The Basalt Citadel
Rules
Winter Magnitude 80
Performing the Ritual
Performing this ritual takes at least 10 minutes of roleplaying. During the ritual the casters must be in a strong Winter regio.
This ritual targets a specific region. During the performance of the ritual the casters must name a region within the target territory which has the "ruins" or ruined quality.
The ritual may target a region in a territory which is under Imperial control (that is, which is eligible to appoint a Senator) when cast from the Imperial regio. To affect a region in a territory that is not under Imperial control, the ritual must be performed at a regio within the target territory.
This ritual is an enchantment. A target may only be under one enchantment effect at a time.
Effects
The ritual targets a single region containing extensive ruins. Over the course of the next few days a powerful enchantment settles over the region which conjures a monolithic citadel of black basalt from the ruins that offers protection to armies belonging to the force that controls the area.
The magical structure mimics the effect of a 2,000 strength fortification in the enchanted region. The fortification helps determine victory, and if the region is attacked it may inflict casualties. Unlike a mundane fortification, the magical fortification does not absorb any casualties itself. A region may only contain one fortification, regardless of whether it is magical or mundane in nature.
The effect lasts until the start of the next Profound Decisions Empire event.
The ritual draws on the power of the eternal Sorin.
Option
Any caster who has mastered the ritual may choose to substitute dragonbone for crystal mana when contributing to it. Every 2 measures of dragonbone spent counts as 1 crystal mana when contributing to the ritual. If this option is used it must be explicit that the dragonbone is an offering to Sorin by at least one of his recognised names.
There is no particular assurance associated with this ritual. Rather, should those who wield it do so arrogantly, without due respect to the one whose power there are granted, they will incur the Tomb King's enmity. He will, as is his wont, give them a chance to recognise their mistake, and make restitution for their error. If they fail to do so, then the Lord of the Bone Crown will begin to shift matters so that they bring destruction down on themselves. Do not perform this ritual should the Solitary One be under the enmity of the Imperial Conclave. To do so would be to insult Sorin. There will be no other warnings given, Empty One.
A peculiar note in the ritual textAssurance
This ritual draws on the power of the eternal Sorin. As with any ritual that binds an eternal to respond in a certain way there is likely to be an agreement that certain behaviour will cause it to become nonfunctional. The details of the agreement with Sorin are unknown. If this clause of the agreement were to be transgressed however the ritual would either become useless, or the eternal would be freed from the requirement to answer questions posed using it. While it is certainly possible for the eternal to empower the ritual again should the assurance be broken, it would require a new set of negotiations and there is no guarantee that it would work the same way it did previously.
Description
The ritual was codified at the Lyceum under the auspices of the Dean of the Lyceum, Simargl the Empty One, who was also responsible for proposing it for inclusion in Imperial Lore during the Winter Solstice 383YE. It is not clear who did the original work from which the ritual was developed; presumably whoever did so also negotiated the use of Sorin's power.
There is speculation that this is not the first time the ritual has been codified and is unlikely to be the last. Indeed there is some anecdotal evidence that a ritual very similar to this was used once or twice in the distant past. Drawing as it does on the power of Sorin, the Basalt Citadel has apparently appeared in one form or another in a number of sources, in many different places. As a ritual that draws on the power of ruination, loss, and defeat it has been argued by some of the magicians who worked on the codification that there may be something in the essential nature of the ritual that makes knowledge of it fade away over time and be forgotten. Indeed, some theoreticians consider it appropriate that it was codified and included in Imperial lore in the wake of the peculiar memory altering mists that bedevilled the Empire at the end of 383YE.
Common Elements
YBC