
THE LORE · THE NORTHERN RAMPART
The Korl Ancestor-Keeping
A practice, not a god: the Korl hold their family dead as small, near intercessors — a grandfather worth asking before a crossing, a mother who still minds the hold. Winter is when you square accounts with them, and the frontier humans who married into the high passes have quietly picked it up.
The Korl do not have a god of the dead so much as they have their dead, close at hand and still owed to. A Korl ancestor is not a distant power to be worshipped; it is a grandfather who was good in the pass and might still put a word in for you, a mother who ran the hold and has opinions about how you're running it now. You don't build them temples. You keep them the way you'd keep any elder who's stopped being able to fetch for themselves — a share of the meal set aside, the good news told aloud at the barrow so they hear it, the hard decision talked over at the graveside because they knew the ground better than you do. The rite that matters is winter's. When the passes shut and the hold is closed in for the long dark, the Korl square accounts with the dead: the year's debts named at the barrow and forgiven or carried; the year's dead formally added to the keeping; a portion of the winter stores — real stores, in a lean winter, which is the point — left out on the first hard night so the ancestors go into the season fed. A hold that skips it is asking for a bad winter, and the Korl mean that as plainly as they'd mean a leaking roof. The dead are part of the household's arithmetic, and you do not shortchange your own. This keeping sits right against the Korl Grave-Right — that a warrior's tools stay in the barrow, and to take grave-goods without the living kin's blessing is to inherit the dead's quarrels. Same logic: the dead are present, they are owed, and their attention is not free. The frontier humans who came up the trade roads and married into the high holds have taken the practice on without much fuss — it is a sensible thing to do in a place where the dead are the only neighbors who stay all winter — though they tend to keep it softer, a plate set out and a few words, where a Korl keeps it as law.
KIND
custom
DOMAIN
the family dead as near, owed intercessors
PRACTICE NOT DEITY
There is no death-god here. The dead are kept the way you keep an elder who can no longer fetch for themselves — a share of the meal, the news told at the barrow, the hard decision talked over at the graveside.
SITS BESIDE
concept.korl-grave-custom — same logic: the dead are present, owed, and their attention is not free.
Connected
Type Fields
All Relationships (3)
rooted_in
- →The Korl — A practice, not a god: the Korl hold their family dead as small, near intercessors rather than swearing to any distant power.
expressed_through
- →The First Sleeper — The Korl name the half-sunk colossus their first ancestor — the largest single object of the ancestor-keeping.
worships
- ←Brunda Pass-Keeper — Brunda counts which lowland wars are worth Korl backs the way her own ancestor-keeping taught her — by what the dead would have spent for.
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