Which Mythologies/Pantheons do you want?

Which Mythologies/Pantheons would you like detailed?

  • African

    Votes: 3 18.8%
  • Amerindian (North American)

    Votes: 4 25.0%
  • Aztec (Central American)

    Votes: 2 12.5%
  • Canaanite/Phoenician

    Votes: 7 43.8%
  • Celtic

    Votes: 5 31.3%
  • Chinese

    Votes: 5 31.3%
  • Egyptian

    Votes: 8 50.0%
  • Finnish

    Votes: 3 18.8%
  • Greek

    Votes: 9 56.3%
  • Incan (South American)

    Votes: 1 6.3%
  • Indian (Hindu/Vedic)

    Votes: 2 12.5%
  • Japanese

    Votes: 7 43.8%
  • Mesopotamian (Babylonian/Sumerian)

    Votes: 8 50.0%
  • Norse

    Votes: 8 50.0%
  • Oceanic

    Votes: 2 12.5%
  • Persian

    Votes: 5 31.3%
  • Slavic (Polish/Russian)

    Votes: 5 31.3%
  • Obscure Real World (Australian, Korean etc.)

    Votes: 3 18.8%
  • Fictional/Occult (Atlantean etc.)

    Votes: 9 56.3%
  • Something Else (post below)

    Votes: 1 6.3%

  • Poll closed .
Hi all! :)

Okay, curious to know which Mythologies/Pantheons people most want to see.

Just to let you know you can make multiple choices.
 
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Center-of-All

First Post
I voted for the particularly obscure ones you have listed (Canaanite, Amerindian, Oceanic, etc.), largely because I feel your talents would be better spent in that area. Once they get your system down, almost anyone could make a servicable Greek/Norse/Egyptian pantheon, considering how well known they are. Very, very few people (even gamers) would know where to begin to put an Oceanic pantheon together.

Also, aren't African and Amerindian awefully broad categories? Unless I'm much mistaken, these are broad categorizations of cultures, each with its own religious beliefs. It just seems kinda like smashing the Norse, Greek, Roman(you missed this one, by the way, and no it's not just the greek pantheon), and Celtic pantheons together into one 'European' pantheon. There's solid enough support to justify doing so, but you're losing alot by doing so.
 

Hiya mate! :)

Center-of-All said:
I voted for the particularly obscure ones you have listed (Canaanite, Amerindian, Oceanic, etc.), largely because I feel your talents would be better spent in that area. Once they get your system down, almost anyone could make a servicable Greek/Norse/Egyptian pantheon, considering how well known they are. Very, very few people (even gamers) would know where to begin to put an Oceanic pantheon together.

I discussed this recently with someone from these forums via email. I wanted to have three small pdfs. Mesopotamian, Persian and Canaanite which could be released individually and then lumped together to form some sort of Middle-Eastern section of the Immortals Index.

They suggested that more people would probably want to see the Greek, Norse and Egyptian mythos.

I sort of felt a tad fed up with seeing the same old pantheons in other peoples books. Of course this would be me doing it... ;) ...but even so. Of course I ultimately want to be able to do every pantheon, but again, this is me... :eek: ...so maybe I shouldn't try to run before I can walk.

Center-of-All said:
Also, aren't African and Amerindian awefully broad categories? Unless I'm much mistaken, these are broad categorizations of cultures, each with its own religious beliefs. It just seems kinda like smashing the Norse, Greek, Roman(you missed this one, by the way, and no it's not just the greek pantheon), and Celtic pantheons together into one 'European' pantheon. There's solid enough support to justify doing so, but you're losing alot by doing so

As I see it, much of the African and Amerindian mythology is basically the same group of deities given different names for different tribes/countries/territories. I know thats doing them a slight disservice, but thats the way I see it.

Just like the vast majority see the Greek and Roman gods as the same with different names. Same with the Canaanite/Phoenician, same with Babylonian/Sumerian, same with Aztec/Mayan, same with Irish/Welsh.

Yes you can subdivide, but more often that not any such division is a mere facade.

Normally I suggest that you reverse all the alignments and make the 'alter-ego' pantheon a sort of evil doppelganger.

So the good greek gods will be evil Roman gods and vice versa.

But that it itself doesn't call for an entire seperate entry for each deity. It just calls for a footnote.
 

Center-of-All

First Post
Upper_Krust said:
As I see it, much of the African and Amerindian mythology is basically the same group of deities given different names for different tribes/countries/territories. I know thats doing them a slight disservice, but thats the way I see it.

Just like the vast majority see the Greek and Roman gods as the same with different names. Same with the Canaanite/Phoenician, same with Babylonian/Sumerian, same with Aztec/Mayan, same with Irish/Welsh.

Yes you can subdivide, but more often that not any such division is a mere facade.

Normally I suggest that you reverse all the alignments and make the 'alter-ego' pantheon a sort of evil doppelganger.

So the good greek gods will be evil Roman gods and vice versa.

But that it itself doesn't call for an entire seperate entry for each deity. It just calls for a footnote.

Thing is, the Greek and Roman gods aren't just the same figures renamed. The Romans just associated their deitys with the Greek ones to lend themselves credibility. Mars has a very different personality than Ares, notably lacking the cowardice and bloodlust of the latter, being a model roman soldier. Jupiter didn't have Zeus' characteristic lecherousness, and Juno had none of Hera's jealousy or nagging qualities. As a whole, the Greek gods were more interesting, but they were definately different enough to not be the same pantheon, nor do the Roman gods fit the 'evil doppelganger' paradigm (Vesta, most notably, was not any more malicious than Hestia). And what about gods like Janus or Quirinus, who have no opposite counterpart?


As for the divisions you mention, yes you can see them that way, but the same goes for the various european/near-eastern pantheons. Demeter is really just a variation on Isis, Aphrodite is Innana/Ishtar, Thor bears a striking resemblance to Heracles, etc. This sort of conflation is possible with almost any cultures that share a similar geographical area. It's just the relative obscurity of these religions that tends to give this sort of impression. People think of subsaharic Africa as a single monolithic culture, ignorant of the enormous differences between the ancient Ethiopians and Khoisan Bushmen, and completely unaware that the Haida aren't at all similar to the Iroquois Confederacy. This ignorance extends to their religions, but that's no reason to encourage that in your works.

PS: Persia isn't part of the Middle East:p. I'd personally put it closer to the Vedic pantheon. A suitable replacement might be something from pre-Islam Arabia, but that may be difficult to find information on.
 
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Alzrius

The EN World kitten
WarDragon said:
Regardless of my votes, I'd like to see anything you have left to do in 3.5.

I agree (though I think we've made that view clear, so perhaps we don't need to bring that debate here).
 

Howdy Center-of-All! :)

Center-of-All said:
Thing is, the Greek and Roman gods aren't just the same figures renamed. The Romans just associated their deitys with the Greek ones to lend themselves credibility. Mars has a very different personality than Ares, notably lacking the cowardice and bloodlust of the latter, being a model roman soldier. Jupiter didn't have Zeus' characteristic lecherousness, and Juno had none of Hera's jealousy or nagging qualities.

So basically (it sounds like what you're saying is) you could handle the Roman counterparts of all three by using the same stats and simply reversing their alignments. ;)

As a whole, the Greek gods were more interesting, but they were definately different enough to not be the same pantheon, nor do the Roman gods fit the 'evil doppelganger' paradigm (Vesta, most notably, was not any more malicious than Hestia).

If they are originally neutral then they'd be neutral in the other pantheon too.

And what about gods like Janus or Quirinus, who have no opposite counterpart?

Janus I'll be using in a non-Roman capacity as one of the Inevitables. I don't like Immortals of Time. I think Time should be above immortals.

As for Quirinus...here follows a list of Minor Roman Gods...don't expect to see (stats for) any of them (other than perhaps on a list of quasi-deities/demi-deities) in the Immortals Index...though one or two are likely to show up in Gods & Monsters. ;)

http://www.unrv.com/culture/minor-roman-god-list.php

As for the divisions you mention, yes you can see them that way, but the same goes for the various european/near-eastern pantheons. Demeter is really just a variation on Isis, Aphrodite is Innana/Ishtar, Thor bears a striking resemblance to Heracles, etc. This sort of conflation is possible with almost any cultures that share a similar geographical area.

The difference being that all those gods mentioned have their own legends and are clearly distinctive enough to warrant their own entry/stats. Heracles doesn't have different legends than Hercules. Mars may have been held in higher esteem by soldiers than Ares, but there simply isn't enough to make a distinction worthy of a full new suite of stats.

It's just the relative obscurity of these religions that tends to give this sort of impression. People think of subsaharic Africa as a single monolithic culture, ignorant of the enormous differences between the ancient Ethiopians and Khoisan Bushmen, and completely unaware that the Haida aren't at all similar to the Iroquois Confederacy. This ignorance extends to their religions, but that's no reason to encourage that in your works.

Its not about ignorance, its simply about creating a feasible Pantheon, which, taken at face value, you can't have with African Mythology because basically every tribe has its own (name for the) Skyfather: Imana, Chuku, Kaang, Leza, Mawu-Leza, Mlungu, Mwezo, Ruhanga, Unkulunkulu, Wele, Zanahary. Thats a quick list of African Creator/Supreme/Sky deities from a five minute search through one of my mythology books. Its also not like you can say all these gods existed and interacted, because there are no legends (as far as my knowledge of African myth go) of gods from one tribe interacting with gods of another tribe.

Theoretically it might be possible to concoct some sort of over-arching African Pantheon from a bunch of tribal Sub-Pantheons, but all the primary deities therein are going to be Creator/Supreme/Sky, which seems compeltely unsatisfactory.

So either you have multiple Pantheons for each tribe. Completely self-defeating. Or, we take the main gods with the best legends and characteristics fulfilling a given role and fashion it into a workable Pantheon.

PS: Persia isn't part of the Middle East :p

Here is a map of the Middle East as defined by wikipedia. See the biggest country within it, thats Iran. Iran = Persia.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_East

I'd personally put it closer to the Vedic pantheon. A suitable replacement might be something from pre-Islam Arabia, but that may be difficult to find information on.

Persia is the very definition OF the Middle East. Classically, Persia was the middle of the trade route between Europe (the west) and China (the east).
 

Hey WarDragon mate! :)

WarDragon said:
Regardless of my votes, I'd like to see anything you have left to do in 3.5.

Well obviously the next book will be 3.5 (and my last 3.5 book) and have Gods in it, although this poll (more specifically) is for the 4E stuff after that.
 

Center-of-All

First Post
Heh, now I feel like a shmuck. I'd always learned that the Middle-East went as far east as Iraq (not counting the peninsula), and that Iran was something else entirely. Go figure. Sorry if I sounded rude.

Although, I would hardly call Quirinus minor. He was a member of the Capitoline Triad, was served by flamines maiores, and more than any other was the god of Rome.
 

WarDragon

First Post
Upper_Krust said:
Hey WarDragon mate! :)



Well obviously the next book will be 3.5 (and my last 3.5 book) and have Gods in it, although this poll (more specifically) is for the 4E stuff after that.
Well then, reduce the Amerind, Aztec, Celtic, Egyptian, Greek, and Mesopotamian vote counts by 1. I don't care to see anything done for 4e.
 

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