Elendir2am wrote: »8 aedra participated on creating of Mundus. Mundus had been created long time agou, so it is closed club already. Tribunal or Talos are mostly imposters. Peoples who get enough power to force their will, bud there is nothing divine about them in aedra way.
Elendir2am wrote: »8 aedra participated on creating of Mundus. Mundus had been created long time agou, so it is closed club already. Tribunal or Talos are mostly imposters. Peoples who get enough power to force their will, bud there is nothing divine about them in aedra way.
What is and what is not an Aedra is muddled in my opinion. Of course, Talos as people were born after the creation of Nirn. However, they are important figures in building some of the societies that inhabit Nirn... so could you call them an ancestor? That is, in the literal meaning of Aedra. In terms of the creation of Aedra, that's even more muddled. To my understanding, 7 of the Divines are Anuic, with Akatosh being Padomaic and Anuic. One could argue the Aedra must have a close connection to Anu but Lorkhan is Padomaic so is he an Aedra then (though, not a part of the 8)? He is THE ancestor so in the literal sense, yes...
So what is Divine in an Aedra way if Aedra is hard to define? What are the deciding factors in who's an Aedra and who's not?
boi_anachronism_ wrote: »Not entirely true. According to lore you can absolutely mantel a god and become one in the process. In cannon that's what happens to the hero of kvatch. He becomes sheogoroth after stopping the grey march I believe.
Elendir2am wrote: »boi_anachronism_ wrote: »Not entirely true. According to lore you can absolutely mantel a god and become one in the process. In cannon that's what happens to the hero of kvatch. He becomes sheogoroth after stopping the grey march I believe.
There is no threshold you can overcome to ascend godhood. 8 Divines earn this position with creating mundus. You cannot say that they was more powerful or that there was some other clear difference from daedric princes for example.
It is primarily about their merits. Their powers play only an indirect role in this (not everyone can create something like them).
No other has ever come close to the merits of 8 divines. The others just have enough power to assert their place in history as "gods".
To put it simply, the addition of Tiber Septim to the Divines was purely a political move on part of the Church and the Elder Council - to appease both the Septims and the Talos Cult. The cult already existed while Tiber Septim was alive, managed to essentially take over the leadership of the Blades, and one of its branches even plotted to kill Uriel Septim VII during the events of Morrowind because they believed he was a weak emperor.moleculardrugs wrote: »I know that Talos ascended to godhood, but I'm not sure how that happens exactly. I was a lot younger when I played TES3 and TES4.
Talos, who's mortal name is TIber Septim conquered all of Tamriel and this somehow allowed him to become a god/part of the divines?
If anyone can explain, that'll be great. Thank you!
The Nibenese find the numinous in everything around them, and their different cults are too numerous to mention (the most famous are the Cult of the Ancestor-Moth, the Cult of Heroes, the Cult of Tiber Septim, and the Cult of Emperor Zero).
- Pocket Guide to the Empire
However, this kowtowing to the Talos Cult and the Septim dynasty was not really popular. And we can see this in the Guide to the Imperial City (written during the late Third Era), where the writer openly criticizes the Elder Council's decision to place a statue of Talos in the middle of the Imperial City Arboretum instead of a statue of Akatosh, the king of the gods.There are rumors that Uriel will be visiting Vvardenfell in person. If so, we must act sooner than anticipated. We must watch his actions carefully and strike if the opportunity presents itself. We must also recruit more and swear them to the oath: That we shall die to put a strong man back on the throne of Tamriel.
- Note from Oritius Maro
In this beautiful garden you will find the famous Statues of the Nine Divines. In the center you will find the statue of Lord Talos, Emperor Tiber Septim. But is it right, that Talos should have this place of honor rather than Akatosh, king of gods? It is the scheming pride of the Elder Council, who sought favor with the sons of Talos, that is responsible for this shameful error.
- Guide to the Imperial City
It's messy and one of the weirder aspects of TES lore. Talos is more likely than not a genuine god, mantling the position Lorkhan would've held had he not been killed.
He wasn't actually a god until the end of TES 2 however, many hundreds of years after Tiber Septim's death. The ending of that game basically caused the three oversouls making up 'Talos' (Tiber Septim, the Underking and Zurin Arctus) to retroactively become a god. It changed the past as well as the present. ESO takes place in the altered timeline caused by this, hence why Cyrodiil isn't a jungle.