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History of Orethil: Difference between revisions

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== The Great Migration (c. BME 50,000–20,000) ==
== The Great Migration (c. BME 50,000–20,000) ==
<noautolinks>{{main|Great Migration}}</noautolinks>
Trueborn humans, descending from the dream-realms of [[Awenelir]], began to settle in Orethil. They adapted to the terrain and elements, building cultures that reflected both the endurance of stone and the dynamism of the invading elements.
Trueborn humans, descending from the dream-realms of [[Awenelir]], began to settle in Orethil. They adapted to the terrain and elements, building cultures that reflected both the endurance of stone and the dynamism of the invading elements.



Revision as of 17:40, 6 April 2025

The history of Orethil is a chronicle of stability, transformation, and adaptation, spanning from the dawn of existence to the modern age. As the first physical realm in Adaris, Orethil has played a foundational role in shaping the continent of Elemara and influencing the surrounding realms.

Primordial Beginnings (c. BME 95,000–∞)

Orethil was the first tangible realm to emerge from the Primordial Void, formed by Oras, the Primordial Spirit of Earth, from the chaotic essence of Astram. In its original state, Orethil was an infinite expanse of solid stone—featureless, unmoving, and untouched by any opposing element. It embodied permanence, density, and memory.

The Era of Isolation (c. BME 80,000–95,000)

During this epoch, Orethil remained sealed from the influence of fire, air, and water. The realm’s landscapes were dominated by stone mesas, massive cliffs, and echoing hollows carved solely by seismic shifts and the play of light. The realm was devoid of weather, erosion, or renewal.

The Birth of the Orasians (c. BME 80,000)

The Orasians emerged from the conscious strata of Orethil—fragments of Oras’s essence hardened into sentient form. Towering and slow-moving, these beings resonated with the earth itself, communicating through tremors and echo harmonics. They are considered the realm’s first inhabitants and remain its most enduring lineage.

The Great Awakening (c. BME 60,000)

As elemental forces encroached, the scale and presence of the Orasians diminished. Some of the ancients are said to slumber still within the Citadel Mountains, entombed in the last uncorrupted pillars of stone.

The Legacy of the Orasians

Stewards of resonance and stonecraft, the Orasians shaped the foundations of culture in Orethil—establishing traditions of carved memory, vibration-based speech, and silent ritual observation that persist in Orasian-descended communities.

The Great Erosion (c. BME 63,000–55,000)

The Great Erosion began when Jala, the Primordial Spirit of Water, forced entry into Orethil. Lacking a realm of its own, Jala penetrated the domain of earth—fracturing the elemental boundaries that had previously held the primordial realms apart. This intrusion initiated the first elemental conflict in Adaris.

With the breach opened, Shasae (air) and Tejas (fire) followed, each invading Orethil. What was once still and eternal began to fracture. Water carved ravines and underground rivers; fire erupted through faults, forming volcanic fields; wind swept stone into dust, reshaping the terrain.

The Citadel Mountains emerged as the last bastion of unyielding earth—a spiritual and physical anchor preserving the heart of ancient Orethil.

The Rise of Elemental Integration (c. BME 55,000–50,000)

Over time, the elemental conflict slowed. With the emergence of Kairos, the spirit of time, came sequence and stability. The elements began to coexist in cycles rather than in chaos.

Orethil transformed—its edges reshaped into hybrid regions like the Emerald Valley, where stone mingled with stream and root. Flora, fauna, and weather emerged. Though changed, the realm remained rooted in the density and echo of Oras.

The Great Migration (c. BME 50,000–20,000)

Trueborn humans, descending from the dream-realms of Awenelir, began to settle in Orethil. They adapted to the terrain and elements, building cultures that reflected both the endurance of stone and the dynamism of the invading elements.

Bibliography