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It
is not known when worship of the Pantheon of Dargotten began;
it is thought that it was always present within Telgard, since
before the Race Wars, when the elves regularly had direct
contact with the gods. Nevertheless, the Church of Telgard
is the oldest belief system in the world, with scholars of
every race and writings older than some mountains.
The
Elves were the first members of the Church by virtue of being
the first race, but the religion soon spread to the other
races. At one time, every single race on Telgard followed
the beliefs of the Church, and it is this globalism that Church
scholars point to as proof that the Pantheon exists--though
truly, few would dispute it, unless they were heretics.
After
the Race Wars, the Elves withdrew; their sect of the Church
was soon tainted by the actions of zealots and the isolation
from the races, creating a doctrine of superiority that still
has echoes in the Elven culture today. The Humans, with their
reproductive prowess and their skills at war and trade, soon
became the most powerful worshippers of Telgard, and they
build the Great Cathedral of Telgard in Maston, considered
today to be the center of the Church of Telgard. It is here
that the Matr rules with a power envied by some monarchs.
The
Dwarves, meantime, came into contact with the Delfae, and
this contact diluted their own strong allegiance to the Church.
While most dwarves are still members of the Church of Telgard,
there are some significant differences, including Dargotten
being referred to as the Smith, and to the inclusion of ancester
and clan worship into the beliefs.
Things
continued on this vein for several centuries. It is thought
to be about five hundred years before the Scourge that there
came again some major upheavals to the power of the Church;
at nearly the same time, the ss'tiss and the goblins broke
away from the Church. Some more zealous Brantars claim this
is proof that the Dark Enemy began working his hand upon the
world, but it is generally agreed otherwise that this change
was caused by the harsh environments both races had to endure.
The
ss'tiss were the first to break away, and their seperation
and subsequent worship of the Sun enraged many brantars as
well as the Matr at the time. She did not hesitate and swiftly
ordered that the Church Army march into Tahnn with intent
to convert the heretics--on their funeral pyres, if necessary.
The Church Army was not prepared for the Desert, however,
despite careful selection of the generals, and were decimated
even before contact with the ss'tiss. This loss was seen by
the ss'tiss as proof of their beliefs.
The
Matr ordered next that the Paladins, nominally affiliated
with the Church and possessed of powerful magic march upon
Hasst, but the Paladins refused. The Matr's subsequent loss
of power caused her to be removed a few short years later.
It
was during the confusion of the succession that the goblins,
more intelligent than often given credit for, quietly assumed
the worship of the Big Green, and the Church was too much
in disarray to do more than offer token resistance. By the
time the Church's power and stability was again restored,
the goblins had already built defenses, and unlike the ss'tiss,
the goblins had magic to protect them as well as thier hostile
home.
The
goblins' break with the Church was aided or perhaps caused
by a schism between themselves and the elves, though none
remember the nature of the dispute. The Elves, previously
having established contact with the goblins only--who they
saw as the race who shared their beliefs the most--now shoved
away from the goblins' heresy and became their staunchest
enemy. This schism forced the elves back into the rest of
the world, and they tentatively established contact with Garr
and Korresh, who, despite their differences, still shared
some measure of the worship of Dargotten, even if they naively--so
the elves thought--did not realize their own childlike nature.
The
discovery of the minotaurs and subsequently, the misharr,
did little to alter the balance of power of the Church...the
Church engineered a vast campaign after the Scourge to fill
the vaccuum caused by the loss of the Wizard's Council, and
did remarkably well, possibly due to the need to find hope
again and their good works during the time of recovery.
Now,
the Church's power has waned slightly with a resurgence of
magic and of the Dark One's minions in the lands, but her
power is still significant, and she is richer than any other
organization including the hidden Red Order.
--By
the hand of Chian Bekasdottir, Scribe
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