L25.36 Stave Divination
A rural divination rite practiced by the common folk of Lal-Mit. Said to have descended from ancient beliefs in numerology of Old Lashur, the progenitor of Lal-Mittic culture.
Held during at the end of autumn, village folk inscribe their hopes for the coming year upon a pieces of flat slabs of soft clay and a layer of dyed vellum or hemp fabric is placed upon it. The local shaman then rolls the clay into a a number of staves and fires them in the furnace before it is painted in various colours and patterns.
The next morning, the staves are bound into bundles of five, and erected at the village square.
At the end of the month, the staves that remain standing are said to contain divinations that shall come true in some shape in the future.
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