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- 16 de Dic, 2022
80% of the lore we have (if you dont count ESO which I dont want to) is from Daggerfall and Morrowind, and Morrowind was the last time the lore was consistent. The fleshing out of Oblivion and Skyrim has introduced a ton of lore inconsistencies (not in universe inconsistencies like biased characters). I dont think the Nords are as racist as people make them out to be on Reddit. I think the "racist angle" was introduced to make the Stormcloaks not the oblivious moral good guys. I just don't think that the way they did the "racism" fits the character of the Nords that we have seen in every previous title.The lore was less fleshed out back in 2002, and Dunmer are the focal point of Morrowind. It's not about the Nords, so we don't see as much.
Plus, a Nord that's outside of Skyrim is probably more tolerant of other races. Sven the Sailor in Morrowind has learned to trade and interact with non-Nords; Bjorg the Bumpkin of 4E Skyrim has only experienced the foreigners barging in and demanding he change his way of life.
Yes but we dont see things like household shrines or shamans. If we look into Varieties of Faith we find talking about Shor: "Considered a "dead god," Shor has no priesthood and is not actively worshiped, but he is frequently sworn by." What this suggests is that the other gods do have active priesthoods and Shor is the exception to the rule. If they don't have a concept of temples and priests, why did they the ancient nords build giant temples to them, Sure you can say the dragon's made them do it, but why do they then have form a order of monks, build a monastery hundreds of years after the end of the Dragon Cult on a holy site significant to the Nord belief system. Did Paarthurnax tell them to do it? So the Nords didn't build temples or monuments or have holy men until the imperial cult took over in the last 200 years? An internal document for Skyrim by Kirkbride says "The Hearth Gods have temples appropriate to their nature: Kyne's are built on peaks, Mara's are the halls of important Witches, Dibella's are the halls of important Wives– the temples aren't like those of the Imperials; as Hearth Gods, they are always homes to someone, and the highest-ranking female of that home is their de facto high priestess." and "The Eight Divines are viewed by the Nords as a “Southern” import. They retain some of the taint of the Alessian Order, and are basically viewed as a religion for foreigners. Their gods are fine for them, but Nords need Nord gods."I already mentioned that. Those old folk beliefs would be expressed in more animistic ways, without shrines or priests or temples.
Yes but this is a historical quote and when you talk to them they only ever use Imperial Cult names and ideas. When you talk to Greybeard's they mention that you have the gift of Akatosh where as they are followers of Kynareth and that is why they have to be pacifists and you can fight for Skyrim and Nirn . This makes zero sense if they follow the old ways at all since Akatosh is Alduin. Kyne is the Mother of Man, she is Skyrim itself but they can't protect Skyrim and her people because of ?, but you can because you have the evil blood of the evil god that you are fighting and wants to destroy the world?They explicitly invoke Ysmir, Shor, and Kyne when giving the Dragonborn the formal greeting.
The Idea of The dragonborn being linked to the Voice is a Skyrim thing apart from maybe a single very vague line by Mankar Camoran in Oblivion. The Voice was always a Kyne thing. Kyne is the god of wind, she breathed man into existence. What is a man's voice but shaping wind and breath into sounds that can alter the world. They believe that their breath is the breath of Kyne.
Do they mention any of this? No. they mention kyne 2 times and the voice being her gift once in a historical quote that seems to go completely against what they actually believe when you ask them.
Im not saying that he should be actively praying to Shor, but he never references any of the old gods once, not even Shor who is a perfect metaphor for how the Thalmor are attacking humanity. It would be like if a Christian country sold all of their firearms to mass buy tractors and not a single person made an news article or quip about "turning swords into ploughshares". We have no evidence of Ulfric ever even thinking about the old gods, the only one he ever mentions by name is Alduin but that's because he is the big bad.The Monomyth generally agrees that Lorkhan is dead, and the world/the moons are the remains of his body. Why worship a deceased god that no longer has power?
As for Ulfric, he's a politician as well as a warlord. He's more pragmatic than the memes and his reputation would have you believe. He wants Skyrim to be free to worship Talos and/or follow the "old ways", not impose it upon all of Skyrim. He only opposes foreigners insofar as they cause problems for the Nord majority.
Sorry for the absolute war and peace posts, brevity is not one of my strong suits




