Difference between revisions of "Trelagism"

From The Coppermind
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 21: Line 21:
 
'''Geography:''' The Nelazan were located far to the north of Scadrial, close to its equivalent of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_circle Arctic Circle]. The Nelazan resided just south of their Arctic Circle, however, as it was noted by Sazed that their winters had few hours of daylight, and their summers had few hours of darkness. (Had the Nelazan lived on or north of Scadrial's Arctic Circle, their winters would have had at least one day of total darkness, and their summers would have at least one day of total daylight.)
 
'''Geography:''' The Nelazan were located far to the north of Scadrial, close to its equivalent of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arctic_circle Arctic Circle]. The Nelazan resided just south of their Arctic Circle, however, as it was noted by Sazed that their winters had few hours of daylight, and their summers had few hours of darkness. (Had the Nelazan lived on or north of Scadrial's Arctic Circle, their winters would have had at least one day of total darkness, and their summers would have at least one day of total daylight.)
   
== In ''Alloy of Law'' ==
+
== Post-Catacendre ==
 
Trelagism may have diverged from its original beliefs since the end of the Final Empire. However, only one self-proclaimed adherent to the belief is encountered ([[Miles Dagouter]]), so the apparent divergence could simply be a personal opinion of the worshipper, or even his interpretation of beliefs that have yet to be revealed to readers.
 
Trelagism may have diverged from its original beliefs since the end of the Final Empire. However, only one self-proclaimed adherent to the belief is encountered ([[Miles Dagouter]]), so the apparent divergence could simply be a personal opinion of the worshipper, or even his interpretation of beliefs that have yet to be revealed to readers.
   
  +
;Miles
Whatever the case may be, Miles claimed to worship Trell and believed that Trell created mankind, but made no comments regarding the Thousand Eyes or Nalt's eye, or even expressed a dislike of daylight. In addition, he held the beliefs that the ruling class should be made up exclusively of [[twinborn]] — a concept that might be unimaginable to the Nelazan — and that Trell had made men like him specially to right wrongs in the world.{{book ref|aol|11}} Whether or not he was a Trelagist is not clear; he referred to his religion as "Trellism", rather than "Trelagism", but he did name his god as "Trell". Miles also claimed, as he was being executed, that "the men of gold and red, bearers of the final metal, ''will'' come".{{book ref|aol|epilogue}} It is unknown if this was a personal belief or a tenet of Trellism.
+
Miles claimed to worship Trell and believed that Trell created mankind, but made no comments regarding the Thousand Eyes or Nalt's eye, or even expressed a dislike of daylight. In addition, he held the beliefs that the ruling class should be made up exclusively of [[twinborn]] — a concept that might be unimaginable to the Nelazan — and that Trell had made men like him specially to right wrongs in the world.{{book ref|aol|11}} Whether or not he was a Trelagist is not clear; he referred to his religion as "Trellism", rather than "Trelagism", but he did name his god as "Trell". Miles also claimed, as he was being executed, that "the men of gold and red, bearers of the final metal, ''will'' come".{{book ref|aol|epilogue}} It is unknown if this was a personal belief or a tenet of Trellism.
   
  +
;Bleeder
== In ''Shadows of Self'' ==
 
In the epilogue, a metal spike used by [[Paalm|Bleeder]] for [[Hemalurgy]] is made up of an [[Trellium|unknown metal]] not known to [[Harmony]]. [[Marasi]] speculates that the metal is from an another god and resolves to find out more about Trell.
+
A metal spike used by [[Paalm|Bleeder]] for [[Hemalurgy]] is made up of an [[Trellium|unknown metal]] not known to [[Harmony]]. [[Marasi]] speculates that the metal is from an another god and resolves to find out more about Trell.{{book ref|sos|epilogue}}
   
  +
;The Set
== In ''The Bands of Mourning'' ==
 
In the epilogue, the [[Set]] are revealed as agents of Trell. [[Edwarn Ladrian]] brags of the Set having [[kandra|Faceless Immortals]] of their own. One of these tells Edwarn that Scadrial has become too dangerous, and that Trell intends to destroy it instead of using the [[Set]] to rule it. He also says Edwarn will be allowed to serve in another Realm, perhaps indicating that Trell's followers are [[Worldhoppers]], or at least aware of the different [[Realms]].
+
The [[Set]] are agents of Trell.{{book ref|bom|epilogue}} [[Edwarn Ladrian]] brags of the Set having [[kandra|Faceless Immortals]] of their own. One of these tells Edwarn that Scadrial has become too dangerous, and that Trell intends to destroy it instead of using the [[Set]] to rule it. He also says Edwarn will be allowed to serve in another Realm, perhaps indicating that Trell's followers are [[Worldhoppers]], or at least aware of the different [[Realms]].
   
 
== Notable Trelagists ==
 
== Notable Trelagists ==

Revision as of 04:34, 6 February 2017

Trelagism
Related to Classical Scadrial, Nelazan
World of Origin Scadrial
This page or section needs to be updated with new information for Shadows of Self!
Be aware that in its current state, it may not include all additional content yet.

Trelagism was a religion on Scadrial worshipped by the Nelazan before the Ascension of the Lord Ruler and the establishment of the Final Empire.

Beliefs

Trelagism was a dualist religion named after the god Trell. Trell's opposite was Nalt, and the two were believed to be brothers.[1]

Trelagists believed that night was sacred and daylight was profane. During the night, Trelagists were able to see the Thousand Eyes of Trell (the stars) watching over them, but during the day, Nalt, jealous of the worship given to his brother, would shine his single eye (the sun) on the land, blocking Trelagists from seeing Trell's eyes.

One can speculate that their religious observances, if they had any, were at their height during the winter months, and summer months may have contained many petitions to Trell or attempts to ward off Nalt's jealousy. (See "Geography", below.)

Followers

Before the Final Empire eradicated Trelagism, it was practiced primarily by a people known as the Nelazan. Little is known about the Nelazan, themselves, but they were described by Sazed as being a "determined people", and that they mapped out the entire night sky. (Likely, it was only the northern sky and not the entire sky; see "Geography", below.) Since the stars were considered to be Trell's eyes, it is possible that the Nelazan did not name the stars in a manner that other cultures might, but rather gave stars — or constellations — names related to attributes associated with Trell.

Geography: The Nelazan were located far to the north of Scadrial, close to its equivalent of the Arctic Circle. The Nelazan resided just south of their Arctic Circle, however, as it was noted by Sazed that their winters had few hours of daylight, and their summers had few hours of darkness. (Had the Nelazan lived on or north of Scadrial's Arctic Circle, their winters would have had at least one day of total darkness, and their summers would have at least one day of total daylight.)

Post-Catacendre

Trelagism may have diverged from its original beliefs since the end of the Final Empire. However, only one self-proclaimed adherent to the belief is encountered (Miles Dagouter), so the apparent divergence could simply be a personal opinion of the worshipper, or even his interpretation of beliefs that have yet to be revealed to readers.

Miles

Miles claimed to worship Trell and believed that Trell created mankind, but made no comments regarding the Thousand Eyes or Nalt's eye, or even expressed a dislike of daylight. In addition, he held the beliefs that the ruling class should be made up exclusively of twinborn — a concept that might be unimaginable to the Nelazan — and that Trell had made men like him specially to right wrongs in the world.[2] Whether or not he was a Trelagist is not clear; he referred to his religion as "Trellism", rather than "Trelagism", but he did name his god as "Trell". Miles also claimed, as he was being executed, that "the men of gold and red, bearers of the final metal, will come".[3] It is unknown if this was a personal belief or a tenet of Trellism.

Bleeder

A metal spike used by Bleeder for Hemalurgy is made up of an unknown metal not known to Harmony. Marasi speculates that the metal is from an another god and resolves to find out more about Trell.[4]

The Set

The Set are agents of Trell.[5] Edwarn Ladrian brags of the Set having Faceless Immortals of their own. One of these tells Edwarn that Scadrial has become too dangerous, and that Trell intends to destroy it instead of using the Set to rule it. He also says Edwarn will be allowed to serve in another Realm, perhaps indicating that Trell's followers are Worldhoppers, or at least aware of the different Realms.

Notable Trelagists

Other Notes

Trelagism was the fifth religion that Sazed offered to Vin.[1]

Notes

This article is still missing information. Please help The Coppermind by expanding it.