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|name = [[Andraste]]
 
|name = [[Andraste]]
 
|image = Andraste WoT.jpg
 
|image = Andraste WoT.jpg
  +
|px =
 
|gender = Female
 
|gender = Female
|family = Alamarri Chieftain (father) <br> [[Brona]] <small>(mother)</small> <br> [[Maferath]] <small>("mortal" husband)</small> <br> [[The Maker]] <small>("spiritual" husband)</small> <br> Numerous children
+
|family = Alamarri Chieftain <small>(father)</small> <br> [[Brona]] <small>(mother)</small> <br> [[Maferath]] <small>("mortal" husband)</small> <br> [[The Maker]] <small>("spiritual" husband)</small> <br> Numerous children
  +
|class =
|class = [[Mage]] <small>(Disputed)</small><ref name="prima">Prima Official Game Guide: DAO Collector's Edition.</ref>
 
 
|title = Bride of the Maker <br> Prophet <br> Our Lady Redeemer <br> Lady of Sorrow <br> Leader of rebel grand army against the [[Tevinter Imperium|Imperium]]
 
|title = Bride of the Maker <br> Prophet <br> Our Lady Redeemer <br> Lady of Sorrow <br> Leader of rebel grand army against the [[Tevinter Imperium|Imperium]]
 
|race = [[Human]]
 
|race = [[Human]]
Line 16: Line 17:
   
 
== Background ==
 
== Background ==
Born in a [[Denerim|fishing village]] to an [[Alamarri]]<ref>[[Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker]]</ref> woman named [[Brona]] and the chieftain of one of the largest Alamarri tribes in what is now northern Ferelden,<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 111.</ref> Andraste was a woman who rose to greatness first as a [[Slavery|slave]] of the Tevinter Imperium, then as a prophet, war leader, and religious icon.
+
According to some scholars, Andraste was born at -203 [[Ancient Age|Ancient]] (992 TE) in [[Denerim]], which was then a fishing village. Her mother was an [[Alamarri]]<ref>[[Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker]]</ref> woman named [[Brona]] and her father was the chieftain of one of the largest Alamarri tribes in what is now northern Ferelden,<ref name="wot111">{{Cite wot|111}}</ref> Andraste was a woman who rose to greatness first as a [[Slavery|slave]] of the [[Tevinter Imperium]], then as a prophet, war leader, and religious icon.
   
[[File:Andraste and Maker WoT.jpg|thumb|184px|Andraste's vision of the Maker.<ref>''[[Dragon Age: The World of Thedas]]'', vol. 1, pg. 112.</ref>]]
+
[[File:Andraste and Maker WoT.jpg|thumb|184px|Andraste's vision of the Maker.<ref name="wot112">{{Cite wot|112}}</ref>]]
  +
{{See Also|Tears of Andraste}}
From an early age, Andraste suffered troubling dreams of a god known as the Maker.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 111.</ref> Over time she began to interpret these dreams as the answer to questions that plagued her, and she came to understand that the Maker was the supreme being who had abandoned the world when his people took up the worship of the Old Gods, those beings worshipped in particular by the Tevinter Imperium. According to Chantry canon, after having fled the Imperium and marrying the warlord [[Maferath]], Andraste appealed to the gods<ref>[[Codex entry: The Avvars]], specifically, their religion.</ref> but her prayers went unanswered. She would sing, and one day the Maker, enchanted by her voice, invited her to join Him at His side. She instead encouraged Him to return to humanity and forgive them, compelling her fellow Alamarri and others to accept the one true god of Thedas.
 
  +
According to the legend, before the Maker spoke to Andraste, she despaired at the fate of her fellows. At that time, every night, her husband, [[Maferath]] would come to console her and each time Andraste would tell him her despair while shedding a single tear which Maferath captured in a vial. In the thirtieth night the vial was full and when dawn came Andraste saw her first vision of the Maker. Even though this legend is popular and has passed on for ages, a part of it isn't in the [[Chant of Light]].<ref>This legend is mentioned by [[Slim Couldry]] when acquiring [[The Tears of Andraste]] sub-quest.</ref>
   
 
From an early age, Andraste suffered troubling dreams of a god known as the Maker.<ref name="wot111"/> Over time she began to interpret these dreams as the answer to questions that plagued her, and she came to understand that the Maker was the supreme being who had abandoned the world when his people took up the worship of the Old Gods, those beings worshipped in particular by the Tevinter Imperium. According to Chantry canon, after having fled the Imperium and marrying the warlord Maferath, Andraste appealed to the gods<ref>[[Codex entry: The Avvars]], specifically, their religion.</ref> but her prayers went unanswered. She would sing, and one day the Maker, enchanted by her voice, invited her to join Him at His side. She instead encouraged Him to return to humanity and forgive them, compelling her fellow Alamarri and others to accept the one true god of Thedas.
To the world, Andraste was an escaped slave from the [[Tevinter Imperium]] who came to power after the [[First Blight]] had ended and [[Dumat]] was slain. She fought against the Imperium, which had been significantly weakened by the First [[Blight]]. As part of the [[Exalted Marches]], she conquered most of the south while fighting to destroy the [[magisters]], whom she blamed for the Blight. The people she led in her campaign were the barbarian ancestors of the Fereldans, the Alamarri. She also joined forces with the elven leader and former slave [[Shartan]] and his people as they shared a common enemy in the Imperium. To the Imperium, Andraste was an opportunist, a barbarian taking advantage of their weakness. She led her rebellion against the Tevinter Imperium in the first Exalted March under the Maker's sanction. Andraste's March was greatly successful due in part to several unfortunately concurrent natural disasters, including droughts, famines and flooding, which decimated the Imperium's farmland and, consequently, troops—a form of divine punishment, which [[Disciple Cathaire]], one of her war leaders, contends. According to the [[Chantry]] teachings, the reason the Imperium did not fall entirely to her army was because of Maferath, Andraste's mortal husband. Feeling that the barbarians had overextended themselves, he made a deal with the magisters to keep the south in exchange for turning Andraste over to them. She was burned at the stake in [[Minrathous]]. Her death is known as the second sin, which caused the Maker to turn from humanity once again. Yet, because of her, the Imperium, for all intents and purposes, was greatly weakened, and the Chantry was formed, focused around her teachings.
 
  +
 
To the world, Andraste was an escaped slave from the Tevinter Imperium who came to power after the [[First Blight]] had ended and [[Dumat]] was slain. She fought against the Imperium, which had been significantly weakened by the First [[Blight]]. As part of the [[Exalted Marches]], she conquered most of the south while fighting to destroy the [[magister]]s, whom she blamed for the Blight. The people she led in her campaign were the barbarian ancestors of the Fereldans, the Alamarri. She also joined forces with the elven leader and former slave [[Shartan]] and his people as they shared a common enemy in the Imperium. To the Imperium, Andraste was an opportunist, a barbarian taking advantage of their weakness. She led her rebellion against the Tevinter Imperium in the first Exalted March under the Maker's sanction. Andraste's March was greatly successful due in part to several unfortunately concurrent natural disasters, including droughts, famines and flooding, which decimated the Imperium's farmland and, consequently, troops—a form of divine punishment, which Disciple [[Cathaire]], one of her war leaders, contends. According to the [[Chantry]] teachings, the reason the Imperium did not fall entirely to her army was because of Maferath, Andraste's mortal husband. Feeling that the barbarians had overextended themselves, he made a deal with the magisters to keep the south in exchange for turning Andraste over to them. She was burned at the stake in [[Minrathous]]. Her death is known as the second sin, which caused the Maker to turn from humanity once again. Yet, because of her, the Imperium, for all intents and purposes, was greatly weakened, and the Chantry was formed, focused around her teachings.
   
 
[[File:Statue-Archon Hessarian.jpg|left|thumb|125px|Statue of Archon Hessarian]]
 
[[File:Statue-Archon Hessarian.jpg|left|thumb|125px|Statue of Archon Hessarian]]
[[Archon Hessarian]], who ordered Andraste's execution, was the first person converted to following the [[Chant of Light]]. According to the Chant, the Archon saw the error of his ways as soon as Andraste was burned. It was he that put the sword through her heart to put her out of her misery, which is why the sword is a symbol of mercy in Andrastian lore, and later repented her execution entirely (though Chantry dissenters claim Hessarian only converted because he could not stem the tide against Andraste's followers, only emboldened by the death of their leader, and repented his actions as a means to stay in power).
+
Archon [[Hessarian]], who ordered Andraste's execution, was the first person converted to following the Chant of Light. According to the Chant, the Archon saw the error of his ways as soon as Andraste was burned. It was he that put the sword through her heart to put her out of her misery, which is why the sword is a symbol of mercy in Andrastian lore, and later repented her execution entirely (though Chantry dissenters claim Hessarian only converted because he could not stem the tide against Andraste's followers, only emboldened by the death of their leader, and repented his actions as a means to stay in power).
   
[[File:Maferath WoT.jpg|thumb|140px|An Orlesian sculpture of Maferath.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 112.</ref>]]
+
[[File:Maferath WoT.jpg|thumb|140px|An Orlesian sculpture of Maferath.<ref name="wot112"/>]]
 
He turned on his former ally Maferath and ushered the way for the Tevinter Imperium to eventually become an Andrastian nation, though the Chantry as an organization did not yet exist at this time. As for Maferath, when his betrayal became common knowledge, his people abandoned and eventually murdered him.
 
He turned on his former ally Maferath and ushered the way for the Tevinter Imperium to eventually become an Andrastian nation, though the Chantry as an organization did not yet exist at this time. As for Maferath, when his betrayal became common knowledge, his people abandoned and eventually murdered him.
   
Andraste had several children but they are all believed to have died in the civil wars that tore the south apart after Maferath's death, and the unification of the Ciriane tribes in modern-day Orlais.<ref>[[Jeshavis]] was married to two of the "Sons of Betrayal" at this time, and manipulated them both to protect the Ciriane people.</ref> There have been many claimants in the centuries since, saying they were descendants of survivors, but the Chantry has disavowed each of them. To date there are no known legitimate heirs to Andraste's blood.<ref>{{BW old forums|author=Gaider, David|date=June 30, 2009|url=http://forums.bioware.com/forums/viewtopic.html?topic=684017&forum=135&sp=45#6487165|title=One-line lore questions only please|access=January 9, 2011}}</ref>
+
Andraste had several children but they are all believed to have died in the civil wars that tore the south apart after Maferath's death, and the unification of the Ciriane tribes in modern-day [[Orlais]].<ref>[[Jeshavis]] was married to two of the "Sons of Betrayal" at this time, and manipulated them both to protect the Ciriane people.</ref> There have been many claimants in the centuries since, saying they were descendants of survivors, but the Chantry has disavowed each of them. To date there are no known legitimate heirs to Andraste's blood.<ref>{{BW old forums|author=Gaider, David|date=June 30, 2009|url=http://forums.bioware.com/forums/viewtopic.html?topic=684017&forum=135&sp=45#6487165|archive=http://web.archive.org/web/20090714123543/http://www.dragonagecentral.com/thread/684017|title=One-line lore questions only please|access=February 28, 2014}}</ref>
   
 
[[File:Andraste and magisters - Those Who Speak 1-1.png|thumb|200px|Andraste and Tevinter magisters (from ''[[Dragon Age: Those Who Speak|Those Who Speak]]'')]]
 
[[File:Andraste and magisters - Those Who Speak 1-1.png|thumb|200px|Andraste and Tevinter magisters (from ''[[Dragon Age: Those Who Speak|Those Who Speak]]'')]]
 
After her death, a group of people named as [[Disciples of Andraste]] was created for the purpose of protecting her [[Urn of Andraste|remnants]] and continuing her legacy. They moved her remnants to the [[Frostback Mountains]] and a [[The Gauntlet|temple]] was built around it. Eventually however only the [[Guardian (character)|Guardian]] stood still in his post and protected the ashes as the rest of the disciples believed that Andraste has been reborn into the form of a [[High dragon]]. This temple commemorates her memory and prevents the unworthy from viewing her remains. The remains stayed in the mountain, undisturbed for many years and eventually rumours began to spread that her ashes held curative properties.
 
After her death, a group of people named as [[Disciples of Andraste]] was created for the purpose of protecting her [[Urn of Andraste|remnants]] and continuing her legacy. They moved her remnants to the [[Frostback Mountains]] and a [[The Gauntlet|temple]] was built around it. Eventually however only the [[Guardian (character)|Guardian]] stood still in his post and protected the ashes as the rest of the disciples believed that Andraste has been reborn into the form of a [[High dragon]]. This temple commemorates her memory and prevents the unworthy from viewing her remains. The remains stayed in the mountain, undisturbed for many years and eventually rumours began to spread that her ashes held curative properties.
   
Furthermore, the official belief of the [[Imperial Chantry]] is that Andraste wasn't, in fact, the Maker's Chosen, but rather "just" an extraordinarily powerful [[mage]].<ref name="prima"/> This view, which is considered heretical by the Andrastian Chantry, can also be found in a book called "[[The Search for the True Prophet]]".
+
Furthermore, the official belief of the [[Imperial Chantry]] is that Andraste wasn't, in fact, the Maker's Chosen, but rather "just" an extraordinarily powerful [[mage]]. This view, which is considered heretical by the Andrastian Chantry, can also be found in a book called "[[The Search for the True Prophet]]".
   
The prophet is said to have been born in Denerim where a memorial stone, known as the '''Birth Rock,'''<ref>[[Denerim#Background]], the codex entry.</ref> stands in the city's Palace District. It is a site of pilgrimage to her followers who come to touch the rock in her honor.<ref>[[Codex entry: Denerim]]</ref> However, the Orlesian city of Jader also claims this prestige.
+
The prophet is said to have been born in Denerim where a memorial stone, known as the '''Birth Rock,''' stands in the city's [[Royal Palace|Palace]] District. It is a site of pilgrimage to her followers who come to touch the rock in her honor.<ref>[[Codex entry: Denerim]]</ref> However, the Orlesian city of Jader also claims this prestige.
   
 
== Customs & Culture ==
 
== Customs & Culture ==
Line 42: Line 46:
   
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==
* Before the developers decided on the name of Andraste, she was named Augusta.<ref>Gaider, David. [http://social.bioware.com/unofficial%20http:/social.bioware.com/forum/1/topic/141/index/4972250/3#4981947 "Gameing Research"]. BioWare Social Network. Retrieved 2011-01-09.</ref>
+
* Before the developers decided on the name of Andraste, she was named Augusta.<ref>{{BWF|author=Gaider, David|date=8 October, 2010|url=http://forum.bioware.com/topic/144584-gameing-research/?p=3830742|title=Gameing Research|access=February 28, 2014}}</ref>
  +
*Some people believed that Andraste may have been a powerful [[mage]].<ref name="prima">Prima Official Game Guide: DAO Collector's Edition.</ref> [[The Search for the True Prophet]] is a tome that explores this possibility.
* The story of her life in many ways mirrors that of Joan of Arc, including the manner of her death. Her role within the Chantry religion is that of a messianic Christ-figure and the vessel her [[Urn of Andraste|ashes]] are contained in is presented much like the Holy Grail of Christian lore, right down to knights dying in its pursuit as they did in the Arthurian cycle. It is also guarded in a similar manner to the Grail as seen in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.
 
* Similar to the Christ story, it is said that Andraste was terribly abused by the Archon's Guard before her execution, mirroring the Flagellation of Christ<ref>[[Codex entry: The Archon's Blades]]</ref>.
+
* It appears that many Andrastians suspect, as a matter of salacious debate, that [[Shartan]] and Andraste were lovers during her rebellion against the [[Magister]]s of [[Tevinter]].<ref>[[Patrick Weekes]]. ''[[Dragon Age: The Masked Empire]]'', pg. 109-110.</ref>
* The book called "The Search for the True Prophet" also alludes to elements of Christian lore; it is an allegory to various texts that mention the possibility of Jesus (Andraste) being just an extraordinary prophet (mage), not the Son of God (Maker's Chosen).
 
* Andraste, according to Dio Cassius, was an Icenic war goddess invoked by Boudica while fighting against the Roman occupation of Britain in AD 61. This ties in with parallels of the fictional Andraste being a tribal queen, like Boudica, and leading a military campaign against an empire (the Roman Empire/Tevinter Imperium).
 
* In Greek mythology two sea nymphs, usually called Adrastea and Ida, nursed Zeus and sheltered him from his father, the titan Kronos(also named Cronos). Later, Zeus placed the two nymphs in the sky as the Great Bear and the Little Bear. The story of Andraste loosely parallels this as she supported and defended the Maker (Zeus) and was rewarded and taken away to be by his side (the sky). There is also the great similarities in the two names.
 
* Elements of Andraste are also allegories for the Prophet Muhammad, including the prophet herself acting as a military leader -- something found in the life of Muhammad but not Jesus.
 
   
 
== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
 
<gallery widths=189 captionalign="center">
 
<gallery widths=189 captionalign="center">
Life of andraste 1 WoT.jpg|False idols and Andraste's vision.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 112.</ref>
+
Life of andraste 1 WoT.jpg|False idols and Andraste's vision.<ref name="wot112"/>
Life of andraste 2 WoT.jpg|Andraste as war leader against the Imperium.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 113.</ref>
+
Life of andraste 2 WoT.jpg|Andraste as war leader against the Imperium.<ref>{{Cite wot|113}}</ref>
Life of andraste 3 WoT.jpg|Andraste's captivity and immolation.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 114.</ref>
+
Life of andraste 3 WoT.jpg|Andraste's captivity and immolation.<ref>{{Cite wot|114}}</ref>
Life of andraste 4 WoT.jpg|Andraste's ascension and the weakened Imperium.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 115.</ref>
+
Life of andraste 4 WoT.jpg|Andraste's ascension and the weakened Imperium.<ref>{{Cite wot|115}}</ref>
Andraste triptych.jpg|A triptych featuring Andraste.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 119.</ref>
+
Andraste triptych.jpg|A triptych featuring Andraste.<ref>{{Cite wot|119}}</ref>
Andraste statue.jpg|A Fereldan statue depicting Andraste as a warrior.<ref>''Dragon Age: The World of Thedas'', vol. 1, pg. 111.</ref>
+
Andraste statue.jpg|A Fereldan statue depicting Andraste as a warrior.<ref name="wot111"/>
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  +
  +
== See also ==
  +
{{:Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker|style=iconmini}}{{clrl}}
   
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
<references/>
+
{{Scroll box|<references/>}}
   
 
{{Chantry}}
 
{{Chantry}}
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[[Category:Alamarri]]
 
[[Category:Alamarri]]
 
[[Category:Slaves]]
 
[[Category:Slaves]]
 
[[Category:Alamarri nobility]]
 
[[Category:Religious figures]]
 
[[Category:Religious figures]]
[[Category:Chantry]]
 
 
[[Category:Andraste| ]]
 
[[Category:Andraste| ]]
  +
[[Category:Human lore]]

Revision as of 01:59, 14 April 2014


“Its gates forever shut.
Heaven has been filled with silence,
I knew then,
And cross'd my heart with shame.
—Andraste 1:11”

Andraste is the prophet whose teachings later served as the foundation for the formation of the Chantry, which later becomes the dominant religion of Thedas. She was the spiritual wife of the Maker, the being whom the Chantry worships.

Background

According to some scholars, Andraste was born at -203 Ancient (992 TE) in Denerim, which was then a fishing village. Her mother was an Alamarri[1] woman named Brona and her father was the chieftain of one of the largest Alamarri tribes in what is now northern Ferelden,[2] Andraste was a woman who rose to greatness first as a slave of the Tevinter Imperium, then as a prophet, war leader, and religious icon.

Andraste and Maker WoT

Andraste's vision of the Maker.[3]

See also: Tears of Andraste

According to the legend, before the Maker spoke to Andraste, she despaired at the fate of her fellows. At that time, every night, her husband, Maferath would come to console her and each time Andraste would tell him her despair while shedding a single tear which Maferath captured in a vial. In the thirtieth night the vial was full and when dawn came Andraste saw her first vision of the Maker. Even though this legend is popular and has passed on for ages, a part of it isn't in the Chant of Light.[4]

From an early age, Andraste suffered troubling dreams of a god known as the Maker.[2] Over time she began to interpret these dreams as the answer to questions that plagued her, and she came to understand that the Maker was the supreme being who had abandoned the world when his people took up the worship of the Old Gods, those beings worshipped in particular by the Tevinter Imperium. According to Chantry canon, after having fled the Imperium and marrying the warlord Maferath, Andraste appealed to the gods[5] but her prayers went unanswered. She would sing, and one day the Maker, enchanted by her voice, invited her to join Him at His side. She instead encouraged Him to return to humanity and forgive them, compelling her fellow Alamarri and others to accept the one true god of Thedas.

To the world, Andraste was an escaped slave from the Tevinter Imperium who came to power after the First Blight had ended and Dumat was slain. She fought against the Imperium, which had been significantly weakened by the First Blight. As part of the Exalted Marches, she conquered most of the south while fighting to destroy the magisters, whom she blamed for the Blight. The people she led in her campaign were the barbarian ancestors of the Fereldans, the Alamarri. She also joined forces with the elven leader and former slave Shartan and his people as they shared a common enemy in the Imperium. To the Imperium, Andraste was an opportunist, a barbarian taking advantage of their weakness. She led her rebellion against the Tevinter Imperium in the first Exalted March under the Maker's sanction. Andraste's March was greatly successful due in part to several unfortunately concurrent natural disasters, including droughts, famines and flooding, which decimated the Imperium's farmland and, consequently, troops—a form of divine punishment, which Disciple Cathaire, one of her war leaders, contends. According to the Chantry teachings, the reason the Imperium did not fall entirely to her army was because of Maferath, Andraste's mortal husband. Feeling that the barbarians had overextended themselves, he made a deal with the magisters to keep the south in exchange for turning Andraste over to them. She was burned at the stake in Minrathous. Her death is known as the second sin, which caused the Maker to turn from humanity once again. Yet, because of her, the Imperium, for all intents and purposes, was greatly weakened, and the Chantry was formed, focused around her teachings.

File:Statue-Archon Hessarian.jpg

Statue of Archon Hessarian

Archon Hessarian, who ordered Andraste's execution, was the first person converted to following the Chant of Light. According to the Chant, the Archon saw the error of his ways as soon as Andraste was burned. It was he that put the sword through her heart to put her out of her misery, which is why the sword is a symbol of mercy in Andrastian lore, and later repented her execution entirely (though Chantry dissenters claim Hessarian only converted because he could not stem the tide against Andraste's followers, only emboldened by the death of their leader, and repented his actions as a means to stay in power).

Maferath WoT

An Orlesian sculpture of Maferath.[3]

He turned on his former ally Maferath and ushered the way for the Tevinter Imperium to eventually become an Andrastian nation, though the Chantry as an organization did not yet exist at this time. As for Maferath, when his betrayal became common knowledge, his people abandoned and eventually murdered him.

Andraste had several children but they are all believed to have died in the civil wars that tore the south apart after Maferath's death, and the unification of the Ciriane tribes in modern-day Orlais.[6] There have been many claimants in the centuries since, saying they were descendants of survivors, but the Chantry has disavowed each of them. To date there are no known legitimate heirs to Andraste's blood.[7]

Andraste and magisters - Those Who Speak 1-1

Andraste and Tevinter magisters (from Those Who Speak)

After her death, a group of people named as Disciples of Andraste was created for the purpose of protecting her remnants and continuing her legacy. They moved her remnants to the Frostback Mountains and a temple was built around it. Eventually however only the Guardian stood still in his post and protected the ashes as the rest of the disciples believed that Andraste has been reborn into the form of a High dragon. This temple commemorates her memory and prevents the unworthy from viewing her remains. The remains stayed in the mountain, undisturbed for many years and eventually rumours began to spread that her ashes held curative properties.

Furthermore, the official belief of the Imperial Chantry is that Andraste wasn't, in fact, the Maker's Chosen, but rather "just" an extraordinarily powerful mage. This view, which is considered heretical by the Andrastian Chantry, can also be found in a book called "The Search for the True Prophet".

The prophet is said to have been born in Denerim where a memorial stone, known as the Birth Rock, stands in the city's Palace District. It is a site of pilgrimage to her followers who come to touch the rock in her honor.[8] However, the Orlesian city of Jader also claims this prestige.

Customs & Culture

At the beginning of Matrinalis there is a holiday named "All Soul’s Day" and the Chantry uses the holiday to remember the death of Andraste, with public fires that mark her immolation and plays that depict her death.

Trivia

  • Before the developers decided on the name of Andraste, she was named Augusta.[9]
  • Some people believed that Andraste may have been a powerful mage.[10] The Search for the True Prophet is a tome that explores this possibility.
  • It appears that many Andrastians suspect, as a matter of salacious debate, that Shartan and Andraste were lovers during her rebellion against the Magisters of Tevinter.[11]

Gallery

See also

Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker

References

  1. Codex entry: Andraste: Bride of the Maker
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 111
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 112
  4. This legend is mentioned by Slim Couldry when acquiring The Tears of Andraste sub-quest.
  5. Codex entry: The Avvars, specifically, their religion.
  6. Jeshavis was married to two of the "Sons of Betrayal" at this time, and manipulated them both to protect the Ciriane people.
  7. BioWare old forums Gaider, David (June 30, 2009). "One-line lore questions only please" (archive). BioWare Forums (offline). Retrieved on February 28, 2014.
  8. Codex entry: Denerim
  9. BSN Gaider, David (8 October, 2010). "Gameing Research" . The BioWare Forum. Retrieved on February 28, 2014.
  10. Prima Official Game Guide: DAO Collector's Edition.
  11. Patrick Weekes. Dragon Age: The Masked Empire, pg. 109-110.
  12. Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 113
  13. Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 114
  14. Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 115
  15. Dragon Age logo - new Dragon Age: The World of Thedas, vol. 1, p. 119