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A religion with monastic and temple-based traditons. founded in following the Immaculate Dragons - five Dragon-Blooded of great power who acted during the Usurption. So powerful were they it is believed they were manifestations of the five Elemental Dragons themselves.
THE NATURE OF THE IMMACULATE DRAGONS
 
   
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The core belief of the Order is that through [[Noble Insight]] and [[Diligent Practice]], a follower can elevate themselves closer to the perfection that was the [[Immaculate Dragons]].
At the core of the Immaculate Philosophy sit the five Immaculate Dragons. Although their names are used long and loud by monks and the Dragon-Blooded Host, most—even many among the Great Houses—do not understand the intricacies of Immaculate theology in relation to these five legends.
 
   
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The acknowledged heads of the Order of Immaculate Dragons are the Dragon-Blooded. This is accepted as right and proper. After all, those who will outlive mortals by entire generations should be in the position to apply the long wisdom they gain.<nowiki/>
IMMACULATE VS. ELEMENTAL DRAGONS
 
   
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== BECOMING AN IMMACULATE ==
It is first and foremost imperative to understand the difference between the Elemental Dragons and the Immaculate Dragons. The Elemental Dragons, according to Immaculate doctrine, are the sum Essential total of Creation’s primal make-up. Birthed by the Primordial Gaia, the fi ve Elemental Dragons are the foundation of Creation in the same way that the wheels of a wagon are its foundation. The wagon is not only built atop the wheels, but the very presence of the wheels makes the contraption a wagon. Without them, it may be many things, but it is not a wagon.
 
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Joining the Immaculate Order as one of its monks is long and arduous. A would-be monk must present himself to the monks of the subdued Procession of Gray, the small, unassuming monastery in the heart of the Temple District of the Imperial City, with one difference. At any given time, its courtyard is typically packed with kneeling postulants, clad in the gray robes of their station, seeking only to be noticed by the Paragon of Sextes Jylis from his office window that overlooks the courtyard or on her way to the Scarlet Chapel in the Imperial Palace.
   
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Those who come to the Procession of Gray must NOT arrive with shaven heads. To do so suggests one is already suited for the Order, and only the Paragon of Sextes Jylis may make that decision. Those who come from powerful families are likely to wait the longest, especially the Exalted, as they are expected to exceed the mortals around them in their capacity to withstand the rigors of fasting, lack of sleep and constant kneeling on the cobblestones of the courtyard.
The Elemental Dragons are purest primal elemental otherness—their forms are too pure to be made manifest in Creation. Yet, in Immaculate theology, the Elemental Dragons are not aloof or uncaring. They are simply distant, out of a desire to preserve the great Creation of their mother.
 
   
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Occasionally, monks require a postulants aid in some small task. Afterward, they are expected to return to their places. At night, all postulants are shown to a single dormitory overseen by a monk to sleep on bare wooden floors until just before dawn. When not sleeping or assisting monks, postulants are expected to remain kneeling in the courtyard. They are brought a single shallow bowl of rice to eat once in the middle of the day; water is brought to them four times a day. Most continue this for a few days, but for some (particularly Dragon-Blooded postulants) it can go for weeks should the Paragon suspect they still wrestle with pride.
Even from their distance, however, the Elemental Dragons could not miss the horror the Anathema wrought on their mother’s Creation, threatening to rend it asunder and disperse its totality into the chaos of the Wyld.
 
   
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All it takes is a nod from the Paragon as she passes on her way to tend to important business to make a postulant an acolyte. When this happens, the monks around the Paragon hurry to the side of the new acolyte, take him into the inner adytum of the Procession of Gray, where he is given a meal of rice, chicken and fruit and a small cup of watered wine. After this, their head is shaved completely, they are given a freezing cold ritual bath of cleansing, and an acolyte’s robe. At this time, the monk attending him gives him a new name, and the new acolyte takes his oath of service.
The Immaculate Order does not comment on the nature of the Elemental Dragons, believing them to be beings of utter transcendence. The Immaculate Texts teach that mortals can never wholly understand the Elemental Dragons, so it contains no commentary on these transcendent beings. What mortals and Exalted can understand of the Elemental Dragons is present in the Immaculate Dragons, so the Order has nothing to say on the matter of the Elemental Dragons.
 
   
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=== THE PILGRIMAGE ===
The Immaculate Texts do not say whether the Immaculate Dragons were born with their power or if they were merely Dragon-Blooded somehow elevated to the Immaculate state. Indeed, it is considered a secular waste of time to contemplate the origins of the Immaculate Dragons. It is sufficient that, at the time of greatest need, the Elemental Dragons made themselves manifest in Creation as the Immaculate Dragons. What’s important are their teachings and the deeds they performed while thus manifest.
 
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New acolytes are given a week to recuperate from the postulant ordeal and learn the basic sutras and martial-arts stances required of all novice monks. After this, regardless of the season, a new monk is expected to undertake the pilgrimage by foot from the Imperial City to the Great Coast Road to the Palace Sublime in Incas Prefecture. Acolytes are given only their robes, a walking staff and a begging bowl with which to beg for food or money.
   
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This is often a humbling experience for monks, especially those from Dynastic or patrician families. These pilgrims are forbidden from using Essence or force to get food, and may not break any laws. The communities between the Imperial City and the Palace Sublime are accustomed to these begging monks and are willing to give food to the sufficiently humble. A new monk, even one with Dragon-Blooded heritage, who approaches the task of begging with arrogance or expectation is in for a rude shock.
EMULATION VS. WORSHIP
 
   
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Finally, after weeks of travel by foot and begging rides with those who have wagons, the new acolyte arrives at the Palace Sublime. He is taken in, fed, bathed and his head shaved again. He is given any medical attention that may be necessary from his long and arduous trip and given a place in the monks’ cells as a monk of the First Coil.
Secondly, it is inappropriate to render up worship to the Immaculate Dragons (to say nothing of the Elemental Dragons). They are not part of the godly bureaucracies.
 
   
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== COILS OF THE IMMACULATE ORDER ==
Instead, the Elemental Dragons made themselves manifest in the Immaculate Dragons in order to show mortals the correct means of emulating the ineffable dynamic that the Dragons themselves embody.
 
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The Immaculate Order teaches that the Road of Enlightenment wraps around like the long, sinuous body of a dragon coiled around a great pillar. In the normal process of living, a being remains where he stands on this winding Road, moving perhaps a few steps up or down. Those who dedicate themselves to the Immaculate Dragons may advance greatly in their place through diligent service and practice of the Immaculate Philosophy.
   
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The behaviors of the various Coils are required for several reasons.
The Immaculate Dragons are not gods to be worshipped, but rather are the foremost inspirations for enlightened behavior. Through their example, mortals may understand proper action in accordance with the human experience in the cycle of rebirth. Therefore, to worship the Immaculate Dragons is to lose sight of the message that they taught: Through proper action in successive lifetimes, mortals may one day embody the very powers that the Immaculate Dragons did. To worship a thing that one should aspire to be is foolishness, shackling oneself to a base existence instead of striving for true spiritual ascendance.
 
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* it sets the monks apart from society, constantly reminding them they are held to a higher standard.
   
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* these voluntary limitations teach the monk discipline and allow him to focus his energy and attention on things of a spiritual, rather than secular, nature.
DAANA’D
 
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Immaculate monks speak of this symbolic structure as the Five Coils. They are not so prideful as to claim any control over where their soul actually stands—they simply find use in these five “levels” of devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy. A monk of higher Coils is expected to exemplify the ideas of the Order more than one of lower Coils, adhering to stricter requirements of behavior and service.
   
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The Five Coils were first described in The Gentle Rule, a text supposedly inspired by [[Daana’d]] that describes the proper running of monasteries, including the division of work, methods of dress and the like. All monks are expected to study The Gentle Rule.
Arbiter of the Immaculate Complaint Capricious and rebellious was Daana’d, the Immaculate of Water, a maiden from the Far West. Although many claim that their arrogant refusal to obey is in emulation of this Immaculate Dragon, the rebellious ways of Daana’d were not the result of such blind vanity. Rather, Daana’d understood the need within each being to be wholly sufficient within itself. She bowed her head to none, for those who wished her to do a thing were not enlightened until they did a thing themselves. Likewise, she did not seek for others to do things on her behalf, for she was the very embodiment of capability.
 
   
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The majority of a monk’s strictures are established when he takes his vows as a monk of the First Coil. Some of these strictures change as the monk increases in Coil, and to assume the strictures of a higher Coil is considered an act of vanity and presumption.
Although the Anathema sought to lure her into their thrall, she spurned them, eschewing the seductions they laid before her. She turned aside all offers of power and wealth, asking what followers of Daana’d call the Question of Virtue: “If I did not gain these things on my own virtue, do they have worth?” In all cases, the answer is a resounding No.
 
   
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==== FIRST COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •]) ====
When the Anathema were thrown down, it was Daana’d who swam to the bottom of the deepest sea to lock away the gate to the Underworld, preventing them from returning to trouble the world of man. Her followers teach that, in this action, she taught true freedom: the freedom of dependence upon the cycle of death and rebirth to enlighten one. Instead, the freedom-loving and self-suffi cient seeker might fi nd their enlightenment here and now.
 
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* '''Appearance''': A monk is required to shave his head, and keep it shaven, though may wear facial hair. Jewelry and tattoos are forbidden.
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* '''Celibacy''': A monk must take a vow of celibacy; sex is too great of a distraction from spiritual endeavors. Masturbation is allowed.
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* '''Diet''': Eat no red meat; consume no intoxicants or narcotics.
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* '''Poverty''': A monk must vow to own nothing. Even the clothing on his back belongs to the Order. Any money given to a monk of the Order, by tradition, has been given to the Order.
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* '''Vestments''': a simple hempen robe, belted with rope. The robe may be decorated with modest trim, which usually adheres to the traditions to which the monk belongs (monastic, temple or ascetic). The monk may also wear a broad-rimmed hat and sandals.
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* '''Name''': At the end of her time as a postulant, a monk of the First Coil is given a new name, meant to divorce her from her old life and reflect something of her inner nature. It is usually diminutive or even slightly embarrassing, such as “Cricket” for the high-jumper or “Little Brook” for the monk who can’t quite still her tongue.
   
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==== SECOND COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••]) ====
Daana’d’s mon is the Crashing Wave That Swallows, symbolic of the plunge one must take in accepting full responsibility for oneself, without reliance on others.
 
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* '''Diet''': consume no fowl, in addition to the dietary strictures of the First Coil.
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* '''Vestments''': As First Coil, save that the hempen robe is cinched up with a linen belt. This belt is generally undyed, unless the monk is a devotee of one of the Immaculate Dragons, in which case it may be black (Daana’d), white (Pasiap), blue (Mela), red (Hesiesh) or green (Sextes Jylis).
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* '''Name''': Upon being given the linen belt of the Second Coil, the monk may change his name. A monk may reclaim his birth or family name, though doing so is a sign that one’s family will still play a role in one’s life (though there is no stigma for doing so). Many monks ask a mentor or respected figure to name them. By tradition, this is a serious name, one that truly reflects the holy figure the monk is becoming.
   
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==== THIRD COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••]) ====
THE UNMANLY BABBLER
 
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This is the highest rank any non-Dragon Blood can achieve.
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* '''Diet''': consume no sweets, sorbets or coarse grains in addition to the former restrictions.
   
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* '''Status''': The monk may hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil, depending on the need for someone to hold such a position.
The Antithesis of Daana’d is the Unmanly Babbler. The Unmanly Babbler depends on others to do everything for him and fi nds his worth only in the praise of others. He cannot solve his own problems, and he whines until others do it for him. He cannot see that the true answer to every problem lies in his own Essence.
 
   
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* '''Title''': The monk is addressed by lessers as “Honored One” or “Reverend.” When their name is used, the prefix “Honored” is applied to it (“Honored Nine Rivers,” for instance). Only speakers within the Order need use these titles. Outsiders who wish to win favor might do so.
EMULATING DAANA’D
 
   
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* '''Vestments''': a robe of soft linen, often undyed, or dyed to reflect the monk’s devotion to a given [[Immaculate Dragon]]. He wears a belt of woven wool.
Mortals seek in Daana’d the inspiration for self-sufficiency.
 
   
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==== FOURTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••••]) ====
They understand that this is not selfi shness—those in need are not ignored. In fact, the truly enlightened seeker tries to inspire others to self-suffi ciency, aiding them where they are weak, that they may depend on themselves in the future.
 
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* '''Diet''': consume no meat whatsoever and drink nothing but tea and water in addition to former restrictions.
   
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* '''Exaltation''': Only the Dragon-Blooded hold ranking of the Fourth Coil.
Dragon-Blooded who truly follow Daana’d understand that all of the riches in the world are nothing before the ability to do for oneself. Those who truly seek to embody her Essence should work toward self-suffi ciency as complete as possible. Daana’d’s teachings are considered vital for Wateraspected Dragon-Blooded to overcome their faults, for their elemental nature inclines them toward dependence on social interaction and chains of command.
 
   
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* '''Status''': Should the need present itself, the monk may hold the position of lama. They are almost guaranteed to hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil.
HESIESH
 
   
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* '''Title''': The monk is addressed by lessers as “Most Enlightened Master,” and when his name is used, the prefix “Master” is applied to it.
Reciter of Loud Hymns and Effi cacious Prayers Though none ever saw Hesiesh use his mighty control of burning Essence, few who gazed upon his brilliant face could doubt the power contained within his frame. Like the paper of a lantern cover that is too close to the burning wick, the body of Hesiesh seemed as though it might ignite at any moment from the power within him.
 
   
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* '''Vestments''': As Third Coil, but the belt is made of silk.
Calm and reserved was Hesiesh, who understood that the proper fl ow of Essence should be continued in all things.
 
   
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==== FIFTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••••]) ====
Therefore, he never wasted his own personal power and was careful to render up the proper prayers to the Celestial Bureaucracy, that mortal Essence might be transubstantiated into divine power, all according to the intention of Creation.
 
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* '''Diet''': consume only rice, bread, vegetables, tea and water.
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* '''Status''': Most who hold the Fifth Coil are elder lamas. The Mouth of Peace and the Immaculate Paragons are all chosen from those who stand on the Fifth Coil.
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* '''Vestments''': The monk of the Fifth Coil wears a robe and belt of silk.
   
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=== THE MOUTH OF PEACE ===
The Anathema sought to lure Hesiesh into a battle frenzy, into exhausting his volatile Essence, but Hesiesh refused to take their clumsy bait. He battled according to the strength of his own limbs and the sharpness of his mind. When the battle was done and the Anathema lay as corpses waiting for the fall of night to rise up, confi dent that their foes had exhausted all of their Essence, only then did Hesiesh unleash his power, burning their bodies to pure, white ash.
 
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One of the most powerful people in the Realm, the Mouth of Peace acts as the conscience of the Scarlet Empress, counseling peaceful resolutions and the secularized search for enlightenment in all things. The position is named for the office’s traditional role in counseling the Dynasty against warfare. Because she sits so closely to the Empress, the Mouth of Peace acts as the secular-dealing head of the Immaculate Order. She takes on such things as the disbursement of imperial funds to the Immaculate Order, situations where the Immaculate Order and imperial government or Great Houses clash and a variety of other circumstances.
   
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It is the intent of the Immaculate Order that the spiritual leadership of the Order, the five Immaculate Paragons, be disturbed with secular, mundane matters as little as possible. As a result, though, the Mouth of Peace wields quite a bit of power, for she is generally the primary contact and point of authority between the Immaculate Order and the secular world. In fact, those outside the Order generally assume that the Mouth of Peace is the leadership for this massive faith (which is mostly true).
Hesiesh’s mon is the Three Candles Lighting Darkness, symbolic of the sudden fl are of power and enlightenment that comes from the timely application of proper resources and behavior.
 
   
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The Mouth of Peace is considered a sacrificial figure, a being of great enlightenment and spiritual power who makes the sacrifice of sullying herself with the necessity of involvement in politics, secularism and mundane tasks. It is understood she does these things so that others—particularly the Immaculate Paragons—do not have to. Nonetheless, few are granted permission to see her in her Contemplative Chamber atop one of the towers of the Palace Sublime. Only high-ranking members of the Dynasty, the elders of [[House Iselsi]] (who have taken sanctuary in the Palace Sublime), the Sidereals, and highly placed members of the Immaculate Order are permitted audiences.
THE ILLIBERAL CHURL
 
 
The Antithesis of Hesiesh is the Illiberal Churl, who observes tradition because it is expected of him. The Illiberal Churl does not see the Essence at the heart of hallowed ways. He retains himself out of deep selfi shness, rather than restraint.
 
 
EMULATING HESIESH
 
 
Mortals seek in Hesiesh the inspiration for tradition and an understanding of the past, though not a slavish devotion to old ways. They seek only genuine contemplation of these methods, adhering to them because they save time and energy.
 
 
Tradition becomes tradition because it works. Followers of Hesiesh uphold tradition and precedent and are the ones most involved in the Immaculate Order’s catechism.
 
 
Dragon-Blooded who truly follow Hesiesh understand that in tradition lies success. Innovation for innovation’s sake is simply vain. Honoring those who came before and maintaining tradition is key to such devotees. Hesiesh’s teachings are considered vital for Fire-aspected Dragon-Blooded, for their fiery Essence inclines them toward swift action and personal vainglory. In the hallowed, reverent traditions and solemn contemplation of Hesiesh are Fire Aspects enlightened.
 
 
MELA
 
 
Petitioner of Clouds Accordant to the Call of Battle The eldest of the Immaculate Dragons, called Resplendent in Perfection, Mela was a mighty warrior. Strong in body, mind, spirit and Essence, Mela taught those around her to settle for no less than personal perfection. A warrior-savant without peer, Mela was the very embodiment of glory.
 
 
Mela was never content to rest on her laurels, always seeking greater and greater tests for herself. She accepted that glory was the due of the successful and skilled, but she did not seek accolades, for they were ultimately empty. Accolades did not stand between Mela and the Anathema in the dusk of the First Age—only her perfection did.
 
 
Mela’s battles with the Anathema were many and well lauded. She oft arrived at the forefront of a storm, driving aside the puling, corruptive fi res of the Anathema and blanketing the battlefi eld in cold, pure mists and wind. To Mela, victory was the natural course of events to those who strove the greatest. What foe could hope to equal the challenges that a truly righteous heroine might lay before herself?
 
 
Mela’s mon is the Transcendent Fan of the Five Winds, a reminder that, while nature brings wind, those who are strong and cunning may bring it for themselves.
 
 
THE SICKLY WHORE
 
 
The Antithesis of Mela is the Sickly Whore, who is beauteous and glorious to behold, but who uses that glory for the degradation of self and others. The Sickly Whore collects the accolades that are the favors of her many lovers, allowing the world to use her for pleasure in return for cheap, empty baubles.
 
 
EMULATING MELA
 
 
Mortals seek in Mela the drive toward perfection. Mela, who taught men how to wield Essence even though they were not Exalted, believed that in the pursuit of perfection in this lifetime, a man might better prepare his spirit for the time between lives. Mela’s teachings allow men to understand that virtuous action and striving toward perfection give them leave to claim a place closer to the Dragons themselves in the next incarnation.
 
 
Dragon-Blooded who truly follow Mela understand that glory is hollow and fl eeting, and only in the perfection of oneself and one’s Essence is lasting enlightenment found. The teachings of Mela are considered valuable to Air-aspected Dragon-Blooded, whose mercurial Essence lends to them an air of either extreme focus in one area or useless dilettantism.
 
 
Going halfway in either direction is unacceptable.
 
 
The Dragon-Blooded Host should aspire toward perfection in all things.
 
 
PASIAP
 
 
He Who Illuminates Both Worlds with Majesty and Power The great warrior Pasiap was a pillar of strength in the war against the Anathema. Never did he turn from the fi eld in fear, nor did he succumb to the Anathema’s taunts with fury. In all instances, it was said that Pasiap had only to place himself so that his back was to the Imperial Mountain, and it was clear to all who saw him that he stood at the Center of All Creation: unmovable, resolute, strong and enduring.
 
 
Pasiap taught his followers that there was no difference between the Essence of the self and the Essence of Creation.
 
 
Did not the Exalted and gods draw into themselves the power of the dragon lines? Control of one’s Essence led to control of the Essence around one. Likewise, in shaping the things of the world, the shaper was himself shaped.
 
 
Time and again the Anathema tried to destroy Pasiap.
 
 
When he proved too mighty, they instead threw down those things he had created, in hopes of driving him to anger or despair. The Immaculate Texts say that he but smiled and thanked his foes for the chance to build again. When the wars against the Anathema drew to a close, Pasiap remained incarnate to teach men the ways of controlling the Essence of the earth. He is considered the father of geomancy, where once that art was the sole province of the Exalted and Anathema.
 
 
Pasiap’s mon is the Omphalos Triumphant, the symbol of the Imperial Mountain, the center upon which all of Creation is balanced, the spoke between Heaven and the lands of mortals, reminding the Dragon-Blooded that they, too, must act to join the propriety of Heaven with the realities of Creation.
 
 
THE OSTENTATIOUS PEASANT
 
 
The Antithesis of Pasiap is the Ostentatious Peasant, who does not understand that the true glory in fi ne possessions is not in the having of them, but in the making. The solid, honest work ethic evades the Ostentatious Peasant, who sees only the riches of those around him without seeing the hard work they have put into acquiring them. The Ostentatious Peasant sees only the rewards of hard work, rather than the enlightenment that is effort’s true reward.
 
 
EMULATING PASIAP
 
 
In Pasiap, mortals fi nd that the reward for hard work isn’t luxury—it is the enlightenment of a job done well and with care. Architects and builders revere Pasiap, whose gift to them is the knowledge that, with every brick they lay and every wall they stand, the sweat of their brow has firmed their tread on the path to enlightenment.
 
 
Dragon-Blooded who truly follow Pasiap understand that the wealth of the Great Houses is nothing if it does not reflect the hard work and dedication of those who possess it. The wealthy are to be admired, but only if what they have reflects their resolute effort. Earth-aspected Dragon-Blooded are often taught to curb their Essence-driven pride and focus on things of the material world that are the bane of those who would be enlightened. But rather than eschewing it, they are reminded that it should stand for something. Wealth and respect are the natural result of hard work, nothing more.
 
 
SEXTES JYLIS
 
 
He Who Hath Strewn Much Grass Compassionate Sextes Jylis was loved by all the people of Creation. Kind and unwilling to see those around him suffer, Sextes Jylis could not bear the pain caused by the Anathema. Sextes Jylis is the responsible healer, who bears great knowledge and the potential to do great harm. Yet, he is willing to do a small, immediate harm to prevent a greater one, and thus, Sextes Jylis, Beloved of Creation, raised his bow against the Anathema.
 
 
It was not in war, but in the peace that followed, that the followers of Sextes Jylis take their inspiration in his story. The Immaculate of Wood wandered Creation after the destruction of the Anathema, rebuilding toppled mountains and setting fallen trees aright. To the wounded, he brought relief of pain and healing, and to destroyed fi elds, he spread clean, new grass.
 
 
Though the Anathema sought to corrupt Sextes Jylis into using his powers irresponsibly, he could not be tempted.
 
 
He knew that the rash use of the great and terrible power that was his legacy could bring disaster and ruin, and he dedicated himself to uplifting Creation. The Anathema could not understand his ways, and so failed.
 
 
Sextes Jylis’ mon is the Leaf Upraised in Vigor, the emblem of growth, renewal and life, symbolic of the first plants to arise from the shattered fields of battle.
 
 
THE INCONSIDERATE HORSEMAN
 
 
The Antithesis of Sextes Jylis is the Inconsiderate Horseman, who is neglectful and short-sighted. This horseman does not take the time to go around the fi eld he encounters, instead trampling it under his mount’s hooves simply because he is in a hurry and has the power to do so.
 
 
EMULATING SEXTES JYLIS
 
 
Mortals seek in Sextes Jylis the inspiration for mindful action and compassion. To take rash action is to risk trampling the fi ne things of life and to risk harming those who have done nothing to deserve it. In mindful action, a job may take a little longer for one man, perhaps, but if it brings joy to two, then surely that is a wiser investment.
 
 
Dragon-Blooded who truly follow Sextes Jylis understand that compassion is the source of happiness, both to those who give it and those who receive it, but it must be tempered by responsible forethought. The teachings of Sextes Jylis are considered valuable to Wood-aspected Dragon-Blooded, for whom the verdant Essence of their aspect lures them into either the fulfi llment of needs immediately and rashly or moves them to crippling pity for living things around them.
 
 
Enlightenment comes through balance.
 
 
THE IMMACULATE PHILOSOPHY
 
 
The Immaculate Order emphasizes several core concepts to those who would follow its teachings. There are fi ve Noble Insights that all students must understand and internalize in order to be truly counted among the faithful. It also teaches the fi ve Diligent Practices that the faithful must undertake in order to embody the teachings of the Order. Through Noble Insight and Diligent Practice, an adherent to the Immaculate Philosophy is ennobled and elevated, made closer to the perfection of the Immaculate Dragons.
 
 
THE NOBLE INSIGHTS
 
 
The core concepts of Immaculate belief are signified by the Noble Insights. These concepts are absolute across Immaculate orthodoxy. All sub-traditions of the Immaculate Philosophy believe these to be true, though they might not all agree on the best ways in which to incorporate them and might have differing conclusions about them. Ultimately, the Noble Insights teach Cooperation, Reincarnation and Perfection.
 
 
THE FIRST NOBLE INSIGHT
 
 
All beings in Creation are constantly dying and being reborn, ascending and descending the Road of Enlightenment. Those who are Exalted are very close to the end of the Road, while insects and plants are near the beginning. Most sentient mortals are somewhere near the middle.
 
 
To mortals, this Insight is essential for understanding their place in Creation. The First Noble Insight brings clarity and an understanding of one’s place. Only those who understand their intended role may successfully perform that role.
 
 
Likewise, this Insight is what gives the Dragon-Blooded the right to rule in matters both secular and religious. Exalted adherents are taught, however, that this isn’t privilege, but responsibility. Even those Exalted to the Dragons have not completed their walk. It is simply that the heights of the journey are in sight.
 
 
THE SECOND NOBLE INSIGHT
 
 
As beings approach the end of the Road, they approach the infinite perfection of Essence that is the Elemental Dragons, who hold Creation together.
 
 
To mortals, this is the promise of one day Exalting as part of the Dragon-Blooded Host, and of being born into one of the Great Houses. Literally, this is the promise of a fine, high life of wealth and power for those who live according to the Perfected Hierarchy. It is also the unspoken agreement between lord and peasant: Obedience to the nobility is not simply expected, but a compact through successive lives. If a lord does not behave in ways appropriate to his station, he will not return as a lord. Likewise, if a peasant is faithful, respectful and obedient, he will be rewarded for this diligence by being elevated to a higher station in the next life.
 
 
To the Dragon-Blooded, this Insight emphasizes the importance of their position. They are not merely powerful overlords—they share in the power and responsibility of holding together the very fabric of Creation. Those who do not hold to this ultimate responsibility will not be reborn to it, until they prove themselves after lifetimes of mortality.
 
 
THE THIRD NOBLE INSIGHT
 
 
Working in solitude and striving to surpass their lot in life, all beings in Creation draw away from the perfection of the Elemental Dragons. Working together and accepting their present incarnations, all beings in Creation mimic the Elemental Dragons and approach their perfection.
 
 
To mortals, this is the understanding that in acceptance comes enlightenment. By acknowledging their place in society and working hard to best master their skills and succeed in what is expected of them, they work to hold the very fabric of Creation together. By doing so—by fi nding holiness and perfection in even being a humble street-sweeper, for instance—mortals can prove their dedication to Creation and earn a greater responsibility over it in successive lives.
 
 
To the Dragon-Blooded, this is an admonition to work toward building civilization and empire. Allowing chaos and strife to enter into a thing of great order opens the gates to the Wyld, allowing it to erode the very fabric of Creation.
 
 
It is why a cruel and dishonest Dragon-Blood who works within the system is more highly regarded than a kind and wise one who departs to live his life alone somewhere in the Threshold.
 
 
THE FOURTH NOBLE INSIGHT
 
 
The Dragon-Blooded, who were the disciples and children of the mortal incarnations of the Elemental Dragons, are leading the Immaculates toward that degree of perfection.
 
 
To mortals, this Insight is what grants the Dragon-Blooded families the right to rule. It is proper to follow those who are the children of the Immaculate Dragons. Who better to teach how to properly emulate the Dragons but their own children? It is also proper to follow the wisest. By dint of their Exaltations and long lives, the Dragon-Blooded are the ones who are wise in drawing closer to the Essence of the Immaculate Dragons.
 
 
To the Exalted of the Dragons, this is the statement of utmost responsibility. It is why the Immaculate Order frowns on greedy and intemperate Dynastic Dragon-Blooded, for they are not providing proper examples. It is too easy for base human nature to poison the carefully gathered wisdom and enlightenment of lifetimes of service with such distractions.
 
 
Dragon-Blooded who are not aware of their duty in leading mortals toward behavior that will elevate them are not worthy of their Exaltation.
 
 
THE FIFTH NOBLE INSIGHT
 
 
The Anathema, who reject the Elemental Dragons and obey only their own ambitions, are drawing Creation toward despair and ruin.
 
 
To mortals, this is precautionary. To obey one’s own selfish ambition is the way of the Anathema, who are demons. The faithful of the Immaculate Order are taught to expect the Anathema to be glorious and winsome. They are demons in their ultimate aims, not in their direct actions. They might heal, teach and praise mortals, but ultimately, they are feeding their own ambition. They pull men and women away from their proper role in this lifetime, away from lessons that the soul must learn on its way to Exaltation.
 
 
To the Dragon-Blooded, this Insight is the basis for the Wyld Hunt. If, as the Children of the Dragons, they acknowledge that they share in the responsibility for keeping Creation whole and sound, then they must fi ght against that which would destabilize it.
 
 
THE DILIGENT PRACTICES
 
 
The Diligent Practices provide the framework for correct action in the Immaculate Philosophy. Simple belief is not enough—the faithful live their beliefs through correct action.
 
 
THE FIRST DILIGENT PRACTICE
 
 
Hear a recital of an Immaculate Text at least once a month, in the company of at least 17 other followers of the Philosophy. In hearing the words of the Immaculate Dragons and those who were closest to them, the faithful discover words of wisdom when they need them. The sutras that make up the Immaculate Texts are not simply words of spirituality, they apply to all elements of the life of mortals. They act as a guide toward the Higher Road that leads to Exaltation.
 
 
The requirement that the Immaculate Text be heard in the company of others emphasizes that community and commonality are the foremost practices of the devoted. By working together to understand their purpose, mortals and Exalted alike grow to understand their respective places in Creation, which strengthens the ties of Creation itself.
 
 
THE SECOND DILIGENT PRACTICE
 
 
Respect and honor spirits only according to the calendar and in the specifi c rites set down by the Immaculate Order, giving each spirit its due only insofar as it serves the harmony of Creation.
 
 
Worship no spirit, elemental, small god or Anathema at all. As the ties that hold Creation together, it is the proper duty of mortals to contribute to the power of the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies. But the gods and spirits of the world do not have the right to rule the lives of mortals. Gods have their duties as surely as mortals and Exalts do, and to try to gather power over things that are not under their aegis is wrong and prideful. Therefore, the Immaculate Order is careful to shield mortals from the undue infl uence of godly beings.
 
 
The Immaculate Order teaches that the Dragon-Blooded are the only ones spiritually strong enough to deal with powerful gods and spirits without being corrupted by them. Therefore, it is forbidden for mortals to engage in actual worship of individual gods. Instead, mortals may participate in the rites that glorify the gods as a whole, while Dragon-Blooded monks tend to the individual rites of the Hundred Gods (the name for the multitude of divinities in Creation and Heaven).
 
 
For this reason, the Immaculate Order is aniconic. The mistrust of animal symbols dates back to the First Age, when many animals were associated with the cults of the Unconquered Sun or Luna, and it has evolved into a general cultural prohibition against the depiction of gods. Only in the temples of those gods may statuary or depictions be erected, and they may be shown only when a Dragon-Blooded monk is performing their rites. All other times, they are locked away and hidden from view.
 
 
It is also considered ill luck to depict the Immaculate Dragons, who are best represented with their simple mon symbols. There is no prohibition against depiction of the Elemental Dragons, however, for they are so transcendent that human worship is irrelevant.
 
 
THE THIRD DILIGENT PRACTICE
 
 
Imitate in word and deed the honorable behaviors of the five Immaculate Dragons, the mortal incarnations of the Dragons of the Elements. Emulate the thoughts appropriate to your incarnation as decreed by the Immaculate Dragons.
 
 
This is the core for all morality and ethical behavior to adherents of the Immaculate Philosophy. Mortals are expected to try to emulate all of the Immaculate Dragons, when and where they can. Self-reliance, adherence to tradition and restraint, compassion, the search for perfection, the holiness of hard work: These are the true virtues of the Immaculate adherent.
 
 
The Dragon-Blooded are assumed, by tradition, to emulate one Immaculate Dragon above others. Most of the time, this is the Dragon that corresponds to their aspect. A Fire Aspect manifests spiritual spontaneity and rebelliousness in his very anima, so the teachings of Hesiesh will likely benefit him the most. Sometimes, however, that is not the case. In some instances, a monk might suggest to a Dragon-Blood that she seek out the teachings of one of the other Immaculate Dragons.
 
 
THE FOURTH DILIGENT PRACTICE
 
 
Obey the Dragon-Blooded, who are the descendants and disciples of the Immaculate Dragons and are so close to enlightenment that their commands cannot cause a soul to stray from the Road.
 
 
There are those among the Dragon-Blooded who claim that this Diligent Practice demonstrates the innate righteousness of the Dragon-Blooded. Certainly, that is what the Immaculate Order teaches the un-Exalted who follow its beliefs. In truth, though, those Dragon-Blooded who learn anything about the Immaculate Faith are taught that this Diligent Practice does not mean that all of the Terrestrial Exalted’s whims and commands are righteous. It simply means that while one of the Princes of the Earth may command a man to take unrighteous action, men will not be led astray by obeying that command. It is the proper place of mortals to obey the Exalted, and in the fulfi llment of that destiny, men draw closer to the Essence of the Dragons.
 
 
The Immaculate Order emphasizes to its Exalted adherents, however, that they are still responsible for making sure that their commands are righteous and proper, in keeping with the proper order of Creation. In short, while the commands that one of the Dragon-Blooded Host gives to a mortal cannot draw that mortal away from enlightenment, it can pull the Dragon-Blood further from it.
 
 
THE FIFTH DILIGENT PRACTICE
 
 
Resist the commands of the Anathema to the fullest degree of the abilities of your present incarnation, and do not fall into despair.
 
 
This Diligent Practice emphasizes two things: the understanding of the terrible sway of the Anathema, and the fact that mortals have only so much resistance to them. For this reason, the Immaculate Order considers those mortals who follow the Anathema to be as much victims as those the Anathema slay. In either case, what can mere mortals do to stymie the will of such demons?
 
 
Of course, by this token, those Dragon-Blooded who fall to the sway of the Anathema are responsible for their own weakness. They carry the Essence of the Dragons and are heirs to the blood of those who overthrew the Anathema once, at the height of their power. The Immaculate Order’s orthodoxy has no pity for those who fail to resist the demons, though those who have actually encountered the Anathema before are more likely to understand, given the power of the demons that possess them.
 
 
THE ORDER OF IMMACULATE DRAGONS
 
 
The faith of the Immaculate Dragons is administered by the Order of Immaculate Dragons, a religion with monastic and temple-based traditions, as well as ascetic and itinerant off-shoots. The acknowledged heads of the Order of Immaculate Dragons are the Dragon-Blooded, and this is accepted as right and proper. After all, those who will outlive mortals by entire generations should be in the position to apply the long wisdom they gain.
 
 
BECOMING AN IMMACULATE
 
 
The process of joining the Immaculate Order as one of its monks is long and arduous. A would-be monk must present himself to the monks of the subdued Procession of Gray, the small, unassuming monastery in the heart of the Temple District of the Imperial City. The Procession of Gray is a standard monastery, with one difference. At any given time, its courtyard may be packed with kneeling postulants, clad in the gray robes of their station. These postulants seek only to be noticed by the Paragon of Sextes Jylis from the window of his offi ce that overlooks the courtyard or on her way to the Scarlet Chapel in the Imperial Palace.
 
 
The Paragon of Sextes Jylis notices everything, it seems. Those who come to the Procession of Gray must not arrive with their heads already shaven. To do so is to suggest that one is already suited for the Order, and only the Paragon of Sextes Jylis may make that decision. Those who come from powerful families are likely to wait the longest, especially the Exalted, who are expected to exceed the mortals around them in their capacity to withstand the rigors of fasting, lack of sleep and constant kneeling on the cobblestones of the courtyard.
 
 
Occasionally, monks require that postulants aid them in some small task. Afterward, they are expected to return to their places. At night, all postulants are shown to a single dormitory overseen by a monk, there to sleep on bare wooden fl oors until just before dawn. When they are not sleeping or assisting monks, postulants are expected to remain kneeling in the courtyard. In the middle of the day, they are brought a single shallow bowl of rice to eat; water is brought to them four times a day. Most postulants continue this process for a few days, but it is not unheard of for it to go on for weeks for those the Paragon suspects may still be wrestling with pride, particularly Dragon-Blooded postulants.
 
 
All it takes is a nod from the Paragon as she passes on her way to tend to important business to make a postulant an acolyte. When this happens, the monks around the Paragon hurry to the side of the new acolyte, to take him into the inner adytum of the Procession of Gray, where he is given a meal of rice, chicken and fruit and a small cup of watered wine. After this meal, the head of a new acolyte is shaved completely. He is thereafter given a freezing cold ritual bath of cleansing and an acolyte’s robe. At this time, the monk attending him gives him a new name, and the new acolyte takes his oath of service.
 
 
THE PILGRIMAGE
 
 
New acolytes are given a week to recuperate from the ordeal of the postulant and to learn the basic sutras and martial-arts stances required of all novice monks. After this time, regardless of the season, a new monk is expected to undertake the pilgrimage by foot from the Imperial City down the Great Coast Road to the Palace Sublime, in Incas Prefecture. Acolytes are given only their robes, a walking staff and a begging bowl with which to beg for food or money to buy food along the way.
 
 
This is often a humbling experience for monks, especially for those who come from Dynastic or patrician families. These pilgrims are forbidden from using Essence or force to get their food, and they certainly may not break any laws. The communities between the Imperial City and the Palace Sublime are accustomed to these begging monks and are willing to give food to those who are suffi ciently humble. But a new monk, even one with Dragon-Blooded heritage, who approaches the task of begging with arrogance or expectation is in for a rude shock.
 
 
Finally, after weeks of travel by foot and by begging rides with those who have wagons, the new acolyte arrives at the Palace Sublime. He is taken in, fed, bathed and his head shaved again. He is given any medical attention that may be necessary from his long and arduous trip and given a place in the monks’ cells as a monk of the First Coil.
 
 
THE COILS OF THE IMMACULATE ORDER
 
 
The Immaculate Order teaches that the Road of Enlightenment wraps around and around, like the long, sinuous body of a dragon coiled around a great pillar. In the normal process of living, a being remains where he stands on this winding Road, moving perhaps a few steps up or down.
 
 
Those who dedicate themselves to the Immaculate Dragons, however, may advance greatly in their place.
 
 
Through diligent service and practice of the Immaculate Philosophy, they can move their spirits not simply one or two steps along the path, but up to the spiral of the road, or coil of the dragon, above where they now stand. The behaviors of the various Coils are required for several reasons. The fi rst is to set the monks apart from the rest of society, constantly reminding them that they are held to a higher standard. Secondly, these voluntary limitations teach the monk discipline and allow him to focus his energy and attention on things of a spiritual, rather than secular, nature.
 
 
Many of the things that provoke lust, greed and envy are forbidden the Immaculate monk.
 
 
Immaculate monks speak of this symbolic structure as the Five Coils. They are not so prideful as to claim to have any control over where a monk’s soul actually stands—they simply find use in these five “levels” of devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy. A monk of higher Coils is expected to exemplify the ideas of the Order more than one of lower Coils, adhering to stricter requirements of behavior and service. The Five Coils were first described in The Gentle Rule, a text supposedly inspired by Daana’d that describes the proper running of monasteries, including the division of work, methods of dress and the like. All monks are expected to study The Gentle Rule.
 
 
FIRST COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •])
 
 
The majority of a monk’s strictures are established when he takes his vows as a monk of the First Coil. It should be noted that some of these strictures change as the monk increases in Coil, and to assume the strictures of a higher Coil is considered an act of vanity and presumption.
 
 
Appearance: A monk of the First Coil is required to shave his head, and keep it shaven, though the monk may wear facial hair. Such monks are forbidden jewelry and tattoos.
 
 
Celibacy: A monk of the First Coil must take a vow of celibacy, under the belief that sex is too great of a distraction and lure from the spiritual endeavors of a true Immaculate. Masturbation is not forbidden, however.
 
 
Diet: The strictures of the First Coil forbid the eating of red meat and the consumption of intoxicants or narcotics.
 
 
Name: At the end of her time as a postulant, a monk of the First Coil is given a new name, one meant to divorce her from her old life and reflect something of her inner nature. It is usually a diminutive or even slightly embarrassing name, such as “Cricket” for the high-jumper or “Little Brook” for the monk who can’t quite still her tongue.
 
 
Poverty: A monk of the First Coil takes an oath of poverty, vowing to own nothing. Even the clothing on his back belongs to the Order. Any money given to a monk of the Order, by tradition, has been given to the Order.
 
 
Vestments: The garb of the First Coil is a simple hempen robe, belted with rope. The robe may be decorated with modest trim, which usually adheres to the traditions to which the monk belongs (monastic, temple or ascetic). The monk may also wear a broad-rimmed hat and sandals.
 
 
SECOND COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••])
 
 
All of the strictures from the First Coil remain in effect, with the following exceptions:
 
 
Diet: A monk of the Second Coil is expected to consume no fowl, in addition to the dietary strictures of the First Coil.
 
 
Name: Upon being given the linen belt of the Second Coil, the monk may change his name. A monk may reclaim his birth or family name, though doing so is a sign that one’s family will still play a role in one’s life (though there is no stigma for doing so). Many monks ask a mentor or respected figure to name them. By tradition, this is a serious name, one that truly refl ects the holy fi gure the monk is becoming.
 
 
Vestments: As First Coil, save that the hempen robe is cinched up with a linen belt. This belt is generally undyed, unless the monk is a devotee of one of the Immaculate Dragons, in which case it may be black (Daana’d), white (Pasiap), blue (Mela), red (Hesiesh) or green (Sextes Jylis).
 
 
THIRD COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••])
 
 
All of the strictures from the Second Coil remain in effect, with the following exceptions:
 
 
Diet: A monk of the Third Coil is expected to consume no sweets, sorbets or coarse grains in addition to the restrictions of the First and Second Coils.
 
 
Status: The monk may hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil, depending on the need for someone to hold such a position and the tradition in which the monk works.
 
 
Title: The monk is addressed by lessers as “Honored One” or “Reverend,” and when his name is used, the prefi x “Honored” is applied to it (“Honored Nine Rivers,” for instance). Only speakers within the Order need use these titles, though those outsiders who wish to win favor might do so.
 
 
Vestments: The monk of the Third Coil may wear a robe of soft linen, often left undyed, or dyed to refl ect the monk’s devotion to a given Immaculate Dragon. He wears a belt of woven wool.
 
 
FOURTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••••])
 
 
All of the strictures from the Third Coil remain in effect, with the following exceptions: Diet: A monk of the Fourth Coil is expected to consume no meat whatsoever and to drink nothing but tea and water, while continuing the strictures from the First through Third Coils.
 
 
Exaltation: Only the Dragon-Blooded hold ranking of the Fourth Coil.
 
 
Status: Should the need for such present itself, the monk of the Fourth Coil may hold the position of lama. The monk is almost guaranteed to hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil.
 
 
Title: The monk is addressed by lessers as “Most Enlightened Master,” and when his name is used, the prefix “Master” is applied to it.
 
 
Vestments: As Third Coil, but the belt is made of silk.
 
 
FIFTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••••])
 
 
All the strictures from the Fourth Coil remain in effect, with the following exceptions:
 
 
Diet: A monk of the Fifth Coil consumes only rice, bread, vegetables, tea and water.
 
 
Status: Most who hold the Fifth Coil are elder lamas. The Mouth of Peace and the Immaculate Paragons are all
 
 
chosen from those who stand on the Fifth Coil.
 
 
Vestments: The monk of the Fifth Coil wears a robe and belt of silk.
 
 
THE MOUTH OF PEACE
 
 
One of the most powerful people in the Realm, the Mouth of Peace acts as the conscience of the Scarlet Empress, counseling peaceful resolutions and the secularized search for enlightenment in all things. The position is named for the offi ce’s traditional role in counseling the Dynasty against warfare. Because she sits so closely to the Empress, the Mouth of Peace also acts as the secular-dealing head of the Immaculate Order. She takes on such things as the disbursement of imperial funds to the Immaculate Order, situations where the Immaculate Order and imperial government or Great Houses clash and a variety of other circumstances.
 
 
It is the intent of the Immaculate Order that the spiritual leadership of the Order, the fi ve Immaculate Paragons, be disturbed with secular, mundane matters as little as possible. As a result, though, the Mouth of Peace wields quite a bit of power, for she is generally the primary contact and point of authority between the Immaculate Order and the secular world. In fact, those outside the Order generally assume that the Mouth of Peace is the leadership for this massive faith (which is mostly true).
 
 
The Mouth of Peace is considered a sacrifi cial fi gure, a being of great enlightenment and spiritual power who makes the sacrifi ce of sullying herself with the necessity of involvement in politics, secularism and mundane tasks. It is understood that she does these things so that others—particularly the Immaculate Paragons—do not have to. Nonetheless, few are those who are granted permission to see her in her Contemplative Chamber atop one of the towers of the Palace Sublime. Only high-ranking members of the Dynasty, the elders of House Iselsi (who have taken up sanctuary in the Palace Sublime), the Sidereals and highly placed members of the Immaculate Order are permitted audiences.
 
   
 
The Mouth of Peace is expected to give up everything when she assumes the role: all political connections, family ties, friendships. The one who is made the Mouth of Peace even surrenders her name, for the Immaculate Order teaches that the Mouth of Peace should be a single entity, throughout the history of the Immaculate Order. The Mouth of Peace does not speak out against the actions of previous Mouths of Peace, but is expected to act in accordance with them.
 
The Mouth of Peace is expected to give up everything when she assumes the role: all political connections, family ties, friendships. The one who is made the Mouth of Peace even surrenders her name, for the Immaculate Order teaches that the Mouth of Peace should be a single entity, throughout the history of the Immaculate Order. The Mouth of Peace does not speak out against the actions of previous Mouths of Peace, but is expected to act in accordance with them.
   
The current Mouth of Peace is an Earth Aspect formerly of House Mnemon. Of course, this family tie does Mnemon herself very little good. In fact, it is a source of aggravation that this granddaughter of hers will not accede to her ambitions and aid her. The Mouth of Peace has also refused Mnemon’s attempts to have the heart of the Immaculate Order moved to within the walls of the Imperial City. Her predecessor was a scion of House Iselsi who never truly abandoned her House affiliation (resulting in, among other things, her murder at the hands of unknown forces when the House was finally officially dismantled in RY 570). The current Mouth of Peace, however, has created a defi nitive separation between her origins and her role, so she will not move the entire Order for political reasons. She has also begun some traditions that are likely to continue with successive Mouths of Peace, including the tendency to leave the Contemplative Chamber in disguise once every few years or so and travel the Realm incognito to ascertain the spiritual state of her people.
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The current Mouth of Peace is an Earth Aspect formerly of [[House Mnemon]]. This family tie does [[Mnemon]] little good which is a source of aggravation that her granddaughter will not accede to her ambitions and aid her. The Mouth of Peace has also refused Mnemon’s attempts to have the heart of the Immaculate Order moved within the walls of the Imperial City.
   
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Her predecessor was a scion of [[House Iselsi]] who never truly abandoned her House affiliation (resulting in her murder at the hands of unknown forces when the House was officially dismantled in RY 570). The current Mouth of Peace, however, has created a definitive separation between her origins and her role, so she will not move the entire Order for political reasons. She has also begun some traditions that are likely to continue with successive Mouths of Peace, including the tendency to leave the Contemplative Chamber in disguise once every few years or so and travel the Realm incognito to ascertain the spiritual state of her people.
THE IMMACULATE PARAGONS
 
   
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=== THE IMMACULATE PARAGONS ===
In terms of hierarchy, the fi ve Immaculate Paragons are beneath the Mouth of Peace, but this is for a simple reason: The top of a hierarchical structure is, of necessity, a political one, and the true spiritual leaders of the Immaculate Order should be distanced from such things. The Immaculate Paragons are considered living saints and bodhisattvas, men and women of Exaltation so potent it marks everything they do.
 
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In terms of hierarchy, the five Immaculate Paragons are beneath the Mouth of Peace, but for a simple reason: The top of a hierarchical structure is, of necessity, a political one, and the true spiritual leaders of the Immaculate Order should be distanced from such things. The Immaculate Paragons are considered living saints and bodhisattvas, men and women of Exaltation so potent it marks everything they do. They are Dragon-Blooded whose Essence transcends the normal heights of the Dragon-Blooded, they literally wear the element of their Exaltation on their bodies. Such souls are taught to be close to unity with the Dragons once more. The Immaculate Paragons are acknowledged as greatly compassionate souls who have delayed this unity in order to help elevate the rest of mankind.
   
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When an Immaculate monk is recognized as one of the Immaculate Paragons, he abandons all old ties of tradition and House, should he retain any. Unlike the Mouth of Peace, each Paragon should be remembered by the Order, so they take names reflective of the lessons they see themselves as having to teach Creation and the faithful. That way, simply by speaking their names, their message and teachings are remembered.
Invariably, these are some of the few Dragon-Blooded whose Essence transcends the normal heights of the Dragon-Blooded, so that they literally wear the element of their Exaltation on their bodies. Such souls are taught to be close to unity with the Dragons once more. The Immaculate Paragons are acknowledged as greatly compassionate souls who have delayed this unity in order to help elevate the rest of mankind.
 
   
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The Paragons are always Dragon-Blooded, with an aspect appropriate to the Dragon that they serve. They are all masters of at least one of the elemental styles (again, of the aspect appropriate to the Dragon they emulate), and most are masters of multiple ones.
When an Immaculate monk is recognized as one of the Immaculate Paragons, he abandons all old ties of tradition and House, should he retain any. Unlike the Mouth of Peace, however, each Paragon should be remembered by the Order, so they take names refl ective of the lessons they see themselves as having to teach Creation and the faithful.
 
   
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=== LAMAS ===
That way, simply by speaking their names, their message and teachings are remembered.
 
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Beneath the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons are the Lamas - wise monks with years of experience and leadership to their credit. All lamas are Dragon-Blooded, and are assigned to a Cloister or Temple (depending on the individual) to help supervise their Traditions. In this role, they are expected to know what is going on in their territories, that they may counsel the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons properly. In theory, there must be at least one lama for each geographical region and satrapy, but this isn’t always the case (particularly away from the Blessed Isle). A lama is supposed to spend half of every year in the geographical region he oversees and the other half at the Palace Sublime.
   
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In addition to these duties, every Lama must learn to balance the political demands of the Mouth of Peace against the enlightened Paragons - frequently a very difficult task to accomplish. Outsiders wonder why it isn’t made simpler—why is there no definitive chain of command? The wise know the answer to this, however. A lama’s first master should be his own wisdom, balancing the needs of the secular world with the demands of enlightenment.
The Paragons are always Dragon-Blooded, with an aspect appropriate to the Dragon that they serve. They are all masters of at least one of the elemental styles (again, of the aspect appropriate to the Dragon they emulate), and most of them are masters of multiple ones
 
   
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=== THE CLOISTER TRADITION ===
THE PARAGON OF DAANA’D
 
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Nearly half of all monks follow this tradition. Rather than acting as intercessors for the people, the cloister tradition teaches Immaculates to sequester themselves from the bustle of daily life in remote monasteries. In these places of serenity, the cloistered monk may focus on his Essence and its development, seeking to emulate the Immaculate Dragons—who moved through life remaining apart from the banality of the mundane world—as close as anyone can.
   
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In the Immaculate Order, the cloistered monks serve a valuable purpose. It is from cloistered monasteries that most copies of the sutras come, as one of the tasks undertaken by these men and women is the hand-copying of the Immaculate Texts. Additionally, cloistered monks study martial arts significantly more than those of the other traditions, when trouble with a god or spirit is reported to the Immaculate Order, it is usually a cloistered monastery that the request for aid is sent.
The Paragon of Daana’d is expected to oversee the pursuit of liberation and self-fulfi llment in the lives of the righteous. This duty, which names the Paragon of Daana’d as “The Most Capable and Liberated,” is a diffi cult one, for it applies not only to the individual, but to the Immaculate Order as well. It is the Paragon of Daana’d’s responsibility to make sure that the Immaculate Order does not become too reliant on any outside force, lest it fi nd itself either beholden to another or in danger when something happens. That the disappearance of the Scarlet Empress did not do more damage to the Immaculate Order is directly traceable to this endeavor by successive Paragons of Daana’d.
 
   
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The monks of the cloisters have a frightening reputation to the common folk, for they rarely see the cloisters monks until the need for Immaculate martial arts comes. Then, they are grim warriors who come with sutras on their lips and terrible elemental Essence about their fists.
The Paragon of Daana’d is also a seeker of social justice. If public censure by the Immaculate Order isn’t sufficient to curb the whims of a tyrannical or incompetent prefect or governor, the followers of this Paragon instigate “The Blossoming of Sorrowful Violence.” This act is an uprising led by the Immaculate monks of a local monastery, maintained until reparations are made to those the lord has harmed, at which point the monks return to their peaceful lives.
 
   
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Cloistered monks wear only the basic vestments of monks of the Immaculate Order. A given cloister might have a unified pattern of trim at the edges, though, such as the wave motif of the Heavenly Cloister of Sapphire, in the western part of the Blessed Isle, or the Unyielding Perseverance Keep’s pattern of diamonds with a single dot in the middle of each.
In many ways, the Paragon of Daana’d seeks to do two things for the common man: to make certain that the people know enough to carry on their adherence to the Immaculate Philosophy in the absence of a monk and to institute social justice on their behalf. As such, many monks who follow this Paragon are considered rabble-rousers and troublemakers, but they are careful to remember that order is what the Dragons built. It is considered irresponsible to rise up against a social order without a plan for a better one.
 
   
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==== THE ABBOT ====
The current Paragon of Daana’d is Bride of Justice, an older Water-aspected woman. Her once-fi ery anger at the Great Houses—a result of being born an outcaste—has cooled into a calm determination to see that those responsible for the Realm’s social ills are held up to public accountability for their part in such. She is notorious for her public declamations against important government fi gures and their excesses. The elders of House Cynis have expressed their dislike of Bride of Justice on more than one drunken occasion.
 
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The lama of a cloistered monastery is an abbot/ abbess who oversee the monks within their monastery and very little else. They drive their subordinates toward martial and spiritual excellence relentlessly, seeking to push them until their common weaknesses hinder them, and then to push them some more, allowing them to overcome those weaknesses. A cloistered abbot may be a grim, insulting master of the martial arts or a kindly old man given to meditation and philosophical talks over tea, but he is always one thing—driven. Most Paragons are chosen from lamas who once served as abbots.
   
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=== THE TEMPLE TRADITION ===
THE PARAGON OF HESIESH
 
  +
The temple tradition is the part of the Order that sees to the adherence to the Immaculate Calendar and the performance of the rites to the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies. These monks often deal with common folk, and their penchant for wisdom and strict watchfulness against heresy is legendary.
   
  +
Ultimately, the temple tradition exists for two reasons:
The Paragon of Hesiesh is expected to act as the voice of reason and calm deliberation among the Paragons and the Immaculate Order as a whole. It is he who must pay attention to any sign of shift away from orthodoxy without good reason. This role has earned the Paragon of Hesiesh the title of “The Suitor of Sutras,” for he is said to “court” respected traditions and teachings the way an ardent lover courts his beloved.
 
  +
* to see that the appropriate rites are performed for the gods of the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies
   
  +
* to see that people understand the Immaculate Philosophy.
The Paragon of Hesiesh is expected to counsel restraint in the Immaculate Order, and the Paragons of Hesiesh and Daana’d often fi nd themselves at odds with one another.
 
  +
Where cloistered monks live the Philosophy, teaching by example and answering questions of the curious, temple monks seek to make those around them understand through the use of parables, prayers and readings. Although they practice martial arts as well, temple monks spend more of their days overseeing the various rites of propitiation, teaching the common folk and performing rites of passage for them.
   
  +
Temple monks often wear prayer shawls, each marked with the symbol of the temple to which the monk belongs. They also often wear pectorals or belts hung with the symbolic representations of the gods to whom they are performing rites. Such decorations change daily.
Arguments between the two are referred to as “The Ten Thousand Gouts of Steam.”
 
   
  +
==== THE VARTABED ====
The current Paragon of Hesiesh is a Fire Aspect formerly of House Cathak named the Red Coal Bodhisattva. His words of calm are said to emanate from the center of his serene, enlightened spirit like the heat from a hot coal, bringing the warmth of peace and deliberation to those who need it. The Red Coal Bodhisattva and the Bride of Justice are very close friends. Rather than this lessening their official conflicts, however, it escalates them, for neither seems beholden to restrain themselves, knowing that whatever the outcome, their friendship is unlikely to be negatively impacted.
 
  +
The lama charged with a temple is called the Vartabed. They are responsible for training the monks under them in the maintenance of the Immaculate Calendar and education of the populace. Vartabeds are usually assumed to be quite socially engaging. A vartabed understands that the Immaculate Order wields no small power, as entrenched as it is in society. It is his responsibility to make sure that this power—like all that in the Immaculate Order—is wielded in accordance to the tenets of the Immaculate Philosophy.
   
  +
All of the Mouths of Peace has been chosen from lamas who were once vartabeds.
THE PARAGON OF MELA
 
   
  +
=== THE ASCETIC TRADITION ===
The Paragon of Mela is expected to watch for the signs of war carefully, that the righteous might be ready for it. This duty, which is given the poetic title of “The Eye upon the Horizon,” is one taken very seriously. This does not, however, refer only to actual war, but to any element that might be a danger to the pursuit of enlightenment. The Paragon of Mela takes reports of heresy very seriously, and many of those who are devotees of Mela watch for signs of such. Anything that threatens spiritual perfection is worthy of the attention of the Paragon of Mela.
 
  +
Although not officially recognized, the ascetic tradition is quite strong. Approximately 1 in every 10 monks pursue an ascetic path, and many Immaculate monks, whether temple or cloister trained, undertake asceticism in order to deepen their understanding at some point in their lives.
   
  +
Simply put, the ascetic tradition seeks to escape all of civilization. Unlike cloistered monks, ascetics don’t sequester themselves behind high monastery walls; unlike temple monks, they don’t seek immersion in the daily life of the Realm. Instead, the ascetic monk flees cities and goes into the wilderness to simply dwell there for a time.
The Paragon of Mela is also expected to be the foremost defender of the faith. Although this has never come to pass, it is she who will act as the Immaculate Order’s general should it be necessary to mobilize the Order to war.
 
   
  +
Most ascetic monks put themselves through a very difficult existence, eating only insects and roots, drinking only cool river water and living either exposed to the elements or within naturally occurring shelter. All ascetic monks believe the denial of the body’s needs is how the soul is purified and enlightened. Therefore, most ascetic monks remain on the edge of sleep deprivation, starvation and exposure, mortifying their bodies in order to elevate their souls. These monks often acquire a supernatural reputation among the common folk, who attribute to them amazing abilities for their sacrifice and dedication.
The current Paragon of Mela is the youngest of the Paragons, an Air Aspect named Righteous Typhoon. Elevated in the years since the Empress disappeared, Righteous Typhoon believes that the Immaculate Order should take the opportunity of her disappearance to transform all of the Realm into a powerful theocratic nation, with no division between legal and religious laws. She preaches that, in such a nation, a citizen’s foremost concern would be his own enlightenment, rather than the coffers of his masters, and she advocates the use of force in achieving this. Of course, the other Paragons have counseled against this, as has the Mouth of Peace. There does seem to be some measure of support for her growing in some of the more fundamental levels of the Immaculate Order, however.
 
   
  +
Ascetic monks are invariably dressed in tattered vestments, or are nearly naked, clothed only in what they can make by hand, or what superstitious peasants leave for them at the mouths of their caves.
THE PARAGON OF PASIAP
 
   
  +
==== THE SYBIL ====
The duty of the Paragon of Pasiap is to act as the “Raiser of Stones,” a builder and creator. Always incredibly skilled in architecture—including the design of manses—the Paragon of Pasiap oversees the construction of new temples and other structures for the Immaculate Order. His role extends beyond this, however, for he acts as the apportioner of the Immaculate Order’s resources, allotting those resources the Mouth of Peace secures for the use of the Immaculate Order, from money and food to artifacts and the hearthstones of the Order’s many manses.
 
  +
Ascetics have no leaders as it is unnecessary as most of these monks remain ascetic for just a few years at a time, returning to their home monasteries nearly dead of exhaustion, when they have gained whatever insights they sought or when their responsibilities pull them home once more. A rare few ascetic monks, however, do not pursue this life and undertake the ascetic tradition permanently - believing that since the Immaculate Dragons wandered Creation in order to understand their Essence, so too must they. When such a monk achieves the renown that would elevate them to the position of Vartabed or Abbot, the lamas simply refer to them as a Sybil.
   
  +
Sybils are often sought out by other monks seeking wisdom. Many teachers instruct the monks beneath them that, in order to truly undertake the ascetic tradition for a time, they must seek out a Sybil in order for her to impart some wisdom to them. Many of them do discover refinements of their Essence unique to the insights that come from prolonged ascetic practice. Most stories that discuss strange ascetic monks capable of working miracles refer to sybils.
The Paragon of Pasiap is to represent the understanding of the greatest weapon that Creation has against the erosion of the Wyld: civilization. The Paragon of Pasiap teaches that Creation was once larger, but with the deaths caused by the Contagion and the subsequent fall of civilization, the walls that held back the storm of the Wyld fell, and madness breached the world. As a result, those monks who follow the teachings of Pasiap tend to be vehement missionaries, seeking always to bring civilization to those places that are without it.
 
   
  +
=== ITINERANT MONKS ===
The current Paragon of Pasiap is the oldest of the Paragons, an ancient Earth Aspect with fl esh like white marble known as Foundation of Prosperity. The devotees of Pasiap under Foundation of Prosperity have gone a long way toward the accomplishment of what he views as Pasiap’s foremost goal: the building of prosperity, which builds civilization.
 
  +
An itinerant monk adheres to all three of the major Immaculate traditions in many ways. They travel seeking wisdom in the wilderness through starvation and deprivation like an Ascetic, yet also seek out communities without a nearby Immaculate presence to performing the rites of passage and propitiating the local small gods properly like a Temple monk. Most itinerant monks adhere to a strictly scheduled route of travel, allowing them to come to know the people along that route. When such a monk shows up, many put-off marriages are held and celebrated, babies born since he was last through are named and blessed, and any local spirits problems are reported to him to deal with. It sometimes seems that where an itinerant monk goes, celebration follows.
   
  +
Itinerant monks are often quite skilled in the martial arts, as well, for they seek out masters of the martial arts to train them in their journeys. They are the monks most likely to be called upon to deal with the dangers of the road and wilderness.
THE PARAGON OF SEXTES JYLIS
 
   
  +
Most monks are instructed to undertake an itinerant existence at some point in their lives. Frequently this happens after completing their training at the Palace Sublime but before they report to their new monasteries. It also occurs prior a monk takes over a monastery as Vartabed or abbot. Many monks see this as a rite of passage, used to mark dramatic changes in the monk’s existence.
The Paragon of Sextes Jylis, unlike the others, is not based out of the Palace Sublime. Instead, the role of this Paragon is that of “The Sower of New Seeds,” a poetic reference to his role in accepting postulants into the Immaculate Order and then planting them within the Immaculate Order. The Paragon of Sextes Jylis is based out of the Procession of Gray, the monastery in the Temple District of the Imperial City. It is considered appropriate that this Paragon acts in this role, for he must embody the very compassion of the Immaculate Dragon of Wood. He must take pity on those who come from the secular world and are burdened by it, accepting them into the peace and discipline of the Immaculate Order not out of desire for power, but out of love and compassion.
 
   
  +
=== THE CELESTIALLY GUIDED ITINERANTS ===
The Paragon of Sextes Jylis also acts as the master of the Scarlet Chapel, a huge temple structure situated within the Imperial Palace capable of holding many thousands. The Scarlet Chapel is the offi cial temple for the Great Houses, though its daily services are sparsely attended and usually only by those who intend on being viewed as faithful and devout. Still, the Order considers it appropriate for the most compassionate of the Paragons to be the public priest for the Great Houses, hoping that they will learn something of compassion.
 
  +
Occasionally, a monk’s skill, piety and devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy is noticed by the Mouth of Peace. Such figures may be chosen to join the Celestially Guided Itinerants, an order of wandering agents of the Mouth of Peace. What the magistrates are to the Thousand Scales, the Celestially Guided Itinerants are to the Immaculate Order—bringers of scrutiny and justice, in adherence with the laws of the Order and the will of the Mouth of Peace.
 
The current Paragon of Sextes Jylis is named Peaceful Reflection of Compassion, for he hopes to teach the world’s peoples to fi nd compassion fi rst for themselves. He believes that once a soul fi nds Sextes Jylis’ true compassion—that which is stern, yet loving—for herself, she cannot help but discover that same compassion for those around her.
 
 
LAMAS
 
 
Beneath the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons are the lamas of the Immaculate Order, wise monks with years of experience and leadership to their credit. All lamas in the Immaculate Order are Dragon-Blooded, as befi tting men and women in a position such as they are in.
 
 
Difficult is the road a lama walks, for he must learn to balance the demands of the political Mouth of Peace with those of the enlightened Paragons—a task that often resembles a juggling act. Outsiders point out the diffi culty in which lamas fi nd themselves and wonder why it isn’t made simpler—why is there no defi nitive chain of command? The wise know the answer to this, however. A lama’s fi rst master should be his own wisdom, balancing the needs of the secular world with the demands of enlightenment.
 
 
Lamas oversee geographical locations, acting as administrators for the abbots, vartabeds and sybils of each of those locations. In this role, they are expected to know what is going on in their territories, that they may counsel the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons properly. In theory, there must be at least one lama for each geographical region and satrapy, but this isn’t always the case (particularly away from the Blessed Isle). A lama is supposed to spend half of every year in the geographical region he oversees and the other half at the Palace Sublime.
 
 
THE CLOISTER TRADITION
 
 
The cloister tradition is a strong one in the Immaculate Order, with nearly half of all monks following it. Rather than acting as intercessors for the people, the cloister tradition teaches Immaculates to sequester themselves from the bustle of daily life in remote monasteries. In these places of serenity, the cloistered monk may focus on his Essence and its development, seeking to emulate the Immaculate Dragons—who moved through life remaining apart from the banality of the mundane world—as close as anyone can.
 
 
In the Immaculate Order, the cloistered monks serve a valuable purpose. It is from cloistered monasteries that most copies of the sutras come, as one of the spiritual tasks undertaken by these men and women is the hand-copying of the Immaculate Texts. Additionally, cloistered monks study the martial arts signifi cantly more often than those of the other traditions, and when trouble with a god or other spirit is reported to the Immaculate Order, it is usually to a cloistered monastery that the request for aid is sent.
 
 
The men and women of the cloisters have established something of a frightening reputation to the common folk, for they rarely see the monks of the cloisters until the need for Immaculate martial arts comes about. Then, they are grim warriors who come with sutras on their lips and terrible elemental Essence about their fists.
 
 
Cloistered monks wear only the basic vestments of monks of the Immaculate Order. A given cloister might have a unifi ed pattern of trim at the edges, though, such as the wave motif of the Heavenly Cloister of Sapphire, in the western part of the Blessed Isle, or the Unyielding Perseverance Keep’s pattern of diamonds with a single dot in the middle of each.
 
 
THE ABBOT
 
 
The head of a cloistered monastery is an abbot or abbess, a wise elder monk who has served in the Immaculate Order for many years. These men and women understand their duties quite well. They are there to oversee the monks within their monastery and very little else. They drive their subordinates toward martial and spiritual excellence relentlessly, seeking to push them until their common weaknesses hinder them, and then to push them some more, allowing them to overcome those weaknesses. A cloistered abbot may be a grim, insulting master of the martial arts or a kindly old man given to meditation and philosophical talks over tea, but he is always one thing—driven. Most of the Paragons are chosen from lamas who once served as abbots.
 
 
THE TEMPLE TRADITION
 
 
The tradition best known by the common folk of the Blessed Isle, the temple tradition is the part of the Order that sees to the adherence to the Immaculate Calendar and the performance of the rites to the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies. Temple monks are the Immaculates who deal most often with the common folk, and their penchant for wisdom and strict watchfulness against heresy is legendary.
 
 
Ultimately, the temple tradition exists for two reasons: to see that the appropriate rites are performed for the gods of the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies and to see that people understand the Immaculate Philosophy.
 
 
Where cloistered monks live the Philosophy, teaching by example and answering the questions of the curious, temple monks seek to make those around them understand through the use of parables, prayers and readings. Although they practice the martial arts as well, temple monks spend more of their days overseeing the various rites of propitiation, teaching the common folk and performing rites of passage for them.
 
 
Temple monks often wear prayer shawls, each marked with the symbol of the temple to which the monk belongs.
 
 
They also often wear pectorals or belts hung with the symbolic representations of the gods to whom they are performing rites.
 
 
Most such decorations change daily, though.
 
 
THE VARTABED
 
 
What the abbot is to a cloistered monastery, the vartabed is to a temple. An elder monk known for his wisdom and understanding of the Immaculate rites, the vartabed is responsible for training the monks under him in the maintenance of the Immaculate Calendar and the education of the populace. Where abbots have a reputation as being distant and unsociable, vartabeds are usually assumed to be quite socially engaging. A vartabed understands that the Immaculate Order wields no small power, as entrenched as it is in society. It is his responsibility to make sure that this power—like all that in the Immaculate Order—is wielded in accordance to the tenets of the Immaculate Philosophy.
 
 
Every one of the Mouths of Peace has been chosen from among the ranks of lamas who were once vartabeds.
 
 
THE ASCETIC TRADITION
 
 
There is a third tradition of monastic practice in the Immaculate Order. Although it is not an offi cially recognized or organized one, the ascetic tradition is quite strong. At any given time, perhaps one in 10 monks in Creation is pursuing an ascetic path, and many Immaculate monks, whether temple or cloister trained, undertake asceticism in order to deepen their understanding at some point in their lives.
 
 
Simply put, the ascetic tradition seeks to escape all of civilization. Unlike cloistered monks, ascetics don’t sequester themselves behind high monastery walls; unlike temple monks, they don’t seek immersion in the daily life of the Realm. Instead, the ascetic monk fl ees cities and goes into the wilderness, in order to simply dwell there for a time.
 
 
Most ascetic monks put themselves through a very difficult existence, eating only insects and roots, drinking only cool river water and living either exposed to the elements or within naturally occurring shelter. All ascetic monks believe that the denial of the body’s needs is the method by which the soul is purified and enlightened. Therefore, most ascetic monks remain on the edge of sleep deprivation, starvation and exposure, mortifying their bodies in order to elevate their souls. These monks often acquire a supernatural reputation among the common folk, who attribute to them amazing abilities for their sacrifi ce and dedication.
 
 
Ascetic monks are invariably dressed in tattered vestments, or are nearly naked, clothed only in what they can make by hand, or what superstitious peasants leave out for them at the mouths of their caves.
 
 
THE SYBIL
 
 
Ascetics have no leaders, in the fashion of cloistered and temple monks. It is, after all, not necessary. Most ascetic monks remain ascetic for just a few years at a time, returning to their home monasteries nearly dead of exhaustion, when they have gained whatever insights they sought or when their responsibilities pull them home once more. A rare few ascetic monks, however, do not pursue this life. These men and women undertake the ascetic tradition permanently, believing that, as the Immaculate Dragons wandered Creation in order to understand their Essence, so too must they. When such a monk achieves the kind of renown in the Immaculate Order that would elevate other monks to the position of vartabed or abbot, the lamas simply begin referring to him or her as a sybil.
 
 
Sybils are often sought out by other monks seeking wisdom.
 
 
Many teachers instruct the monks beneath them that, in order to truly undertake the ascetic tradition for a time, they must seek out a sybil in order for her to impart some wisdom to them. Sybils invariably dwell in remote regions, the proverbial old man on the mountain or seer hidden away in a cavern. Additionally, many of them do discover refi nements of their Essence that are unique to the insights that come from prolonged ascetic practice. Most stories that discuss strange ascetic monks who are capable of working miracles refer to sybils.
 
 
OTHER TRADITIONS
 
 
Though the three foregoing traditions are the most common within the Immaculate Order, there are a few other ways of following the Immaculate Philosophy.
 
 
ITINERANT MONKS
 
 
An itinerant monk is, in many ways, a monk who adheres to all three of the major Immaculate traditions. Such monks travel from place to place, seeking wisdom in the wilderness
 
 
THE CELESTIALLY GUIDED ITINERANTS
 
 
Occasionally, a monk’s skill, piety and devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy is noticed by the Mouth of Peace. Such fi gures may be chosen to join the Celestially Guided Itinerants, an order of wandering agents of the Mouth of Peace. What the magistrates are to the Thousand Scales, the Celestially Guided Itinerants are to the Immaculate Order—bringers of scrutiny and justice, in adherence with the laws of the Order and the will of the Mouth of Peace.
 
   
 
The Celestially Guided Itinerants are tremendously skilled investigators, and are all Dragon-Blooded. They answer only to the Mouth of Peace and are notorious for their ability to stumble into false tithing scams, corruption in monasteries and other symptoms of the fact that, for all their preaching of perfection, the Immaculate Order is still manned by fallible mortals.
 
The Celestially Guided Itinerants are tremendously skilled investigators, and are all Dragon-Blooded. They answer only to the Mouth of Peace and are notorious for their ability to stumble into false tithing scams, corruption in monasteries and other symptoms of the fact that, for all their preaching of perfection, the Immaculate Order is still manned by fallible mortals.
   
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== SOCIAL DUTIES ==
through starvation and deprivation in the fashion of an ascetic. Yet, they also seek out communities that do not have an Immaculate presence nearby, performing the rites of passage and propitiating the local small gods properly, in the fashion of a temple monk. Itinerant monks are often quite skilled in the martial arts, as well, for they seek out masters of the martial arts to train them in their journeys. They are the monks most likely to be called upon to use them, in order to deal with the dangers of the road and wilderness.
 
  +
Regardless of tradition and style of service, all Immaculate monks are expected to fulfill a variety of obligations:
 
At some point in their lives, most monks are instructed to undertake an itinerant existence. Sometimes, this is just after their training at the Palace Sublime is over, before they report to their new monasteries. Other times, this is after a period of years, or just before a monk takes over a monastery as vartabed or abbot. Many monks see a period of itinerancy as a rite of passage, used to mark dramatic changes in the monk’s existence.
 
 
Most itinerant monks adhere to a strictly scheduled route of travel, allowing them to come to know the people along that route. When such a monk shows up, many marriages that have been put off are held and celebrated, babies that have been born since he was last through there are named and blessed, and any problems with local spirits are reported to him to deal with. As a result, it sometimes seems that where an itinerant monk goes, celebration follows.
 
 
SOCIAL DUTIES
 
 
Regardless of their tradition and style of service, all Immaculate monks are expected to fulfi ll a variety of obligations.
 
 
Some traditions focus on certain of these duties more than others, but all understand that these duties are all absolutely important and seek to fulfi ll those they are capable of to the best of their ability.
 
 
SEARCH FOR RELICS
 
 
In hearing the words and understanding the message of the Immaculate Dragons, mortals and Exalted are brought closer to enlightenment. The more an individual hears and understands, the closer he might come. Therefore, it is considered an important duty of every Immaculate monk to search for relics of the First Age, especially writings that contain the words of the Immaculate Dragons. Such fi ndings form the basis for the Immaculate Texts. Even those that are not the words of the Immaculate Dragons or their apostles are still considered important, allowing Immaculate scholars to better understand the context in which some sutras were spoken.
 
 
CULTIVATION OF ESSENCE
 
 
Every monk is responsible for aiding others in the cultivation of their Essence. First and foremost, of course, an Immaculate monk must not neglect her own development, but she must also aid others where she can. In some cases, this aid involves training young Dragon-Blooded (particularly outcastes) how to use their Essence, but this duty is not limited to the Princes of the Earth. A mortal who learns to fi nd resolve, acceptance and self-reliance in his life’s duties is said to be cultivating his Essence, as is one who learns the sutras. Many monks strive to teach all who wish to learn the techniques of meditation and the basics of the martial arts.
 
   
  +
=== SEARCH FOR RELICS ===
Exalted monks are also taught that they should assist their mortal brethren in learning the techniques of awakening their Essence, where such is possible.
 
  +
Hearing the words and understanding the message of the Immaculate Dragons, mortals and Exalted are brought closer to enlightenment. The more an individual hears and understands, the closer he might come. Therefore, it is considered an important duty of every Immaculate monk to search for relics of the First Age, especially writings that contain the words of the Immaculate Dragons. Such findings form the basis for the Immaculate Texts. Even those that are not the words of the Immaculate Dragons or their apostles are still considered important, allowing Immaculate scholars to better understand the context in which some sutras were spoken.
   
  +
=== CULTIVATION OF ESSENCE ===
EDUCATION
 
  +
Every monk is responsible for aiding others in the cultivation of their Essence. First and foremost, of course, an Immaculate monk must not neglect her own development, but she must also aid others where she can. In some cases, this involves training young Dragon-Blooded (particularly outcastes) how to use their Essence, but is not limited to the Princes of the Earth. A mortal who learns to find resolve, acceptance and self-reliance in his life’s duties is said to be cultivating his Essence, as is one who learns the sutras. Many monks strive to teach all who wish to learn the techniques of meditation and the basics of the martial arts.
   
  +
Exalted monks are also taught that they should assist mortals in learning the techniques of awakening their Essence, where such is possible.
Immaculate monks are also beholden to teach those around them. This teaching focuses primarily on the Immaculate Texts and the Immaculate Philosophy, though it is understood that mortals are enlightened through education of any kind. As such, all monasteries are required to take in children from the age of fi ve to nine and educate them, usually using the holy sutras as the basis for learning to read.
 
   
  +
=== EDUCATION ===
RITES OF PASSAGE
 
  +
Immaculate monks are beholden to teach those around them. This teaching focuses primarily on the Immaculate Texts and the Immaculate Philosophy, though it is understood that mortals are enlightened through education of any kind. All monasteries are required to take in children from the age 5-9 and educate them, usually using the holy sutras as the basis for learning to read.
   
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=== RITES OF PASSAGE ===
 
The passage through a single life, while just a blink in a soul’s walk along the Road of Enlightenment, is still noteworthy. Rites of passage serve to bind a community together, thus building civilization. The Immaculate monks perform all weddings, binding in union new couples. Monks also perform the naming ceremonies of new children, who are simply called “boy” or “girl” until such a ceremony has taken place. Rites of adulthood, funerals and many other such ceremonies are usually performed under the watchfulness of the Immaculate monks as well.
 
The passage through a single life, while just a blink in a soul’s walk along the Road of Enlightenment, is still noteworthy. Rites of passage serve to bind a community together, thus building civilization. The Immaculate monks perform all weddings, binding in union new couples. Monks also perform the naming ceremonies of new children, who are simply called “boy” or “girl” until such a ceremony has taken place. Rites of adulthood, funerals and many other such ceremonies are usually performed under the watchfulness of the Immaculate monks as well.
   
DIVINE INTERCESSION
+
=== DIVINE INTERCESSION ===
 
 
Dragon-Blooded monks are expected to act as intermediaries between men and gods. It is a tenet of the Immaculate Philosophy that the Princes of the Earth are the only ones with the moral and spiritual fortitude to withstand the influence of the gods without losing their will. As such, the Immaculate Order not only oversees all the rites of all the gods (theoretically, at least) in Creation, in accordance to the Immaculate Calendar, but its monks also go to small gods to represent mortal populations. Such occurrences are usually sufficient to cow most small gods, who fear the supernatural martial prowess of the Immaculate monks.
 
Dragon-Blooded monks are expected to act as intermediaries between men and gods. It is a tenet of the Immaculate Philosophy that the Princes of the Earth are the only ones with the moral and spiritual fortitude to withstand the influence of the gods without losing their will. As such, the Immaculate Order not only oversees all the rites of all the gods (theoretically, at least) in Creation, in accordance to the Immaculate Calendar, but its monks also go to small gods to represent mortal populations. Such occurrences are usually sufficient to cow most small gods, who fear the supernatural martial prowess of the Immaculate monks.
   
MISSIONARY WORK
+
=== MISSIONARY WORK ===
  +
Through the spread of understanding one’s place under Heaven, Creation is strengthened. Therefore, one of the Immaculate Order’s foremost efforts is in missionary work. The missionary efforts of the Immaculate Order are not limited to teaching mortals the truths of the Immaculate Philosophy, however—they also extend to local gods. Normally, when the Immaculate Order achieves sufficient influence in an area, it builds a monastery and populates it.
 
The Immaculate Order maintains that, through the spread of understanding of one’s place under Heaven, Creation is strengthened. Therefore, one of the Immaculate Order’s foremost efforts is in missionary work. The missionary efforts of the Immaculate Order are not limited to teaching mortals the truths of the Immaculate Philosophy, however—they also extend to local gods. Normally, when the Immaculate Order achieves suffi cient infl uence in an area, it builds a monastery and populates it.
 
   
 
Then, as the mortal monks go forth and teach the sutras and Philosophy to the common men of the area, the Dragon-Blooded monks seek out the local gods, calling on them to bow before the righteousness of the Immaculate Way. Those who defy the monks are fought with supernatural martial arts. Then, once gods and commoners have been swayed to the Immaculate Philosophy, most abbots invite the local leaders of an area to the monastery, believing that once the commoners and the gods of the area adhere to the Immaculate Philosophy, the leadership can do nothing but accede as well.
 
Then, as the mortal monks go forth and teach the sutras and Philosophy to the common men of the area, the Dragon-Blooded monks seek out the local gods, calling on them to bow before the righteousness of the Immaculate Way. Those who defy the monks are fought with supernatural martial arts. Then, once gods and commoners have been swayed to the Immaculate Philosophy, most abbots invite the local leaders of an area to the monastery, believing that once the commoners and the gods of the area adhere to the Immaculate Philosophy, the leadership can do nothing but accede as well.
   
SOCIAL JUSTICE
+
=== SOCIAL JUSTICE ===
  +
The monks of the Immaculate Order—particularly monks who hold the ideals of Daana’d close—teach that each being is a potential bodhisattva and should be treated accordingly. Everyone in Creation has a place, and to fight against that place is wrong (though that does not give one the right to abuse those below one). Immaculate monks are notorious for protesting the tyrannies of rulers in front of their palaces, refusing to be moved and willing to sacrifice themselves in some instances (if only to prove how strongly the Order opposes such a situation). They will even go so far as to lead uprisings, and the Paragons of the Immaculate Dragons have spoken out against the excesses of even the Great Houses in the past.
 
The monks of the Immaculate Order—particularly those monks who hold the ideals of Daana’d close—teach that each being is a potential bodhisattva and so should be treated accordingly. Everyone in Creation has a place, and to fi ght against that place is wrong, but that does not give one the right to abuse those below one. Immaculate monks are notorious for protesting the tyrannies of rulers in front of their palaces, refusing to be moved and indeed, willing to sacrifi ce themselves in some instances (if only to prove how strongly the Order opposes such a situation). They will even go so far as to lead uprisings, and the Paragons of the Immaculate Dragons have spoken out against the excesses of even the Great Houses in the past.
 
   
  +
=== EMULATION VS. WORSHIP ===
THE IMMACULATE CALENDAR
 
  +
The Immaculate Dragons are inspirations for enlightened behavior; NOT gods to be worshipped (they are NOT part of the godly bureaucracies). Through their example, mortals may understand proper action in accordance with the human experience in the cycle of rebirth. To worship the Immaculate Dragons, a thing one should aspire to be, is to lose sight of the message they taught and shackling oneself to a base existence instead of striving for true spiritual ascendance.
   
  +
== THE IMMACULATE CALENDAR ==
 
The Immaculate Order maintains the Immaculate Calendar, a massive archive of gods both large and small in Creation and in Heaven. This calendar records not only the identity of a god, but the proper ritual used to propitiate it. Gods are given direct worship only by the Immaculate monks, who understand that it is the proper place of those in Creation to render up worship to those in Heaven. They do not believe, however, that every individual god has the right to coerce more worship than it is due from vulnerable mortals.
 
The Immaculate Order maintains the Immaculate Calendar, a massive archive of gods both large and small in Creation and in Heaven. This calendar records not only the identity of a god, but the proper ritual used to propitiate it. Gods are given direct worship only by the Immaculate monks, who understand that it is the proper place of those in Creation to render up worship to those in Heaven. They do not believe, however, that every individual god has the right to coerce more worship than it is due from vulnerable mortals.
   
Line 535: Line 196:
 
For this reason, the Immaculate Order is careful to search out heresy. It isn’t as though gods are not worshiped, all gods are worshiped in accordance with their duties under Heaven.
 
For this reason, the Immaculate Order is careful to search out heresy. It isn’t as though gods are not worshiped, all gods are worshiped in accordance with their duties under Heaven.
   
Therefore, by the teachings of the Order, additional and direct worship not only exposes mortals to the potentially corrupting infl uence of divine majesty, which may cause them to veer away from their search for enlightenment, but it gives the god more worship than it is due. It is, in effect, either bribery or blackmail, depending on the nature of the god in question.
+
Therefore, by the teachings of the Order, additional and direct worship not only exposes mortals to the potentially corrupting influence of divine majesty, which may cause them to veer away from their search for enlightenment, but it gives the god more worship than it is due. It is, in effect, either bribery or blackmail, depending on the nature of the god in question.
   
Heresy is answered with direct, swift action. The Immaculate monks call out the heretic gods to combat, preferably in the presence of their erstwhile cult. Once the god has been beaten either into submission or dispersal, the mortals are reminded of their duties to seek personal enlightenment, not to provide power to a greedy little god. The diffi culties they are praying to be alleviated are part of their natural existence and meant to challenge them. By meeting those challenges, they take steps on the Road of Enlightenment; by running to a spirit to do it for them, they lose their footing.
+
Heresy is answered with direct, swift action. The Immaculate monks call out the heretic gods to combat, preferably in the presence of their erstwhile cult. Once the god has been beaten either into submission or dispersal, the mortals are reminded of their duties to seek personal enlightenment, not to provide power to a greedy little god. The difficulties they are praying to be alleviated are part of their natural existence and meant to challenge them. By meeting those challenges, they take steps on the Road of Enlightenment; by running to a spirit to do it for them, they lose their footing.
   
As a result of these painful demonstrations, many gods on the Blessed Isle are quite terrifi ed of being accused of heresy. At the fi rst sign of any direct worship potentially developing around them, it isn’t uncommon for a god who has experienced Immaculate retribution to not only refuse to allow people to worship him, but to be the one to report the would-be cult at the nearest Immaculate temple!
+
As a result of these painful demonstrations, many gods on the Blessed Isle are quite terrified of being accused of heresy. At the first sign of any direct worship potentially developing around them, it isn’t uncommon for a god who has experienced Immaculate retribution to not only refuse to allow people to worship him, but to be the one to report the would-be cult at the nearest Immaculate temple!
   
  +
== TEMPLES & MONASTERIES ==
THE WYLD HUNT
 
  +
The buildings and manses of the Immaculate Order are generally put to a variety of uses. The Exalted monks of the Immaculate Order prefer to use a manse for their purposes, but will work with whatever is available.
   
  +
=== THE PALACE SUBLIME ===
The Wyld Hunt is not technically part of the Immaculate Order proper. Strictly speaking, it is a special organization, partly religious and partly secular, overseen by both. In actuality, though, the Wyld Hunt receives most of its support from the Immaculate Order. Even if this wasn’t always the case, with the disappearance of the Scarlet Empress, the Imperial Bureaucracy has many more issues on its hands.
 
  +
The largest temple of the Immaculate Order is a confusing maze of temple spaces, monastic training grounds, offices, council chambers, meditation quarters and vaults of riches and artifacts. The Palace Sublime seems quite indefensible, made up of a pair of immensely tall towers and a squat, square keep. Nonetheless, it is home to no less than the Mouth of Peace and four of the five Immaculate Paragons. It is the heart of the Immaculate Order, and none has ever dared attack it.
   
  +
Atop of one of the towers is the Contemplative Chamber of the Mouth of Peace. The next few floors beneath that are appointed for her staff. Above the Contemplative Chamber is a small, modest office where [[Chejop Kejak]] resides, watching out over Creation from one of the tallest towers anywhere.
MEMBERSHIP
 
   
  +
The monks who dwell here are one of two kinds:
There are two kinds of Wyld Huntsmen, who are usually referred to as harriers, or shikari. The most common is the errant shikari, a hunter who maintains a life outside of the Wyld Hunt. Errant shikari are not supported by the Wyld Hunt and usually have duties outside the Hunt chapter house, be they to the Immaculate Order, the All-Seeing Eye, the Imperial Army, their House or other masters. Less common, but highly praised, are hosted shikari, harriers who have dedicated their lives to the aims of the Wyld Hunt. These are men and women who have usually given all their personal wealth to the Wyld Hunt as a whole and are supported by it. Hosted shikari own nothing, but they are also the fi rst ones to be given the resources of the Wyld Hunt in the fi eld. The numbers of hosted shikari have swelled somewhat in recent years, as more than a few scions of House Tepet have signed up, wanting to fi ght the threat of the Anathema in these days after the slaughter of the Tepet Legions.
 
  +
* the very young, undergoing their first training after their pilgrimage, before being sent on to another monastery somewhere,
  +
* the very experienced, lamas, Celestially Guided Itinerants and a variety of others.
  +
Among these scuttle bureaucrats, under-secretaries and minor functionaries who keeps the monolithic Immaculate Order running.
   
  +
The [[Bronze Faction]] considers this the closest thing it has to a headquarters in Creation, and many nights see 3-4 of the most unlikely secretaries, monks and others gathered atop the roof, watching the stars in the sky closely.
RANKS
 
   
  +
=== MONASTERIES===
The Wyld Hunt answers to two forces: the Mouth of Peace and the Committee on Matters of Venery, a bureau of the All-Seeing Eye that oversees the secular matters of the Wyld Hunt, keeping track of supplies and payroll, transfers of soldiers and resources and the like. It also acts as the channel by which information from the All-Seeing Eye reaches the Wyld Hunt.
 
  +
The Immaculate Order is perhaps best known for its monasteries, fine walled enclosures decorated with draconic iconography, dedicated to either all five of the Immaculate Dragons or one of them in particular.
 
The Mouth of Peace is advised by the correctors, a council traditionally made up of monks who have served with the Wyld Hunt and monks that have not, in equal numbers. The correctors monitor the workings of the Wyld Hunt, order reports on campaigns and perform audits. The correctors and the Committee on Matters of Venery often work to perform the same deeds, each reporting to their differing superiors.
 
 
They maintain a fairly strong rivalry, and more than one canny exarch has used this rivalry to his chapter house’s advantage, playing each side off one another. Individual chapter houses are run by exarchs (Backing [Wyld Hunt] •••••), Immaculate-trained hosted shikari who act as the heads of chapter houses and oversee the administration and training of its resources. Exarchs almost never go into the field, though more than one has strapped on his old armor after a particularly devastating loss of a cadre.
 
 
Below the exarchs are the ostiaries (Backing [Wyld Hunt] ••••), who act as the generals for the chapter houses, overseeing the operation of the cadres, including organizing them. The ostiary acts as the right-hand man for the exarch in a chapter house.
 
 
Each chapter house has between two and four venerers (Backing [Wyld Hunt] •••) each. When a cadre is formed, it is a venerer who acts as the head of that cadre, and the venerers are expected to know the capabilities of those beneath them. The venerers of a chapter house form a council that advises the ostiary and the exarch.
 
 
Finally, within a given cadre, there are simple shikari (Backing [Wyld Hunt] •) and those harriers who are more experienced and have survived campaigns against at least four Anathema. Such heroes are referred to as amercers (Backing [Wyld Hunt] ••).
 
 
CHAPTER HOUSES
 
 
Once, there were 11 chapter houses spread across the Blessed Isle and the Threshold. Now, with the sudden drop in imperial funding and the Great Houses working to consolidate their own power, only six remain, only one of which is in the Threshold (specifi cally, in the North, near Cherak). Chapter houses are always manses under the leadership of an exarch and ostiary.
 
 
CADRES
 
 
Any given chapter house has a large number of amercers and shikari, with a handful of venerers to act as cadre leadership. A chapter house always maintains approximately half of its membership as established cadres, teams who work and train together routinely, getting to know one another’s weaknesses and strengths, drawing on the nature of the Dragon-Blooded Exaltation to improve one another. Many established cadres are sworn brotherhoods.
 
 
The others form the basis of ad hoc cadres, cadres put together as a team under a given venerer on a case-by-case basis. This arrangement sacrifi ces some of the benefi ts of established cadres in exchange for supreme fl exibility and the ability to tailor the team’s membership to the needs of the mission.
 
 
Originally, cadres of the Wyld Hunt consisted of two to fi ve Dragon-Blooded, with a host of soldiers and an assortment of aides and support for the cadre. The Immaculate Order and the All-Seeing Eye originally tried to make sure that they had at least one of their own in each cadre.
 
 
With the changes that have shaken Creation, however, the cadres have grown. No longer do Anathema move alone through Creation. Instead, they seem to have appeared in numbers great enough to fi nd one another and band together. Now, a cadre generally consists of fi ve to 10 Dragon-Blooded harriers, with a proportional swelling in support. The Immaculate Order has tried to make certain that it has at least two monks in any cadre, and the All-Seeing Eye has done the same.
 
 
TEMPLES & MONASTERIES
 
 
The buildings and manses of the Immaculate Order are generally put to a variety of uses. Like most of the Dragon-Blooded Host, the Exalted monks of the Immaculate Order prefer to use a manse for their purposes, but they will work with whatever is available.
 
 
THE PALACE SUBLIME
 
 
The largest temple of the Immaculate Order, the Palace Sublime seems quite indefensible, made up as it is of a pair of immensely tall towers and a squat, square keep. Nonetheless, it is home to no less than the Mouth of Peace and four of the fi ve Immaculate Paragons. It is the heart of the Immaculate Order, and none has ever dared attack it.
 
 
At the top of one of the towers is the Contemplative Chamber of the Mouth of Peace, and the next few floors beneath that are appointed for her staff. Above the Contemplative Chamber is a small, modest offi ce wherein Chejop Kejak, head of the Sidereal Bronze Faction, resides, watching out over Creation from one of the tallest towers anywhere.
 
 
The Palace Sublime is a confusing maze of temple spaces, monastic training grounds, offi ces, council chambers, meditation quarters and vaults of riches and artifacts. The monks who dwell here are one of two kinds: the very young, undergoing their fi rst training after their pilgrimage, before being sent on to another monastery somewhere, or the very experienced, lamas, Celestially Guided Itinerants and a variety of others.
 
 
Among these scuttle the bureaucrats, under-secretaries and minor functionaries who keeps the monolithic Immaculate Order running.
 
 
The Bronze Faction likewise considers this the closest thing it has to a headquarters in Creation, and many nights see three or four of the most unlikely secretaries, monks and others gathered atop the roof, watching the stars in the sky closely.
 
 
THE CLOISTER OF WISDOM
 
 
Less than a day’s travel from the Palace Sublime lies the Cloister of Wisdom, one of the four offi cially recognized secondary academies. The Cloister is sponsored by the Immaculate Order, whose goal is to teach students who attend the Cloister how to be proper Dragon-Blooded in the eyes of the Immaculate Dragons. Those on the outside of Dragon-Blooded society assume that those who attend the Cloister end up joining the Immaculate Order, but in actuality, only a relatively small percentage ever wind up doing so.
 
 
There are many in Dragon-Blooded society—including such luminaries as Cathak Cainan, the head of House Cathak—who attended the Cloister. These Dragon-Blooded have no common destination after the Cloister, but wherever they end up, they bring with them a solid grounding in Immaculate morals and ethics, a firm grasp of the Immaculate Texts and a clear understanding of their duty as the Princes of the Earth.
 
 
The Cloister of Wisdom prides itself in turning out students who are many things: devout, clear-thinking, innovative and adept in combat. The techniques perfected by the Immaculate Order in the training of its monks were adapted for the purposes of the Cloister.
 
 
TEACHERS
 
 
The dominie of the Cloister of Wisdom is the lama Repentant Blossom of Winter, a powerful Air-aspected Immaculate and sorceress several centuries old, with snowwhite eyebrows beneath a fi nely shaven pate and a serene countenance. Repentant Blossom has mastered both the Air and Earth Dragon Styles of Immaculate martial arts and a smattering of Terrestrial styles, and she has the knowledge of up to the Form Charm of Water Dragon Style. She is rarely seen on the grounds, for her time is usually taken up in expanding the education of those the Cloister employs as teachers. Part of their payment for teaching at the Cloister is the privilege of learning at her feet. Some of these teachers include:
 
 
• Mnemon Araha: Responsible for lessons of ethical statecraft and politics, Mnemon Araha is the daughter of Mnemon herself. A potent Earth-aspected Dragon-Blood, Araha fully supports her mother’s aspirations, though she acknowledges that this support must not be permitted to taint her role as a teacher here.
 
 
• Hitayasha: Claiming to be an outcaste who grew up in the Scavenger Lands, Hitayasha is actually Iselsi Hitayasha. In addition to the lessons in herbalism and healing for which she is known, Hitayasha also recruits for the All-Seeing Eye, a fact Repentant Blossom is aware of and supports. Hitayasha is careful to keep her familial ties secret, though she believes that Mnemon Araha suspects.
 
 
• Silk Tide: The famous poet and historian Silk Tide is not a Dragon-Blood. In his youth, he toured the Blessed Isle, performing his epic historical poetic works for the Great Houses, who vied to be his sole patron. He always made clear that his loyalty was to the Scarlet Empire as a whole, rather than any one House, a stance that found him favor with the Scarlet Empress. When he performed for her, Repentant Blossom was in court, and afterward, she invited him to take up a teaching post at the Cloister of Wisdom when he wearied of travel. Rumor has that he and Repentant Blossom are lovers, but the truth is almost more intimate than that. She has taught him to awaken his mortal Essence through the use of martial arts.
 
 
STUDENT LIFE
 
 
Students sleep in large, same-sex dormitories, separated by years. The accommodations are quite plain—the students sleep on bamboo mats—and the food is nutritious but simple. Students rise with the sun to perform devotions and spend the rest of the day in study and meditation. Each student is responsible for knowing what areas he is weakest in. Students are also responsible for seeking out those masters who can help them improve themselves. No master keeps track of a student’s progress, so it falls to the student to strengthen himself through study and practice. The core of education here is broad: There are many masters with many talents, from religious training to combat tactics and from mathematics and engineering to social interaction and proper etiquette.
 
 
But there are three categories in which all must excel. First and foremost, all students must demonstrate mastery of their minds by learning the techniques of meditation. Secondly, students must master their bodies through the martial arts.
 
 
Lastly, students must prove their mastery of spirit by learning Charms and the manipulation of their personal Essence.
 
 
Students of the fi rst year spend time working on nothing but those three areas. When he shows suffi cient mastery, a student may seek out other masters to learn from them.
 
 
There are no set schedules that students must follow. The masters of given subjects simply make it known that they will be in a given place at a given time, and those who show up will learn what they have to teach. Each year, a student is expected to seek out the masters who are teaching the things he desires to learn and to beg those masters to be allowed to come to their classes.
 
 
Unlike other academies, the Cloister of Wisdom does not permit a student to remain there for more than seven years. Students are expected to be serious learners and to learn as much as they can. The masters constantly drill into their students the fact that they have only seven years to learn all the Cloister of Wisdom has to offer. Once that time is over, it is done.
 
 
This does not mean that classes are easy, though, by any measure. A student who does not excel in a master’s class will be removed from it, banished and told to never return. A master who banishes a student will never accept that student into one of his classes. The masters also keep track of how many classes students are taking and adjust daily chore schedules appropriately. A student who is lazy and does not take many classes, or who fi nds himself banished from classes, often fi nds he has the hardest backbreaking labor.
 
 
The masters are clear in this. Those who do not work to enlighten themselves and gain knowledge will quickly wish they were given the privilege to do so once more.
 
 
Students who live at the Cloister of Wisdom are expected to adhere to at least the First Coil living requirements of Immaculate monks. Occasional slips are expected, but these should be spontaneous. Deliberately planning to break those requirements or worse, aiding others in doing so, is cause for punishment (usually in the form of additional chores).
 
 
The chores here are onerous and exceedingly menial.
 
 
Students sand and oil the wood fl oors on every level of every building daily. Students also tend gardens on the grounds, prepare food and mend clothing. Those who excel in their studies, especially in their later years, are often given chores that lead to higher education, such as assignments to copy parts of the Immaculate Texts.
 
 
LAYOUT
 
 
The Cloister of Wisdom is a compound without walls or even true defenses. It is located in a valley in Incas Prefecture, with the easternmost of the surrounding hills ending suddenly in a cliff that overlooks the sea. The passage that leads down into the valley crosses a stream with a small footbridge over it. An arch depicting the fi ve Elemental Dragons spans the steps up to the bridge, and a small sign next to the arch requests that visitors use the stone basin of salt water to ritually cleanse themselves before crossing the bridge.
 
 
There are three primary buildings here: the Cloister Temple, the Hall of Masters and the Garden Hall.
 
 
The Cloister Temple houses not only a large temple to the Immaculate Dragons, but a large library and lecture halls, as well as quiet study and meditation cells, meant for only one person at a time.
 
 
The Hall of Masters houses the masters of the Cloister, with its ground fl oor serving as a large dining hall for both masters and students.
 
 
The Garden Hall is a large building that completely encircles a beautiful sand garden. The Hall has a wide variety of classrooms and lecture halls, and a strictly enforced policy of utter silence in the meditation garden, which has space for seated meditation as well as ample room for the performance of katas.
 
 
Scattered around the beautifully landscaped grounds are the fi ve Young Dragon Halls, where students live. Each hall houses up to 25 students (up to the school’s maximum enrollment of 125), but they are not always fi lled. Each of the Young Dragon Halls is designed in a style that honors one of the Immaculate Dragons, with a meditation garden in the middle of the hall, open to the elements.
 
 
Each of these dormitories, where students sleep fi ve to a room on bamboo mats, has a garden that the students within that given hall are expected to help tend. There are no offi cial schedules or times for these chores—students are expected to simply honor their responsibility. Practically speaking, fi rst year students are taken under the wing of older students and taught how to care for the garden of that hall.
 
 
Generally speaking, a system tends to evolve where one of the older students takes on the responsibility of caring for his hall’s garden and requests help from his dorm-mates. Those few who shirk these requests generally receive discipline at the hands of the older student, often through duels.
 
 
DEFENSES
 
 
The Cloister of Wisdom, like the Palace Sublime, has no defenses. The arch that lies at its opening has no gate, and the bridge that spans the shallow stream is a courtesy only.
 
 
There are no walls, and the Cloister could be easily destroyed by anyone with a mind to do so. There is, however, one thing that prevents that: the Exalted within the Cloister. If, for some reason, someone chose to make herself an enemy in the eyes of the Immaculate Order and attacked the Cloister, she would still fi nd herself up against some of the most competent martial artists in the Realm. Moreover, the Cloister lies only a halfday from the Palace Sublime, home to four of the Immaculate Paragons, four of the most powerful Essence-wielding Dragon-Bloods in all of Creation, to say nothing of headquarters for the Sidereal secret masters of the Order.
 
 
MONASTERIES
 
 
The Immaculate Order is perhaps best known for its monasteries, fi ne walled enclosures decorated with draconic iconography, dedicated to either all fi ve of the Immaculate Dragons or one of them in particular.
 
 
CLOISTERS
 
   
  +
=== CLOISTERS ===
 
Cloistered monasteries are meant for no one save the Immaculate Order. Consisting entirely of bare living spaces, ample training courtyards, martial-arts dojos and meditation rooms, cloisters do not have servants to tend to the inhabitants’ needs, for the monks themselves perform these duties.
 
Cloistered monasteries are meant for no one save the Immaculate Order. Consisting entirely of bare living spaces, ample training courtyards, martial-arts dojos and meditation rooms, cloisters do not have servants to tend to the inhabitants’ needs, for the monks themselves perform these duties.
   
 
Most cloisters are quite defensible, with tall walls and the means of fi ghting off a prolonged siege. They also tend to boast impressive armories of weapons, and some cloisters might even have armed and armored monastery guardians at the gates and patrolling the walls.
 
Most cloisters are quite defensible, with tall walls and the means of fi ghting off a prolonged siege. They also tend to boast impressive armories of weapons, and some cloisters might even have armed and armored monastery guardians at the gates and patrolling the walls.
   
TEMPLES
+
=== TEMPLES ===
  +
Temple monasteries, on the other hand, tend to be lavish, with beautiful craftsmanship. There are usually public worship areas (normally in a chapel dedicated to the five Immaculate Dragons), as well as a few other areas for the celebration of rites of passage. Simple, small chambers can usually be found scattered about, meant for one supplicant to confer with a monk on issues of a private nature.
 
Temple monasteries, on the other hand, tend to be lavish, with beautiful craftsmanship. There are usually public worship areas (normally in a chapel dedicated to the fi ve Immaculate Dragons), as well as a few other areas for the celebration of rites of passage. Simple, small chambers can usually be found scattered about, meant for one supplicant to confer with a monk on issues of a private nature.
 
   
 
Behind these public areas are not just the living areas for monks, but also the individual temples or shrines for the local gods or for greater gods that the monastery is responsible for helping to directly worship. Such areas are strictly off-limits to non-monks, and even then, it is only the Exalted monks who carry keys to these chambers.
 
Behind these public areas are not just the living areas for monks, but also the individual temples or shrines for the local gods or for greater gods that the monastery is responsible for helping to directly worship. Such areas are strictly off-limits to non-monks, and even then, it is only the Exalted monks who carry keys to these chambers.
   
  +
=== SHRINES ===
OTHER CONSTRUCTIONS
 
  +
There are usually two kinds of shrines to be found: those to the Immaculate Dragons and those to local small gods in an area where there are no temple monasteries. The first shrines are usually set aside for itinerant and ascetic monks who find the necessity of a temple space (usually for performing rites of passage and the like for those who haven’t seen a monk in a while). Such shrines are built simply, often out of local materials, featuring a large stone or wooden statue of a dragon, with a simple bed of sand in front of it for joss sticks.
 
Monasteries are not the only structures on which the Immaculate Order depends. The following kinds of buildings are rarer than monasteries, but they do serve valuable purposes.
 
 
SHRINES
 
 
There are usually two kinds of shrines to be found: those to the Immaculate Dragons and those to local small gods in an area where there are no temple monasteries. The fi rst shrines are usually set aside for itinerant and ascetic monks who fi nd the necessity of a temple space (usually for performing rites of passage and the like for those who haven’t seen a monk in a while). Such shrines are built simply, often out of local materials, featuring a large stone or wooden statue of a dragon, with a simple bed of sand in front of it for joss sticks.
 
   
 
The second type of shrine is a little rarer, as Immaculate monks don’t like the possibility of cults springing up around the shrines of little gods. In some cases, however, it is necessary to perform the rites of a small god in a space dedicated to it. Such shrines are found only in areas where an ascetic monk or cloistered monastery provides the only Immaculate attention, and such shrines are always sealed behind heavily locked doors, the key of which remains in the possession of the Immaculate.
 
The second type of shrine is a little rarer, as Immaculate monks don’t like the possibility of cults springing up around the shrines of little gods. In some cases, however, it is necessary to perform the rites of a small god in a space dedicated to it. Such shrines are found only in areas where an ascetic monk or cloistered monastery provides the only Immaculate attention, and such shrines are always sealed behind heavily locked doors, the key of which remains in the possession of the Immaculate.
   
SCHOOLS
+
=== SCHOOLS ===
  +
The Immaculate Order takes responsibility for teaching the children of non-patrician families that cannot afford tutors of their own. From the ages of five to nine, children from all over report to monasteries to learn the basics of reading, writing and mathematics, as well as a heavy dose of the Immaculate Philosophy. At the age of 10, however, children leave, continuing on to primary schools if their parents can afford it or to begin working toward the craft they will pursue as adults otherwise.
 
The Immaculate Order takes responsibility for teaching the children of non-patrician families that cannot afford tutors of their own. From the ages of fi ve to nine, children from all over report to monasteries to learn the basics of reading, writing and mathematics, as well as a heavy dose of the Immaculate Philosophy. At the age of 10, however, children leave, continuing on to primary schools if their parents can afford it or to begin working toward the craft they will pursue as adults otherwise.
 
   
The Immaculate Order maintains a couple of primary schools, though, like other primary schools, they are for those who can afford to enroll their children there. Only one, the Academy of Those Who Tread in Sextes Jylis’ Footsteps, is free. Children who reach the appropriate age and demonstrate admirable piety with a natural intelligence may be sponsored by the Immaculate Order to attend this primary school. Such students often end up as part of the Order itself, and the best among them can even find themselves with a sponsorship to the Cloister of Wisdom.
+
The Immaculate Order maintains a couple of primary schools, though, like other primary schools, they are for those who can afford to enroll their children there. Only one, the Academy of Those Who Tread in Sextes Jylis’ Footsteps, is free. Children who reach the appropriate age and demonstrate admirable piety with a natural intelligence may be sponsored by the Immaculate Order to attend this primary school. Such students often end up as part of the Order itself, and the best among them can even find themselves with a sponsorship to the [[Cloister of Wisdom]].

Latest revision as of 03:06, 24 February 2015

A religion with monastic and temple-based traditons. founded in following the Immaculate Dragons - five Dragon-Blooded of great power who acted during the Usurption. So powerful were they it is believed they were manifestations of the five Elemental Dragons themselves.

The core belief of the Order is that through Noble Insight and Diligent Practice, a follower can elevate themselves closer to the perfection that was the Immaculate Dragons.

The acknowledged heads of the Order of Immaculate Dragons are the Dragon-Blooded. This is accepted as right and proper. After all, those who will outlive mortals by entire generations should be in the position to apply the long wisdom they gain.

BECOMING AN IMMACULATE[]

Joining the Immaculate Order as one of its monks is long and arduous. A would-be monk must present himself to the monks of the subdued Procession of Gray, the small, unassuming monastery in the heart of the Temple District of the Imperial City, with one difference. At any given time, its courtyard is typically packed with kneeling postulants, clad in the gray robes of their station, seeking only to be noticed by the Paragon of Sextes Jylis from his office window that overlooks the courtyard or on her way to the Scarlet Chapel in the Imperial Palace.

Those who come to the Procession of Gray must NOT arrive with shaven heads. To do so suggests one is already suited for the Order, and only the Paragon of Sextes Jylis may make that decision. Those who come from powerful families are likely to wait the longest, especially the Exalted, as they are expected to exceed the mortals around them in their capacity to withstand the rigors of fasting, lack of sleep and constant kneeling on the cobblestones of the courtyard.

Occasionally, monks require a postulants aid in some small task. Afterward, they are expected to return to their places. At night, all postulants are shown to a single dormitory overseen by a monk to sleep on bare wooden floors until just before dawn. When not sleeping or assisting monks, postulants are expected to remain kneeling in the courtyard. They are brought a single shallow bowl of rice to eat once in the middle of the day; water is brought to them four times a day. Most continue this for a few days, but for some (particularly Dragon-Blooded postulants) it can go for weeks should the Paragon suspect they still wrestle with pride.

All it takes is a nod from the Paragon as she passes on her way to tend to important business to make a postulant an acolyte. When this happens, the monks around the Paragon hurry to the side of the new acolyte, take him into the inner adytum of the Procession of Gray, where he is given a meal of rice, chicken and fruit and a small cup of watered wine. After this, their head is shaved completely, they are given a freezing cold ritual bath of cleansing, and an acolyte’s robe. At this time, the monk attending him gives him a new name, and the new acolyte takes his oath of service.

THE PILGRIMAGE[]

New acolytes are given a week to recuperate from the postulant ordeal and learn the basic sutras and martial-arts stances required of all novice monks. After this, regardless of the season, a new monk is expected to undertake the pilgrimage by foot from the Imperial City to the Great Coast Road to the Palace Sublime in Incas Prefecture. Acolytes are given only their robes, a walking staff and a begging bowl with which to beg for food or money.

This is often a humbling experience for monks, especially those from Dynastic or patrician families. These pilgrims are forbidden from using Essence or force to get food, and may not break any laws. The communities between the Imperial City and the Palace Sublime are accustomed to these begging monks and are willing to give food to the sufficiently humble. A new monk, even one with Dragon-Blooded heritage, who approaches the task of begging with arrogance or expectation is in for a rude shock.

Finally, after weeks of travel by foot and begging rides with those who have wagons, the new acolyte arrives at the Palace Sublime. He is taken in, fed, bathed and his head shaved again. He is given any medical attention that may be necessary from his long and arduous trip and given a place in the monks’ cells as a monk of the First Coil.

COILS OF THE IMMACULATE ORDER[]

The Immaculate Order teaches that the Road of Enlightenment wraps around like the long, sinuous body of a dragon coiled around a great pillar. In the normal process of living, a being remains where he stands on this winding Road, moving perhaps a few steps up or down. Those who dedicate themselves to the Immaculate Dragons may advance greatly in their place through diligent service and practice of the Immaculate Philosophy.

The behaviors of the various Coils are required for several reasons.

  • it sets the monks apart from society, constantly reminding them they are held to a higher standard.
  • these voluntary limitations teach the monk discipline and allow him to focus his energy and attention on things of a spiritual, rather than secular, nature.

Immaculate monks speak of this symbolic structure as the Five Coils. They are not so prideful as to claim any control over where their soul actually stands—they simply find use in these five “levels” of devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy. A monk of higher Coils is expected to exemplify the ideas of the Order more than one of lower Coils, adhering to stricter requirements of behavior and service.

The Five Coils were first described in The Gentle Rule, a text supposedly inspired by Daana’d that describes the proper running of monasteries, including the division of work, methods of dress and the like. All monks are expected to study The Gentle Rule.

The majority of a monk’s strictures are established when he takes his vows as a monk of the First Coil. Some of these strictures change as the monk increases in Coil, and to assume the strictures of a higher Coil is considered an act of vanity and presumption.

FIRST COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •])[]

  • Appearance: A monk is required to shave his head, and keep it shaven, though may wear facial hair. Jewelry and tattoos are forbidden.
  • Celibacy: A monk must take a vow of celibacy; sex is too great of a distraction from spiritual endeavors. Masturbation is allowed.
  • Diet: Eat no red meat; consume no intoxicants or narcotics.
  • Poverty: A monk must vow to own nothing. Even the clothing on his back belongs to the Order. Any money given to a monk of the Order, by tradition, has been given to the Order.
  • Vestments: a simple hempen robe, belted with rope. The robe may be decorated with modest trim, which usually adheres to the traditions to which the monk belongs (monastic, temple or ascetic). The monk may also wear a broad-rimmed hat and sandals.
  • Name: At the end of her time as a postulant, a monk of the First Coil is given a new name, meant to divorce her from her old life and reflect something of her inner nature. It is usually diminutive or even slightly embarrassing, such as “Cricket” for the high-jumper or “Little Brook” for the monk who can’t quite still her tongue.

SECOND COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••])[]

  • Diet: consume no fowl, in addition to the dietary strictures of the First Coil.
  • Vestments: As First Coil, save that the hempen robe is cinched up with a linen belt. This belt is generally undyed, unless the monk is a devotee of one of the Immaculate Dragons, in which case it may be black (Daana’d), white (Pasiap), blue (Mela), red (Hesiesh) or green (Sextes Jylis).
  • Name: Upon being given the linen belt of the Second Coil, the monk may change his name. A monk may reclaim his birth or family name, though doing so is a sign that one’s family will still play a role in one’s life (though there is no stigma for doing so). Many monks ask a mentor or respected figure to name them. By tradition, this is a serious name, one that truly reflects the holy figure the monk is becoming.

THIRD COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••])[]

This is the highest rank any non-Dragon Blood can achieve.

  • Diet: consume no sweets, sorbets or coarse grains in addition to the former restrictions.
  • Status: The monk may hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil, depending on the need for someone to hold such a position.
  • Title: The monk is addressed by lessers as “Honored One” or “Reverend.” When their name is used, the prefix “Honored” is applied to it (“Honored Nine Rivers,” for instance). Only speakers within the Order need use these titles. Outsiders who wish to win favor might do so.
  • Vestments: a robe of soft linen, often undyed, or dyed to reflect the monk’s devotion to a given Immaculate Dragon. He wears a belt of woven wool.

FOURTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER ••••])[]

  • Diet: consume no meat whatsoever and drink nothing but tea and water in addition to former restrictions.
  • Exaltation: Only the Dragon-Blooded hold ranking of the Fourth Coil.
  • Status: Should the need present itself, the monk may hold the position of lama. They are almost guaranteed to hold the position of abbot, vartabed or sybil.
  • Title: The monk is addressed by lessers as “Most Enlightened Master,” and when his name is used, the prefix “Master” is applied to it.
  • Vestments: As Third Coil, but the belt is made of silk.

FIFTH COIL (BACKING [IMMACULATE ORDER •••••])[]

  • Diet: consume only rice, bread, vegetables, tea and water.
  • Status: Most who hold the Fifth Coil are elder lamas. The Mouth of Peace and the Immaculate Paragons are all chosen from those who stand on the Fifth Coil.
  • Vestments: The monk of the Fifth Coil wears a robe and belt of silk.

THE MOUTH OF PEACE[]

One of the most powerful people in the Realm, the Mouth of Peace acts as the conscience of the Scarlet Empress, counseling peaceful resolutions and the secularized search for enlightenment in all things. The position is named for the office’s traditional role in counseling the Dynasty against warfare. Because she sits so closely to the Empress, the Mouth of Peace acts as the secular-dealing head of the Immaculate Order. She takes on such things as the disbursement of imperial funds to the Immaculate Order, situations where the Immaculate Order and imperial government or Great Houses clash and a variety of other circumstances.

It is the intent of the Immaculate Order that the spiritual leadership of the Order, the five Immaculate Paragons, be disturbed with secular, mundane matters as little as possible. As a result, though, the Mouth of Peace wields quite a bit of power, for she is generally the primary contact and point of authority between the Immaculate Order and the secular world. In fact, those outside the Order generally assume that the Mouth of Peace is the leadership for this massive faith (which is mostly true).

The Mouth of Peace is considered a sacrificial figure, a being of great enlightenment and spiritual power who makes the sacrifice of sullying herself with the necessity of involvement in politics, secularism and mundane tasks. It is understood she does these things so that others—particularly the Immaculate Paragons—do not have to. Nonetheless, few are granted permission to see her in her Contemplative Chamber atop one of the towers of the Palace Sublime. Only high-ranking members of the Dynasty, the elders of House Iselsi (who have taken sanctuary in the Palace Sublime), the Sidereals, and highly placed members of the Immaculate Order are permitted audiences.

The Mouth of Peace is expected to give up everything when she assumes the role: all political connections, family ties, friendships. The one who is made the Mouth of Peace even surrenders her name, for the Immaculate Order teaches that the Mouth of Peace should be a single entity, throughout the history of the Immaculate Order. The Mouth of Peace does not speak out against the actions of previous Mouths of Peace, but is expected to act in accordance with them.

The current Mouth of Peace is an Earth Aspect formerly of House Mnemon. This family tie does Mnemon little good which is a source of aggravation that her granddaughter will not accede to her ambitions and aid her. The Mouth of Peace has also refused Mnemon’s attempts to have the heart of the Immaculate Order moved within the walls of the Imperial City.

Her predecessor was a scion of House Iselsi who never truly abandoned her House affiliation (resulting in her murder at the hands of unknown forces when the House was officially dismantled in RY 570). The current Mouth of Peace, however, has created a definitive separation between her origins and her role, so she will not move the entire Order for political reasons. She has also begun some traditions that are likely to continue with successive Mouths of Peace, including the tendency to leave the Contemplative Chamber in disguise once every few years or so and travel the Realm incognito to ascertain the spiritual state of her people.

THE IMMACULATE PARAGONS[]

In terms of hierarchy, the five Immaculate Paragons are beneath the Mouth of Peace, but for a simple reason: The top of a hierarchical structure is, of necessity, a political one, and the true spiritual leaders of the Immaculate Order should be distanced from such things. The Immaculate Paragons are considered living saints and bodhisattvas, men and women of Exaltation so potent it marks everything they do. They are Dragon-Blooded whose Essence transcends the normal heights of the Dragon-Blooded, they literally wear the element of their Exaltation on their bodies. Such souls are taught to be close to unity with the Dragons once more. The Immaculate Paragons are acknowledged as greatly compassionate souls who have delayed this unity in order to help elevate the rest of mankind.

When an Immaculate monk is recognized as one of the Immaculate Paragons, he abandons all old ties of tradition and House, should he retain any. Unlike the Mouth of Peace, each Paragon should be remembered by the Order, so they take names reflective of the lessons they see themselves as having to teach Creation and the faithful. That way, simply by speaking their names, their message and teachings are remembered.

The Paragons are always Dragon-Blooded, with an aspect appropriate to the Dragon that they serve. They are all masters of at least one of the elemental styles (again, of the aspect appropriate to the Dragon they emulate), and most are masters of multiple ones.

LAMAS[]

Beneath the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons are the Lamas - wise monks with years of experience and leadership to their credit. All lamas are Dragon-Blooded, and are assigned to a Cloister or Temple (depending on the individual) to help supervise their Traditions. In this role, they are expected to know what is going on in their territories, that they may counsel the Mouth of Peace and the Paragons properly. In theory, there must be at least one lama for each geographical region and satrapy, but this isn’t always the case (particularly away from the Blessed Isle). A lama is supposed to spend half of every year in the geographical region he oversees and the other half at the Palace Sublime.

In addition to these duties, every Lama must learn to balance the political demands of the Mouth of Peace against the enlightened Paragons - frequently a very difficult task to accomplish. Outsiders wonder why it isn’t made simpler—why is there no definitive chain of command? The wise know the answer to this, however. A lama’s first master should be his own wisdom, balancing the needs of the secular world with the demands of enlightenment.

THE CLOISTER TRADITION[]

Nearly half of all monks follow this tradition. Rather than acting as intercessors for the people, the cloister tradition teaches Immaculates to sequester themselves from the bustle of daily life in remote monasteries. In these places of serenity, the cloistered monk may focus on his Essence and its development, seeking to emulate the Immaculate Dragons—who moved through life remaining apart from the banality of the mundane world—as close as anyone can.

In the Immaculate Order, the cloistered monks serve a valuable purpose. It is from cloistered monasteries that most copies of the sutras come, as one of the tasks undertaken by these men and women is the hand-copying of the Immaculate Texts. Additionally, cloistered monks study martial arts significantly more than those of the other traditions, when trouble with a god or spirit is reported to the Immaculate Order, it is usually a cloistered monastery that the request for aid is sent.

The monks of the cloisters have a frightening reputation to the common folk, for they rarely see the cloisters monks until the need for Immaculate martial arts comes. Then, they are grim warriors who come with sutras on their lips and terrible elemental Essence about their fists.

Cloistered monks wear only the basic vestments of monks of the Immaculate Order. A given cloister might have a unified pattern of trim at the edges, though, such as the wave motif of the Heavenly Cloister of Sapphire, in the western part of the Blessed Isle, or the Unyielding Perseverance Keep’s pattern of diamonds with a single dot in the middle of each.

THE ABBOT[]

The lama of a cloistered monastery is an abbot/ abbess who oversee the monks within their monastery and very little else. They drive their subordinates toward martial and spiritual excellence relentlessly, seeking to push them until their common weaknesses hinder them, and then to push them some more, allowing them to overcome those weaknesses. A cloistered abbot may be a grim, insulting master of the martial arts or a kindly old man given to meditation and philosophical talks over tea, but he is always one thing—driven. Most Paragons are chosen from lamas who once served as abbots.

THE TEMPLE TRADITION[]

The temple tradition is the part of the Order that sees to the adherence to the Immaculate Calendar and the performance of the rites to the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies. These monks often deal with common folk, and their penchant for wisdom and strict watchfulness against heresy is legendary.

Ultimately, the temple tradition exists for two reasons:

  • to see that the appropriate rites are performed for the gods of the Celestial and Terrestrial Bureaucracies
  • to see that people understand the Immaculate Philosophy.

Where cloistered monks live the Philosophy, teaching by example and answering questions of the curious, temple monks seek to make those around them understand through the use of parables, prayers and readings. Although they practice martial arts as well, temple monks spend more of their days overseeing the various rites of propitiation, teaching the common folk and performing rites of passage for them.

Temple monks often wear prayer shawls, each marked with the symbol of the temple to which the monk belongs. They also often wear pectorals or belts hung with the symbolic representations of the gods to whom they are performing rites. Such decorations change daily.

THE VARTABED[]

The lama charged with a temple is called the Vartabed. They are responsible for training the monks under them in the maintenance of the Immaculate Calendar and education of the populace. Vartabeds are usually assumed to be quite socially engaging. A vartabed understands that the Immaculate Order wields no small power, as entrenched as it is in society. It is his responsibility to make sure that this power—like all that in the Immaculate Order—is wielded in accordance to the tenets of the Immaculate Philosophy.

All of the Mouths of Peace has been chosen from lamas who were once vartabeds.

THE ASCETIC TRADITION[]

Although not officially recognized, the ascetic tradition is quite strong. Approximately 1 in every 10 monks pursue an ascetic path, and many Immaculate monks, whether temple or cloister trained, undertake asceticism in order to deepen their understanding at some point in their lives.

Simply put, the ascetic tradition seeks to escape all of civilization. Unlike cloistered monks, ascetics don’t sequester themselves behind high monastery walls; unlike temple monks, they don’t seek immersion in the daily life of the Realm. Instead, the ascetic monk flees cities and goes into the wilderness to simply dwell there for a time.

Most ascetic monks put themselves through a very difficult existence, eating only insects and roots, drinking only cool river water and living either exposed to the elements or within naturally occurring shelter. All ascetic monks believe the denial of the body’s needs is how the soul is purified and enlightened. Therefore, most ascetic monks remain on the edge of sleep deprivation, starvation and exposure, mortifying their bodies in order to elevate their souls. These monks often acquire a supernatural reputation among the common folk, who attribute to them amazing abilities for their sacrifice and dedication.

Ascetic monks are invariably dressed in tattered vestments, or are nearly naked, clothed only in what they can make by hand, or what superstitious peasants leave for them at the mouths of their caves.

THE SYBIL[]

Ascetics have no leaders as it is unnecessary as most of these monks remain ascetic for just a few years at a time, returning to their home monasteries nearly dead of exhaustion, when they have gained whatever insights they sought or when their responsibilities pull them home once more. A rare few ascetic monks, however, do not pursue this life and undertake the ascetic tradition permanently - believing that since the Immaculate Dragons wandered Creation in order to understand their Essence, so too must they. When such a monk achieves the renown that would elevate them to the position of Vartabed or Abbot, the lamas simply refer to them as a Sybil.

Sybils are often sought out by other monks seeking wisdom. Many teachers instruct the monks beneath them that, in order to truly undertake the ascetic tradition for a time, they must seek out a Sybil in order for her to impart some wisdom to them. Many of them do discover refinements of their Essence unique to the insights that come from prolonged ascetic practice. Most stories that discuss strange ascetic monks capable of working miracles refer to sybils.

ITINERANT MONKS[]

An itinerant monk adheres to all three of the major Immaculate traditions in many ways. They travel seeking wisdom in the wilderness through starvation and deprivation like an Ascetic, yet also seek out communities without a nearby Immaculate presence to performing the rites of passage and propitiating the local small gods properly like a Temple monk. Most itinerant monks adhere to a strictly scheduled route of travel, allowing them to come to know the people along that route. When such a monk shows up, many put-off marriages are held and celebrated, babies born since he was last through are named and blessed, and any local spirits problems are reported to him to deal with. It sometimes seems that where an itinerant monk goes, celebration follows.

Itinerant monks are often quite skilled in the martial arts, as well, for they seek out masters of the martial arts to train them in their journeys. They are the monks most likely to be called upon to deal with the dangers of the road and wilderness.

Most monks are instructed to undertake an itinerant existence at some point in their lives. Frequently this happens after completing their training at the Palace Sublime but before they report to their new monasteries. It also occurs prior a monk takes over a monastery as Vartabed or abbot. Many monks see this as a rite of passage, used to mark dramatic changes in the monk’s existence.

THE CELESTIALLY GUIDED ITINERANTS[]

Occasionally, a monk’s skill, piety and devotion to the Immaculate Philosophy is noticed by the Mouth of Peace. Such figures may be chosen to join the Celestially Guided Itinerants, an order of wandering agents of the Mouth of Peace. What the magistrates are to the Thousand Scales, the Celestially Guided Itinerants are to the Immaculate Order—bringers of scrutiny and justice, in adherence with the laws of the Order and the will of the Mouth of Peace.

The Celestially Guided Itinerants are tremendously skilled investigators, and are all Dragon-Blooded. They answer only to the Mouth of Peace and are notorious for their ability to stumble into false tithing scams, corruption in monasteries and other symptoms of the fact that, for all their preaching of perfection, the Immaculate Order is still manned by fallible mortals.

SOCIAL DUTIES[]

Regardless of tradition and style of service, all Immaculate monks are expected to fulfill a variety of obligations:

SEARCH FOR RELICS[]

Hearing the words and understanding the message of the Immaculate Dragons, mortals and Exalted are brought closer to enlightenment. The more an individual hears and understands, the closer he might come. Therefore, it is considered an important duty of every Immaculate monk to search for relics of the First Age, especially writings that contain the words of the Immaculate Dragons. Such findings form the basis for the Immaculate Texts. Even those that are not the words of the Immaculate Dragons or their apostles are still considered important, allowing Immaculate scholars to better understand the context in which some sutras were spoken.

CULTIVATION OF ESSENCE[]

Every monk is responsible for aiding others in the cultivation of their Essence. First and foremost, of course, an Immaculate monk must not neglect her own development, but she must also aid others where she can. In some cases, this involves training young Dragon-Blooded (particularly outcastes) how to use their Essence, but is not limited to the Princes of the Earth. A mortal who learns to find resolve, acceptance and self-reliance in his life’s duties is said to be cultivating his Essence, as is one who learns the sutras. Many monks strive to teach all who wish to learn the techniques of meditation and the basics of the martial arts.

Exalted monks are also taught that they should assist mortals in learning the techniques of awakening their Essence, where such is possible.

EDUCATION[]

Immaculate monks are beholden to teach those around them. This teaching focuses primarily on the Immaculate Texts and the Immaculate Philosophy, though it is understood that mortals are enlightened through education of any kind. All monasteries are required to take in children from the age 5-9 and educate them, usually using the holy sutras as the basis for learning to read.

RITES OF PASSAGE[]

The passage through a single life, while just a blink in a soul’s walk along the Road of Enlightenment, is still noteworthy. Rites of passage serve to bind a community together, thus building civilization. The Immaculate monks perform all weddings, binding in union new couples. Monks also perform the naming ceremonies of new children, who are simply called “boy” or “girl” until such a ceremony has taken place. Rites of adulthood, funerals and many other such ceremonies are usually performed under the watchfulness of the Immaculate monks as well.

DIVINE INTERCESSION[]

Dragon-Blooded monks are expected to act as intermediaries between men and gods. It is a tenet of the Immaculate Philosophy that the Princes of the Earth are the only ones with the moral and spiritual fortitude to withstand the influence of the gods without losing their will. As such, the Immaculate Order not only oversees all the rites of all the gods (theoretically, at least) in Creation, in accordance to the Immaculate Calendar, but its monks also go to small gods to represent mortal populations. Such occurrences are usually sufficient to cow most small gods, who fear the supernatural martial prowess of the Immaculate monks.

MISSIONARY WORK[]

Through the spread of understanding one’s place under Heaven, Creation is strengthened. Therefore, one of the Immaculate Order’s foremost efforts is in missionary work. The missionary efforts of the Immaculate Order are not limited to teaching mortals the truths of the Immaculate Philosophy, however—they also extend to local gods. Normally, when the Immaculate Order achieves sufficient influence in an area, it builds a monastery and populates it.

Then, as the mortal monks go forth and teach the sutras and Philosophy to the common men of the area, the Dragon-Blooded monks seek out the local gods, calling on them to bow before the righteousness of the Immaculate Way. Those who defy the monks are fought with supernatural martial arts. Then, once gods and commoners have been swayed to the Immaculate Philosophy, most abbots invite the local leaders of an area to the monastery, believing that once the commoners and the gods of the area adhere to the Immaculate Philosophy, the leadership can do nothing but accede as well.

SOCIAL JUSTICE[]

The monks of the Immaculate Order—particularly monks who hold the ideals of Daana’d close—teach that each being is a potential bodhisattva and should be treated accordingly. Everyone in Creation has a place, and to fight against that place is wrong (though that does not give one the right to abuse those below one). Immaculate monks are notorious for protesting the tyrannies of rulers in front of their palaces, refusing to be moved and willing to sacrifice themselves in some instances (if only to prove how strongly the Order opposes such a situation). They will even go so far as to lead uprisings, and the Paragons of the Immaculate Dragons have spoken out against the excesses of even the Great Houses in the past.

EMULATION VS. WORSHIP[]

The Immaculate Dragons are inspirations for enlightened behavior; NOT gods to be worshipped (they are NOT part of the godly bureaucracies). Through their example, mortals may understand proper action in accordance with the human experience in the cycle of rebirth. To worship the Immaculate Dragons, a thing one should aspire to be, is to lose sight of the message they taught and shackling oneself to a base existence instead of striving for true spiritual ascendance.

THE IMMACULATE CALENDAR[]

The Immaculate Order maintains the Immaculate Calendar, a massive archive of gods both large and small in Creation and in Heaven. This calendar records not only the identity of a god, but the proper ritual used to propitiate it. Gods are given direct worship only by the Immaculate monks, who understand that it is the proper place of those in Creation to render up worship to those in Heaven. They do not believe, however, that every individual god has the right to coerce more worship than it is due from vulnerable mortals.

As such, the more powerful the god is, the more frequently it is given worship. The Celestines are worshiped on a daily basis by all the temple monasteries. Heavenly gods are likewise rendered worship at the Palace Sublime and other major temple monasteries, with more important gods being worshiped more frequently.

When a local god agrees to adhere to the Immaculate Philosophy, its rites and days of worship are entered in the local copy of the Immaculate Calendar, and the monks of that temple perform the rites when its proper ritual days come around. Most local gods do not receive more than a few days of worship a year.

The Immaculate Philosophy’s rituals incorporate worship of the Celestial Bureaucracy in a general way. Temple monks lead the faithful in sutras and rituals that glorify the gods in general, rendering up the proper obeisance of mortals without favoring any one god over others. The Immaculate Order teaches that the gods are properly worshiped in this fashion.

Although the monks know what gods are being revered on a given day, the ritual that is performed by the laity is the same every day, with the monks symbolically gathering that worship and apportioning it to the appropriate gods.

For this reason, the Immaculate Order is careful to search out heresy. It isn’t as though gods are not worshiped, all gods are worshiped in accordance with their duties under Heaven.

Therefore, by the teachings of the Order, additional and direct worship not only exposes mortals to the potentially corrupting influence of divine majesty, which may cause them to veer away from their search for enlightenment, but it gives the god more worship than it is due. It is, in effect, either bribery or blackmail, depending on the nature of the god in question.

Heresy is answered with direct, swift action. The Immaculate monks call out the heretic gods to combat, preferably in the presence of their erstwhile cult. Once the god has been beaten either into submission or dispersal, the mortals are reminded of their duties to seek personal enlightenment, not to provide power to a greedy little god. The difficulties they are praying to be alleviated are part of their natural existence and meant to challenge them. By meeting those challenges, they take steps on the Road of Enlightenment; by running to a spirit to do it for them, they lose their footing.

As a result of these painful demonstrations, many gods on the Blessed Isle are quite terrified of being accused of heresy. At the first sign of any direct worship potentially developing around them, it isn’t uncommon for a god who has experienced Immaculate retribution to not only refuse to allow people to worship him, but to be the one to report the would-be cult at the nearest Immaculate temple!

TEMPLES & MONASTERIES[]

The buildings and manses of the Immaculate Order are generally put to a variety of uses. The Exalted monks of the Immaculate Order prefer to use a manse for their purposes, but will work with whatever is available.

THE PALACE SUBLIME[]

The largest temple of the Immaculate Order is a confusing maze of temple spaces, monastic training grounds, offices, council chambers, meditation quarters and vaults of riches and artifacts. The Palace Sublime seems quite indefensible, made up of a pair of immensely tall towers and a squat, square keep. Nonetheless, it is home to no less than the Mouth of Peace and four of the five Immaculate Paragons. It is the heart of the Immaculate Order, and none has ever dared attack it.

Atop of one of the towers is the Contemplative Chamber of the Mouth of Peace. The next few floors beneath that are appointed for her staff. Above the Contemplative Chamber is a small, modest office where Chejop Kejak resides, watching out over Creation from one of the tallest towers anywhere.

The monks who dwell here are one of two kinds:

  • the very young, undergoing their first training after their pilgrimage, before being sent on to another monastery somewhere,
  • the very experienced, lamas, Celestially Guided Itinerants and a variety of others.

Among these scuttle bureaucrats, under-secretaries and minor functionaries who keeps the monolithic Immaculate Order running.

The Bronze Faction considers this the closest thing it has to a headquarters in Creation, and many nights see 3-4 of the most unlikely secretaries, monks and others gathered atop the roof, watching the stars in the sky closely.

MONASTERIES[]

The Immaculate Order is perhaps best known for its monasteries, fine walled enclosures decorated with draconic iconography, dedicated to either all five of the Immaculate Dragons or one of them in particular.

CLOISTERS[]

Cloistered monasteries are meant for no one save the Immaculate Order. Consisting entirely of bare living spaces, ample training courtyards, martial-arts dojos and meditation rooms, cloisters do not have servants to tend to the inhabitants’ needs, for the monks themselves perform these duties.

Most cloisters are quite defensible, with tall walls and the means of fi ghting off a prolonged siege. They also tend to boast impressive armories of weapons, and some cloisters might even have armed and armored monastery guardians at the gates and patrolling the walls.

TEMPLES[]

Temple monasteries, on the other hand, tend to be lavish, with beautiful craftsmanship. There are usually public worship areas (normally in a chapel dedicated to the five Immaculate Dragons), as well as a few other areas for the celebration of rites of passage. Simple, small chambers can usually be found scattered about, meant for one supplicant to confer with a monk on issues of a private nature.

Behind these public areas are not just the living areas for monks, but also the individual temples or shrines for the local gods or for greater gods that the monastery is responsible for helping to directly worship. Such areas are strictly off-limits to non-monks, and even then, it is only the Exalted monks who carry keys to these chambers.

SHRINES[]

There are usually two kinds of shrines to be found: those to the Immaculate Dragons and those to local small gods in an area where there are no temple monasteries. The first shrines are usually set aside for itinerant and ascetic monks who find the necessity of a temple space (usually for performing rites of passage and the like for those who haven’t seen a monk in a while). Such shrines are built simply, often out of local materials, featuring a large stone or wooden statue of a dragon, with a simple bed of sand in front of it for joss sticks.

The second type of shrine is a little rarer, as Immaculate monks don’t like the possibility of cults springing up around the shrines of little gods. In some cases, however, it is necessary to perform the rites of a small god in a space dedicated to it. Such shrines are found only in areas where an ascetic monk or cloistered monastery provides the only Immaculate attention, and such shrines are always sealed behind heavily locked doors, the key of which remains in the possession of the Immaculate.

SCHOOLS[]

The Immaculate Order takes responsibility for teaching the children of non-patrician families that cannot afford tutors of their own. From the ages of five to nine, children from all over report to monasteries to learn the basics of reading, writing and mathematics, as well as a heavy dose of the Immaculate Philosophy. At the age of 10, however, children leave, continuing on to primary schools if their parents can afford it or to begin working toward the craft they will pursue as adults otherwise.

The Immaculate Order maintains a couple of primary schools, though, like other primary schools, they are for those who can afford to enroll their children there. Only one, the Academy of Those Who Tread in Sextes Jylis’ Footsteps, is free. Children who reach the appropriate age and demonstrate admirable piety with a natural intelligence may be sponsored by the Immaculate Order to attend this primary school. Such students often end up as part of the Order itself, and the best among them can even find themselves with a sponsorship to the Cloister of Wisdom.