Tya Nehru Character in Ugaron | World Anvil

Tya Nehru

The Fultonian Mother Goddess.   There are two major trains of Fultonian theological thought. Both center around the mother goddess Tya Nehru.
  The pluralists take a more traditional view of Fultonian religion. They see Tya Nehru as the mother of the gods. For most Fultonians Tya Nehru is the patron goddess of mothers, homes and all wise action. Tya Nehru is commonly pictured as a large, sometimes pregnant, woman with no face and exaggerated breasts and buttocks. At the beginning of time, Tya Nehru first gave birth to the skies and forests, the ocean and rivers, the humans and animals, the sun and stars, and all the gods. Other important Fultonian deities are Sennia, the goddess of agriculture and patron of Gebash; Hantithenus, the god of the sea and merchants and the patron of Fulton; Ram Kor, the god of war; Ohgma, a Celtic god of music and song; and Hecate, the goddess of the moon and magic.
The peacock is her sigil and sacred animal, and she created the peacock from the dead body of her trusted watchman, the hundred-eyed giant Argus. When Argus was killed by Hecate request, Tya Nehru mourned his death and placed his eyes on the tail of a peacock, as a lasting tribute of her gratitude for his loyalty and service.
The "holists" believe in one all powerful mother goddess Tya Nehru. Although "she" can take the human like form of Tya Nehru, or when "she" desires the form of any other deity, "she" is viewed as a supernatural force that holds together the essence of all life, wonder, death and beauty. The holists often tolerate the belief in other deities and mythologies thinking that may be the method Tya Nehru has chosen to communicate with us mortals. Other more hard line holists view non-holists as heretics to be converted or killed. The holist view of Tya Nehru is a rather recent (the last few centuries), and at times evangelical movement, and in the past has suffered fierce persecution and hostility. They remain disfavored and minority perspective.   She has numerous sects and orders, including, for example, The Order of the Swordmaidens of the White Oak.