Aion (Aion)  

Aion
Wikibase™
Lore
The god of Atreia, Aion built The Tower Of Eternity and poured his essence into it, in a sense becoming the physical Tower. The Tower was the source of light and life to this hollow world, connecting at both the southern and northern poles. In the Epic Cataclysm, Aion was shattered and only the lower half of the world, the land now called Elysea, receives light from the nearby star. Due to Atreia's axial tilt, Asmodae, the upper hemisphere, gets no light and has become a cold, dark place.

OOC The name, Aion, could be a reference to a minor Anatolian deity in classical times, which Wikipedia says is considered to be another form of Osiris-Dionysus, or a book by Carl Jung, Aion: Researches into the Phenomenology of the Self, which was also a reference to the same deity, or both, or nothing at all.

The word AION, from greek, originally meant "ever-flowing", with a heavy emphasis on time or eternity. This would make translations of "ever-flowing through time", "fountain of life", and, more significant to us, "fountain of immortality" reasonable.

AION also is given definitions of The World, or multiple worlds, especially "a multiplicity of 'worlds' or spheres of experience, all of which are coexistent." This last interpretation would seem to very aptly describe a modern MMO, where many copies of the same world (servers) are played simultaneously.

Wikipedia says, "The word aeon, also spelled eon or æon, means "age", "forever" or "for eternity". It is a Latin transliteration from the koine Greek word ὁ αἰών (aion), from the archaic αἰϝών (aiwon)."

This page last modified 2009-08-21 11:24:24.