Inceptors
The inceptors preserve both mystical and mundane lore.
To be an “inceptor” means to be just beginning, to be
taking everything in. While some inceptors possess vast
knowledge, and have already taken in a great deal,
title still pertains to them. No matter how venerable,
inceptors always eagerly learn more.
An ancient order, the inceptors trace the names of their
elders across many generations. They keep scriptorium
records, meticulously noting of details great and small.
They do not have the minds or demeanors of accountants
and lawyers, though, for they focus their minds on exploration, discovery, and questioning. They question what
they record. They doubt the facts, and test them constantly
for veracity.
The Bard Imarillus once observed: “Morwyn’s matriarchs say, ‘How may I help you?’ The soldiers of Terak
ask, ‘How may I defend you?’ The Zhenkefan apostles
wonder, ‘What will inspire you?’ But an inceptor of
Tinel asks only ‘Why?’ and ‘Why?’ again, until a man
wants nothing more than the company of the unholy
and unclean.” The inceptors wonder at everything, picking apart the details, and finding questions no one else
would think to ask. Their inquisitiveness stems from
their lifelong mission to understand the world, and help
others to understand it.
There are two distinct phases in the career of an inceptor, whatever his faction. Younger inceptors wander and
hunt lore, while the more powerful inceptors remain in
the scriptoriums where they work. Exceptions exist, and
history is filled with heroic inceptors who never had time
to go back to their home scriptoriums to teach others all
they learned. These adventuring inceptors are sometimes
the source of legends and great tales, and nearly always
spend their final days recording the exploits of their lives.
Most inceptors are part of the dominant (chaotic good)
faction of the scriptoriums.They believe there is no holier
act one can perform than to broaden the awareness of
another. Their worship of Tinel is individualistic and
revolves around small groups, and one-on-one interactions. These folk live as itinerate teachers and students,
both to better themselves and others. They believe good
results come from education, and offer people the knowledge they need in life. To them, the journey is the key.
Exploration of knowledge, of the mind, yields the unexpected, and the worthiest answers are the ones one did not
seek in the first place.
Other members of the faction are neutral good. This
is a sizable minority, and while they also believe good
should be done through knowledge, they do it through
large organizations. Neutral good members expand the
educational aspects of the scriptoriums.
In cities and
nations where they have real influence, the Tinelites
involve themselves with governments to educate people
on a mass scale. These inceptors are happy to use any kind
and decent method available to expand the minds of those
they encounter, and lack the suspicion of law and government that their chaotic good brethren espouse.
The inceptors of the neutral faction, on the other hand,
care only about uncovering knowledge. They do not aid
others in their learning. Instead, they join a cabal of the
“worthy” and work together to solve the mysteries of
the universe not for each other, but because cooperation
brings better results they may apply to their own interests.
Their missions nearly always pursue a specific piece of
learning, and bring it back to allied inceptors for study.
To them, nothing done in this world matters, save what
one does in preparation for serving Tinel in the next life.
These Tinelites avoid secular concerns as much as possible, and are happiest when they are left alone with their
books and studies.
There are many different alignments among the neutral faction: lawful neutral, chaotic neutral, and neutral
evil. The lawful neutral members of the faction work as a
hive. They organize cells of neophytes and teachers, work
together on research projects, plan missions, and dispatch
junior members to undertake them. Their influence has
kept the faction from falling apart entirely, in the face of
opposition from chaotic good inceptors.
Neutral evil members of the faction organize the resistance to the primary church. They see the hoarding of
knowledge as a sacred right the chaotic good clergy deny
them. They wish to topple the more powerful faction,
and resort to evil acts to achieve their goals. Lust for
knowledge consumes them to the point that most will
kill for it.
Chaotic neutral members fit in neither faction, though
they are loosely associated with the neutral faction. They
love secrets—the collection and whispering of them. They
are not only disinterested in secular affairs, but do not
even care about church matters. They simply roam the
world, hunting for hidden lore. This odd offshoot of the
order arises from a mystical belief that the Visions of the
Opening Eye are secrets Tinel reveals. If every person
recorded their visions and put them all together, the
combined result would tell the story of all creation, past,
present, and future. There is no secret these inceptors love
more than the details of a person’s vision, but they believe
there is power in all secrets.
Neophyte
All new members of the order are called neophytes, the
title by which they are addressed and introduced, and
remain so for many years—in some cases, for the rest of
their lives—as they work to study the universe and its
secrets. Neophytes travel widely, read constantly, debate
contentiously, and, most importantly, learn.
Teacher
Neophytes might become teachers. A council of inceptors
made up of local teachers and armarii grill prospective
teachers over a period of three days, asking in-depth
questions on topics the neophytes have spent their
careers studying. At the end of this time and if the neophytes prove knowledgeable enough, they are elevated
to teachers. It falls to them to spread learning, through
his scriptorium or by traveling from town to town, educating people. Among the neutral faction of the faith,
teachers oversee large projects within their scriptoriums,
assembling great reserves of learning on a single topic.
Whatever the faction, teachers work to unravel the mystery of their visions. They are addressed as “master” or
“mistress,” and introduced by full title.
Armarius
At some point after becoming teachers, devotees might
advance to the title of armarius. An armarius must have
unraveled the mystery of his vision. Only a teacher who
has come to understand his vision can attain this title. The
teacher must deliver a lecture to a scriptorium explaining
his vision and its interpretation, and at the end of this, he
takes on a new surname pertaining to the vision. Because
the Tinelites document matters so thoroughly, it is possible to go back through generations, and read the notes
from very old armarii lectures about their visions. An
armarius is addressed as “revered master,” or “revered mistress,” and introduced by full title.
The armarii oversee the scriptoriums and are their
supreme authorities, issuing commands to all the other
orders except the hierophants.
If a scriptorium has several armarii, they make decisions for the scriptorium as a
council where a simple majority rules. Once he becomes an
armarius, it is the inceptor’s goal to aid others, but also to
comprehend the riddle of his life through his interpretation
of his vision. Even among these, the most knowledgeable of
the Tinelites, it is rare to succeed completely.
Joining the Inceptors
Prospective members of the inceptors come to the scriptorium seeking training, and are made neophytes once
they experience the Vision of the Opening Eye. One
cannot become an inceptor without being on a lifelong
quest to solve the riddle of one’s existence. A person who
has already had the vision is immediately inducted into
the order. Neophytes are clerics with domains related to
Tinel, such as Knowledge. Most neophytes carry daggers,
for Tinel is traditionally shown blasting the servants of
Kador with five great knives of magic.
Type
Religious, Special
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