Kethra
Kethra was a major goddess in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with land, stability, and inheritance. In pre-Fall belief, Kethra did not represent nature in a spiritual sense, but the permanence of ground, territory, and physical foundation. Her domain included soil, bedrock, and the fixed geography upon which all structures and institutions depended.
Orthodox doctrine treated land as a finite and inheritable resource. Kethra governed ownership, boundaries, and continuity of place across generations. Disputes over land were considered among the most serious forms of disorder, as they destabilized both economic and social systems. Her influence reinforced the idea that territory was not merely occupied, but held in trust across time.
Kethra was closely associated with agriculture, construction, and civil surveying. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized maintenance and stewardship rather than expansion. Exhaustion of land or reckless development was viewed as failure of duty rather than progress. Kethra’s role reinforced restraint and long-term planning in resource use.
No knowledge of Kethra survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, role, or symbolic presence in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all formal understanding of Kethra vanished. She is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted in any capacity.
Orthodox doctrine treated land as a finite and inheritable resource. Kethra governed ownership, boundaries, and continuity of place across generations. Disputes over land were considered among the most serious forms of disorder, as they destabilized both economic and social systems. Her influence reinforced the idea that territory was not merely occupied, but held in trust across time.
Kethra was closely associated with agriculture, construction, and civil surveying. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized maintenance and stewardship rather than expansion. Exhaustion of land or reckless development was viewed as failure of duty rather than progress. Kethra’s role reinforced restraint and long-term planning in resource use.
No knowledge of Kethra survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, role, or symbolic presence in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all formal understanding of Kethra vanished. She is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted in any capacity.
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