Tsatya, Sword of Justice
During the Purge, Tsatya was the chief enforcer and spymaster of the Dragons. When her brother Traeus took up the role of watching over humanity after the war, Tsatya dedicated herself to being his right hand. As the Sword of Justice, her responsibility is to root out corruption and punish those who act against the will of the Dragons. In popular stories, this usually puts her in opposition to both Lunoth and Ravor-Tua, though there is also a degree of animosity between her and Ziak over his seeming abandonment of the Dragons' goals.
Summary
Titles: Sword of Justice, Mother of Men
Divine Rank: Dragon-God
Portfolio: Justice, Enforcement, Morality
Symbol: Gold-bound book with an eye on the cover
Alignment: Lawful Good
Domains: Light, Order
Saints: Adriel the Judge, Simon the Zealot
Tenets: # Serve the Dragons, for their providence grants us life. # Serve your fellows, and they will serve you in return. # Let your thoughts be pure, for wicked thoughts lead to wicked deeds.
Divine Rank: Dragon-God
Portfolio: Justice, Enforcement, Morality
Symbol: Gold-bound book with an eye on the cover
Alignment: Lawful Good
Domains: Light, Order
Saints: Adriel the Judge, Simon the Zealot
Tenets: # Serve the Dragons, for their providence grants us life. # Serve your fellows, and they will serve you in return. # Let your thoughts be pure, for wicked thoughts lead to wicked deeds.
Variations & Mutation
Stern Tsatya
Among rural areas, Tsatya plays a secondary role in the akregian mythology. In this version of the myth, "Stern Tsatya" is portrayed as a punisher of misbehaving children, stealing them away in the night and turning them into kobolds to toil away underground forever.In Literature
Tsatya was heavily referenced in many morality plays during the Age of Regulation (though always in the role of an off-stage presence, as the early Church viewed fictional portrayals of the Dragons as blasphemy). Such plays typically included the servants of Tsatya warning characters away from wicked actions, describing the dangers of immorality, and in a few cases, placing the characters under arrest for actions they took over the course of the story.
Related Organizations
Remove these ads. Join the Worldbuilders Guild
Comments