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Next—Book Five: The Fires of Heaven
Glossary
A NOTE ON DATES IN THIS GLOSSARY. Three systems
of recording dates have been in general use since the Breaking of
the World. The first recorded years After the Breaking (AB). Since
the years of the Breaking and immediately after were years of
almost total chaos, and since this calendar was adopted a good
hundred years after the end of the Breaking, its starting point was
arbitrarily assigned. At the end of the Trolloc Wars many records
had been lost, so much so that there was argument about the exact
year under the old system. A new calendar was therefore
established, dating from the end of the Wars and celebrating the
supposed freedom of the world from the Trolloc threat. This second
calendar recorded each year as Free Year (FY). After the
disruption, death, and destruction caused by the War of the Hundred
Years, a third calendar came into being. This calendar, of the New
Era (NE), is currently in use.
- Accepted, the:
- Young women in training to be Aes Sedai who have reached a
certain level of power and passed certain tests. It normally takes
five to ten years to be raised from novice to the Accepted.
Accepted are somewhat less confined by rules than novices, and are
allowed to choose their own areas of study, within limits. An
Accepted has the right to wear a Great Serpent ring, but only on
the third finger of her left hand. When an Accepted is raised to
the Aes Sedai, she chooses her Ajah, gains the right to wear the
shawl, and may wear the ring on any finger or not at all as
circumstances warrant.
- a’dam (AYE-dam):
- A Seanchan device for controlling a woman who can channel,
consisting of a collar and a bracelet linked by a leash all of
silvery metal control. It has no effect on a woman who cannot
channel. See also damane; Seanchan;
sul’dam.
- Adelin (AD-ehl-ihn):
- A woman of the Jindo sept of the Taardad Aiel. A Maiden of the
Spear who came to the Stone of Tear.
- Aes Sedai (EYEZ
seh-DEYE):
- Wielders of the One Power. Since the Time of Madness, all
surviving Aes Sedai are women. Widely distrusted and feared, even
hated, they are blamed by many for the Breaking of the World, and
are thought to meddle in the affairs of nations. At the same time,
few rulers will be without an Aes Sedai adviser, even in lands
where the existence of such a connection must be kept secret. After
some years of channeling the One Power, Aes Sedai take on an
ageless quality, so that an Aes Sedai who is old enough to be a
grandmother may show no signs of age except perhaps a few gray
hairs. See also Ajah; Amyrlin Seat; Time of Madness.
- Age Lace:
- Alternative name for the Pattern. See Pattern of an
Age.
- Age of Legends:
- The Age ended by the War of the Shadow and the Breaking of the
World. A time when Aes Sedai performed wonders now only dreamed of.
See also Wheel of Time; Breaking of the World; War of the
Shadow.
- Aiel (eye-EEL):
- The people of the Aiel Waste. Fierce and hardy. Also called
Aielmen. They veil their faces before they kill, giving rise to the
saying “acting like a black-veiled Aiel” to describe someone who is
being violent. Deadly warriors with weapons or with nothing but
their bare hands, they will not touch a sword. Their pipers play
them into battle with the music of dances, and Aielmen call battle
“the dance,” and “the dance of spears.” See also Aiel
warrior societies; Aiel Waste.
- Aiel War, the:
- (976-978 NE) When King Laman of Cairhien cut down
Avendoraldera, several clans of the Aiel crossed the Spine
of the World. They looted and burned the capital city of Cairhien
as well as many other cities and towns, and the conflict extended
into Andor and Tear. The conventional view is that the Aiel were
finally defeated at the Battle of the Shining Walls, before Tar
Valon, but in fact, Laman was killed in that battle, and having
done what they came for, the Aiel recrossed the Spine. See
also Avendoraldera; Cairhien.
- Aiel warrior societies:
- Aiel warriors are all members of one of the warrior societies,
such as the Stone Dogs (Shae’en M’taal), the Red Shields
(Aethan Dor), the Water Seekers (Duahde Mahdi’in)
or the Maidens of the Spear (Far Dareis Mai). Each society
has its own customs, and sometimes specific duties. For example,
Red Shields act as police. Stone Dogs are often used as rear guards
during retreats, while Maidens are often scouts. Aiel clans
frequently raid and battle, but members of the same society will
not fight one another even if their clans do so. Thus there are
always lines of contact between the clans even during open warfare.
See also Aiel; Aiel Waste; Far Dareis Mai.
- Aiel Waste:
- Harsh, rugged, and all-but-waterless land east of the Spine of
the World. Called the Three-fold Land by the Aiel. Few outsiders
enter; the Aiel consider themselves at war with all other peoples
and do not welcome strangers. Only peddlers, gleemen, and the
Tuatha’an are allowed safe entry, although Aiel avoid all contact
with the Tuatha’an, whom they call “the Lost Ones.” No maps of the
Waste itself are known to exist.
- Aile Jafar (EYEL
jah-FAHR):
- A group of Sea Folk islands approximately due west of
Tarabon.
- Aile Somera (EYEL
soh-MEER-ah):
- A group of Sea Folk islands approximately due west of Toman
Head.
- Ajah (AH-jah):
- Societies among the Aes Sedai, seven in number and designated
by colors: Blue, Red, White, Green, Brown, Yellow, and Gray. All
Aes Sedai except the Amyrlin Seat belong to one. Each follows a
specific philosophy of the use of the One Power and the purposes of
the Aes Sedai. The Red Ajah bends all its energies to finding men
who can channel, and to gentling them. The Brown Ajah forsakes
involvement with the mundane world and dedicates itself to seeking
knowledge, while the White Ajah, largely eschewing both the world
and the value of worldly knowledge, devotes itself to questions of
philosophy and truth. The Green Ajah (called the Battle Ajah during
the Trolloc Wars) holds itself ready for Tarmon Gai’don, the Yellow
concentrates on Healing, and Blue sisters involve themselves with
causes and justice. The Gray are mediators, seeking harmony and
consensus. Rumors of a Black Ajah, dedicated to serving the Dark
One, are officially denied.
- Alanna Mosvani (ah-LAN-nah
mos-VANH-nie):
- An Aes Sedai of the Green Ajah.
- al’Meara, Nynaeve (ahl-MEER-ah,
NIGH-neev):
- A woman once the Wisdom of Emond’s Field, in the Two Rivers
district of Andor (AN-door). Now one of the Accepted.
- al’Thor, Rand (ahl-THOR,
RAND):
- A young man from Emond’s Field who is ta’veren. Once a
shepherd. Now proclaimed as the Dragon Reborn.
- al’Thor, Tam (ahl-THOR,
TAM):
- A farmer and shepherd in the Two Rivers. As a young man, he
left to become a soldier, returning with a wife (Kari, now
deceased) and a child (Rand).
- Alteima (ahl-TEEM-ah):
- A High Lady of Tear, ambitious and concerned for her husband’s
health.
- al’Vere, Egwene (ahl-VEER,
eh-GWAIN):
- A young woman from Emond’s Field. Now one of the Accepted.
- Alviarin
(ahl-vee-AH-rihn):
- An Aes Sedai of the White Ajah.
- Amyrlin Seat (AHM-ehr-lin
SEAT):
- (1) Leader of the Aes Sedai. Elected for life by the Hall of
the Tower, which consists of three representatives (called Sitters,
as in “a Sitter for the Green”) from each Ajah. The Amyrlin Seat
has, theoretically, almost supreme authority among the Aes Sedai,
and ranks as the equal of a king or queen. A slightly less formal
usage is “the Amyrlin”.
- (2) The throne upon which the leader of the Aes Sedai
sits.
- Amys (ah-MEESE):
- Wise One of Cold Rocks Hold, and a dreamwalker. An Aiel of the
Nine Valleys Sept of the Taardad Aiel. Wife of Rhuarc, sister-wife
to Lian (lee-AHN), who is roofmistress of Cold Rocks Hold, and
sister-mother to Aviendha.
- angreal
(anh-gree-AHL):
- Remnants of the Age of Legends that allow anyone capable of
channeling the One Power to handle a greater amount of the Power
than would be safely possible unaided. Some were made for use by
women, others by men. Rumors of angreal usable by both men
and women have never been confirmed. Their making is no longer
known. Few remain in existence. See also channel;
sa’angreal; ter’angreal.
- Arad Doman (AH-rad
do-MAHN):
- Nation on the Aryth Ocean. Presently wracked by civil war and
simultaneously by wars against those who have declared for the
Dragon Reborn and against Tarabon. Most Domani merchants are women,
and according to the saying, to “let a man trade with a Domani” is
to do something extremely foolish. Domani women are famous—or
infamous—for their beauty, seductiveness, and scandalous
clothes.
- Aram (Ah-rahm):
- A handsome young man of the Tuatha’an.
- Artur Hawkwing:
- Legendary king, Artur Paendrag Tanreall (AHR-tuhr PAY-ehn-DRAG
tahn-REE-ahl). Ruled FY 943-994. United all the lands west of the
Spine of the World. Sent armies across the Aryth Ocean (FY 992),
but contact with these was lost at his death, which set off the War
of the Hundred Years. His sign was a golden hawk in flight. See
also War of the Hundred Years.
- Atha’an Miere (ah-thah-AHN
mee-EHR):
- See Sea Folk.
- Avendesora
(AH-vehn-deh-S0-rah):
- In the Old Tongue, “the Tree of Life.” Mentioned in many
stories and legends, which give various locations.
- Avendoraldera
(AH-ven-doh-ral-DEH-rah):
- A tree grown in the city of Cairhien from a sapling of
Avendesora, a gift from the Aiel in 566 NE, although no
record shows any connection whatsoever between the Aiel and
Avendesora. See also Aiel War.
- Aviendha
(Ah-vee-EHN-dah):
- A woman of the Nine Valleys sept of the Taardad Aiel.
- Aybara, Perrin (ay-BAHR-ah,
PEHR-rihn):
- A young man from Emond’s Field, formerly a blacksmith’s
apprentice. He is ta’veren. See also
ta’veren
-
- Ba’alzamon
(bah-AHL-zah-mon):
- In the Trolloc tongue, “Heart of the Dark.” Believed by most,
erroneously, to be the Trolloc name for the Dark One. See
also Dark One; Trollocs.
- Bain (BAYN):
- A woman of the Black Rock sept of the Shaarad Aiel. A Maiden of
the Spear.
- Bair (BAIR):
- A Wise One of the Haido sept of the Shaarad Aiel. A
dreamwalker.
- Berelain sur Paendraeg (BEH-reh-lain
suhr PAY-en-DRAG):
- First of Mayene, Blessed of the Light, Defender of the Waves,
High Seat of House Paeron (pay-eh-ROHN). A beautiful and willful
young woman, and a skillful ruler. She will have what she wants,
whatever it takes, and she always keeps her word. See
Mayene.
- Birgitte (ber-GEET-teh):
- Hero of legend and story, renowned for her beauty almost as
much as for her bravery and skill at archery. Carried a silver bow
and silver arrows, with which she never missed. One of the heroes
called back when the Horn of Valere is sounded. Always linked with
the hero-swordsman, Gaidal Cain. See also Cain, Gaidal;
Horn of Valere.
- Blight, the:
- See Great Blight, the.
- Borderlands, the:
- The nations bordering the Great Blight. Saldaea, Arafel,
Kandor, and Shienar.
- Bornhald, Dain (BOHRN-hahld,
DAY-in):
- A Captain of the Children of the Light.
- Breaking of the World, the:
- During the Time of Madness, male Aes Sedai who had gone insane,
and who could wield the One Power to a degree now unknown, changed
the face of the earth. They caused great earthquakes, leveled old
mountain ranges and raised new mountains, lifted dry land where
seas had been and made the ocean rush in where dry land had been.
Many parts of the world were completely depopulated, and the
survivors were scattered like dust on the wind. This destruction is
remembered in stories, legends, and history as the Breaking of the
World. See also Time of Madness; Hundred Companions,
the.
- Byar, Jaret (BY-ahr,
JAH-ret):
- An officer of the Children of the Light.
-
- cadin’sor
(KAH-dihn-sohr):
- Garb of Aiel warriors; coat and breeches in browns and grays
that fade into rock or shadow, along with soft, laced knee-high
boots. In the Old Tongue, “working clothes.”
- Caemlyn (KAYM-lihn):
- The capital city of Andor.
- Cain, Gaidal (KAIN,
GAY-dahl):
- Hero-swordsman of legend and story, always linked to Birgitte
and said to be as handsome as she was beautiful. Said to be
invincible when his feet were on his native soil. One of the heroes
called back when the Horn of Valere is sounded. See also
Birgitte; Horn of Valere.
- Cairhien (KEYE-ree-EHN):
- Both a nation along the Spine of the World and the capital city
of that nation. The city was burned and looted during the Aiel War,
as were many other towns and villages. The subsequent abandonment
of farmland near the Spine of the World made necessary the
importation of great quantities of grain. The assassination of King
Galldrian (998 NE) resulted in a civil war for succession to the
Sun Throne, causing the disruption of grain shipments and famine.
The sign of Cairhien is a many-rayed golden sun rising from the
bottom of a field of sky blue.
- Callandor
(CAH-lahn-DOOR):
- The Sword That Is Not A Sword, the Sword That Cannot Be
Touched. Crystal sword once held in the Stone of Tear. A powerful
male sa’angreal. Its removal from the chamber called the
Heart of the Stone was, along with the fall of the Stone, a major
sign of the Dragon’s Rebirth and the approach of Tarmon Gai’don.
See also Dragon Reborn, the; sa’angreal; Stone of
Tear, the.
- Carridin, Jaichim (CAHR-ih-dihn,
JAY-kim):
- An Inquisitor of the Hand of the Light, a high officer of the
Children of the Light.
- Cauthon, Abell (CAW-thon,
AY-bell):
- A farmer in the Two Rivers. Father of Mat Cauthon. Wife: Natti
(NAT-tee). Daughters: Eldrin (EHL-drihn) and Bodewhin (BOHD-wihn),
called Bode.
- Cauthon, Mat (CAW-thon,
MAT):
- A young man from Emond’s Field in the Two Rivers who is
ta’veren. Full name: Matrim (MAT-rihm) Cauthon.
- Chaendaer
(CHAY-ehn-DARE):
- A mountain in the Aiel Waste, above the valley of Rhuidean.
See also Aiel Waste, the; Rhuidean.
- channel (verb):
- To control the flow of the One Power. See also One
Power.
- Chiad (CHEE-ahd):
- A woman of the Stones River sept of the Goshien Aiel, who have
blood feud with the Shaarad. A Maiden of the Spear.
- Children of the Light:
- A society holding strict ascetic beliefs, dedicated to the
defeat of the Dark One and the destruction of all Darkfriends.
Founded during the War of the Hundred Years by Lothair Mantelar
(LOH-thayr MAHN-tee-LAHR) to proselytize against an increase in
Darkfriends, they evolved during the war into a completely military
organization, extremely rigid in their beliefs, and completely
certain that only they know the truth and the right. They hate Aes
Sedai, considering them, and any who support or befriend them,
Darkfriends. They are known disparagingly as Whitecloaks. Their
sign is a golden sunburst on a field of white. See also
Questioners.
- Chronicles, Keeper of the:
- Second in authority to the Amyrlin Seat among the Aes Sedai,
she also acts as secretary to the Amyrlin. Chosen for life by the
Hall of the Tower, usually from the same Ajah as the Amyrlin. A
slightly less formal usage is “the Keeper.” See also
Amyrlin Seat; Ajah.
- Congar, Dase (COHN-gahr,
DAYS):
- A woman of the Two Rivers, now Wisdom of Emond’s Field.
Husband: Wit.
- cuendillar
(CWAIN-deh-yar):
- An indestructible substance created during the Age of Legends.
Any force used in an attempt to break it is absorbed, making
cuendillar stronger. Also called heartstone.
-
- damane
(dah-MAHN-ee):
- In the Old Tongue, literally “leashed one.” Seanchan term for
women who can channel and who are, as they see it, properly
controlled by use of a’dam. All across Seanchan, young
women are tested each year until the age when the inborn ability to
channel would have manifested itself. Just as with young men found
able to channel (who are executed), damane are removed
from the rolls of citizens, in effect ceasing to exist as people.
Women who can channel but who have not yet been made
damane are called marath’damane, literally “those
who must be leashed.” See also a’dam; Seanchan;
sul’dam.
- Damodred, Lord Galadedrid
(DAHM-oh-drehd, gah-LAHD-eh-drihd):
- Half-brother to Elayne and Gawyn, sharing the same father,
Taringail (TAH-rihn-gail) Damodred. His sign is a winged silver
sword, point down.
- Darkfriends:
- Those who follow the Dark One and believe they will gain great
power and rewards, and even immortality, when he is freed from his
prison.
- Dark One:
- Most common name, used in every land, for Shai’tan. The source
of evil, antithesis of the Creator. Imprisoned by the Creator in
Shayol Ghul at the moment of Creation. An attempt to free him
brought about the War of the Shadow, the tainting of
saidin, the Breaking of the World, and the end of the Age
of Legends.
- Dark One, naming the:
- Saying the true name of the Dark One (Shai’tan) draws his
attention, inevitably bringing ill fortune at best, disaster at
worst. For that reason, many euphemisms are used, among them the
Dark One, Father of Lies, Sightblinder, Lord of the Grave, Shepherd
of the Night, Heartsbane, Soulsbane, Heartfang, Old Grim,
Grassburner, and Leafblighter. Darkfriends call him the Great Lord
of the Dark. Someone who seems to be inviting ill fortune is often
said to be “naming the Dark One.”
- Daughter-Heir:
- Title of the heir to the throne of Andor. The eldest daughter
of the queen succeeds her mother on the throne. Without a surviving
daughter, the throne goes to the nearest female blood relation of
the queen.
- Daughter of the Night:
- See Lanfear.
- din Jubai Wild Winds, Coine (dihn
joo-BUY: coh-EEN):
- A woman of the Atha’an Miere, the Sea Folk. Sailmistress of the
raker Wavedancer. Sister of Jorin.
- din Jubai Wild Winds, Jorin
(joh-RIHN):
- A woman of the Atha’an Miere, the Sea Folk. Windfinder of the
raker Wavedancer. Sister of Coine.
- Domon, Bayle (DOH-mon,
BAIL):
- Sea-captain born in Illian, once a captive of the Seanchan, now
a successful smuggler into and between war-torn Tarabon and Arad
Doman. A sometime collector of antiquities, and a man who pays his
debts.
- Dragon, false:
- Occasionally men claim to be the Dragon Reborn, and sometimes
one of them gains following enough to require an army to put it
down. Some have begun wars that involved many nations. Over the
centuries most of these have been men unable to channel the One
Power, but a few could do so. All, however, either disappeared or
were captured or killed without fulfilling any of the Prophecies
concerning the Rebirth of the Dragon. These men are called false
Dragons. Among those who could channel, the most powerful were
Raolin Darksbane (335-36AB), Yurian Stonebow (circa 1300-1308 AB),
Davian (FY 351), Guaire Amalasan (FY 939-43), and Logain (997 NE).
See also Dragon Reborn; War of the Second Dragon.
- Dragon, Prophecies of the:
- Generally little known and seldom spoken of, the Prophecies,
given in The Karaethon Cycle (ka-REE-ah-thon), foretell
that the Dark One will be freed again to touch the world. And that
Lews Therin Telamon, the Dragon, Breaker of the World, will be
reborn to fight Tarmon Gai’don, the Last Battle against the Shadow.
He will, say the Prophecies, save the world—and Break it
again. See also Dragon, the.
- Dragon, the:
- The name by which Lews Therin Telamon was known during the War
of the Shadow. In the madness that overtook all male Aes Sedai,
Lews Therin killed every living person who carried any of his
blood, as well as everyone he loved, thus earning the name
Kinslayer. See also Hundred Companions, the; Dragon
Reborn; Dragon, Prophecies of the.
- Dragon Reborn:
- According to the Prophecies of the Dragon, the man who is the
rebirth of Lews Therin Kinslayer. See also Dragon, the;
Dragon, false; Dragon, Prophecies of the.
- Dreadlords:
- Men and women able to channel, who went over to the Shadow
during the Trolloc Wars, acting as generals over armies of Trollocs
and Darkfriends. Occasionally confused with the Forsaken by the
less well educated.
- Dreamer:
- See Talents.
- dreamwalker:
- Aiel name for a woman able to enter
Tel’aran’rhiod.
-
- Egeanin
(egg-ee-AHN-ihn):
- A Seanchan ship’s captain on detached duty.
- Elaida (eh-LY-da):
- An Aes Sedai of the Red Ajah. Formerly advisor to Queen Morgase
of Andor. She sometimes has the Foretelling.
- Elayne (ee-LAIN) of
House Trakand (trah-KAND):
- Queen Morgase’s daughter, the Daughter-Heir to the Throne of
Andor. Now one of the Accepted. Her sign is a golden lily.
- Estanda (eh-STAHN-dah):
- A High Lady of Tear who believes in extracting what is owed
slowly but in full.
-
- Faile (fah-EEL):
- In the Old Tongue, means “falcon.” Name assumed by Zarine
Bashere (zah-REEN bah-SHEER), a young woman from Saldaea.
- Far Dareis Mai (FAHR DAH-rize
MY):
- Literally “Maidens of the Spear.” A warrior society of the
Aiel, which, unlike any other, admits women and only women. A
Maiden may not marry and remain in the society, nor may she fight
while carrying a child. Any child born to a Maiden is given to
another woman to raise, in such a way that no one knows the child’s
mother. (“You may belong to no man, nor may any man belong to you,
nor any child. The spear is your lover, your child, and your
life.”) See also Aiel; Aiel warrior societies.
- Five Powers, the:
- There are threads to the One Power, named according to the
sorts of things that can be done using them—Earth, Air
(sometimes called Wind), Fire, Water, and Spirit, which are called
the Five Powers. Any wielder of the Power will have a greater
degree of strength with one, or possibly two, of these, and lesser
with the others. In the Age of Legends, Spirit was found equally in
men and in women, great ability with Earth and/or Fire was found
much more often among men, with Water and/or Air among women.
Despite exceptions, it was so often so that Earth and Fire came to
be regarded as male Powers, Air and Water as female.
- Flame of Tar Valon:
- The symbol of Tar Valon, the Amyrlin Seat, and the Aes Sedai. A
stylized representation of a flame; a white teardrop with the point
upward.
- Forsaken, the:
- Name given to thirteen of the most powerful Aes Sedai of the
Age of Legends, thus among the most powerful ever known, who went
over to the Dark One during the War of the Shadow in return for the
promise of immortality. According to both legend and fragmentary
records, they were imprisoned along with the Dark One when his
prison was resealed. The names given to them are still used to
frighten children. They were: Aginor (AGH-in-nohr), Asmodean
(ahs-MOH-dee-an), Balthamel (BAAL-tha-mell), Be’lal (BEH-lal),
Demandred (DEE-man-drehd), Graendal (GREHN-dahl), Ishamael
(ih-SHAH-may-EHL), Lanfear (LAN-feer), Mesaana (meh-SAH-nah),
Moghedien (moh-GHEH-dee-en), Rahvin (RAAV-ihn), Sammael
(SAHM-may-EHL), and Semirhage (SEH-mih-RHAHG).
-
- Gaidin (GYE-deen):
- Literally, “Brother to Battles.” A title used by Aes Sedai for
the Warders. See also Warder.
- Galad (gah-LAHD):
- See Damodred, Lord Galadedrid.
- Game of Houses, the:
- Name given the scheming, plots, and manipulations for advantage
by the noble Houses. Great value is given to subtlety, to aiming at
one thing while seeming to aim at another, and to achieving ends
with the least visible effort. Also known as the Great Game, and
sometimes by its name in the Old Tongue: Daes Dae’mar
(DAH-ess day-MAR).
- Gaul (GAHWL):
- A man of the Imran sept of the Shaarad Aiel, who have a blood
feud with the Goshien. A Stone Dog.
- Gawyn (GAH-wihn) of House
Trakand (trah-KAND):
- Queen Morgase’s son, and Elayne’s brother, who will be First
Prince of the Sword when Elayne ascends to the throne. His sign is
a white boar.
- Gelb, Floran (GEHLB,
FLOHR-an):
- A former sailor with reasons to avoid Bayle Domon.
- gentling:
- The act, performed by Aes Sedai, of shutting off a male who can
channel from the One Power. This is necessary because any man who
learns to channel will go insane from the taint on saidin
and will almost certainly do horrible things with the Power in his
madness. A man who has been gentled can still sense the True
Source, but he cannot touch it. Whatever madness has come before
gentling is arrested by the act of gentling, but not cured by it,
and if it is done soon enough death can be averted. See
also One Power, the; stilling.
- gleeman:
- A traveling storyteller, musician, juggler, tumbler, and
all-around entertainer. Known by their trademark cloaks of
many-colored patches, they perform mainly in the villages and
smaller towns.
- Gray Man:
- Someone who has voluntarily surrendered his or her soul in
order to become an assassin serving the Shadow. Gray Men are so
ordinary in appearance that the eye can slide right past without
noticing them. The vast majority of Gray Men are indeed men, but a
small number are women.
- Great Blight, the:
- A region in the far north, entirely corrupted by the Dark One.
A haunt of Trollocs, Myrddraal, and other creatures of the
Shadow.
- Great Hunt of the Horn, the:
- A cycle of stories concerning the legendary search for the Horn
of Valere, in the years between the end of the Trolloc Wars and the
beginning of the War of the Hundred Years. If told in its entirety,
the cycle would take many days.
- Great Lord of the Dark:
- The name by which Darkfriends refer to the Dark One, claiming
that to use his true name would be blasphemous.
- Great Serpent:
- A symbol for time and eternity, ancient before the Age of
Legends began, consisting of a serpent eating its own tail. A ring
in the shape of the Great Serpent is awarded to women who have been
raised to the Accepted among the Aes Sedai.
-
- hide:
- A unit of area for measuring land, equal to 100 paces by 100
paces.
- High Lords of Tear:
- Acting as a council, the High Lords are the rules of the nation
of Tear, which has neither king nor queen. Their numbers are not
fixed, and have varied over the years from as many as twenty to as
few as six. Not to be confused with the Lords of the Land, who are
lesser Tairen lords.
- Horn of Valere
(vah-LEER):
- The legendary object of The Great Hunt of the Horn. The Horn
supposedly can call back dead heroes from the grave to fight
against the Shadow. A new Hunt of the Horn has been called, and
oaths have been administered to the Hunters in Illian.
- Hundred Companions, the:
- One hundred male Aes Sedai, among the most powerful of the Age
of Legends, who, led by Lews Therin Telamon, launched the final
stroke that ended the War of the Shadow by sealing the Dark One
back into his prison. The Dark One’s counterstroke tainted
saidin; the Hundred Companions went mad and began the
Breaking of the World. See also Time of Madness; Breaking
of the World; True Source; One Power.
-
- Illian (IHL-lee-ahn):
- A great port on the Sea of Storms, capital city of the nation
of the same name.
- Isendre (ih-SEHN-dreh):
- A beautiful and mysterious woman traveling in the Aiel
Waste.
-
- Kadere, Hadnan (kah-DEER,
HAHD-nahn):
- A peddler traveling the Aiel Waste. A man with knowledge to
sell, if he can find the right price.
- kaf (KAAF):
- A Seanchan drink, brewed black and drunk steaming hot,
sometimes sweetened but often not. A stimulating beverage.
- Keille Shaogi:
- See Shaogi, Keille.
-
- Lan; al’Lan Mandragoran (AHL-LAN
man-DRAG-or-an):
- A Warder, bonded to Moiraine. Uncrowned King of Malkier, Dai
Shan (Battle Lord), and the last surviving Malkieri lord. See
also Warder; Moiraine; Malkier.
- Lanfear (LAN-fear):
- In the Old Tongue, “Daughter of the Night.” One of the
Forsaken, perhaps the most powerful next to Ishamael. Unlike the
other Forsaken, she chose this name herself. She is said to have
been in love with Lews Therin Telamon, and to have hated his wife,
Ilyena. See also Forsaken; Dragon, the.
- league:
- See Length, units of.
- Leane (lee-AHN-eh):
- An Aes Sedai of the Blue Ajah, and Keeper of the Chronicles.
See also Ajah; Chronicles, Keeper of the.
- Length, units of:
- 10 inches = 3 hands = 1 foot; 3 feet = 1 pace; 2 paces = 1
span; 1000 spans = 1 mile; 4 miles = 1 league.
- Lews Therin Telamon; Lews Therin
Kinslayer:
- See Dragon, the.
- Liandrin
(lee-AHN-drihn):
- An Aes Sedai formerly of the Red Ajah, from Tarabon. Now known
to be of the Black Ajah.
- Lini (LIHN-nee):
- Childhood nurse to the Lady Elayne, and before her to Elayne’s
mother, Morgase.
- Logain (loh-GAIN):
- A man who once claimed to be the Dragon Reborn, now gentled and
imprisoned in the White Tower in Tar Valon.
- Loial (LOY-ahl) son
of Arent (AH-rehnt) son of
Halan (HAY-lahn):
- An Ogier from Stedding Shangtai. Would-be author of a book
about the Dragon Reborn.
- Luhhan, Haral (LOOH-hahn,
HAH-rahl):
- Blacksmith of the Two Rivers, and member of the Village Council
of Emond’s Field. His wife Alsbet (AHLS-bet) is a member of the
Women’s Circle.
-
- Malkier (mahl-KEER):
- A nation, once one of the Borderlands, now consumed by the
Blight. The sign of Malkier was a golden crane in flight.
- Manetheren
(mahn-EHTH-ehr-ehn):
- One of the Ten Nations that made the Second Covenant, and also
the capital city of that nation. Both city and nation were utterly
destroyed in the Trolloc Wars. See also Trolloc Wars.
- Mayene (may-EHN):
- City-state on the Sea of Storms that derives its wealth and its
independence from knowledge of where to find the oilfish shoals,
which rival in economic importance the olive groves of Tear,
Illian, and Tarabon. Oilfish and olives provide nearly all lamp
oil. The current ruler of Mayne is Berelain, the First of Mayene.
The Rulers of Mayene claim to be descendants of Artur Hawkwing. The
sign of Mayne is a golden hawk in flight.
- Melaine (meh-LAYN):
- A Wise One of the Jhirad sept of the Goshien Aiel. A
dreamwalker.
- Merrilin, Thom (MER-rih-lihn,
TOM):
- A not-so-simple gleeman.
- mile:
- See Length, units of.
- Min (MIN):
- A young woman with the ability to read things about people in
the auras and images she sometimes sees surrounding them.
- Moiraine (mwah-RAIN):
- An Aes Sedai of the Blue Ajah. Born in House Damodred, though
not in line of succession to the throne, she was raised in the
Royal Palace in Cairhien.
- Morgase (moor-GAYZ):
- By the Grace of the Light, Queen of Andor, Defender of the
Realm, Protector of the People, High Seat of House Trakand. Her
sign is three golden keys. The sign of House Trakand is a silver
keystone.
- Myrddraal (MUHRD-draal):
- Creatures of the Dark One, commanders of the Trollocs. Twisted
offspring of Trollocs in which the human stock used to create the
Trollocs has resurfaced, but tainted by the evil that made the
Trollocs. Physically they are like men except they have no eyes,
but can see like eagles in light or dark. They have certain powers
stemming from the Dark One, including the ability to cause
paralyzing fear with a look and the ability to vanish wherever
there are shadows. One of their few known weaknesses is that they
are reluctant to cross running water. In different lands they are
known by many names, among them Halfman, the Eyeless, Shadowman,
Lurk, Fetch, and Fade.
-
- Natael, Jasin (nah-TAYL,
JAY-sihn):
- A gleeman traveling the Aiel Waste.
- Niall, Pedron (NEYE-awl,
PAY-drohn):
- Lord Captain Commander of the Children of the Light. See
also Children of the Light.
-
- Oaths, Three:
- The oaths taken by an Accepted who is being raised to Aes
Sedai. Spoken while holding the Oath Rod, a ter’angreal
that makes oaths binding. They are:
- (1) To speak no word that is not true.
- (2) To make no weapon with which one man may kill another.
- (3) Never to use the One Power as a weapon except against
Shadowspawn, or in the last extreme of defense of her own life, or
that of her Warder, or another Aes Sedai.
- These oaths were not always required, but various events before
and since the Breaking caused them to be necessary. The second oath
was the first adopted, in response to the War of the Power. The
first oath, while held to the letter, is often circumvented by
careful speaking. It is believed that the last two are
inviolable.
- Ogier (OH-gehr):
- (1) A non-human race, characterized by great height (ten feet
is average for adult males), broad, almost snout-like noses, and
long, tufted ears. They live in areas called stedding.
Their separation from these stedding after the Breaking of
the World (a time called the Exile by the Ogier) resulted in what
is called the Longing; an Ogier who is too long out of the
stedding sickens and dies. Widely known as wondrous
stonemasons who built the great human cities after the Breaking,
they consider stonework simply something they learned during the
Exile and not as important as tending the trees of the
stedding, especially the towering Great Trees. Except for
stonework, they rarely leave their stedding and typically
have little contact with humankind. Knowledge of them among humans
is sparse, and many believe Ogier to be only legends. Although
believed to be a pacific people and extremely slow to anger, some
old stories say they fought alongisde humans in the Trolloc Wars,
and call them implacable enemies. By and large, they are extremely
fond of knowledge, and their books and stories often contain
information lost to humans. A typical Ogier life-span is at least
three to four times that of a human.
- (2) Any individual of that non-human race.
- See also Breaking of the World; stedding;
Treesinger.
- Old Tongue:
- The language spoken during the Age of Legends. It is generally
expected that nobles and the educated will have learned to speak
this, but most know only a few words. Translation is often
difficult, as it is a language capable of many subtly different
meanings.
- One Power, the:
- The power drawn from the True Source. The vast majority of
people are completely unable to learn to channel the One Power. A
very small number can be taught to channel, and an even tinier
number have the ability inborn. For these few there is no need to
be taught; they will touch the True Source and channel the Power
whether they want to or not, perhaps without even realizing what
they are doing. This inborn ability usually manifests itself in
late adolescence or early adulthood. If control is not taught, or
self-learned (extremely difficult, with a success rate of only one
in four), death is certain. Since the Time of Madness, no man has
been able to channel the Power without eventually going completely,
horribly mad, and then, even if he has learned some control, dying
from a wasting sickness that causes the sufferer to rot alive, a
sickness caused, as is the madness, by the Dark One’s taint on
saidin. For a woman the death that comes without control
of the Power is less horrible, but it is death just the same. Aes
Sedai search for girls with the inborn ability as much to save
their lives as to increase Aes Sedai numbers, and for men with it
in order to stop the terrible things they inevitably do with the
Power in their madness. See also Aes Sedai; channel; Five
Powers; Time of Madness; True Source.
- Ordeith (OHR-deeth):
- In the Old Tongue, “Wormwood.” Name taken by a man who advises
the Lord Captain Commander of the Children of the Light.
-
- Pattern of an Age:
- The Wheel of Time weaves the threads of human lives into the
Pattern of an Age, often called simply the Pattern, which forms the
substance of reality for that Age. See also
ta’veren.
-
- Questioners, the:
- An order within the Children of the Light. Their avowed
purposes are to discover the truth in disputations and to uncover
Darkfriends. In the search for truth and the Light, their normal
method of inquiry is by torture; their normal attitude that they
know the truth already and must only make their victim confess to
it. The Questioners refer to themselves as the Hand of the Light,
the Hand that digs out truth, and at times act as if they were
entirely separate from the Children and the Council of the
Anointed, which commands the Children. The head of the Questioners
is the High Inquisitor, who sits on the Council of the Anointed.
Their sign is a blood-red shepherd’s crook
-
- Rendra (REHN-drah):
- A woman of Tarabon. Innkeeper of the Three Plums Court, in
Tarabon.
- Rhuarc (RHOURK):
- An Aiel, clan chief of the Taardad Aiel.
- Rhuidean (RHUY-dee-ahn):
- A place in the Aiel Waste to which must go any man wanting to
be a clan chief and any woman wanting to be a Wise One. Men may
enter only once, women twice. Only one man in three survives his
journey to Rhuidean. The survival rate for women is considerably
higher for both visits. Its location is a secret closely guarded by
the Aiel. The prescribed penalty for a non-Aiel entering the valley
of Rhuidean is death, though some who are favored (such as peddlers
or gleemen) might simply be stripped naked, given waterskins, and
allowed to attempt to walk out of the Waste.
-
- sa’angreal
(SAH-ahn-GREE-ahl):
- Any one of a number of objects that allow channelling much more
of the One Power than would otherwise be possible or safe. A
sa’angreal is like unto, but much more powerful than, an
angreal. The amount of the Power that can be wielded with
a sa’angreal compares to the amount of the Power that can
be handled with an angreal as the power wielded with the
aid of an angreal does to the amount of the Power that can
be handled unaided. The making of them is no longer known. As with
angreal, there are male and female sa’angreal.
Only a handful remain, far fewer even than angreal.
- sa’sara (sah-SAHR-rah):
- An indecent Saldean dance, outlawed by a number of Saldean
queens, but to no avail. Saldean history records three wars, two
rebellions, and countless unions and/or feuds between noble houses,
as well as innumberable duels, sparked by women dancing the
sa’sara. One rebellion was supposedly quelled when a defeated queen
danced it for the victorious general; he married her and restored
her throne. This tale is not found in any official history and has
been denied by every queen of Saldea.
- saidar (sah-ih-DAHR):
saidin (sah-ih-DEEN):
- See True Source.
- Sandar, Juilin (sahn-DAHR,
JUY-lihn):
- A thief-catcher from Tear.
- Sea Folk:
- More properly, the Atha’an Miere (a-tha-AHN mee-AIR), the
People of the Sea. Inhabitants of islands in the Aryth (AH-rihth)
Ocean and the Sea of Storms, they spend little time on those
islands, living most of their lives on their ships. Most seaborne
trade is carried by the Sea Folk’s ships.
- Seana (see-AHN-ah):
- A Wise One of the Black Cliffs sept of the Nakai Aiel. A
dreamwalker.
- Seanchan (SHAWN-CHAN):
- (1) Descendants of the armies Artur Hawkwing sent across the
Aryth Ocean, who conquered the lands there. They believe that any
woman who can channel must be controlled for the safety of everyone
else, and any man who can channel must be killed for the same
reason.
- (2) The land from which the Seanchan come.
- Seekers for Truth:
- A police/spy organization of the Seanchan Imperial Throne.
Although most are property of the Imperial family, they have wide
powers. Even one of the Blood (a Seanchan noble) can be arrested
for failure to answer any question put by a Seeker, or for failure
to cooperate fully with a Seeker, this last defined by the Seekers
themselves, subject only to review by the Empress.
- Servants, Hall of the:
- In the Age of Legends, the great meeting hall of the Aes
Sedai.
- Sevanna (seh-VAHN-nah):
- A woman of the Domai sept of the Shaido Aiel. Widow of Suladric
(soo-LAH-dric), who was clan chief of the Shaido, and thus
roofmistress of Comarda Hold until a new clan chief is chosen.
- Shaogi, Keille (shah-OH-ghe,
KEYEL-lee):
- A peddler traveling in the Aiel Waste. A woman with plans even
larger than she is.
- Shayol Ghul (SHAY-of
GHOOL):
- A mountain in the Blasted Lands, the site of the Dark One’s
prison.
- Siuan Sanche (SWAHN
SAHN-chay):
- The daughter of a Tairen fisherman, she was, according to
Tairen law, put on a ship to Tar Valon before the second sunset
after it was discovered that she had the potential to channel.
Formerly of the Blue Ajah. Raised to the Amyrlin Seat in 988
NE.
- Soulless:
- See Gray Man.
- span:
- See Length, units of.
- Spine of the World, the:
- A towering mountain range, with only a few passes, which
separates the Aiel Waste from the lands to the west.
- stedding (STEHD-ding):
- An Ogier (OH-geer) homeland. Many stedding have been
abandoned since the Breaking of the World. They are shielded in
some way, no longer understood, so that within them no Aes Sedai
can channel the One Power, nor even sense that the True Source
exists. Attempts to wield the One Power from outside a
stedding have no effect inside a stedding
boundary. No Trolloc will enter a stedding unless driven,
and even a Myrddraal will do so only at the greatest need and then
with the greatest reluctance and distaste. Even Darkfriends, if
truly dedicated, feel uncomfortable within a
stedding.
- stilling:
- The act, performed by Aes Sedai, of shutting off a woman who
can channel from the One Power. A woman who has been stilled can
sense the True Source, but she cannot touch it. So seldom has it
been done that novices are required to learn the names and crimes
of all women who have suffered it. Officially, stilling is the
result of trial and sentence for a crime. When it happens
accidentally, it is called being burned out. In practice, the term
stilling is often used for both.
- Stone of Tear:
- A great fortress in the city of Tear, said to have been made by
use of the One Power soon after the Breaking of the World. Attacked
and besieged countless times, it fell in a single night to the
Dragon Reborn and a few hundred Aiel, thus fulfilling two parts of
the Prophecies of the Dragon. The Stone contains a collection of
an’greal and ter’angreal rivaling that of the
White Tower, a collection which was gathered, some say, in an
attempt to diminish the glare of possessing
Callandor.
- sul’dam (SOOL-dam):
- Literally, “leash holder.” Seanchan term for a woman with the
ability to control, by means of an a’dam, a woman who can
channel. Young women in Seanchan are tested for this ability at the
same time as the testing for damane and to the same age. A
fairly honored position among the Seanchan. Many more
sul’dam are found than damane. See also
a’dam; damane; Seanchan.
- Sursa (SUHR-sa):
- Thin, paired sticks used as eating implements in Arad Doman in
place of forks. Some say the difficulty of eating with
sursa is the source of Domani merchants’ fabled
perseverance; others claim it is the source of the equally fabled
Domani temper.
-
- Talents:
- Abilities in the use of the One Power in specific areas. The
best known of these, of course, is Healing. Some, such as
Traveling, the ability to shift oneself from one place to another
without crossing the intervening space, have been lost. Others such
as Foretelling (the ability to foretell future events, but in a
general way) are now found only rarely if at all. Another Talent
long thought lost is Dreaming, which involves, among other things,
interpreting the Dreamer’s dreams to foretell future events in more
specific fashion than Foretelling does. Some Dreamers had the
ability to enter Tel’aran’rhiod, the World of Dreams, and
(it is said) even other people’s dreams. The last known Dreamer was
Corianin Nedeal (coh-ree-AHN-ihn neh-dee-AHL), who died in 526 NE,
but there is now another, known to but a few.
- ta’maral’ailen
(tah-MAHR-ahl-EYE-lehn):
- In the Old Tongue, “Web of Destiny.” A great change in the
Pattern of an Age, centered around one or more people who are
ta’veren. See also Pattern of an Age;
ta’veren.
- Tarabon (TAH-rah-BON):
- Nation on the Aryth Ocean. Capital city: Tanchico
(tan-CHEE-coh). Once a great trading nation, a source of rugs,
dyes, and fireworks produced by the Guild of Illuminators, among
other things. Now wracked by civil war, as well as simultaneous
wars against Arad Doman and people sworn to the Dragon Reborn.
- Tarmon Gai’don (TAHR-mohn
GAY-dohn):
- The Last Battle. See also Dragon, Prophecies of the;
Horn of Valere.
- ta’veren
(tah-VEER-ehn):
- A person around whom the Wheel of Time weaves all surrounding
life-threads, perhaps ALL life-threads, to form a Web of Destiny.
See also Pattern of an Age.
- Tear (TEER):
- A great seaport on the Sea of Storms. Also the capital city of
that nation, a great seaport. The banner of Tear is three white
crescent moons slanting across a field half red, half gold. See
also Stone of Tear.
- Telamon, Lews Therin (TEHL-ah-mon,
LOOZ THEH-rihn):
- See Dragon, the.
- Tel’aran’rhiod
(tel-AYE-rahn-rhee-ODD):
- In the Old Tongue, “the Unseen World”, or “the World of
Dreams.” A world glimpsed in dreams which was believed by the
ancients to permeate and surround all other possible worlds. Unlike
other dreams, what happens to living things in the World of Dreams
is real; a wound taken there will still be there on awakening, and
one who dies there does not wake at all.
- ter’angreal
(TEER-ahn-GREE-ahl):
- Any one of a number of remnants of the Age of Legends that use
the One Power. Unlike angreal and sa’angreal,
each ter’angreal was made to do a particular thing. For
example, one makes oaths taken within it binding. Some are used by
Aes Sedai, but their original purposes are largely unknown. Some
will kill or destroy the ability to channel of any woman who uses
them. See also angreal; sa’angreal.
- Time of Madness:
- The years after the Dark One’s counterstroke tainted the male
half of the True Source, when male Aes Sedai went mad and Broke the
World. The exact duration of this period is unknown, but it is
believed to have lasted nearly one hundred years. It ended
completely only with the death of the last male Aes Sedai. See
also Hundred Companions; True Source; One Power; Breaking of
the World.
- Torean (toh-ree-AHN):
- A High Lord of Tear. A man who desires what neither his vast
fortune nor his face will gain him.
- Traveling People:
- See Tuatha’an.
- Trollocs (TRAHL-lohks):
- Creatures of the Dark One, created during the War of the
Shadow. Huge in stature, they are a twisted blend of animal and
human stock. Vicious by nature, they kill for the pure pleasure of
killing. Deceitful in the extreme, they cannot be trusted unless
coerced by fear. They are divided into tribe-like bands, among them
the Dha’vol, the Ko’bal, and the Dhai’mon.
- Trolloc Wars:
- A series of wars, beginning about 1000 AB and lasting more than
three hundred years, during which Trolloc armies ravaged the world.
Eventually the Trollocs were slain or driven back into the Great
Blight, but some nations ceased to exist, while others were almost
depopulated. All records of the time are fragmentary.
- True Source:
- The driving force of the universe, which turns the Wheel of
Time. It is divided into a male half (saidin) and a female half
(saidar), which work at the same time with and against each other.
Only a man can draw on saidin, only a woman on
saidar. Since the beginning of the Time of Madness,
saidin has been tainted by the Dark One’s touch. See
also One Power.
- Tuatha’an
(too-AH-thah-AHN):
- A wandering folk, also known as the Tinkers and as the
Traveling People, who live in brightly painted wagons and follow a
totally pacifist philosophy called the Way of the Leaf. Things
mended by Tinkers are often better than new. They are among the few
who can cross the Aiel Waste unmolested, for the Aiel strictly
avoid all contact with them.
-
- Verin Mathwin (VEHR-ihn
MAH-thwin):
- An Aes Sedai of the Brown Ajah.
-
- Warder:
- A warrior bonded to an Aes Sedai. The bonding is a thing of the
One Power, and by it he gains such gifts as quick healing, the
ability to go long periods without food, water, or rest, and the
ability to sense the taint of the Dark One at a distance. So long
as a Warder lives, the Aes Sedai to whom he is bonded knows he is
alive however far away he is, and when he dies she will know the
moment and manner of his death. The bonding does not tell her how
far he is, though, nor in what direction. While most Ajahs believe
an Aes Sedai may have one Warder bonded to her at a time, the Red
Ajah refuses to bond any Warders at all, while the Green Ajah
believe an Aes Sedai may bond as many Warders as she wishes.
Ethically the Warder must accede to the bonding, but it has been
known to be done involuntarily. What the Aes Sedai gain from the
bonding is a closely held secret. See
also Aes Sedai.
- War of Power:
- See War of the Shadow.
- War of the Hundred Years:
- A series of overlapping wars among constantly shifting
alliances, precipitated by the death of Artur Hawkwing and the
resulting struggle for his empire. It lasted from FY 994 to FY
1117. The war depopulated large parts of the lands between the
Aryth Ocean and the Aiel Waste, from the Sea of Storms to the Great
Blight. So great was the destruction that only fragmentary records
of the time remain. The empire of Artur Hawkwing was pulled apart
in the wars, and the nations of the present day were formed.
See also Hawkwing, Artur.
- War of the Second Dragon:
- The war fought (FY 939-43) against the false Dragon Guaire
Amalasan. During this war a young king named Artur Tanreall
Paendrag, later known as Artur Hawkwing, rose to overwhelming
prominence.
- War of the Shadow:
- Also known as the War of Power, it ended the Age of Legends. It
began shortly after the attempt to free the Dark One, and soon
involved the whole world. In a world where even the memory of war
had been forgotten, every facet of war was rediscovered, often
twisted by the Dark One’s touch on the world, and the One Power was
used as a weapon. The war was ended by the resealing of the Dark
One into his prison. See also Hundred Companions, the;
Dragon, the.
- Weight, units of:
- 10 ounces= 1 pound; 10 pounds= stone; 10 stone= hundredweight;
10 hundredweight= 1 ton.
- Wheel of Time, the:
- Time is a wheel with seven spokes, each spoke an Age. As the
Wheel turns, the Ages come and go, each leaving memories that fade
to legend, then to myth, and are forgotten by the time that Age
comes again. The Pattern of an Age is slightly different each time
an Age comes, and each time it is subject to greater change, but
each time it is the same Age.
- Whitecloaks:
- See Children of the Light.
- wilder:
- A woman who has learned to channel the One Power on her own,
surviving the crisis as only one in four does. Such women usually
build barriers against knowing what it is they are doing, but if
these can be broken down, wilders are among the most powerful of
channelers. The term is often used in derogatory fashion.
- Wisdom:
- In villages, a woman chosen by the Women’s Circle for her
knowledge of such things as healing, and foretelling the weather,
as well as for common good sense. A position of great
responsibility and authority, both actual and implied. She is
generally considered the equal of the mayor, just as the Women’s
Circle is the equal of the Village Council. Unlike the mayor, the
Wisdom is chosen for life, and it is very rare for a Wisdom to be
removed from office before her death. Depending on the land, she
may instead have another title, such as Guide, Healer, Wise Woman,
or Seeker.
- Wise One:
- Among the Aiel, Wise Ones are women chosen by other Wise Ones
and trained in healing, herbs and other things, much like Wisdoms.
Usually there is a single Wise One to each clan or sept hold. Some
Wise Ones are said to have wondrous healing abilities, and to do
things that seem miraculous. They have great authority and
responsibility, as well as great influence with sept and clan
chiefs, though these men often accuse them of meddling.
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