Difference between revisions of "Morthagi lore"

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(→‎Art of the Mortificers: updated pronunciation to match FAQ)
 
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[[Category: Documentation]]
The Clockwork Undead
Cruel reminders of our own folly, the Morthagi have been around since magic first blossomed. Is it any surprise? What secret have we ever sought but that which gives us primacy over death?


Ironic, really, that the now-forbidden study of necromancy is perhaps our most storied accomplishment, our most often-plundered trove of understanding. Banal necromantic mages have created hosts, armies, of mindless undead, while the more imaginative and successful warlocks instilled spirit, conscience, thought, even ambition into their finest and most dreadful works.
=Art of the Mortificers=
'''Morthagi''' (More-thaug-ee: singular and plural noun) is an old term, as old as the practice that first created them. Morthagi can be any of a wide variety of constructed entities that combine once-living tissue with mechanical components, mystical elements, and clockwork, in order to achieve a profane, though admittedly impressive, semblance of life. The most remarkable of them show true intuition, analytical capabilities, and situational cunning. Indeed, the limits of the Morthagi's potential for thought are beyond knowing.


A quick look through our documented encounters will reveal animated skeletons—some beast, some man—risen and rotting corpses possessed of atrocious and endless appetites, stitched-up golems, soul-infused liches, wraiths and specters of unknowable and frankly tantalizing life force… The Morthagi are without singular or traceable origin, and are not altogether bonded to one or another goal. It takes a powerful mystic to exert his or her will over even one manifest morthage, let alone many. Still, if there is one thing we have learned about magic through the ages, it is that, wherever and whatever its limits may be, they are so far beyond our sight and knowledge that they may as well not exist at all.  
'''Mortificer''' is the term for those who invented and built the Morthagi, in antiquity. You read their stories, and if you're lucky stumble upon some of their original texts, scrawled in archaic scripts. Most academics are helplessly taken with their achievements, and we certainly see the value of Mortificial components and mechanisms in such fields as medicine and masonry. The art of Mortificing is sadly lost to our world, and though many have sought to revive it, all have failed. The children of the Mortificers, their constructs, 'live' on, self-propagating, preserving the legacy of their creators.


Fighting the Morthagi is a prospect no one relishes. That’s not to say that a skeleton can’t be shattered, or a ghoul burned to dust. More, the danger lies in the very interaction with, the presence of arcane engineering. Where magic dwells in perceivable manifestation, it tends to have been nesting for a great long while, accumulating power and prejudice. Some of the greatest wizards ever were necromancers, and this is understandable. Necromancy, as we’ve been hinting, is perhaps the essential human goal; it merely goes by different names in more civilized society: medicine, literature, art. Physically and metaphysically, we are always toying with, seeking to harness, and struggling to overcome our real and metaphorical deaths.
=Ecology=
They may be destroyed by willful violence or exceptional accident, of course, but otherwise Mortificial devices and the Morthagi in particular tend to remain operational indefinitely. They appear almost universally capable of interfacing with each other, performing mutual repair and maintenance to sustain each other over infinite generations of people. To most scholars, this suggests there's an elegance to the schematics of the Mortificers that we are simply not comprehending, a simple repetitive principle that allows them all to exist, iterate, and interlock. Myself, I've analyzed their stunning capability to form links where none would've seemed conceivable, and I've attempted to observe the nature of their complex and holistic maintenance, and after doing so can only hypothesize that it's based on critical thinking more than original design: they study and solve problems with their 'minds', applying thought-skills that are perhaps owed to the lost magics interwoven with their joints and gears at their inception, back when such things may have been possible. Indeed, I see not the consistent reliable markings of manufacture, but truly the inspired and creative asymmetry of art.


Still, essentially, our task remains to combat our oppressive foes. Sticks and stones can break brittle bones, but swords and axes are better. Of course, there are other means as well: magics may be devised that specialize in turning and defusing necromantic bindings. Such studies would of course require looser restrictions and oversights, as well as extensive delving into dark and ambiguous places…
That is not to say that the Morthagi are not essentially tools, or that there is no pattern to their form and function. Many an explorer has written of finding machines in deep tombs and forgotten caves. Often they're discovered employed in some mundanity, working at whatever it is they were directed to do, all those ages ago. Such constructs are often reported to have unique designs, and some are suspected to be exaggerated or wholly fabricated by those giving the account... but certain designs seem to be timeless, repeated by every practitioner of the artform. And few of them are defenseless.


Speaking of dark and ambiguous places, we have taken a vote, and we all agree that this dungeon could use a few more latrines. Not to single anyone out, but certain high-minded scholars seem to take forever in there…
Some of the simpler Morthagi must be powered by an external mystical or mechanical means, and can fall dormant in the absence of such a power source. Others, though, must have been designed to harvest their own power supply from their surroundings, giving outstanding credence to the notion that these Morthagi, for purposes that remain delightfully and tantalizingly opaque, were intended to outlast the civilizations and genius minds that birthed them. What they harvest and use appears opportunistically selected, ranging from naturally occurring resources and oil deposits, to living matter refined for whatever essential fuel such matter can produce. Regardless, it is never safe to assume that a given Morthagi is dormant, or, indeed, that one exhibiting harmless behavior might not suddenly turn aggressive.


--These Informed Opinions submitted by the Order of Kralar on <Date>
There is so much about the Morthagi 'Ecosystem' we do not yet know. The hunt for knowledge rides by day and night! It never rests!
 
[[Category:Monster]]
[[Category:Morthagi]]
[[Category:Lore]]

Latest revision as of 13:09, 4 July 2023

The Clockwork Undead

Art of the Mortificers

Morthagi (More-thaug-ee: singular and plural noun) is an old term, as old as the practice that first created them. Morthagi can be any of a wide variety of constructed entities that combine once-living tissue with mechanical components, mystical elements, and clockwork, in order to achieve a profane, though admittedly impressive, semblance of life. The most remarkable of them show true intuition, analytical capabilities, and situational cunning. Indeed, the limits of the Morthagi's potential for thought are beyond knowing.

Mortificer is the term for those who invented and built the Morthagi, in antiquity. You read their stories, and if you're lucky stumble upon some of their original texts, scrawled in archaic scripts. Most academics are helplessly taken with their achievements, and we certainly see the value of Mortificial components and mechanisms in such fields as medicine and masonry. The art of Mortificing is sadly lost to our world, and though many have sought to revive it, all have failed. The children of the Mortificers, their constructs, 'live' on, self-propagating, preserving the legacy of their creators.

Ecology

They may be destroyed by willful violence or exceptional accident, of course, but otherwise Mortificial devices and the Morthagi in particular tend to remain operational indefinitely. They appear almost universally capable of interfacing with each other, performing mutual repair and maintenance to sustain each other over infinite generations of people. To most scholars, this suggests there's an elegance to the schematics of the Mortificers that we are simply not comprehending, a simple repetitive principle that allows them all to exist, iterate, and interlock. Myself, I've analyzed their stunning capability to form links where none would've seemed conceivable, and I've attempted to observe the nature of their complex and holistic maintenance, and after doing so can only hypothesize that it's based on critical thinking more than original design: they study and solve problems with their 'minds', applying thought-skills that are perhaps owed to the lost magics interwoven with their joints and gears at their inception, back when such things may have been possible. Indeed, I see not the consistent reliable markings of manufacture, but truly the inspired and creative asymmetry of art.

That is not to say that the Morthagi are not essentially tools, or that there is no pattern to their form and function. Many an explorer has written of finding machines in deep tombs and forgotten caves. Often they're discovered employed in some mundanity, working at whatever it is they were directed to do, all those ages ago. Such constructs are often reported to have unique designs, and some are suspected to be exaggerated or wholly fabricated by those giving the account... but certain designs seem to be timeless, repeated by every practitioner of the artform. And few of them are defenseless.

Some of the simpler Morthagi must be powered by an external mystical or mechanical means, and can fall dormant in the absence of such a power source. Others, though, must have been designed to harvest their own power supply from their surroundings, giving outstanding credence to the notion that these Morthagi, for purposes that remain delightfully and tantalizingly opaque, were intended to outlast the civilizations and genius minds that birthed them. What they harvest and use appears opportunistically selected, ranging from naturally occurring resources and oil deposits, to living matter refined for whatever essential fuel such matter can produce. Regardless, it is never safe to assume that a given Morthagi is dormant, or, indeed, that one exhibiting harmless behavior might not suddenly turn aggressive.

There is so much about the Morthagi 'Ecosystem' we do not yet know. The hunt for knowledge rides by day and night! It never rests!