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Orris

Orris was a major god in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with coin, wealth, debt, and obligation. In pre-Fall belief, Orris did not represent prosperity or greed, but the circulation and accounting of value. His domain governed exchange, accumulation, and liability, treating wealth as a system of obligation rather than possession.
  Orthodox doctrine framed economic systems as mechanisms of balance rather than competition. Orris represented the idea that value carried responsibility. Coin was not neutral; it bound parties together through debt, repayment, and expectation. Pre-Fall teachings emphasized that unmanaged obligation destabilized societies, and Orris embodied the necessity of tracking, enforcing, and resolving economic ties.
  Orris was closely associated with taxation systems, ledgers, contracts, and repayment schedules. Pre-Fall institutions treated accurate accounting as a civic duty rather than a technical task. Debt left unresolved was believed to propagate disorder beyond the original parties involved. Orris reinforced the Orthodoxy’s emphasis on transparency, documentation, and closure in economic relationships.
  No knowledge of Orris survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to his name, symbols, or economic doctrines in modern Vey’Zari culture. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its disappearance, all formal understanding of Orris vanished. He is not remembered, worshiped, or adapted into later belief systems.
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