Gnome

From Jade Tower
Revision as of 14:07, 10 May 2007 by Jerichothebard (talk | contribs) (New page: ==Gnomish Cultural Notes== Gnomes are much like men of the Renaissance – well-educated in a number of different fields. For example, the foremost clockwork expert is also a well-respect...)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Gnomish Cultural Notes

Gnomes are much like men of the Renaissance – well-educated in a number of different fields. For example, the foremost clockwork expert is also a well-respected religious scholar.

Equal value is placed on material and spiritual progress, and the city’s children are well-educated by current standards. Literacy rates are higher in Ferrodyne than in any other region of Crescent.

Gnomish Language

Gnomish is an extremely exact language, but at the expense of brevity – so much so that getting a single word answer from a gnome is basically impossible. Their brains simply don’t work that way. Consequently, gnomes tend to talk very very very fast, even in other languages.

Gnomish is the language of engineering and technology. However, there are some abstract concepts it is simply impossible to express in Gnomish, so most educated gnomes also speak Celestial or Elven.

Gnomish Religion

The gnomish approach to religion is somewhat predictable, given gnomish character. They embrace and revere the overlap and contrast of the material and the spiritual. Unlike many scholars, most gnomish clerics do not automatically see night as a time of spiritual darkness. Indeed, many of the go so far as to explore the idea that night is when mortal’s spirits shine most brightly.

Their approach to religion is about finding relations between contrasts – as all living creatures are beings of both the four physical elements, and the spiritual spark of life, so does a study of the similarities and contrasts between the elements and the spirit lay bare the truth of mortal existence.

The gnomish scholars are also frequently the only ones to doubt the literalness of the Librera. They tend to see it as a collection of poetry, parable and prophecy, rather than divinely recorded absolute history. For example, a common part of a gnomish sermon takes a passage from the scripture and debates the moral lesson to be found – and often the priest delivering the sermon doesn’t have an answer. Religious services are very open, with lots of questions and answers, and are frequently only nominally led by the attending clergy.

This open approach to scriptural interpretation often puts them at odds with the established, very literal view of the Church, which is largely headed by the Order of the Sword of Malicean.