Evandel
501 Civil Era
The known lands
of Evandel consist of four continents, Matten, Mares, Ludde, and Jogn. These
four landmasses circulated the Island of Down and Elk, which in Ancient Days, housed
the Holy City, Paten, of the Church of Down. Paten was a bustling and holy
city, home to the High Priests of Down, and the seat of the Leader of the
Church, the Archrector. The Cathedral of the Blue Rose, seat of the Archrector
as well as the host to the Church’s most sacred relic, was considered one of the tallest structures in of the Gospel Era, its spire soaring to the heavens. In 1 GE, one of the worst
natural disasters ever experienced struck the world of Evandel. What became
known as the Downquake destroyed the majority of the Island of Down & Elk.
The city of Paten and its inhabitants were destroyed. All that was left
standing was the Cathedral, though it sunk several feet into the ground.
While some
considered this a sign that the Church of Down had one the favor of the Rose
Pantheon, surviving in the face of extreme catastrophe, many others considered
the destruction of Paten to be a sign that the Church had lost favor with the
Heavens. Doubt filled the four lands, civil Kings rose up and struck down
Church leaders, installing themselves as rightful rulers of peoples. Such was
the beginning of the Civil Era. By 100 CE, the Kingdoms within both Matten and Jogn
had eradicated the Church from existence, while in Ludde a partnership of sorts
existed between many Kings and Church leaders, although some of the Southern
Kingdoms had abolished it in favor of their own idols. Only in Mares did the
Church continue to dominate in the political scene, but even then did it share power with civil authorities that were not obligated to the Church.
In 500 Civil Era, the Church faced another catastrophe with the death of Archrector Rurigamian II and the death of the Blue Rose which had been venerated by the Church for so long. After the selection of Archrector Aligroil XI, the Blue Rose died and changed the world of Evandel as it had been known.