The Grim Reaper
TNPer
John the Apostle: Chapter I
History, Section I - "The Sea Between Two Doors"
History, Section I - "The Sea Between Two Doors"
"In the old days, it was said that the Gods themselves appeared to the first emissaries between Alba Longa and Neapolis. The people of Alba Longa believe that the meeting was conducted by an Albanese monk, who arrived in the service of the Albanese pantheon - specifically Paxus, Albanese God of Peace - when he met a Neapolitan nobleman professing a monotheistic faith in service to the Neapolitan deity Kovenantos, God of Law. The Neapolitans claim that it was a diplomat, not a monk, and that the Neapolitan also professed a polytheistic pantheon, discussing Kovenantos because of the timing of the meeting, on a holy day of Kovenantos.
The circumstances of that meeting are deceptively simplistic. Kovenantos was relegated, with the rise of the Latin Confederation, to the role of a God of Service, during the Great Reformation spearheaded by Alba Longa. As Neapolis shored up a navy more fearsome than any other in the Latin Confederation, their relationship with the inland farming towns and the large mining settlements that shared its religion collapsed. Augustine Syncretism took hold over the Latin Confederation, combining the Gods of the Albanese faith with the new, revisionist understanding of Neapolitan theology. It became pseudo-monotheistic, with Paxus displacing Kovenantos as patron of the Latin Confederation, to placate those who adopted revisionist Neapolitan polytheism. Kovenantos became almost a forethought, a mere member of the new syncretic pantheon.
In the modern day, Paxus is the only God that can be celebrated by any individual receiving government pay. As a result, they claim in their name one of the two government-funded temples, the Door of Peace, overlooking the Albanese Strait (traditionally, the Fretum Viri). The other is the multi-faith Augustine Door, overlooking the Neapolitan Strait (traditionally, the Fretum Uxoris, or the Skia Gefyras), which in practice is effectively only open to foreigners working with ambassadorial or corporate staff that Imperium wishes to segregate from the center of government."
For a cutthroat, corrupt police dictatorship, the government was surpisingly tolerant of critical thought and discussion. As long as you didn't work for Caesar, Caesar would allow you to speak - and St. Adrianne's was a private school.
It was, to many, THE private school. That wasn't because it is a particularly good school - although, it was. It was, simply, one of the very few private schools available in the heart of Alba Longa, collectively known as the "Mariti Union". The 'sea between doors', so to speak - a reference to the two Doors, a saying that meant something like "so close, and yet so far away". The saying is particularly apt in St. Adrianne's case. The Albanese private schools provided a bridge between the public life of private people and the private world of the public sector. Most who could afford to live in Alba Longa were willing to put their students under the watchful eye of Caesar, in the public schools of the Albanese District. Many of the public schools across the Imperium would tolerate some level of rebellious teen years, but not the Albanese District. Those who studied in the Albanese District, the public schools in Old Alba Longa, were expected not to rebel against the system they were taught from birth to repair and maintain.
But even the enlightened teenager must stop and give themselves time to breathe. To be fair, if we skip the sarcasm for a moment, it was a rather wordy lecture - particularly for someone working towards a science degree, as our fair hero is. John (for anglicized names are popular with many of the students attending the Mariti Union) was, in particular, interested in pharmaceutical science. It was a growing industry in the Imperium. And, frankly, John didn't really like Latin History anyway. It was all rehashing things everyone understood - if not perfectly, then adequately.
Who didn't know the old stories of Paxus and Kovenantos? Admittedly, in Alba Longa, the stories were even more imbalanced than they were in the rest of Imperium. Many of the Albanese families understood Kovenantos as something akin to a regional nature spirit, more so than a God. Kovenantos filled a role as an unknowledgeable, unlikeably cynical human voice in mythology, contrasted against the aloof, idealistic, usually victorious, and always paternalistic Paxus. Paxus brought strange, new ideas, and imposed them upon humanity, helping them to defy their own challenges. Every Augustan knew what other nations thought of war - unnatural, destructive, and detestable. Its innovations were necessitated by brutality. But Caesar knew what was best - Paxus was not an enemy of war, but created by it. Peace is divine, and war is human. Through war, peace is forged.
Caesar and innovation. Divinity and civilization. The Augustine Door and the Door of Peace.
If you want peace, prepare for war. The Imperium is always prepared.
John is not. He has a history test coming up. Good luck, John.