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  1. #1
    Player
    Anonymoose's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Limsa Lominsa
    Posts
    5,034
    Character
    Anony Moose
    World
    Excalibur
    Main Class
    Arcanist Lv 100
    The Twelve are often associated with the element around the place of which they are a patron. Lightning gods in the highlands of Gyr Abania, fire gods in the deserts of Thanalan, earth gods in the forests of the Black Shroud, ice gods in the mountains of Coerthas, water gods in the riverlands of Dravania, and wind gods across the meadows of La Noscea.

    We're often influenced by our expectations. We assume a thalassocracy would have a "God of the Sea", such as Poseidon. With that expectation, wind makes little sense. But the water is only what the sea is on and below the surface, the winds above are what bring it to life for the sailor. The winds drag across the surface and generate both the waves that fall upon the beach and the breezes that roll across the plains. They are the force that fills the sails and allows for navigation. All of that is far more salient to the La Noscean sailor than simply the existence of the water. The sea is both. And more than simply gods of the sea, Llymlaen and Oschon are gods of movement and exploration. The only thing it doesn't really account for is the fact that fishing for sustenance and profit is also a huge part of the maritime culture ... but I guess that's why Llymlaen is a fisherwoman, eh? Besides, staying above the water is pretty important to the sailor, too.

    That's not to say that they don't have a healthy fear of and respect for the sea, of course. Even on Vylbrand there were those that preferred to focus on the depths - ancient religions, worshipers of great sea serpents. Were these seeds of faith the same as those from which sprung the modern Leviathan of the Sahagin tribe? Perhaps. The remnants of the serpent worshipers sometimes joined the Sahagin faith of their own free will, before the summoning of primals made their faith ... complicated.

    I am the waves that bear.
    I am the winds that guide.
    I am the evening stars.
    I am the morning sky.
    I am born of the sea.
    And there shall I die.
    - Sailor's Requiem

    Also, shards just symbolize what's happening. Weavers use wind shards in association with shearing things apart the same way they use lightning shards to break something down and earth shards to bond it together. There's a simple but clever philosophy to it all.
    (13)
    Last edited by Anonymoose; 09-18-2016 at 11:43 PM.

  2. #2
    Player
    Canadane's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    Limsa Lominsa
    Posts
    7,489
    Character
    King Canadane
    World
    Hyperion
    Main Class
    Sage Lv 100
    Quote Originally Posted by Anonymoose View Post
    EDITS IN PROGRESS - WHIMSICAL REORGANIZATION
    And I sit here stoked...
    (2)

    http://king.canadane.com

  3. #3
    Player
    Catapult's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Lotus Gardens
    Posts
    3,240
    Character
    Thal Icebound
    World
    Ravana
    Main Class
    Dancer Lv 100
    From the Nymeia perspective, water is something that can be shaped, poured, moved. This is important in creation mythology. Where Althyk (earth) created time and structure, Nymeia gave it fate and motion.

    For other examples of water as a tool of fate, consider:
    - Galadriel's mirror in a basin of water
    - The Lady of the Lake offering Excalibur to King Aurthur
    - The symbolism of ripples from a drop of water
    - The 'breaking of waters' before childbirth

    Wind doesn't have a monopoly on fate symbolism.
    (3)