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Mortis

From Fantasia Encyclopedia
Revision as of 17:35, 2 September 2025 by Vorlov (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Mortis is the god of death and together with Vitalis (Life), Tempist (Time) and Erit (Matter) he formes the Four pillars of Existence, the highest form of godhood possible. He is seen as a lawfull neutral god, even though the world paints him often as evil. He is also called: Death, The End, The Last One, The Unavoidable, Meaning-giver, The Father. Mortis ensures that everything ends, disappears, dies. Mortis does not make a difference between good and evil, ever...")
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Mortis is the god of death and together with Vitalis (Life), Tempist (Time) and Erit (Matter) he formes the Four pillars of Existence, the highest form of godhood possible.

He is seen as a lawfull neutral god, even though the world paints him often as evil.

He is also called: Death, The End, The Last One, The Unavoidable, Meaning-giver, The Father.

Mortis ensures that everything ends, disappears, dies. Mortis does not make a difference between good and evil, everything has to end, and thus Mortis gives Meaning. Very rarely the living follow the believe of Mortis for it seems counterintuitive to believe in what will end you, but those who do will find absolution far before they close their eyes for good. The god of death thus is one of the most controversial, misunderstood and wrongly interpreted beings in known existence.

Quotes:

Everything means nothing, Anything means everything.

Eternity is meaningless.

Nothing is certain but the end.

Would I understand, cherish, believe or know what "the end" means, I'd be a god myself.

Every End is a step on the road to disprove eternity.

Those who understand their mortality will be welcomed with open arms by a dear friend who will accompany them the rest of the way, listening to every story of journey until they reach the most holy place - A final destination.

Commandments

  1. Mortis calls the end.
  2. Every death is a prayer.
  3. Welcoming the end is a virtue.
  4. Sinners will be judged, hubris will be punished.
  5. You grant the rites or Mortis grants a choice.
  6. Lost ones will be found.
  7. Life will die, souls shell end.

Common Folk

Everyone dies and . Mortis praises and welcomes everyone who welcomes this embrace. Those who find their ways to Mortis on their own terms are not shunt, but welcomed.

Undead & Necromancers

Contrarry to common believe Mortis is not the god of undead creatures. Quite the contrary. Prolonging live is seen as a weakness and a sin and nontheless some of his believers dwell in necromancy. This has more to do with the believer accepting being un-pure, a sinner waiting for the final judgement and being ready to be prosecuted by death itself, weighed against everything done in live. Those who are unfortunate enough to end up unwillingly in an undead existance are protected by Mortis though. The god of dead gives those unfortunate souls the time they need to accept the undeniable and welcomes them with open arms.

Priests, Paladins and other believers

active followers of Mortis are a contradicting mix of empathy and emotionless. They don't understand the suffering of those who fear death or those who moan over those who have passed. Instead they try offer comfort, knowing that death might be the end, but one that canÄt come soon enough for everything and everyone. It is a blessing, not a curse. Believers don't see good and evil, just poor beings trying to fight the unavoidable.

The Blessing/Curse of Mortis

The most powerful Blessing/Curse of Mortis is the inability to die.