Mekash
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Commonly known as The Gilded Sovereign, Master of Coin and Contract, and The Silent Ledger
Mekash governs wealth not as indulgence, but as influence made tangible. Coin, trade, land, titles, and agreements all fall beneath his domain, for to Mekash, value is not what something is, but what it can command.
He is the patron of merchants, bankers, nobles, guildmasters, and those who understand that power is rarely seized, it is acquired, negotiated, and secured.
To his faithful, wealth is not excess, it is leverage. Gold builds armies, shapes cities, determines succession, and decides which histories are remembered.
“A king rules the throne. A wealthy man decides who sits on it.” - Lord Halveth Marr, 0331-2A
The Coin Purse Doctrine
1. Value
Everything has worth. The wise learn how to see it.
- Coin is only the simplest form of wealth
- Land, influence, knowledge, and loyalty all carry value
- The greatest profit comes from what others overlook
- Never mistake price for worth
Mekash teaches that understanding value is the foundation of power.
2. Acquisition
Wealth must be gathered with intent.
- Take opportunities others hesitate to claim
- Invest in what will grow, not what will fade
- Patience often yields greater profit than haste
- Every gain should serve a larger design
To acquire without purpose is waste.
3. Exchange
Nothing moves without agreement.
- Trade is the foundation of civilisation
- A fair deal is one both parties accept, not one that is equal
- Words bind as strongly as chains when properly used
- Contracts are sacred, but interpretation is an art
Mekash values those who understand negotiation as a weapon.
4. Authority
Wealth creates structure.
- Power should be visible, but not always obvious
- Leadership is maintained through dependency as much as respect
- A stable hierarchy protects accumulated wealth
- Influence is strongest when it appears natural
To rule through coin is to rule without constant conflict.
5. Legacy
Wealth that dies with you was never true wealth.
- Build institutions, not just fortunes
- Ensure your name persists through generations
- Invest in people, titles, and structures that outlast you
- True power is measured in what remains
Mekash’s highest ideal is not riches, but permanence.
Most followers lean:
- Lawful Neutral
- Neutral
- Lawful Evil, among those who value power over all else
Rarely chaotic. Wealth thrives in stability.
Rituals & Traditions
The Opening Ledger
At the start of any major venture, followers record their intent, expected gain, and acceptable loss, formalising purpose before action.
The First Trade
Young initiates must complete a profitable exchange, no matter how small, to prove understanding of value.
The Binding Contract
Important agreements are ritually witnessed, often sealed with coin, blood, or sigil, invoking Mekash as guarantor.
The Inheritance Rite
Wealth passed between generations is formally acknowledged, reinforcing the importance of legacy.
Taboos
- Squandering wealth without purpose
- Breaking a contract without consequence or compensation
- Failing to recognise value when it is present
- Acting without consideration of long-term gain
- Allowing emotion to override negotiation
Mekash does not despise greed, he despises incompetence.
Clergy & Titles
Mekash’s clergy are deeply entwined with economic and political systems.
Titles
- Coinbearer – Initiate
- Ledger Clerk – Financial acolyte or record keeper
- Factor – Merchant-priest overseeing trade
- Gold Magistrate – Authority over regional wealth and contracts
- High Overseer of Coin – Supreme representative of Mekash
Many clergy are:
- Merchants, bankers, and traders
- Nobles and estate holders
- Guild leaders and financiers
- Legal experts specialising in contracts and trade law
Temples often function as counting houses, vaults, or negotiation halls.
Clerics / Paladins of Mekash as Adventurers
- Well-dressed, even in practical settings, appearance reflects status
- Keeps detailed records of expenses, profits, and agreements
- Values loot not for rarity, but for utility and resale
- Prefers negotiation before conflict, but will fund conflict if needed
- Thinks in long-term outcomes rather than immediate gain
A follower of Mekash might:
- Insist on contracts before undertaking dangerous work
- Negotiate rewards aggressively, even with allies
- Invest party gold into future ventures
- Track debts between party members
- View political power as more valuable than treasure
“Gilded Sovereign,
Let my hand be steady in trade,
My word binding in agreement,
My wealth ever growing,
And my legacy beyond erasure.”