Zeht, Yokudan God of Farms, is the Yokudan god of agriculture,[1] civil law, mathematics,[2] and food,[3] but he still finds a place in the pantheon of the Crowns[4]. He is similar to Zenithar, and sometimes worshiped in that name by the Forebears.[5] He renounced his father after the world was created, which is why Ruptga makes it so hard to grow food.[1] He is the father of Zeqqi. He forsakes the land of Hew's Bane, preventing most food from growing there.[6] Occasionally farming utensils of the Zeht's faithful such as digging spades are decorated with semi-precious stones and blessed by a priests of Zeht.[7] The white camel is believed to be sacred to Zeht and pious Redguards tend to bow to passing Cloud Camels.[3]
ArtifactsEdit
Aurbical AbacusEdit
The Aurbical Abacus was an ancient Yokudan relic created by distilling the knowledge and wisdom of twenty generations of the priest-wizards of the Yokudan god Zeht. It had the physical appearance of having glass gears and ivory pistons, and suffused with the blue glow of star-magic. It was used to track the movements of the moons, constellations, and planets and calculate the exact turn of the seasons. It detected the directional origin of star-magicka, or "varliance," and stored it as data. It can also predict the weather and even control it on a continental scale. It was brought to Hew's Bane after Yokuda sank, by the Zeht priesthood, where it was buried in the old Hubalajad family tomb known as Bahraha's Gloom.[2]
GalleryEdit
Known ExpressionsEdit
- Zeht's tears.[8]
ReferencesEdit
- ^ a b Varieties of Faith... — Brother Mikhael Karkuxor of the Imperial College
- ^ a b Naryu's Journal/Hew's Bane — Naryu Virian
- ^ a b Zeht's Cloud Camel's description in ESO
- ^ Varieties of Faith, Crown Redguards — Brother Mikhael Karkuxor of the Imperial College
- ^ Varieties of Faith, The Forebears — Brother Mikhael Karkuxor of the Imperial College
- ^ Lady in the Cistern: Walks-Softly's Theory — Walks-Softly
- ^ Blessed Spade item description in ESO
- ^ Sai Sahan's dialogue in ESO