Khoran
Khoran was a minor god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with storms, the sky, and large-scale atmospheric violence. In pre-Fall belief, Khoran was not a god of weather in a general sense, but of disruptive weather—storms that damaged infrastructure, halted movement, and imposed sudden constraint on human activity. His domain represented the upper boundary of environmental control, where planning and authority encountered forces that could not be negotiated with.
Orthodox doctrine framed Khoran as an enforcing mechanism rather than a moral actor. Storms were not interpreted as punishment for individual wrongdoing, nor as messages requiring interpretation. Instead, they were understood as reminders of environmental limits placed on human systems. Khoran’s influence emphasized preparedness, structural resilience, and respect for conditions beyond administrative reach. Failure to account for weather was treated as negligence, not divine anger.
Khoran was closely associated with engineering standards, building codes, and seasonal planning. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that storms were predictable in pattern if not in timing, and that their damage reflected human failure to anticipate risk. Khoran’s role reinforced the Orthodoxy’s broader emphasis on responsibility: divine forces did not absolve poor planning. His presence was assumed wherever sky conditions disrupted routine operations.
No knowledge of Khoran survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, role, or conceptual framework in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all structured understanding of Khoran vanished. He is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted in any form.
Orthodox doctrine framed Khoran as an enforcing mechanism rather than a moral actor. Storms were not interpreted as punishment for individual wrongdoing, nor as messages requiring interpretation. Instead, they were understood as reminders of environmental limits placed on human systems. Khoran’s influence emphasized preparedness, structural resilience, and respect for conditions beyond administrative reach. Failure to account for weather was treated as negligence, not divine anger.
Khoran was closely associated with engineering standards, building codes, and seasonal planning. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that storms were predictable in pattern if not in timing, and that their damage reflected human failure to anticipate risk. Khoran’s role reinforced the Orthodoxy’s broader emphasis on responsibility: divine forces did not absolve poor planning. His presence was assumed wherever sky conditions disrupted routine operations.
No knowledge of Khoran survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, role, or conceptual framework in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all structured understanding of Khoran vanished. He is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted in any form.
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