Corellon Larethian
Corellon Larethian | ||
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A quarter moon, or a starburst |
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Aliases | Coronal of Arvandor, Creator of the Elves, First of the Seldarine, Preserver of Life, the Protector, Ruler of All Elves, the Divine Muse | |
Alignment | Chaotic Good | |
Divine Rank | Greater God | |
Pantheon | Dawn War, Seldarine | |
Portfolio | Arts, Bards, Crafts, Elves, Magic, Music, War | |
Domains | 3E: Arborea, Chaos, Community, Elf, Good, Magic, Protection, War 5E: Arcana, Life, Light, War |
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Home Plane | Arvandor (Arborea) | |
Worshippers | Elves, Eladrin, Half Elves, Archers, Bards, Good Leaders, Fighters, Poets, Rangers, Sorcerers, Wizards | |
Favoured Weapon | Sahandrian (Longsword) |
Corellon Larethian is a Chaotic Good, Greater Deity in the Elven Pantheon in the majority of the D&D cosmologies. Though his exact portfolio changes from edition to edition, and between campaign settings. Wherever there is a Seldarine, you are likely going to find Corellon leading it. He was briefly the patron of Arcane magic, supposedly having seeded the world with the stuff, as well as having a Neutral alignment. However, in the majority of editions he is a CG god of War and Protection, only occasionally branching out into Spellcraft, Community Spirit, Arts and Artisans, Craftsmen and Commanders and all round Mary Sue shit. And in every setting he is in he is a colossal dick
History[edit]
When the Gods were born, they set about dividing creation into their kingdoms. Corellon and a bunch of other deities banded together and started calling themselves "the Seldarine". Corellon took the sexiest goddess, Araushnee, as his wife and together they started planting forests, introducing animals and generally breathing life into the cosmos.
Unfortunately for Corellon, Araushnee had figured she could do the business of running the cosmos herself and was resolved to push her husband off a cliff as soon as he finished building it. She was sleeping around with the other gods, taking Fenmarel Mestarine to bed in an attempt build alliances for her big takeover. The plot was discovered by Sehanine Moonbow, though for varying reasons the truth isn't revealed straight away.
When Gruumsh showed up late to the building of the world he asked where his creations the orcs were meant to live. Corellon then replied that they shouldn't and told Gruumsh to "piss off". So Gruumsh then flew into a rage and started chopping down the forests to build walls and machines in order to make a gigantic fortress for himself. When Corellon told Gruumsh to stop what he was doing, Gruumsh then "kidnapped" Corellon's supermodel wife and held her hostage in his castle, though it was all part of the plot to get rid of her husband.
Corellon did the only reasonable thing you do when you need to storm the battlements: he made a bow. Taking careful aim from a safe distance, he fired over and over, each hit somehow getting past the emplaced defenses and striking Gruumsh in the ass. Eventually Gruumsh's ass had bled so profusely that the fortress was filled with so much blood that the foundations were weakened, causing the fortress to collapse and Araushnee to escape, though she wasn't happy with the result.
From here the story diverges slightly depending on who's telling the story:
- Gruumsh pulled himself from the wreckage then fought Corellon hand to hand and knocked seven shades of shit out of him, and Corellon only wins due to a lucky strike that puts out Gruumsh's eye and ending the fight. After dealing with the duplicity of Araushnee and exiling her, one of the other Goddesses, Sehanine Moonbow (who may or may not be Corellon's daughter), tends Corellon's wounds and creates the Elven race from mixing her tears with his blood.
- Variants to the story have Sehanine interrupting the fight, either because Corellon is too wounded to continue fighting or because his sword Sahandrian breaks. The power of Sehanine is said to heal Corellon's wounds or reforge the sword, giving him the strength to fight on and put out Gruumsh's eye. Corellon would later marry Sehanine (if she isn't his daughter then) after exiling his unfaithful wife. In this case the race of Elves already existed, or they would be created some other way. Presumably the old fashioned way.
- In yet a third different version of the story, Corellon managed to win the fight merely by shooting lots of arrows over and over, never getting wounded in the first place. When Orcs tell this version of the story Gruumsh doesn't get his eye plucked out either, and the creation of the Elves goes unmentioned. This is presumably the story told whenever Elves aren't the preeminent species, so other races (like Humans or Dwarves) can arise before the Elves do, or when the creation mythology requires the races to arise some other way (like in the Broken Mold story).
- A fourth telling of the story (usually the Forgotten Realms version) has Araushnee's exile as entirely separate from the conflict with Gruumsh and the race of Elves already exists in their infancy. Instead, Corellon is accidentally struck by an arrow fired by his daughter Eilistraee that had been cursed by his wife to seek out the heart of her husband. While everyone is in despair, Araushnee would invite the gods of evil and their armies into Arvandor to overthrow it. However, it's somewhat consistent with the other tellings of the story: Sehanine Moonbow had still been aware of the plot and joins with Aerdrie Faenya and Hanali Celanil to become Angharradh so that she can heal Corellon as before, while also revealing the truth of Araushnee's treachery. When the villainous gods are defeated, Araushnee is still exiled, but Eilistraee goes with her due to the guilt she feels from shooting her father while understanding that Araushnee's mortal followers will need a "good" deity to give them an example to aspire to.
- In the "Core 5E" version everything is a little more grimdark. Corellon was actually a formless shapeshifter and a capricious dickhead who pissed off Gruumsh before the Seldarine even existed. During their battles, Corellon's spilled blood would rise up to create new primal entities that nearly matched their power. After coming to appreciate some of them individually they gave them all names and eventually formed the pantheon of gods that would later be named the Seldarine. It was Lolth (no Araushnee this time, just Lolth) who persuaded the primal spirits to take static forms and actually become "Elves". Corellon was pissed at the betrayal and lost all trust in their pantheon while also banishing Lolth and her followers to the Abyss. In their disappointment they also cast out the primal spirits who had taken elven form away from Arvandor to become mortal and continually refuses their eternal respite when they die by reincarnating them in new bodies after a period of time.
Realm[edit]
Corellon and Sehanine reside in the Crescent Grove in the realm of Arvandor, which sits in either the plane of Arborea (in the original cosmology of the Great Wheel) or in the Astral Sea (as part of the World Axis cosmology).
The Crescent Grove isn't actually a "grove" at all, but is an architectural masterpiece of marble and plantlife towers over the plane and makes for an excellent tourist location.
Worshippers[edit]
Needless to say, Corellon's primary followers are elves, though some half-elves worship him too. In 4th edition, he was also a general patron god for wizards, bards and artists, though still mostly favored by humans, elves, half-elves and gnomes.
Champions of Corellon[edit]
Followers of Corellon get their very own prestige class. Champions of Corellon Larethian those Elves and Half-Elves who prefer to stand toe to toe with their enemies, rather than turning them into pin-cushions or casting spells at them. Champions are similar to Paladins in that they are required to follow an ethical code set down by their deity; namely that they must aid elves in need, protect the innocent etc. They also get the ability to Lay on Hands like a Paladin, as well as bonus feats that require mounted combat as a prerequisite, though they do not get their own mounted companion.
Seekers of the Misty Isle[edit]
The epilogue to the story of Corellon's defeat of Gruumsh is that the the Orc god teamed up with Kurtulmak to get his revenge once and for all: by claiming the most splendid Elven city: "The Misty Isle" and concealing it in a dimensional space. No-one knows where it is, all that is certain is that the city still thrives somewhere in the multiverse.
The Seekers of the Misty Isle are an order of divine spellcasters seeks to find the missing city, and they get improved sensory abilities on top of the adding the domains of Magic and Travel to their power sets. Joining the order is by invitation only and while there is no absolute requirement to serve Corellon directly, the history of the order makes it difficult to justify a divine caster serving anyone else, particularly any non-Elven gods.
In Exandria[edit]
Explorer's Guide to Wildemount calls Corellon "the Arch Heart," a poetic title initially used as a copyright-friendly replacement for his name in the unofficial Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting. Referred to with neutral pronouns, Corellon is otherwise mostly unchanged, except for being made into an overt and explicit Lolth-hater, to the point that Corellon's commandments includes "beat the shit out of anyone who likes Lolth" as a core tenet. They're said to live in a palace in Arborea, relentlessly snooping on gods and mortals alike from within those ivory walls.
Servants & Exarchs[edit]
Tethrin Veraldé[edit]
Tethrin Veraldé | ||
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Pair of swords touching over a full moon, under a half moon | ||
Aliases | The Master of Blades, the Shining One | |
Alignment | Neutral Good | |
Divine Rank | Demigod | |
Pantheon | Seldarine | |
Portfolio | Bladesingers, Swordsmanship | |
Domains | 2E: Healing, Protection, Sun, War 5E: War |
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Home Plane | Tethridar (Elysium) | |
Worshippers | Fighters, Bladesingers, Swordsmen |
The son of Corellon Larethian and Sehanine Moonbow, making him the half-brother of Vhaeraun and Eilistraee. Because of this relationship, Lolth has made it a point to slay him in order to cause pain to her former husband, and has sent Selvetarm to try and kill him, though the plan failed.
Tethrin is an adventurous god who has made appearances on other worlds, but has yet to form a dedicated following amongst elves, though he is well-known within elven fighters guilds. The holy days of his church are on the exact same days as his parents, where his priests give thanks to their blessed union that brought Tethrin into being. His priests, called Tethryl are expert swordsmen and are often also fine weaponsmiths.
While Tethrin is welcome in Arvandor, his realm is actually in Elysium, which he shares with his lover Kirith Sotheril, the lesser elven goddess of enchantment and divination.
Tethrin hasn't really been mentioned since 2E, probably because his portfolio was already mostly covered by his father.
Kirith Sotheril[edit]
Kirith Sotheril | ||
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A rainbow striped sphere | ||
Aliases | The Magess | |
Alignment | Neutral Good | |
Divine Rank | Lesser Goddess | |
Pantheon | Seldarine | |
Portfolio | Divination, Enchantment | |
Domains | 2E: Charm, Creation, Healing, Protection, Thought 5E: Knowledge, Trickery |
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Home Plane | Tethridar (Elysium) | |
Worshippers | Wizards |
While Corellon himself holds dominion over all elven magic, Kirith Sotheril is the Elven deity of divination and enchantment in particular. She is a rival of sorts to Sehanine Moonbow since they both have overlapping portfolios, though Sehanine considers herself to be the more subtle of the pair. Kirith even holds her holy occasions on the same days as Sehanine, although priests perform their services during the daytime instead of the evening moon.
Kirith is the lover of Tethrin Veraldé, who happens to be Sehanine's son through her master Corellon, and they share the realm of Tethridar together on Elysium.
The Deities of Dungeons & Dragons 4th Edition | |||
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Lawful | Neutral | Chaotic | |
Good | Bahamut • Haramathur • Moradin | Amoth • Lakal • Nusemnee • Pelor | Avandra • Corellon • Sehanine |
Neutral | Erathis • Raven Queen • Sagawehn | Aurom • Io • Ioun • Melora | Gorellik • Kord • Laeris |
Evil | Asmodeus • Bane • Tiamat | Nerull • Torog • Vecna | Gruumsh • Khala • Lolth • Tharizdun • Zehir |
The Deities of Exandria | |||
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Lawful | Neutral | Chaotic | |
Good | Bahamut • Moradin • Xalicas | Naviask • Pelor • Raei | Avandra • Corellon • Sehanine |
Neutral | Erathis • Raven Queen | Ioun • The Luxon • Melora | Ceratos • Kord • Quajath • The Traveler |
Evil | Asmodeus • Bane • Desirat • Tiamat | Arms of the Betrayers • The Hag Mother • Torog • Uk'otoa • Vecna • Vesh | Gruumsh • Lolth • Tharizdun • Zehir |
Alternatives to Corellon in other D&D Settings[edit]
Galaedros[edit]
Galaedros | ||
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Aliases | The Sorrowful King, the Wood God | |
Alignment | True Neutral | |
Divine Rank | Greater God | |
Pantheon | Manifest | |
Portfolio | Elves, Nature, Wood | |
Domains | Animal, Earth, Plant | |
Worshippers | Elves, Druids, Rangers. | |
Favoured Weapon | Quarterstaff |
In the Ghostwalk setting, Corellon is replaced as the God of the Elves by Galaedros: the Sorrowful King, who is analogous to Corellon in many respects, but appears more of a fusion of Corellon with other Gods such as Obad-Hai or Silvanus:
He is the creator of the Elven race, but in this case he does not reside in Arborea, simply because the setting does not have an Elven afterlife. Instead Elves become sentient trees, and are protected by Arboreal Guardians who are mortal divine spellcasters who gain their power from Galaedros.
Galaedros also has a similar history to Corellon, in that his wife was a dark skinned, grey haired deity, in this case called Phaant. However in this telling of the story, she turned against him because he spent more time tending the garden of creation than he did with her. The betrayal came when she murdered Galaedros' brother Hunael (who may be standing in for Fenmarel Mestarine in this version of the mythos). The story element of the eye that was plucked out could come from the fact that the murder sealed Phaant into her current form, which is a beautiful woman with one white, pupil-less eye.
So, like Lolth before her, Phaant was cast out to become a deity of misfortune. However because the wounding of Corellon-Galaedros was not directed at him personally, but was emotional instead. Galaedros never recovered from it, so he stepped down as King of the Gods, and so the pantheon of Manifest is more or less equal.
Dogma[edit]
Wood endures. Wood is patient. Learn from wood and study its strength. Plants provide the basic necessities of life—food, clothing, and shelter—and a wise person can survive anywhere with the proper knowledge of plants. Avoid the trappings of civilization, for something unknowable gnaws at the heart of civilized folk, making them forget where they came from and harm others for the sake of greed or merely harm itself. The green world soothes the wounds of civilization even as it bears the brunt of its wrath
The Deities of Ghostwalk | |||
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Lawful | Neutral | Chaotic | |
Good | Durann | Aluvan • Eanius | Soggelos • Wyst |
Neutral | Chaniud • Dracanish • Uhanam | Galaedros • Nessek | Tephaneron |
Evil | Phaant | Khostren | Orcus |