Immonhiel
Immonhiel | |
---|---|
(Deity) | |
Titles | Balm-Bringer |
Realm | No fixed abode |
Alignment | Chaotic good |
Areas of Concern | Herbs Medicine Toads |
Worshipers | Alchemists, chronically ill, healers, herbalists, marsh-dwellers |
Cleric Alignments (1E) | |
Domains (1E) | Chaos, Good, Healing, Plant |
Subdomains (1E) | Azata, Growth, Restoration, Resurrection |
Favored Weapon | Handaxe |
Symbol | Herb-covered wooden toad |
Sacred Animal | Toad |
Sacred Colors | Brown, green |
Source: Chronicle of the Righteous, pg(s). 14 |
Immonhiel is the angel empyreal lord patron of medicine. She nurses to health her fellow celestials injured in fights against fiends.[1]
Home
Immonhiel has no fixed home and wanders where she is needed. She has visited the home of nearly every other empyreal lord, and many mortals have unknowingly hosted her without being aware of their visitor's true nature.[1]
Appearance
Immonhiel appears as a regal, elderly, brown-skinned woman. Her moss-green hair hangs in thick braids on both sides of her face, and her black eyes hold great wisdom. She wears a leather skirt and vest fringed with green silk. From her sash hangs innumerable pouches and potions said to contain all kinds of medicine. Immonhiel's right hand is made from pine wood, with long, capable-looking fingers.[1]
Servants
Immonhiel's servants spread the knowledge of herbal remedies and how to tend them, and teach medics on the battlefield how to keep their patients alive. For those who cannot be saved, they provide ointments that give them the gift of a peaceful death.[1]
On Golarion
A small cult of Immonhiel, known as the Silent Surgeons, practices in Azir using non-magical healing to spread the faith among the godless in Rahadoum.[2]
References
For additional resources, see the Meta page.
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Amber Scott. (2013). Chronicle of the Righteous, p. 14. Paizo Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-1-60125-506-8
- ↑ Alexander Augunas, Russ Brown, John Compton, Alex Riggs, and David Ross. (2016). Divine Anthology, p. 24. Paizo Inc. ISBN 978-1-60125-894-6
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