Šiā Religion: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
'''History''' | '''History''' | ||
The early history of Šiāŋos is not known, though it likely descended from the religion of the Island-Peninsular people. The first written document about the religion was a tablet dated to around 1,500 AS. It is a record of the cosmogonic myth in which | The early history of Šiāŋos is not known, though it likely descended from the religion of the Island-Peninsular people. The first written document about the religion was a tablet dated to around 1,500 AS. It is a record of the cosmogonic myth in which Kithpa, the primordial creator of everything, creates the world and splits himself into the new gods. | ||
---- | ---- | ||
''' | '''Deities''' | ||
The three primary deities of the religion are Ɂēŋos, Phaviŋos, and |
Revision as of 16:20, 28 January 2021
Šiāŋos, the people's religion, was the main faith in the Šiāšāv Empire. It is centered around the worship of a number of deities. Šiāŋos, like most other folk religions of Sandula, has mostly been replaced by Catholicism. A majority of the inhabitants of Savā still practice the religion primarily, but on the mainland, the religion has been almost completely abandoned.
History
The early history of Šiāŋos is not known, though it likely descended from the religion of the Island-Peninsular people. The first written document about the religion was a tablet dated to around 1,500 AS. It is a record of the cosmogonic myth in which Kithpa, the primordial creator of everything, creates the world and splits himself into the new gods.
Deities
The three primary deities of the religion are Ɂēŋos, Phaviŋos, and