Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@lost-books
Created April 5, 2020 22:36
Show Gist options
  • Save lost-books/ff7f02bf634009b738662d46eddd2293 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save lost-books/ff7f02bf634009b738662d46eddd2293 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
According to Quatrian myth, the people of Anthuor escaped from the Third World by way of the tunnel of Matarax.
Ancient Quatria was ruled by what scholars call a festal government, with leadership changing throughout the calendar year.
Parades were one of the ways Ancient Quatrians celebrated the eternal return of the mythical magicians.
Quatria is an ancient lost civilization which existed before the last Ice Age.
Quatrian society was centrally organized around the practice and performance of music and musical rituals.
Quatrians are said to have colonized nearly the entire planet, and if the legends have any validity to them, several others.
South Antarctica is thought to be one of the locations evidence of Ancient Quatrian civilization can be potentially confirmed.
The House of Life is the name for a ruin in South Antarctica given by scholars to what is theorized to be a recently re-discovered ruin from Ancient Quatrian society.
The Hypogeum is and underground and otherworldly domain that rests alongside ours, and is often accessed via caves.
The Lost Books contain chronicles of many important mythological and historical mysteries from Ancient Quatria.
The Lost Books of Quatria are fragmentary tales translated and pieced together from artifacts recovered in the House of Life.
The mystic societies of the various schools of minstrels organized and maintained the continuous schedule of ritual performances enacted at immortal festivals throughout the year.
Time in the Hypogeum and in our world do not operate in the same way.
When the Hypogeum opened, the theriomorphic monsters were thought to escape to the land of humans, and the magicians were sent out after to retrieve them.
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment