Lore:Ithelia

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Ithelia
"There was another Daedric Prince! My Prince! A Prince that saved me and preserved just enough of my memory so that I could one day save them in return. A Prince whose jealous and craven siblings cast down and wiped from the annals of history."
Torvesard

Ithelia, known as the Prince of Paths, the Mistress of the Untraveled Road, the Unseen, the Fate-Changer, the Dark Reflection, the Last Tomorrow, and She Who Saw and Wept is the Daedric Prince of Paths.[1][2] It is said that Prisoners exist by her will.[3] She supposedly had the ability to shape destiny, alter fate and rearrange its strands according to her whim. Considering this power a threat to the order of the universe, Hermaeus Mora erased all traces of her memory from existence in order to preserve reality.[4] Ithelia left behind her loyal servant, Torvesard, as a contingency plan in her absence.[5][4] As of 2E 582, she was unknown to the academic community.[6]

Ithelia's realm of Oblivion is Mirrormoor.[7]

History[edit]

Star Orphan[edit]

Hermaeus Mora discussing the threat of Ithelia

Originally the eldest member of the Star-Orphans, Magna Ge that followed the parabolas that led away from Magnus, Ithelia was known as the White Star, the Prime Archon and the Queen of Fates Unwritten. She was responsible for deciding that fate had a chance to be born. At some point, she was shown the Infinite Abyss and the Indeterminate Sea (Mora Obscura), which revealed the Indefinite Limits of creation, probably by the Missing God, who was the first to realize that Nothing does not exist, and that where there is nothing there is possibility.[8]

She realized not only the harmony within duality that exists beyond the simple dichotomy of Anui-El and Sithis, but that this unity of opposites contained starlight and endless possibility beyond cosmic interplay. For this, she was named the Colors of Light. Ithelia thus came to the conclusion that the Time God, Aka, was mad for wanting to layer this endless potential with Linear Time, dooming those endless possibilities in nothingness that his shadow, the Missing God Lorkhan, saw first. To achieve this, Aka erected Ada-Mantia and its Zero Stone to transform endless potential (chaos) into nothing-possible (stability). However, Ithelia soon learned why his insanity was all that was and could be. From this lesson, the Prime Archon endeavored to cleave a path through the everything to reach Numancia. The goal of her followers was to use violence against Man to bring forth a Numinous Paravant, whose metaphysical nature as a Prisoner would give them unbound hands and the ability to achieve Ithelia's goal.[3]

Ithelia found worshippers in the Mythic Era. Her Ayleid followers prayed and offered sacrifices to her before embarking on a journey.[UOL 1] She had a significant amount of ties to the region known today as the West Weald.[7]

Imprisonment[edit]

Ithelia's Prison

When Ithelia first emerged, Hermaeus Mora foresaw her unraveling reality. Her ability to shape destiny as she saw fit had already damaged the threads of fate, so in an effort to prevent further harm, he gathered the other Daedric Princes in a moot where he proposed they remove her from existence. Part of his solution involved erasing Ithelia from their memory entirely. Seeing the damage she had already caused to the fabric of fate, many of the Princes agreed to assist him in the matter: however, Peryite and Vaermina objected to the idea. Against their wishes, he cast a spell that wiped all memory of Ithelia's existence from the minds of his fellow Princes: records of Ithelia's existence and knowledge of her location was all forgotten by Daedra and mortal alike. This would end up becoming Mora's most closely guarded secret.[1][9]

Worship[edit]

Ayleids[edit]

The Ayleids of Essondul worshipped Ithelia as the Prince of Paths.[10]

Bosmer[edit]

The Recollection was a Bosmer cult dedicated to Ithelia. They felt a certain emptiness plaguing Nirn, an "aching hole" where something should be, but nothing is.[11] They sought to fix it by recovering "what was forgotten" and restoring Ithelia.[12]

Artifacts[edit]

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Loom of the Untraveled Road[edit]

Loom of the Untraveled Road

A Daedric apparatus of unimaginable power. It consists of several large floating crystals, held together by streams of energy. When used correctly, it can alter reality to the extent of completely rewriting it, so long as there is an alternate reality in which that possibility exists. Ithelia attempted to use the Loom to restore Mirrormoor to its former glory, but she was unable to find a reality in which it existed, as in all realities that she looked at, Hermaeus Mora had imprisoned her. As a result, she decided to try rebuilding Mirrormoor on the ruins of Apocrypha, through the Loom. However, this effort was thwarted by the Vestige and it was destroyed. But now consumed by her power, Ithelia decided to destroy Apocrypha and Hermaeus Mora herself.

Staff of Many Paths[edit]

A mysterious staff wielded by Torvesard.[7]

Servants[edit]

A Crystal Atronach

The Shardborn are the Dremora servants of Ithelia.[7] For milennia, the Dremora Torvesard was Ithelia's last remaining servant, having had just enough of his memory preserved to come and save her.[5] Ithelia has many glass-like crystalline servants in her service, they often took more familiar forms such as dragons, mantikoras, mind terrors, and hollow sentinels.[7][13] Among her more unique servants are crystal atronachs, crystaljacks, fractured remnants, mirrorplasms, and shattered shards. Tho'at Replicanum is a Daedra Lord composed of living glass like these servants, who was responsible for invading the Infinite Archive.[14] The Blind was a glass-like large Dremora servant of Ithelia who invaded the Bedlam Veil.[15]

Gallery[edit]

Notes[edit]

  • The imprisonment of Ithelia must have occurred in the Merethic Era, given that she was defeated in a settled Resdayn.[16]

References[edit]

Note: The following references are considered to be unofficial sources. They are included to round off this article and may not be authoritative or conclusive.