Champion: Difference between revisions

From Protest-Stand Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{stub}} One of Alexandria's Court who is considered a paragon of some virtue and/or defender of some ideal or group. Sometimes given the prefix "saint."")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{stub}}
{{stub}}


One of [[Alexandria's Court]] who is considered a paragon of some virtue and/or defender of some ideal or group. Sometimes given the prefix "saint."
In [[Alexandrian Orthodoxy]] theology some mortals prove themselves in life to be such a paragon of a virtue and/or defender of some ideal or group that in death they become part of [[Alexandria's Court]]. These Champions are also frequently referred to by the ancient Ubrekti title of "Saint". Even prior to the [[War of Schism]] there were regional variations on the lists of recognized Champions and the creation of many nation-backed [[Western Alexandrian]] Churches following that war has led to even more variations in official lists as several of those nations formally canonized national heroes and historic figures (some of which were likely already considered "folk" Champions.)
 
==Examples of Champions==
*[[Grannet Adlethor]] - founder and Champion of the [[Travelers]] as well as Stonemasons and Pilgrims
*[[The Granger]] - [[Gnome]] Champion of Psionics
*[[Alexandria]] - Alexandria Herself is considered the Champion of Prophecy
*[[Hedran Riqtelo]] - Champion of the Roadways. 6th [[Archwarden]] who created the [[Manifest Episcopacies]] and was an important road and bridge-builder both literally and figuratively following the assassination of [[Hadrian Teldandilion]]

Revision as of 06:42, 2 July 2024

This article is a stub. Please help us out by contributing more to this article.

In Alexandrian Orthodoxy theology some mortals prove themselves in life to be such a paragon of a virtue and/or defender of some ideal or group that in death they become part of Alexandria's Court. These Champions are also frequently referred to by the ancient Ubrekti title of "Saint". Even prior to the War of Schism there were regional variations on the lists of recognized Champions and the creation of many nation-backed Western Alexandrian Churches following that war has led to even more variations in official lists as several of those nations formally canonized national heroes and historic figures (some of which were likely already considered "folk" Champions.)

Examples of Champions