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Hoketh itself is a cycle, [[Deities#Necrecta|Necrecta]], undead, and ghosts interfere with this cycle, and when that happens there are repercussions for mortals.
 
Hoketh itself is a cycle, [[Deities#Necrecta|Necrecta]], undead, and ghosts interfere with this cycle, and when that happens there are repercussions for mortals.
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One of Hoketh's celestials, the Harvest Man is the celestial parent of the [[aasimar]] [[Aila|Aila Balton]]. The harvest man is a tall, figure with spindly legs and is shrouded with a robe that obscures his face.
   
 
== Clergy and Practices ==
 
== Clergy and Practices ==

Revision as of 04:15, 12 April 2018

Background

Hoketh is the god of death. Hoketh's followers are typically not fond of undead and necromancers as they disturb the dead's rest.

Hoketh decides when people die. the idea being Hoketh removes people from unbearable pain that is beyond the capacity for mortals. By creating a cycle of life and death, people are born and people die at the appropriate times. To a Hoketh Cleric, death is an essential state that must exist so that life can follow in its wake.

Hoketh's goals do not include needless death, or an unhealthy abundance of life (overpopulation). But followers believe that for a new mortal to be born an old mortal must pass on so that the cycle can be perpetuated.

Hoketh Symbol Fan Art by @RoSohryu

Hoketh symbol fan art by @RoSohryu. The motto is Latin for "Rest in Peace Before Hoketh"

Hoketh itself is a cycle, Necrecta, undead, and ghosts interfere with this cycle, and when that happens there are repercussions for mortals.

One of Hoketh's celestials, the Harvest Man is the celestial parent of the aasimar Aila Balton. The harvest man is a tall, figure with spindly legs and is shrouded with a robe that obscures his face.

Clergy and Practices

Hoketh's clergy tend to wear darker plate mail with robes, long tabards, and/or capes. Most, if not all standard Hoketh clerics wear a veil over their face draping from their helmet to hide their visage from the living and dead.

Hoketh Clerics tend to fall into two main groups, though not all fit this mold. There are clerics who deals with the end of the cycle of life, and one to who deals in the beginning. Hoketh Clerics range from doctors that deliver babies, prevent disease, cure wounds, and revive those who died before it was their time, to Undertakers, such as Salvador, who put bodies to rest, perform burial rites, and keep souls at rest.

Clerics of Hoketh are not against bringing back the dead with Revivify spells or Resurrection spells. It is believed that these spells work, it means that it was not the revived person's time to pass on. If the spell is used and the person is not revived due to being fully passed on, or unable to possess a form because it is hindered with unfathomable pain (such as charred to a crisp, or flayed to pieces), it means that it was the person's time and Hoketh has made them pass on.

Core Principles of a Hoketh Undertaker

  • Ensure spirits do not linger. That any wrong doing to a spirit is done right, and those who cannot be done right are put to peace.
  • Snuff out the undead of Necrecta.
  • Memorize your burial rites and tend to graves and graveyards in your travel.
  • Always carry a shovel.

The practices of Hoketh clergy varies between regions, cultures and races. Hoketh clerics from Paraton, Tracadia and some other human occupied countries worship the dead, help spirits pass on, and treat corpses with the utmost respect by giving them a burial. In stark contrast clerics of "The Sands" will worship the dead and help spirits pass on, but unlike other cultures won't bury the body. Instead, they release the spirit from the corpse. Once the soul is completely contented and passed on, Hoketh clerics of The Sands then dine on the body rather than let it go to waste. Both, however, dislike necromancy since it desecrates both the body and the spirit. But the importance on the body can vary.

In some cultures Hoketh clergy who marry are considered to be wed to their spouse's spirit, and are thus considered still married even if their partner dies. Due to this, they are never considered widows or widowers and this concept is foreign to them.

Members of the Hoketh clergy can learn literacy through the translation of tombs and study of the burial rights of different cultures.

There is a holy day called Hoketh's Harrowing mentioned by Vel Rock-Fist. She also mentions that it might involve fight pits as part of the festivities. Monty has described Hoketh's Harrowing as a mixture of Halloween and Día de Muertos.