orbit: intrigue between nations is forbidden."''</ref> | *''Every Planet In Fixed and Solitary Orbit: intrigue between nations is forbidden.''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_House_of_Silk_and_Flame|The House of Silk and Flame|Fallen London}} ''"He turns and holds the Princess' gaze: "The Prester Saith: Every Planet In Fixed and Solitary Orbit: intrigue between nations is forbidden."''</ref> | ||
==One of the Three Oaths== | ==One of the Three Oaths== | ||
<blockquote>''"...that my word shall bind me. My promise shall outlast my flesh, and the very flesh of the world. Even when I am dust it will bind me, with red gold and a wind of wounds. If I break it, let my crown burn. Let my flesh run like wax. Let me hunger, and let nothing sate my hunger except my own skin and the marrow of my bones..."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/%22Swear_by_one_of_the_Three_Oaths!%22|"Swear by one of the Three Oaths!"|Fallen London}}</ref></blockquote> | <blockquote>''"...that my word shall bind me. My promise shall outlast my flesh, and the very flesh of the world. Even when I am dust it will bind me, with red gold and a wind of wounds. If I break it, let my crown burn. Let my flesh run like wax. Let me hunger, and let nothing sate my hunger except my own skin and the marrow of my bones..."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/%22Swear_by_one_of_the_Three_Oaths!%22|"Swear by one of the Three Oaths!"|Fallen London}}</ref></blockquote> | ||
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Over time, as Europeans explored Asia and gained an understanding of its geography and political landscape, the exact location of Prester John's kingdom shifted. Theories began to arise that it was actually in Ethiopia or the New World, and as the possibilities dwindled, the promise of the great Christian king lost its meaning. When it came to the Americas, meanwhile, the legend of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Dorado El Dorado] took precedence as a motivator for exploration. Iberian explorers' motives for exploring and conquering the Americas were intrinsically Christian, but they stemmed more from the militant-missionary reasoning that drove the Crusades and the Spanish Reconquista; the legend of El Dorado lacked the same goal of Christian dominion, and instead used indigenous people's stories as fuel for greed and conquest. Thus, rather than El Dorado, the remainder of the Christian inspiration for the Presbyterate probably comes from scholarly attempts to locate the Garden of Eden. | Over time, as Europeans explored Asia and gained an understanding of its geography and political landscape, the exact location of Prester John's kingdom shifted. Theories began to arise that it was actually in Ethiopia or the New World, and as the possibilities dwindled, the promise of the great Christian king lost its meaning. When it came to the Americas, meanwhile, the legend of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Dorado El Dorado] took precedence as a motivator for exploration. Iberian explorers' motives for exploring and conquering the Americas were intrinsically Christian, but they stemmed more from the militant-missionary reasoning that drove the Crusades and the Spanish Reconquista; the legend of El Dorado lacked the same goal of Christian dominion, and instead used indigenous people's stories as fuel for greed and conquest. Thus, rather than El Dorado, the remainder of the Christian inspiration for the Presbyterate probably comes from scholarly attempts to locate the Garden of Eden. | ||
While we don't usually go into discussion of the metatextual variety, there is a case for an exception here. Out-of-universe, all of these stories inspired the Presbyterate. But in-universe, considering the prescience of the Mithridate Office, it could be argued that the Presbyterate seems to be ''aware'' of these Christian legends, and has actively formed its image and propaganda to Londoners and other Europeans around these legends. | While we don't usually go into discussion of the metatextual variety, there is a case for an exception here. Out-of-universe, all of these stories inspired the Presbyterate. But in-universe, considering the prescience of the Mithridate Office, it could be argued that the Presbyterate seems to be ''aware'' of these Christian legends, and has actively formed its image and propaganda to Londoners and other Europeans around these legends. The masked zailors of the Delight see the ship as being full of mythical treasures and foodstuffs, like nectar and ambrosia (which are Greek, but something a literate Londoner would know about). They see its captain as an image of a robed and haloed Christian saint, and even the Mountain itself as a fairly close reflection of Prester John's description of his kingdom as dripping in jewels. | ||
Did the Presbyterate call themselves something else a long time ago, when a different image would have enticed the people of the Neath? Or was Prester John always real, his kingdoms a strange and eldritch mirror of Christian ideals lurking in the Neath? Of course the presence of the literal Garden of Eden within the Prester's domain points to the latter, these are still questions worth asking. | Did the Presbyterate call themselves something else a long time ago, when a different image would have enticed the people of the Neath? Or was Prester John always real, his kingdoms a strange and eldritch mirror of Christian ideals lurking in the Neath? Of course the presence of the literal Garden of Eden within the Prester's domain points to the latter, these are still questions worth asking. |