Eryss
Eryss was a minor goddess in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with final moments, cessation, and the last measurable instant before an ending. In pre-Fall belief, Eryss did not govern death itself, nor what followed it. Her domain was limited to the transition point—the moment when continuation ended and resolution began.
Orthodox doctrine treated endings as necessary closures rather than losses. Eryss represented finality without judgment or meaning. The last breath, the final action, and the irreversible conclusion of a process all fell under her authority. She was not associated with grief, fear, or memory. Her role was strictly bounded, reflecting the Orthodoxy’s preference for clear transitions.
Eryss was closely associated with termination procedures, shutdown protocols, and the formal conclusion of roles or functions. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that endings required recognition. Systems left unresolved were considered unstable. Eryss reinforced the importance of clear cessation, allowing systems to transition without ambiguity.
No knowledge of Eryss survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, rites, or conceptual presence in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all structured understanding of Eryss disappeared. She is not remembered or adapted into later belief systems.
Orthodox doctrine treated endings as necessary closures rather than losses. Eryss represented finality without judgment or meaning. The last breath, the final action, and the irreversible conclusion of a process all fell under her authority. She was not associated with grief, fear, or memory. Her role was strictly bounded, reflecting the Orthodoxy’s preference for clear transitions.
Eryss was closely associated with termination procedures, shutdown protocols, and the formal conclusion of roles or functions. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that endings required recognition. Systems left unresolved were considered unstable. Eryss reinforced the importance of clear cessation, allowing systems to transition without ambiguity.
No knowledge of Eryss survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, rites, or conceptual presence in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all structured understanding of Eryss disappeared. She is not remembered or adapted into later belief systems.
Children

Comments