An aedicula is a small shrine within a larger structure. The larger structure might be anything from a church to a private home to a city gate. Some aediculae are large enough that you could walk into them, others are merely niches in a wall.
Aedicula embedded in a Roman aquaduct
Roman pantries included a small shrine to the household Penates, guardians of grains and olive oil and so forth. A shrine to a saint within a Catholic church could be considered a kind of aedicula, such as the monument erected over St. Peter's tomb within the larger Basilica.
Aedicula Random Generation
Approximate Size
- Under 6 inches
- 1 foot
- 3 feet
- 6 feet
- 10 feet
- 15 feet
Central Figure Depicted
- Humanoid
- Animal
- Animal-human hybrid
- Plant
- Abomination
- Scale model of urban landscape
- Everyday object
- Weapon
- Monster of type that last killed a party member
- Apparently, the most recently deceased party member
Decorative Motif
- Piles of treasure
- Flowers
- Tentacles
- Eyes
- Teeth
- Fruit
- Grains
- Musicians
- Stars
- Mushrooms
- Slaves
- Diagramatic
Special
- Minor adverse magic if offering not made
- Minor helpful magic if offering made
- Central figure animates after specific trigger
- Aedicula "wanders" to different locations
- Accepts donations through a coin slot
- God missing from shrine; may be located elsewhere
(This is for the A-Z Blogger Challenge.)
aedicula occurs spontaneously.
ReplyDeletestatue is actually a spy used for skrying.
marks a point in a breadcrumb trail of clues: statue is looking at the next clue
used by secret-keepers in the city (spies, anarchists, whatever) to hide messages.
has a slot to receive documents, like the Venetian reporting boxes or a geniza.
gives out some resource, maybe only under special circumstances. Water, blessings and mana are all trad. Hindu statues sometimes weep milk. Salt could be interesting, especially if ruminants are important in the setting.
aedicula connects to a bigger, secret temple, that you can only see/notice with prior knowledge (network of aediculae through city/empire?)
aedicula contains an aedicula.
Cool, thanks. I've really been enjoying your LJ posts, BTW, Richard.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Good to know someone's reading :)
ReplyDelete...BTW, with all the DDoS nonsense at livejournal I've set up a second site at http://lurkerablog.wordpress.com/
ReplyDeleteI'm planning to cross post roleplaying stuff (only) in both places.