ANDREW D.H. MOORE
  • Home
  • Book Launch
  • Balthasar's Blog
  • Contact Me
  • Stella's Echo
  • Home
  • Book Launch
  • Balthasar's Blog
  • Contact Me
  • Stella's Echo







​







​Explore the
World System
with Balthasar
​Balefire

The Mythology of Solvigant (Part 1)

2/17/2025

0 Comments

 

​Hail Solo!
Welcome, dear reader, to the second installment of Balthasar’s Blog, where we delve into the nitty gritty of the World System. Today we investigate some of the history of the city of Solvigant, the city peripatetic. The city serves as the principal setting for the events in Children of Solo, so it behooves us to deepen our understanding of this unique place. For though there are a handful of powerful cities in the World System that have sworn fealty to House Callire and the Empire, the historical pilgrimage of Solvigant, the way it traverses the surface of Xys, makes this city special.
Let me back up, however. Solvigant’s peripatesis must be understood in the context of the history of Xys, and that begins with an overview of the Yazerites on another moon entirely. The Yazerites were a multicultural, multiethnic civilization founded on the moon Seniphet, now called Maxon. Tourists to Polaris, the capital of the imperial holdings on Maxon, can rent a coach or buy passage on a steam locomotive to visit the excavated portions of the ruins of the Yazerite city. Archaeologists call this city Zeros, after its mythological founder Zeros Therebor.
​
From the crystal throne of Zeros, Yazerite kings expanded their kingdom to include the entire moon over a period of approximately four centuries. They were known for their engineering acuity, their military might, and their multicultural aristocracy. They built an incredible network of ancient roads to crisscross Seniphet’s two continents, as well as massive public infrastructure projects, and vast, manicured gardens. They considered their kings generals and gods. 
Picture
Tourists visit the extensive ruins of Zeros.
​Every citizen completed four years of mandatory military service, and citizenship was open to any willing to serve. The aristocracy encompassed all the known races: Grym, Seraphim, Ankhim, Human, Nefeshi, and even the ancient Jeyan, a now extinct race of giants. (Note 1: Scholars often refer to the Jeyan as the Ancients, but that term is used interchangeably to also mean the Yazerites. I use their accepted racial terminology here to avoid confusion.)
While Solo held sway over the World System at the height of the Yazerite Empire, they had their own pantheon of gods. Solo’s Children were restricted to heavenly Avernus, and their father Corendar was not yet confined to inky Tartyn but roamed the void freely. The Yazerites worshipped their king, who was believed to be the mortal incarnation of Yazuman, God of Day. They considered Solo, a minor deity in the pantheon, perhaps a child herself of Yazuman. Yazuman’s nemesis was Ishti, Goddess of Night.

When all Seniphet lay under Yazerite dominion, their explorers, scientists, and military leaders turned their attention toward the heavens, and the moons that illuminated the night sky. Remember, dear reader, the height of the Yazerite Empire predates, the Homecoming, the arrival of the Sojourner’s, the creation of the gates, and the First Diaspora. (Note 2: The First Diaspora is the first documented diaspora. While there is no written evidence, or archaeological record of earlier movement between moons. As all the races of the World System could not have arisen separately on separate moons.)

Alchemists, mages, astronomers, philosophers, and scientists of the Yazerite Empire began to theorize about travel to other moons. It was not long before Alistair Pradesh started to experiment with aether. [His famous experiments are reconstructed in Kratowski’s Early Days of Aether.] He discovered that he could use quartz to magnify concentrated streams of aether to create a charge that would transport small amounts of material across the void. By refining aether into crystals, the Yazerites established waypoints around the World System to return to Seniphet. They discovered the dragons on Flynt and established diplomatic relations. There is evidence they built early settlements on Behl, which was uninhabited at the time. Their principal destination, however, was the moon Xys.
​
The process of desertification was well underway when the first Yazerites set foot on Xys, but there remained sprawling oases where nomadic peoples congregated before moving on. These people are known as the tribes of Deniver, after Dr. Everett Deniver, the scholar who wrote the definitive treatise on these peoples. Little is known about them, for they left no records, and the sands of Xys have long ago swallowed up evidence of their civilization. Everything we know comes second hand from written accounts of Yazerite explorers, who had a conqueror’s agenda. 
Picture
Vynissa Nix and early Yazerite Explorers. Artist: Christopher Baziti, Oil on Canvas
On Xys, the Yazerites built a city to rival Zeros, which scholars call Nix, after famed Yazerite explorer Vynissa Nix. The Yazerites took advantage of Xys’ prodigious mineral wealth, and soon Nix was the wealthiest city in the World System. Civil war eventually broke out between the kings in Zeros, and their representatives in Nix. The war raged on and off for decades and weakened the Yazerites. Rebellions broke out amongst the tribes of Deniver, and certain subjugated peoples of Seniphet believed to be the ancestors of the Maxonian Eldarians.

Unbeknownst to the warring Yazerite factions, they had a much larger problem than internal strife. Their aetherial causeways between moons required a vast amount of energy from the World System. The aetherial scholars did not yet understand the connection between their creations, and the movement of energy. It was not until the arrival of the Sojourner’s three centuries later that the technology around the gates would be further understood and stabilized.

The more the Yazerites traveled between moons, the more natural disasters occurred. Famines plagued Seniphet, feverfire sickness devastated Nix, earthquakes increased in frequency, culminating in the great rift that separates imperial Maxon from the eastern grasslands and the Bosque.

Religious scholars disagree whether it was Ishti, Goddess of Night, or Corendar, God of Chaos, who finally put an end to the arrogance of the Yazerites. Whoever it was, flung open the gates of heavenly Avernus, and released Solo’s children upon the World System. Yazerite myths speak of the clash of gods and men that spelled doom for the already diminished Yazerite empire. Yazuman and Ishti were driven into Tartyn and confined therein. The gods enlisted the aid of the dragons. This alliance marked the beginning of the draconic Wars of Tooth and Claw, which culminated in the extermination of the Jeyan.
​
When the dust settled, Zeros was a ruin, while Nix was reduced to a fraction of its former glory. The gods filled the Void with all manner of beasts, like balechtoplasms and star-eaters, to make Void travel prohibitively dangerous. They cast down the towering aetherial beacons the Yazerites used for navigation and banished the ruling Yazerite families to their rustic colonies on Behl. Then the Children of Solo set about dividing the spoils of war amongst themselves. 
Picture
The Destruction of Zeros Artist: Christopher Baziti, Oil on Canvas
Each divinity claimed a moon for his or her own patronage. Pallantier, God of Creation, made his home on Acadia before it was destroyed in the Wars of Succession, when Kade usurped Corendar as God of the Void. The gods restored the autonomy of the tribes of Deniver as they were a peaceful people and widely believed to be victims of Yazerite colonialism. They kept their own gods. This peace held for ten generations.

Finally, however, the ruling Elder of the largest of the Deniverian tribes, converted to the cult of Pallantier and offered Xys as a second home for the androgyne God of creation. Pallantier’s twin brother, Djinnar God of Destruction, was intensely jealous that his brother might hold sway over two moons. This is why he assisted Kade, the son of the Sojourner’s, in the Wars of Succession.

Djinnar appealed to his parents, Solo and Corendar, but they did not intervene. Djinnar visited the other elders of the other tribes and tried to convince them to reject Pallantier. Finally, a compromise was reached, whereby Pallantier assumed control of Xys, but everything he built must pay homage to Xys’ nomadic roots. Djinnar was satisfied that this condition would prevent the people of Xys from ever growing too powerful. Seniphet, where Djinnar held sway from the ruins of Zeros, was, and still is, the most fecund and fertile moon in the World System. The God of Destruction was confident that his dominion was rich enough to compete with Pallantier’s two moons.

After spending time on Xys, Pallantier discovered that the aetherial causeways used by the Yazerites had created another side effect on Xys. The conquerors had undertaken so many trips between the two moons, and moved so much energy around the World System, that Xys’ core became unstable. The result was fluctuating waves of magical energy released from the interior of the moon. These aetherial waves affected the astral dust around the planet and warped the fabric of the Void. They grew to such intensity that the citizens of Xys noticed, and certain areas of the moon became uninhabitable during aetherial surges. In fear, the people began to congregate in safe places. One of these safe havens would eventually take the name Solvigant.
​
As Solvigant grew, the aetherial waves increased in frequency and intensity. When the Sojourner’s arrived in the World System, Pallantier enlisted their aid, and through their efforts Xys’ core was stabilized enough that the waves came in predictable patterns. Pallantier designed the peripatetic path for Solvigant, now known as The Wandering City. The city moves along a predictable course, to avoid the aetherial waves ejected from the moon’s core, and to honor the bargain Pallantier struck with Djinnar. 
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Balthasar Balefire

    Archives

    April 2025
    February 2025

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly