Difference between revisions of "Sung Chiang"

From Kupopowiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
m
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
The closest thing that the Xsian people have to a native [[Dark God]], Sung Chiang is a deity that is supposed to have stolen immortality for himself after becoming a highly proficient thief in [[Fa-Bul]]. Throughout history he has sometimes been seen in the mortal world: from these reports it is known that he has six arms and three faces. [[Shang-Ti]] is said to have named him the patron of policemen in the Empire, but he is unofficially the patron of thieves, assassins and murderers.
+
The closest thing that the Xsian people have to a native [[Dark God]], Sung Chiang is a deity that is supposed to have stolen immortality for himself after becoming a highly proficient thief in [[Fa-Bul]]. Throughout history he has sometimes been seen in the mortal world: from these reports it is known that he has six arms and three faces. [[Shang-Ti]] is said to have named him the patron of policemen in the Empire, but he is unofficially the patron of thieves, assassins and murderers. He is also seen by some as a symbol of the virtue of ability-over-birthright and self-made men; archetypical of those who subscribe to this philosophy (and take Sung Chiang as a patron) was the Kai Dynasty lord [[Kao Meng De]], who worked his way up through the civil service to become one of the most powerful landowners in Fa-Bul.
 +
 
 +
[[category: Xsia]]
 +
[[category: Kupopolis Legends]]

Latest revision as of 11:16, 26 June 2008

The closest thing that the Xsian people have to a native Dark God, Sung Chiang is a deity that is supposed to have stolen immortality for himself after becoming a highly proficient thief in Fa-Bul. Throughout history he has sometimes been seen in the mortal world: from these reports it is known that he has six arms and three faces. Shang-Ti is said to have named him the patron of policemen in the Empire, but he is unofficially the patron of thieves, assassins and murderers. He is also seen by some as a symbol of the virtue of ability-over-birthright and self-made men; archetypical of those who subscribe to this philosophy (and take Sung Chiang as a patron) was the Kai Dynasty lord Kao Meng De, who worked his way up through the civil service to become one of the most powerful landowners in Fa-Bul.