Please tell the loremaster we appreciate him doing one last archive for the year, and that we hope he enjoys his thanksgiving. Hope you have a great thanksgiving as well Kevin!
[OOG: I would note in the lore, "Eloisa" is also the name of Uriel VII's grandmother, so this "Eloisa" of legend may be of Cyrodilic origin?]Impresario,
I have heard many Heart's Day retellings of the Legend of the Lovers, each one closer to fiction than fact. Who were Polydor and Eloisa? Is there any mention of them in the historical record, or is it just a holiday tale?
—Legoless, Tiger-Doyen of the United Explorers of Scholarly Pursuits
[OOG: For additional context, it is implied that temple priests of Tamriel perform resurrections year round, but on Old Life Day, it is rumored that they will wave the "normal fee" to perform the resurrection, which is a very interesting underwritten detail. TES Adventures: Redguard plays with this idea, with the attempt to resurrect A'tor at a Temple of Arkay using a soul gem which contained his soul.]TaigaStrider wrote: »Uh, hey there, Impresario!
Methinks it could just be a fable for the tots, but I've heard tell o' priests o' the Divines performin' a few resurrections durin' Old Life, the last day o' the year - and for free o' charge no less. I ain't tryin' to barrage, but is it true, and if so, how does it work - does it have somethin' to do with the olde celestial alignments? I'm also sure as Arkay's britches they ain't undead - right?
Head-scratchin',
Cotter Georick
Impresario,
I have heard many Heart's Day retellings of the Legend of the Lovers, each one closer to fiction than fact. Who were Polydor and Eloisa? Is there any mention of them in the historical record, or is it just a holiday tale?
—Legoless, Tiger-Doyen of the United Explorers of Scholarly Pursuits
Eloisa sounds like a variation of Eloise which is a Breton name that is one letter off (In ESO we have Eloise Noellaume and Eloise Miller, while its a random name for Bretons in Elder Scrolls Castles). I believe the context you provided is the daughter born to someone from the Septim Dynasty in the late Third Era. The Fall of the Usurper says the Septim Dynasty had the majority of its members that took Emperorship as either being Breton-influenced, or having spent parts of their childhood in High Rock (the exception being Cephorus II). Eloisa's name might be High Rock or Breton influence perhaps.folder_rats wrote: »As always, thanks to the loremaster for taking the time do these, It's always a bunch of fun for fans of series![OOG: I would note in the lore, "Eloisa" is also the name of Uriel VII's grandmother, so this "Eloisa" of legend may be of Cyrodilic origin?]Impresario,
I have heard many Heart's Day retellings of the Legend of the Lovers, each one closer to fiction than fact. Who were Polydor and Eloisa? Is there any mention of them in the historical record, or is it just a holiday tale?
—Legoless, Tiger-Doyen of the United Explorers of Scholarly Pursuits