Merchant Man
New member
--- The Potent Three ---
Out of Character Information- Objective: To introduce The Potent Three as a cynical pagan faith practiced primarily among the nobility of certain Hysperian city-states and petty kingdoms, offering a nihilistic justification for self-serving rule, exploitation of the peasantry, and endless cycles of conquest and decline.
- Category: Organized Religion (Pagan)
- Image Credit: Flow Image Creator
- Development Thread: Not Applicable
- Permissions: Not Applicable
- Name: The Potent Three
- Classification: Polytheistic Paganism (Ditheistic offshoot with triadic focus)
- Affiliation:
- Description:
Overview
- Influence:
- Membership:
- Hierarchy:
- High Orator or High Steward: A senior theological figure attached to a major court or dynasty.
- Banner Priests: Ritual specialists for Irae, usually accompanying armies or commemorating conquest.
- Coin-Readers / Tax Cantors: Clerics of Avaritia who oversee offerings, treasuries, and fiscal rites.
- Keepers of the Still Stone: Custodians of ruins, collapsed halls, and ancestral decay, devoted to Acedia.
- House Devotees: Lesser noble retainers who maintain private shrines and family observances.
Private noble estates, ruined castles maintained as monuments to Acedia, and opulent townhouses with hidden triptych shrines. No public temples exist worship is deliberately kept within elite circles to prevent persecution by the Curia faithful.
- Resources:
- Doctrines:
- Practices:
- Traditions:
Banner Consecration: Captured enemy standards are ritually burned or hung in shrines to feed Irae.
Tax Tithe: A portion of every harsh tax levy is ceremonially offered to Avaritia with prayers for continued prosperity.
- Pantheon:
Avaritia (Greed – The Hoarder): Depicted as a corpulent, richly robed figure clutching overflowing sacks of gold while peasants offer tribute. Symbolizes the ruthless extraction of wealth from the land and people.
Acedia (Sloth – The Decadent Sovereign): Shown as an obese, listless ruler slumped on a crumbling, vine-choked throne amid ruins and discarded weapons. Embodies the inevitable decline that follows excess and neglect of duty.
- Mythology:
Kingdoms that ignore this truth delude themselves; those that embrace it however cynically gain the favor of the Potent Three by accelerating the natural order. The faithful believe Theo himself watches in silent approval as his cast-out children prove the futility of perfection.
- Holy Sites: N/A ( The faith deliberately avoids centralized holy sites. Instead, noble houses maintain private shrines, and certain ancient ruined fortresses or overgrown palaces are revered as natural manifestations of Acedia )
The Potent Three emerged among the fractious nobility of Hysperia in the centuries following the collapse of the Western Priman Empire and the fragmentation of the Shahidic conquests. As petty kingdoms rose and fell amid Ostermanni incursions, Merevingian pressures, and the lingering influence of the Curia and Shahid, some aristocrats grew weary of religions promising paradise, moral reform, or global unity.
They found comfort in a creed that not only explained repeated failure but sanctified their own excesses. The faith stands in direct opposition to Theosan religions (particularly the Curia), which the Potent Three's followers mock as worship of only Theo's acceptable remnants while ignoring his full nature.
They view Shahidic zeal as naïve utopianism doomed to the same cycle they willingly accelerate. By oppressing peasants to fund lavish lifestyles and constant border wars, the nobility unwittingly fulfills the prophecy of decline yet they interpret every revolt or collapse not as failure, but as further proof of the gods' truth.
In the current age of splintered empires, kingdoms and petty fiefdoms, The Potent Three continues to spread quietly among ambitious lords who see no point in building lasting legacies. Their mantra remains simple and bleak: "All things end in Acedia, therefore seize what you can while Irae still burns and Avaritia still smiles." Whether this philosophy will hasten the final decay of Hysperia and the wider world of Gaia or allow a particularly ruthless patron to temporarily dominate the region remains a matter of grim speculation among both adherents and their critics.