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Edit Ancestral Spirit: Tharoz-Mir
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[[File:Tharoz-Mir - General 01.jpg|center|frameless]]
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Introduction:
'''Tharoz-Mir''' is an ancestral spirit venerated by both [[Orasians]] and [[Minthari]] as the consciousness of the Great Tunnels that run beneath Terasil. It is understood not as a maker or mover of stone, but as the enduring presence that records, observes, and preserves the movements, silences, and stories that pass through the underground world. Ancient, voiceless, and vast, Tharoz-Mir is said to predate the formal shaping of the tunnels, forming from the first paths carved by elemental erosion and spiritual passage.
Domain and Manifestation:
Tharoz-Mir's domain is depth, silence, and passage. It manifests through ambient phenomena rather than visible form—still air in ancient shafts, shifts in acoustics, or a moment of unnatural silence amid deep activity. Echoes behave differently where the spirit is said to dwell, and in its presence, sound often travels further or falters altogether. It is known to favor long-abandoned paths and areas of undisturbed stillness.
Cultural Significance:
For the Orasians, Tharoz-Mir embodies the sacred nature of endurance and remembrance beneath the earth. Silence in its domain is a sign of respect; those who speak without purpose are said to risk being forgotten by the tunnels themselves. Minthari, traditionally more pragmatic, have come to see Tharoz-Mir as a spirit of balance—guiding which paths collapse and which persist. Joint [[Orasian]]-Minthari rituals mark the opening and sealing of tunnels, reinforcing mutual trust.
Ritual Practices and Osia:
Legends and Accounts:
One Orasian legend speaks of a miner who halted a collapsing tunnel during [[the Great Erosion]] by carving the name of a forgotten ancestor into the wall. The collapse ceased, and a perfect stone ring formed around the site—the first known shrine to Tharoz-Mir. In Minthari lore, it is said the spirit once opened an unknown passage to lead an entire caravan to safety during a cave-in, though the path vanished once they emerged.
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