Bravkar

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Bravkar is the name of the 9-volume religous text that forms the basis of the Marconian religon. It is one of the very few pieces of Marcon literature to survive the Second Chaotic Period and was preserved furing the Golden Age. The only other significant piece would be the diary of the Slave-Girl Lyria, which became a great work of classic literature and continued to be read well into the Sixth Age.

The Bravkar is preserved only for it's historical importance, as there were no practioners of the Marconian religon after the empire was destroyed in a single year during the Second Chaotic Period of the Mage Wars. Nearly all practioners of the Marcon religon were slaughtered by the Gudersnipe Army in 301 B.G.A.; that same force also attempted to burn every last copy of the Bravkar in an effort to forever destroy the Marcon Alliance.

By the close of the Mage Wars, it was believed permenantly lost. A number of archeological finds during the early centuries of the Golden Age allowed historians to reconstruct roughly 90% of the text to varying degrees of accuracy.

The Kamians would later claim to have recovered a fully intact copy of the text, and would excercise many of it's teachings in the construction of their empire. However, a key difference between the Kami and he Marcons is their view of women: Kamian women are basically equal, while the Marcons did not technically view women as sentient.

Teachings

The teachings of the Bravkar center primarily around the superiority of the master race, the veneration of ancestors, and the subjigation of all those who do not belong to the pure bloodline. It devotes many lines of text to over and over again stressing the weakness and unimportance of women, though one large section seems to focus on their value in providing pleasure.

Only 2 of the 9 volumes concern the ancestor worship practiced by the Marcons. Much of the text is about the importance of venerating one's ancestors, because only they can adress the first Emperor, and through him the Great Sun Gods. Only about a fourth of each volume is actually about the rituals and customs of ancestor worship, though there is sime indication that the rituals may once have been magical in nature, and bear some resemblence to Necromanic practices.

In general, the teachings of the Bravkar were viewed with disgust, and only a few historians were even willing to study it. When the finds were first announced, many citizens of the Unity Earth Sphere Alliance called for their distruction. The Gudersnipe Foundation, which normally supported archeological endeavors, agreed with the sentiment, but did not take action to permenantly erase the Bravkar.