Answers by Greg Stafford. Published 21st Jan 2000
Question from UNDERDARK.
Q: Is it possible for a human and an elf to have a child? How about other races?
A: The Gloranthan intelligent races are all separate species and are not able to breed with humans or each other. Elves, in particular, are intelligent and mobile plants and cannot normally reproduce with the ‘meat-people’. Sexual activities are possible with some species of Aldryami, though this resembles sex only to the human partner, not the elf or dryad. Even trolls cannot breed with humans, though sexual practices are very similar among the two races, and sexual relations are possible, though extremely rare.
However, in the earliest myths these beings had not yet differentiated, and so some bizarre cross breeds were spawned then. Those powerful fertility magics could be obtained by HeroQuesting and used to circumvent the normal restriction. In particular the Empire of the Wyrm’s Friends were able to produce cross-breeds of different intelligent species (and even with animals, though not with plants), but no one has done this since. As the Hero Wars unfold, player Heroes of an eccentric bent might find ways to get these magics again, but this would be an incredibly difficult task, and the usefulness of such an act is questionable in any event.
Question from BRIAN KONDALSKI.
Q: What color of elves have existed in Glorantha? What plants are they associated with? Do they still exist?
A: The first point to make is that the ‘color’ classification of elves is a God Learner construct, and, though widespread among many humans, is not used by elves themselves. It is not a literal description of the appearance of the elf races, who appear generally plantlike in many typical hues – green or yellow leaves, colorful flower-like parts, etc. The color associations are from God Learner sorcerous investigations that related these types to elemental associations. Thus, Brown and Green are both Earth Colors, Blue is the Water Color, and so on. Red Elves are the Heat of the south, while the Yellow Elves were found by the God Learners to be much closer to Halamalao, God of Light, than any other type of elf.
Secondly, two common uses of the term ‘elf’ are found in Gloranthan usage. One strictly refers only to a humanoid plant-being that is associated with trees. The second more broad usage is common among humans to refer to a wide range of different plant beings, not all of which are true woody elves. The term Aldryami would be more correct for the latter. Even some types of “elves” are not actually true Aldryami, a word reserved for those beings descended from Aldrya, Gata, Aron, and Halamalao.
With those provisos in mind, the best known types of elf are as follows:
Brown Elves (Mreli): These are associated with deciduous trees, and are the most common type of elf in Genertela at the end of the Third Age. When elves work they always group together no matter what tree they are from, and so it is common to see elves from willow, birch, oak and elm living together. Since elves are related to local species of trees not all brown elves are known to each other. The Genertelan and Pamaltelan forests are the most obvious example of this estrangement.
Green Elves (Vronkali): Associated with coniferous trees, they are the sole elven inhabitants of the pine forest of Winterwood in northern Fronela. Green Elves are also found in all brown elf forests, which they protect while the Mreli hibernate through the winter. Tree elves do not recognize a segregation of types among themselves and so green elves are mixed with the brown. Observers usually note that elf groups have individuals who correspond to many types of trees among them.
Yellow Elves (Embyli): Associated with tropical evergreen trees, the yellow elves are the most common type in Pamaltela, and are also found in southeastern Genertela, the East Isles and other islands. Yellow elves, like others, come in many shapes and sizes, colors and leafage all depending upon the species they are related to. Where green and brown elves are found in the same areas as yellow elves (notably in Fethlon, Vralos and the Pamaltelan mountains), the different species mix together in a single aldryami society.
White Elves (Halamali): White elves were the first children of Flamal, nurtured by the pure light of Halamalao, the Aldryami sun god. The White Elves were related to the magical trees that grew in the highest forests covering the slope of the Spike in the Godtime. When the Spike exploded, the immortal forests were destroyed so that no white elves remain in Glorantha today. White elves are still in the God Plane. They are the celestial trees, from whence they are worshiped by the elves today.
Moon Elves (Rufeldryami): These elves live only in special imperial gardens, though a multitude live among the forests on the Red Moon, especially the Tendarshan Forest on the Moon’s northeast face. Others are found in the hero planes of the God World. The moon elves have never left their protected gardens, so that many non-Lunars doubt their very existence. They are so beautiful that most mortals are knocked senseless by their mere scent.
Fire Elves (Olembi): In the far south of Pamaltela, beyond the lands of mortal men, everything is made of fire so that hills, rivers and the vales in between are all burning. The fire elves are associated with the fiery trees that cover huge parts of the landscape. The have never visited the Inner World during time except aboard the firebergs. In visions of the Hero Wars many seers have seen the burning of vast forests. A few others, claiming more clarity, say that the burning forests seen in so many visions are not doom for the elves, but part of the Aldryami plan, and shows the fire elves coming to aid their kin.
Blue Elves (Murthoi): Water-breathing Aldryami related to forests of kelp and other large water-plants, blue elves are still found in coastal waters, as well as in some large freshwater rivers and lakes. There are several species of human sized Murthoi (though humans are generally unaware of the differences between them), and many smaller types unrecognized outside of the waters.
Black Elves (Voralans): These are associated with fungi, and live in isolated forests of giant mushrooms that are often found cultivated in and near troll lands. They have never been numerous on the surface world because they require such dank conditions for health. Occasionally these beings are found in other elf communities, like the puffball or mushroom people found in Genertelan forests. Voralans are not true Aldryami, because they are descended from Mee Vorala rather than Aldrya.
Red Elves (Slorifings): Also known as ‘goblins’, these beings are associated with ferns and mosses and are still common in the great swamps of Pamaltela. Two huge nations of slorifings exist, one on the east and the other on the west of Pamaltela. These include a huge number of species of slorifing with a range of appearance from the humanoid to the monstrous. The slorifings are usually found in mixed groups, but generally reject the woody Aldryami, since the slorifings are not true Aldryami themselves.
Related Pages
- Accessing Eternity (2006)
- Belintar’s Book: The Blue Dragon Sshorga (1999)
- Belintar’s Book: Aldrya’s Own Story (1998)
- Belintar’s Book: Mountain Stories (1999)
- Clarifying the Primal Worlds (2003)
- Dragons Past #1 – Gloranthan Military Experience (1983)
- Greg Sez Guest: Does the Emperor party or not? (Jan 1999)
- Greg Sez Guest: Dragon Slayers and Dragons of Saird (Feb 1999)
- Greg Sez Guest: East Isles: United or not? (Jan 1999)
- Greg Sez Guest: The Mighty Janube (Nov 1998)
- Greg Sez Guests: Five Troll Questions (Sep 1999)
- Greg Sez: Barbarians – Heortlings, Vingkotlings, and Orlanthi (Jan 1998)
- Greg Sez: Between the Devil and the Dawn Age (Aug 1998)
- Greg Sez: Chaos Taints Q&A (2007)
- Greg Sez: Divinity and Gender (2009)
- Greg Sez: Ducks and Eggs (Dec 1997)
- Greg Sez: Enemy Gods (2009)
- Greg Sez: Ernaldan Initiation Rites
- Greg Sez: Esrolian Q&A (2001)
- Greg Sez: Heroes & Immortals (2005)
- Greg Sez: How Big Is My God? (Oct 1998)
- Greg Sez: How Does the Red Emperor Rule? (Feb 1999)
- Greg Sez: How Many Humakti?
- Greg Sez: Humakt Illuminated? (Apr 1998)
- Greg Sez: Illusion (2002)
- Greg Sez: Malkioni Literacy (May 1999)
- Greg Sez: Metals In Prax (Feb 1998)
- Greg Sez: Mistress Race Trolls
- Greg Sez: Moon Names (2008)
- Greg Sez: Orlanthi Groups Q&A (2008)
- Greg Sez: Orlanthi Initiation Rites
- Greg Sez: Rathori Creation Myth
- Greg Sez: Second Age Peloria and Carmania (2007)
- Greg Sez: Sheng Seleris in Hell (May 1998)
- Greg Sez: Tada’s High Tumulus (Feb 2000)
- Greg Sez: The Kingdom of War (Jul 1998)
- Greg Sez: The Mother of Monsters (Aug 2009)
- Greg Sez: The Nature of Harmony and Fertility (Jun 1999)
- Greg Sez: The Red Emperor (Sep 1998)
- Greg Sez: The Sky World (Aug 2009)
- Greg Sez: The Southpath Gods (Jul 1999)
- Greg Sez: Troll Ancestors and Rebirth (2011)
- Greg Sez: Understanding Windstop and Esrolia (2005)
- Greg Sez: What is it with the Underworld? (Apr 2007)
- Greg Sez: Who Are the Blue Peoples? (Mar 1998)
- Greg Sez: Who are the Dog Fathers? (May 1999)
- Greg Sez: Who was Baroshi? (Jun 1998)
- Greg Sez: Why do the Giants use the River of Cradles (May 1999)
- Greg Sez: Yelmalio (Mar 2000)
- Hero Wars: Beyond Humanity (2000)
- Hero Wars: Wyters Q&A (2002)
- HeroQuest 1: Embodied & Disembodied Spirits Q&A (2004)
- HeroQuest 1: Heroquesting (2003)
- HeroQuest 1: Landscape Bands Q&A (2004)
- HeroQuest 1: Types of Heroquests (2006)
- Hsunchen Peoples of Genertela (2003)
- Introduction to Umathela (1997)
- Javern Spithorn and the Sunset Leap (2001)
- Library of Londarios: Ancestors of the Lenshi Kings (1998)
- Library of Londarios: Clarifying the Primal Worlds (Feb 2003)
- Library of Londarios: Danmalastan (1999)
- Library of Londarios: Deneskerva the Great Sister
- Library of Londarios: Postcards From Glorantha (Mar 2004)
- Library of Londarios: Stellar FAQ (Dec 1999)
- Library of Londarios: The Abiding Book (1999)
- Library of Londarios: The Birth of Elmal (1993)
- Library of Londarios: The Kings of Seshnela, Part One (1999)
- Library of Londarios: The Kings of Seshnela, Part Three (1999)
- Library of Londarios: The Kings of Seshnela, Part Two (1999)
- Library of Londarios: What the Mystic Taught Me (1998)
- Lives of Sedenya (2006)
- Myth of the Month: Aedin’s Wall (2000)
- Myth of the Month: Chariots and Chariot Gods (2003)
- Myth of the Month: Clouds (2000)
- Myth of the Month: Enemy Gods of the Orlanthi (2001)
- Myth of the Month: History of the Race of Trolls (1998)
- Myth of the Month: How Argan Argar Courted Esrola (2002)
- Myth of the Month: How Orlanth Met Ernalda (1998)
- Myth of the Month: How the Islands Came Apart (1998)
- Myth of the Month: Hrelar Amali (2011)
- Myth of the Month: Lightnight (2010)
- Myth of the Month: Malkioni Otherworld (2001)
- Myth of the Month: Morden Defends the Camp (1999)
- Myth of the Month: Orlanth makes a Ring (1998)
- Myth of the Month: ShangHsa (1998)
- Myth of the Month: Shargash the Destroyer (1998)
- Myth of the Month: The Birth of the Minotaur (1981)
- Myth of the Month: The Drinking Giant’s Cauldron
- Myth of the Month: The Missionaries (2005)
- Myth of the Month: The Orogeria Moon (1998)
- Myth of the Month: The Vithelan Creation of the World (1998)
- Myth of the Month: Three Documents, One Event (2005)
- Pelandan Cosmology
- Praxian Spirit Tradition (2000)
- Safelster in the First Age (2013)
- Sites at the Dawn (2006)
- Summoning Korgatsu (2001)
- The Enerali circa 130 ST
- The Gloranthan Cosmos (2008)
- The Gloranthan Sky (1997)
- The Origins of Writing
- The Perfect Sky, revised (1999)
- Types of Heroquests (2008)
- What is the Third Age History of the Sun Dome Temple in Sartar (2008)
Page Last updated: 2024-07-03 08:58:59