Hazoret: Difference between revisions

From MTG Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>@DeletedUser41276399
No edit summary
>Hunterofsalvation
No edit summary
Line 4: Line 4:
|lifetime=
|lifetime=
|race=[[Gods (creature type)|God]]
|race=[[Gods (creature type)|God]]
|sources=see external links
|sources=see references
}}
}}


'''Hazoret''' is the [[Amonkhet (plane)|Amonkhet]] [[god]] of zeal. She is responsible for the final trial and slaughters the winner with her spear, rewarding them with the [[God-Pharaoh]]'s presence.
[[Jackal]]-headed '''Hazoret''' is the [[Amonkhet (plane)|Amonkhet]] [[god]] of zeal. She is responsible for the final trial and slaughters the winner with her spear, rewarding them with the [[God-Pharaoh]]'s presence. Hazoret's ideal of zeal encompasses powerful emotions as well as religious intensity. It is not enough to merely want a place in the afterlife, initiates must channel that drive into a furious battle that will determine their final place in the afterlife.<ref>Wizards of the Coast. [http://magic.wizards.com/en/story/planes/amonkhet Explore the planes: Amonkhet]</ref>


==Inspiration==
==Inspiration==
Line 31: Line 31:
* <c>Glorybringer</c>
* <c>Glorybringer</c>
* <c>Limits of Solidarity</c>
* <c>Limits of Solidarity</c>
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Amonkhet|gods}}
{{Amonkhet|gods}}

Revision as of 18:28, 3 May 2017

Template:Character

Jackal-headed Hazoret is the Amonkhet god of zeal. She is responsible for the final trial and slaughters the winner with her spear, rewarding them with the God-Pharaoh's presence. Hazoret's ideal of zeal encompasses powerful emotions as well as religious intensity. It is not enough to merely want a place in the afterlife, initiates must channel that drive into a furious battle that will determine their final place in the afterlife.[1]

Inspiration

Hazoret's canine form is likely inspired by Anubis, the Egyptian god of mummification and the afterlife; one of his epithets is tepy-dju-ef, "He who is upon his mountain". Her role in ending the life of the worthy draws parallels to Set, the Egyptian god of storms and the desert, who killed Osiris and thus allowed him to enter the afterlife.

In-game references

Represented in:

Depicted in:

Quoted or referred to:

References

  1. Wizards of the Coast. Explore the planes: Amonkhet