In this new blog I will be posting short stories about the Prophet Khan of Adivine, and his most devoted follower, Saint Aurelia of Çhizrock. This takes place about 800 years prior to the birth of the Immortal Witch, who we now know to be Aurelia of Temlot from the book, Sleepers Awake, by the prophet Jean Orphée of Villeneuve, Fairech.
This is not, however, to be read as historically accurate. These stories were written and published by an anonymous hand during the life of Jean Orphée and were mentioned several times by him, both in the work already mention and in subsequent volumes, he referred to them as Birth of Kahn. However, the volume I am transcribing them from refers to itself as Birth of the Prophet, and still another known title is Life of the Prophet, Life of the Saint. But perhaps, The Walls of Çhizrock, is the title I like best.
The volume is very controversial both when it was written during the reign of the Coronite Emperor, Severinus II, and in the subsequent Malacain government, due on the one hand to its supposed slandering of the Coronite prophet, and on the other to its apparent faith in heathen gods and miracles. I have created this digital version, in an attempt to preserve what I feel is an important piece of our history, a work at least as influential as Orphée's autobiography, which I am also currently preparing and some of which has already been released. I invite you to comment with your own opinions both on the value of what I attempt and on those controversial ideas propounded by the work itself.