Zothique is an imagined future continent in a series of short stories by Clark Ashton Smith. Zothique is also the title of the cycle of tales which take place there. In terms of number and extent, the Zothique Cycle is the largest collection of stories written by Smith. The cycle belongs to the fantasy genre, and more precisely to the Dying Earth subgenre.
August Derleth in "The Dweller in Darkness" mentions Zothique, and thus ties this far future continent to the Cthulhu Mythos.
Zothique Cycle[]
Clark Ashton Smith himself described the Zothique cycle in a letter to L. Sprague de Camp, dated November 3, 1953:
Zothique, vaguely suggested by Theosophic theories about past and future continents, is the last inhabited continent of earth. The continents of our present cycle have sunken, perhaps several times. Some have remained submerged; others have re-risen, partially, and re-arranged themselves. Zothique, as I conceive it, comprises Asia Minor, Arabia, Persia, India, parts of northern and eastern Africa, and much of the Indonesian archipelago. A new Australia exists somewhere to the south. To the west, there are only a few known islands, such as Naat, in which the black cannibals survive. To the north, are immense unexplored deserts; to the east, an immense unvoyaged sea. The peoples are mainly of Aryan or Semitic descent; but there is a negro kingdom (Ilcar) in the north-west; and scattered blacks are found throughout the other countries, mainly in palace-harems. In the southern islands survive vestiges of Indonesian or Malayan races. The science and machinery of our present civilization have long been forgotten, together with our present religions. But many gods are worshipped; and sorcery and demonism prevail again as in ancient days. Oars and sails alone are used by mariners. There are no fire-arms—only the bows, arrows, swords, javelins, etc. of antiquity. The chief language spoken (of which I have provided examples in an unpublished drama) is based on Indo-European roots and is highly inflected, like Sanskrit, Greek and Latin.
Darrell Schweitzer suggests the idea of writing about a far future land may have come from William Hope Hodgson's novel The Night Land, noting that Smith was an admirer of Hodgson's work. However, this theory was conclusively disproven by Scott Conner's "Dust and Atoms: The Influence of William Hope Hodgson on Clark Ashton Smith" in Sargasso #2 (2016), the scholarly journal devoted to Hodgson.
Stories[]
Smith's Zothique stories include:
- "The Empire of the Necromancers" (1932)
- "The Isle of the Torturers" (1933)
- "The Voyage of King Euvoran" (1933)
- "The Weaver in the Vault" (1934)
- "The Witchcraft of Ulua" (1934)
- "The Charnel God" (1934)
- "The Tomb-Spawn" (1934)
- "Xeethra" (1934)
- "The Dark Eidolon" (1935)
- "The Last Hieroglyph" (1935)
- "The Black Abbot of Puthuum" (1936)
- "Necromancy in Naat" (1936)
- "The Death of Ilalotha" (1937)
- "The Garden of Adompha" (1938)
- "The Master of the Crabs" (1948)
- "Morthylla" (1953)
- "The Dead Will Cuckold You" (1963)
- "Mandor's Enemy" (1984)
- "Shapes of Adamant" (1984)
- "In the Book of Vergama" (1989)
Smith also wrote a poem called "Zothique" (1951).
History[]
The historical sequence of events in Zothique cannot be securely determined, not only because the stories cover events only sketchily, but also because in Zothique history is non-directional. Kingdoms rise and fall, and are rebuilt, in a seemingly endless cycle; and whether a particular event took place before or after one of the catastrophes that punctuate the cycle is often a matter of conjecture.
The oldest of the kingdoms of which myth tells is that of Ossaru, the wizard-king who, together with the extraterrestrial monster Nioth-Korghai, ruled half Zothique. The very name of this land is forgotten, and its capital is lost in a wilderness peopled by the cannibal Ghorii.[1]
After Ossaru rose the Empire of Cincor, which lasted for two thousand years, from its first emperor, Hestaiyon, to Illeiro, the last of the Nimboth dynasty ruling in Yethlyreom. Illeiro and all his people perished in a plague, and Cincor remained blighted and deserted for two hundred years after that, until Mmatmuor and Sodosma, necromancers of Naat, revived its people to an undead half-life. This empire of the dead, with which the necromancers planned to conquer the northern land of Tinarath, lasted only a brief time before the dead, led by the first and last of their ancient rulers, overthrew the sorcerers and brought themselves to oblivion.[2]
After Ossaru, and perhaps overlapping with the Nimboth dynasty, the kingdom of Tasuun was founded by King Tnepreez in Chaon Gacca. His successors included Queen Avaina, and the Kings Acharnil and Agmeni.[3] The disasters that befell the latter prompted the movement of the capital of Tasuun to the city of Miraab, where Mandis and Archain reigned, the latter dying at the hands of his wife Xantlicha.[4] The fifty-ninth king of Tasuun, Famorgh, surpassed all the others in luxury, and his wife Lunalia (of Xylac) and his daughter Ulua were known for their experiments in sorcery. It was during his reign that the city of Miraab was destroyed by an earthquake; nonetheless, his son Mandor ruled after him.[3] [5]
The Empire of Xylac was contemporary with Tasuun. Of its emperors, the names of Caleppos,[6] Pithaim, and Zotulla are remembered. The last, known for his pomp and cruelty, suffered at the hands of the sorcerer Namirrha, who had borne him a grudge since childhood. Namirrha's vengeance brought about the utter destruction of Ummaos, chief city of Xylac;[7] but a later Ummaos was built on the ruins, where the astrologer Nushain dwelt in after days.[8]
The Kingdom of Yoros was ruled under many kings of uncertain date, of whom Smaragad, son of Famostan (DC) and Hoaraph[9] are known. The last king of Yoros was Fulbra, son of Altath, in whose time at least two lands—first Tasuun, then Yoros—were devastated by the Silver Death, a plague that killed its victims instantly and left them with a frosted appearance. Fulbra survived by magic, but only long enough to transmit the plague to the torturers' isle of Uccastrog.[10]
Geography[]
Mainland[]
According to Smith's stories, the future continent of Zothique is bounded by sea to the west, south, and east, while its northern boundaries are dubious.
The northernmost known realms of Zothique are Ilcar[9] and Dooza Thom,[3] [11] whose royal seat is Avandas. North of Dooza Thom is only the desert of Nooth-Kemmor. Better known than these are four great realms that repeatedly appear in the stories: the empire of Xylac, and the kingdoms of Tasuun, Yoros, and Ustaim.
Xylac is a major state of northwestern Zothique, governed by an emperor. Its principal city is Ummaos. It has a western coastline which includes the port cities of Mirouane[12] and of Oroth, from which one can sail to Yoros.[13] Land routes lead southward from Ummaos through the Celotian Waste and past the city of Zul-Bha-Sair to the kingdom of Tasuun. [6] [7]
Zul-Bha-Sair is a city-state on the south-west of the red sands of the Celotian Waste, between Xylac and Tasuun. It is best known for its ancient temple of Mordiggian, god of the dead, to whom "it is the law and the custom" that all who die be given to his priests and offered to the deity as a sacrifice.[6]
Tasuun, famous for the number and antiquity of its mummies, lies due south of Xylac. Its chief city is Miraab. Ninety miles north of Miraab lies the long-abandoned capital of Chaon Gacca, site of the ancient palace of the Kings of Tasuun. Some legends about its abandonment refer to mysterious shadows which menaced King Agmeni, driving him insane or causing his hand to rot. The mummy of Avaina is buried there alongside a magic mirror.[14] [3]
Yoros, known for its wines, lies to the south, facing the Indaskian Sea. Its chief city is Faraad (also spelled Pharaad), situated on the river Voum, which flows south into the sea. Also in Yoros are the cities Silpon and Siloar,[10] the river Vos, and the demon-haunted wasteland of Izdrel.[9]
Tinarath lies "far to the east" of Xylac[7] and immediately north of Cincor.[2] It is a "gray country", whose people abhorred necromancy.
Ustaim is a kingdom on the eastern shores of Zothique, east of Xylac, looking toward the island of Sotar. Its chief city is Aramoam.[15] From here, one can travel to the dead kingdom of Calyz,[16] or by a roundabout way to Tasuun.[1]
Lost Kingdoms[]
In Zothique, where the dead vastly outnumber the living, many kingdoms have risen and fallen. The abandoned cities of these lost kingdoms can still be found by the unwary traveler.
One of the most ancient of these was the kingdom of Emperor Ossaru, who ruled half of Zothique. His capital lays in a desolate region near the northeastern borders of Yoros.[1]
Cincor was the home of the fabled Nimboth dynasty, and its capital of Yethlyreom. It once suffered a plague. It's now a "drear and leprous and ashen" desert.[2] The situation of Cincor relative to the other kingdoms of Zothique is uncertain, but it apparently lies east or southeast of Xylac. It was thought by some that Ossaru's capital might be located there. North of Cincor lies the land of Tinarath. The eastern bounds of Cincor are the Mykrasian Mountains, beyond which the way leads through fruitful Zhel, many-citied Istanam, and the desert of Dhir, until one comes at last to Calyz.[16]
Calyz was an ancient kingdom on the eastern shores of Zothique, within traveling distance of Ustaim. For a thousand years, its chief city had been Shathair. Long abandoned, Calyz enjoyed a brief but evanescent return to glory when the long-dead King Amero, son of King Eldamaque, entirely possessed the body and mind of the young Prince Xeethra and, through him, reclaimed his former rule.[16]
Islands[]
West of Zothique lies the island of Iribos,[12] and, at a great distance, the necromantic isle of Naat.[13] Beyond Naat an oceanic current, called the Black River, is said to sweep all travelers to their doom beyond the world's edge.[7] [13] [12] Many notable necromancers and sorcerers come from Naat, including Mmatmuor and Sodosma, sometime rulers of Cincor;[17] Narghai and Vemba-Tsith, the assistants of Abnon-Tha;[6] Sarcand, the rival of Mior Lumivix;[12] and the necromantic household of Vacharn, Vokal, and Uldulla.[13]
South of Zothique is the Indaskian Sea, in which are found the islands of Cyntrom and Uccastrog, the latter also known as the "Isle of the Torturers". Uccastrog's king, Ildrac, and the other inhabitants of the isle were known for their brutality and sadism against arriving travelers. They were wiped out by the "Silver Death" plague brought upon by Fulbra.[10]
East of Zothique lies the island kingdom of Sotar, whose capital is Loithé.[15] [18] Beyond it are the island of Tosk and the atolls of Yumatot; after that are the scattered islands of the Ilozian Sea, mostly unnamed, save for Ornava, the island of birds.[15]
Maps[]
Several maps of Zothique have been drawn by fans over the years. All, however, involve a fair amount of imagination on the part of their artists, including details that are either not derived from the Zothique stories or are actually inconsistent with them. Among the more common cartographical errors are:
- Omitting the "immense unexplored deserts" which bound Zothique to the north, and instead giving Zothique a coastline not far north of Xylac.
- Placing Cincor in the southwest and giving it a coastline, although it's supposed to be an inland desert region, directly south of Tinarath,[17] which is east of Xylac[7] -- though misplaced west of it on at least one map.
- Threading a series of lands and mountain ranges (Zhel, Istanam, Ymorth, Dhir) taken from the story "Xeethra"[16] between Tasuun and Yoros, even though, in the stories, Tasuun borders Yoros directly to the north (IG).[6] [1]
Religion and Deities[]
Zothique is a polytheistic society, where many gods and goddesses are worshipped. Some of this worship is open, with temples and priesthoods; other deities or even demons are worshipped secretly, service to them being either forbidden or at least not spoken of. Some deities are known throughout Zothique; others have their worship confined to a small area or even a single city.
Vergama, or "Destiny", is an ancient deity whose attributes are much disputed, though he is often believed to be almost omnipotent, ruling both the heavens and the earth. Vergama has no temples, idols, or altars, but is sometimes invoked in prayer, especially by sorcerers. When seen, he appears as a colossal "cowled and muffled figure" seated on a marble chair. The hieroglyphic writing in his book preserves the forms of all things that have ever been.[19][8]
The Moon-God has a temple in Faraad, capital of Yoros, formerly known for its wealth--especially in books of magic--before it was plundered by the pirate Omvor.[12]
Ililot is a goddess of love known across Zothique. On the western coasts she is a gentle goddess, "caring alone for love and lovers' joy"; she is depicted with a moon between her eyebrows. But in Yoros she is "a darker goddess", whose worship has a tinge of blood.[20]
Basatan is a deity of the sea, who exerts power over the winds, the sea-currents, and the creatures of the deep. His signet-ring, shaped like a Kraken grasping a gem in its tentacles, was a powerful magic talisman that allowed its possessor a share in Basatan's powers.[12]
Ojhal is a virgin goddess, originally worshipped in Ilcar. Ojhal's priests formed an order of celibate monks. When the worship of Ojhal was banned by Ilcar's emperor, a group of monks fled south to Yoros, and founded a new monastery in the wastelands of Izdrel.[9]
Yuckla, "the small and grotesque god of laughter", is deemed to exert a beneficent and somewhat protective influence. His shrines, unattended, could be found by the roadside in Tasuun. Worshippers sometimes sought his favor by pouring a libation of wine upon his altar.[14]
Yululun is a deity whose office is to protect the sanctity of tombs.[14]
Geol is a "terrestrial god", worshipped in the realm of Ustaim. He is the chief deity of the capital city of Aramoam, where his temple is. Geol is depicted in the form of a pot-bellied man reclining on his back. Worshippers in the Temple of Geol can sometimes hear the audible prophecies of the god emanating from the navel of the idol. These oracles are deemed to be infallible.[15]
Mordiggian, the Charnel God, is worshipped nowhere but in the city of Zul-Bha-Sair, where his low, windowless temple is found in the city center. All those who die within the city are his rightful property, and are delivered to his temple in the care of his semi-bestial priests, where, it is said, the god devours them. These priests are always clad in purple gowns, their faces hidden by silver masks in the shape of skulls. Other than the private rituals of the priests, no other rites in honor of Mordiggian are practised.[6]
Of the less licit deities and demons known in Zothique, Thasaidon, the "black god of evil", "the archfiend", "lord of the seven hells beneath the earth", is the chief. He is depicted in the form of a warrior in full armor, wielding a spiky mace; he is also said to have "dark horns" and to sit on a "throne of ever-burning brass". Thasaidon gives help and power to those necromancers who put themselves at his service. He gave aid to the ancient king Ossaru who dominated half Zothique;[1] he aided the sorcerer Namirrha in his projects, until he projected the destruction of Xylac;[7] he lent his power to Xeethra, in whom the spirit of the long-dead King Amero was revived, and allowed him to restore the kingdom of Calyz, for a time, to its former glory.[16]
Thamogorgos, "lord of the abyss", is a devil to whom the wizard Namirrha turned to destroy Ummaos, chief city of Xylac. His "macrocosmic" horses were so gigantic that their hooves could flatten the city.[7]
Alila, "queen of perdition and goddess of all iniquities," was worshipped with obscene rites by some in Tasuun.[3]
Other, nameless deities include the god represented as a clay image in the palace of the Nimboth dynasty in Yethlyreom;[2] the goddess represented by an ebony figurehead on the royal barge of the kings of Yoros; the demonic god represented by a brazen image in the palace of the kings of Uccastrog;[10] the "dim, fatal deity" of the nomads of Zyra;[13] the "fabulous goddesses" depicted on the tapestries of the royal palace in Tasuun;[3] and the gods to whom temples were built in Xylac[7] and Calyz.[16]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "The Tomb-Spawn," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "The Empire of the Necromancers," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 "The Witchcraft of Ulua," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "The Death of Ilalotha," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "Mandor's Enemy," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 "The Charnel God," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 "The Dark Eidolon," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "The Last Hieroglyph," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 "The Black Abbot of Puthuum," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 "The Isle of the Torturers," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "Shapes of Adamant," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 "The Master of the Crabs," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 ""Necromancy in Naat," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 "The Weaver in the Vault," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 "The Voyage of King Euvoran," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 "Xeethra," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 "The Empire of the Necromancers," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "The Garden of Adompha," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "In the Book of Vergama," Clark Ashton Smith.
- ↑ "The Dead Will Cuckold You," Clark Ashton Smith.