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Isyra

Isyra was a minor goddess in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with justice, balance, and proportional judgment. In pre-Fall belief, Isyra did not represent mercy or punishment alone, but the calibration between them. Justice under her domain was not emotional or moralistic; it was procedural and measured. Outcomes were expected to correspond to offense, context, and precedent rather than personal feeling or political pressure.
  Orthodox doctrine framed Isyra as complementary to Malek rather than subordinate. While Malek rendered final judgment, Isyra governed how judgment was shaped. Courts were believed to function properly only when both principles were respected: Malek for authority, Isyra for balance. Excessive punishment was considered as destabilizing as leniency, and both were viewed as failures of justice rather than expressions of it.
  Isyra was associated with deliberation, evidence, and precedent. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that justice required process: testimony, documentation, and comparison to prior rulings. Arbitrary decisions, even when legally valid, were considered violations of her domain. Justice was treated as a system that required consistency across cases and generations, reinforcing institutional continuity rather than individual discretion.
  No knowledge of Isyra survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, role, or influence in modern Vey’Zari legal thought, religion, or mythology. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all structured understanding of Isyra vanished. She is not remembered or adapted into later belief systems, leaving no trace beyond speculative reconstruction.
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