Today is the Feast of St. Hilarion the New. He was a monastic saint who lived much of his life as a hermit. Eventually, he was ordained as a priest and became the abbot of the Pelekete monastery in Bithynia during the eighth century A.D. This places his life at the time of the first wave of iconoclasm.
On Holy Thursday in A.D. 754, soldiers stormed the monastery under the auspices of rooting out icon-venerators. They disrupted service, threw the Holy Gifts to the floor and put forty-two of the monks in chains. They were then sent to Edessa to be murdered. The remaining monks were horribly mutilated and tortured. Noses were cut off, beards set on fire. St. Hilarion died during this persecution and is today venerated as a martyr.
***
Given that several of my recent Saintly Saturdays have coincidentally been about various saints from around the Sea of Marmara and Bithyina, it seems as if this nascent campaign is going to get further developed.
The story of St. Hilarion and the Pelekete monastery suggests a background story for the center-piece dungeon of the campaign. In past posts, I have suggested a new take on the sample side-view dungeon in Holmes where Skull Mountain becomes the Mountain of Skulls. The monks originally built the monastery to protect the surrounding countryside from an ancient evil buried beneath.
I have also suggested that the monks therein were not wiped out by monsters, but by forces of Law. These forces would have been backed by an authority that is actively supporting a heresy that the monks at the Mountain of Skulls were opposed to (and might possibly be the original rebel monks also suggested by a previous post).
To that end, I’d like to gather some pictures from a few monasteries for the purposes of inspiration. Somewhere in here are the pieces necessary to bring this adventure location to life:
Especially interesting to me are the skulls with names, dates and even icons painted upon them. These are the skulls in question that need to be found and restored to make sure that the ancient evil is once more contained.
2 hours ago
5 comments:
Those are amazing photographs. Do you know where they are from (especially the top one with the priest and nuns)?
The first is an ossuary at Pasarea monastery near Bucharest, Romania.
The second is underneath the Church of St. James in Brno, Czech Republic.
The third and fourth are at the NeamÈ› Monastery in Romania.
These photographs are wonderous. I've had an appreciation of icons - the aesthetics and practical nature of them - since my art history classes back in the day. Your posts on saints is what initially hooked me on your blog.
Are the portraits images of the saints, or the deceased, or I guess they could be both?
Those are wonderful photographs, inspirational for any GM worth his salt.
Since there are no halos, these monks have not yet been revealed to be saints; however, I imagine that they were beloved enough that these icons were painted in the full expectation that they will be. In the Orthodox Christian experience, miracles happen through the prayers of the living all the time. I have no doubt that such things happened in the living memory of those who painted these skulls.
Post a Comment