Friday, September 29, 2017

City of Countless Names- Magic in Constantinople



The Ottoman  religious hierarchy governs the teaching of magic, the freedoms of its citizens to perform magic, and the judgment of those practicing dark magic. While uninterrupted control by religious authorities kept ancient traditions and rites alive, few magicians exist able to perform such fantastic feats using the impotent magic of the modern age. Ottoman magic reached its full blossom in the 1500s and advanced little further. 
Thaumaturgy
The current generation of magicians serving the Sultan stands firmly in the past. Few alive are able to perform the simplest hermetic operations from the 10th-century grimoire Ghāyat al-Ḥakīm, yet the unchanged original text remains a core in their studies. Fewer still dare to alter the ancient operations with modern techniques  to allow for quicker, safer performances. 

Aware of their magicians' degrading abilities, past Sultans tried to introduce new methods and innovations, but the religious and military structures did not tolerate blasphemies and correction. In1853, the Russian navy destroyed a squadron of Ottoman ships in the disastrous Battle of Sinop. Reports of Ottoman ships ablaze with strange magical fire, and of the Russian magicians biding the fire to burn and destroy, gave Abdulmejid paved the way his administration’s reforms.

The Grand Mufti approved new statutes allowing all citizens of the Ottoman Empire to study Thaumaturgy, for secular universities to teach Thaumaturgy, and that the practices may be taught by secular teachers and not just clergy.  The Sultan invited highly respected members of the Guild to consult on a modern curriculum and to teach the next generation of Ottoman magicians. Only time will tell if they make a difference in the Crimea, or even be ready in time to serve before the war ends.

Magnetism
Magnetistic abilities in the Ottoman Empire can be a blessing or a curse. Spared the classifications used by the Guild, the Turks consider all abilities as “miracles”. Magnetism is the most revered magical practice of the Nithamiyeen. They consider magnetists to be blessed by the Heavenly Host for their purity and devotion.
They also consider magnetists of other faiths to be full of infernal power leading those around them to damnation.  While no magnetists suffered government sentenced punishments in the last fifty years, the stigma of dark magic spreads out from any “infidels” performing miracles. These rumors often lead to mob violence and vigilante “justice”.

Most Turkish magnetists join the dervish orders (Nithamiyeen mystics devoted to acetic holiness) housed in the monasteries of Constantinople. There, under the strict discipline of their order, they learn to use their miracles for the glory of the Heavenly Host, and the destruction of any magician practicing Sihr (dark magic).

Sigils
Traditional Ottoman magic truly shines in the scribing of Sigils. Every Nithamiyeen considers writing down any portion of their holy scriptures as blasphemy, so adherents dutifully memorized its entirety. Over time scribes and the clergy developed a system using Arabic letters representing essential passages. Calligraphers created beautiful works of art consisting solely of painstakingly intricate letters perfectly suggesting and representing their holy meanings. Turkish Sigil Scribes use these letters to create powerful talismans, amulets, and seals, often in stone and silver.

Constantinople is the center for Sigil Scribing in Eastern Asia and Western Europe. Sigils are everywhere, carved into walls, etched onto containers, even woven into clothing. Unlike most magical practices, the Ottoman government does not restrict the selling and creation of Sigils. The Jewish and the  Aluminat communities of Constantinople add their skill and will to the craft, free from restrictions, although sigils representing religious figures shared by the three faiths cause a great deal of argument. 

Scribes sell their services on every market and street, but travelers should take care to find an authentic scribe.  Just as many fake Sigils with no magical properties and faulty Sigils with dangerously lax craftsmanship sell in the market as real.

Petty Conjuring
As in Europe, the practitioners of Petty Conjuring get little respect, but at least they can’t be publicly beheaded anymore. Very few Turks perform enchantments, even fewer worship the Turkic deities replaced by the Nithamiyeen faith. Most conjurors descend from the Greek, Eastern European, North African, and Romani communities of the Ottoman Empire, mostly taught by their elders, as they were taught by their elders.

Shortly after taking the throne Sultan Abdulmejid legalized Petty Conjuring, however, the stigma of witchcraft and sorcery stick with the Turkish populations. In the ethnic quarters, conjurors open shops and openly display ready-made foci ready to be used. In the purely Turkish neighborhoods of Constantinople, conjurors furtively watch their step, lest a traditionalist take the law into his hands.

Despite the taboo, Old superstitions still draw people of all backgrounds to purchase the strange red and blue beads (called Nazars) from  conjurors. Horses, dogs, and people wear the charms around their necks believeing the beads protect from the “Evil Eye”, a curse causing bad luck.

Sihr (the Maleficium)
The Severn Pillars of the Nithamiyeen, strictly forbid the practice of Sihr, dark magic. While any magic could be perverted to evil uses (even the miracles of magnetism), Sihr currently describes the inherently corrupting practices of Necromancy and Demonology, but the name previously extended over other forms of magic. Petty Conjuration, and the crafting of Sigils outside the Nithamiyeen alphabet or Sigils of two letters or longer were legally considered Sihr about 100 years ago.

Although the libraries of clergy and mosques often hold books detailing the intricacies of dark magic, the Ottoman clergy consider the study of Sihr too corrupting a force to allow a select few magicians practice in the hope of combating its evils. The Ottoman Empire does not allow licensed demonologists or theoretical necromantic studies. Any citizen of the Ottoman Empire caught practicing a form of Sihr magic receives the death penalty. The authorities turn any foreign citizen caught to their country's consul, provided they are captured alive.  

The Guild in Constantinople
All European Embassies and Consulates keep a Guild magician on their staff, to handle magical crises far from home. These magicians often casually meet to discuss magical theory and share a quiet meal. Dubbing themselves the Macarius Society, they welcome visiting academics, and other magically minded travelers to gather together in fellowship. As the only Guild presence in Constantinople, the members of the Macarius Society are also known to help fellow Europeans in supernatural distress. They have no authority, aside from their diplomatic status, and any strings they can get their Consuls to pull.

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