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Vireth

Vireth was a major goddess in the Thauzunian Orthodoxy, associated with oaths, contracts, and sworn obligation. In pre-Fall belief, Vireth governed the binding force of promises rather than their moral quality. An oath under her domain was not about intent or sincerity, but about enforceability. Once spoken, recorded, or formally recognized, an obligation was considered fixed, regardless of later regret or changing circumstances. Vireth represented commitment as a structural necessity of civilization.
  Orthodox doctrine treated agreements as sacred mechanisms that allowed institutions to function across time and distance. Treaties, employment contracts, military oaths, and civil pledges were believed to derive legitimacy through Vireth’s authority. Breaking an oath was not viewed as a personal failing, but as a destabilizing act that weakened social cohesion. Her influence emphasized reliability and predictability over fairness or compassion, reinforcing the Orthodoxy’s preference for order above individual sentiment.
  Vireth was closely associated with recordkeeping and formal procedure. Verbal promises carried less weight than documented agreements, and undocumented obligations were considered incomplete. Pre-Fall teachings stressed that clarity, precision, and documentation were essential expressions of her domain. Ambiguous language or informal arrangements were discouraged, as they undermined the binding force Vireth represented. In this sense, she supported bureaucratic systems as much as religious ones.
  No knowledge of Vireth survives into the post-Fall era. There are no remaining references to her name, symbols, rituals, or doctrines in modern Vey’Zari society. The Thauzunian Orthodoxy itself is unknown, and with its collapse, all formal understanding of Vireth disappeared. She is not remembered, worshiped, or reinterpreted in any form, existing only as a reconstructed element of pre-Fall religious structure rather than as part of any living tradition.
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