Revision [7063]

Last edited on 2009-07-04 16:42:37 by PgmAnshar [*]
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>>{{image url="http://i188.photobucket.com/albums/z62/ZamahLand/Wiki/Gnorr.jpg"}}>>====__Gnorr__====
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>>{{image url="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v314/GarlickHamster/Misc/Gnorr.jpg"}}>>====__Gnorr__====


Revision [5249]

Edited on 2008-06-30 06:44:54 by PgmVelkaiva
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>>{{image url="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v314/GarlickHamster/Misc/Gnorr.jpg"}}>>====__Gnorr__====
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====__Gnorr__====


Revision [4694]

Edited on 2008-02-26 14:39:42 by PgmCasagemas [Dead image.]
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====__Gnorr__====
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<<{{image url="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v314/GarlickHamster/WikiMisc/Gnorr.jpg"}}>>====__Gnorr__====


Revision [2869]

Edited on 2007-07-16 00:05:32 by PgmVelkaiva [Added picture.]
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<<{{image url="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v314/GarlickHamster/WikiMisc/Gnorr.jpg"}}>>====__Gnorr__====
Stolid and slow to change, the god of elemental Earth is commonly regarded as the dullest of the Four. His is the smallest clergy, with members drawn largely from dwarves, gnomes and the subterranean races.
Although he is usually portrayed by the uninitiated as an unglamorous and slow-witted god, those who worship him are aware that precious metals and jewels also fall into his domain. Gnorr's temples are marvels that few surface-dwellers ever see, ranging from cathedral-sized caverns with dappled limestone ceilings to edifices supported by pillars of petrified wood and streaked with veins of gold ore. Fittingly, the geode is the symbol of Gnorr's faith: unprepossessing on the outside, it reveals a sparkling and sharp-edged interior to those perceptive enough to cut beyond surface appearances.
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====__Gnorr__====
Stolid and slow to change, the god of elemental Earth is commonly regarded as the dullest of the Four. His is the smallest clergy, with members drawn largely from dwarves, gnomes and the subterranean races. Although he is usually portrayed by the uninitiated as an unglamorous and slow-witted god, those who worship him are aware that precious metals and jewels also fall into his domain. Gnorr's temples are marvels that few surface-dwellers ever see, ranging from cathedral-sized caverns with dappled limestone ceilings to edifices supported by pillars of petrified wood and streaked with veins of gold ore. Fittingly, the geode is the symbol of Gnorr's faith: unprepossessing on the outside, it reveals a sparkling and sharp-edged interior to those perceptive enough to cut beyond surface appearances.


Revision [2782]

The oldest known version of this page was created on 2007-07-14 14:18:00 by PgmCasagemas
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