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The Dresden Files => DF Spoilers => DF Reference Collection => Topic started by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 11:11:51 AM

Title: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 11:11:51 AM
Just putting this here so that I can put this thread in the Reference Collection Index and not have this collection lost to time (and have to retype it).

From Storm Front, Chapter 6:

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Santa is a much bigger and more powerful faery than Toot, and I don't know his true name anyway. You'd never see me trying to nab Saint Nick in a magic circle even if I did. I don't think anyone has stones that big.

From page 50 of the DFRPG-Our World:

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The "Wyld Courts": There are a couple of powerful Sidhe on par with the Faerie Queens-the Earlking is on of them, and it's rumored-DON'T LAUGH!-that Santa Claus (a brownie Sidhe) may be another.

From the WoJ compilation:

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Priscillie asked Jim if the Erlking is Wyldfae at DragonCon and posted this reply:
Jim: He is wyldfae.  He isn't a subject of Mab or Titania.  That's what Wyldfae means.  But his origins are in the Summer-side of the cycle of seasons, just like Titania's are.
Ditto Santa, only in Winter
(He /is/ beholden to Mother Summer, but basically everyone in Faerie is, so.)
(I mean, that's like saying "you must obey the law of gravity."  Duh.)

From the 2012 JimButcher AMA Reddit Q&A:

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Dudesan: You've described Santa Claus as being the Winter King. What does that title mean? Do Winter and Summer each have a trinity of Father/King/Prince, like they do with Mother/Queen/Lady? Is the King necessarily the consort of the Queen? If so, will we be seeing Oberon at some point?
Jim: 5) The Faerie realms just aren't that structured. It's more accurate to say that he is /a/ Winter King. Or even more accurately, that he is a free Wyld Fae who is of a power level that is on par with Mab's and happens to neighbor her sphere of influence, and finds it simpler to show up to family dinners during the holidays and make polite than to start staking out boundaries and establishing treaties.
Oberon... well, the guy kind of wound up between Mab and Titania in one of those romantic triangle things, back around Shakespeare's day. He didn't make it.

EDIT: From the recent KC signing:

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Is Kringle Fae?
Is Kringle Fae? His mantle, yes, is part of the Winter Court. Which does not necessarily mean that he himself is Fae as much as the fact that his mantle is. While he’s there, he’s got to pay deference to Mab. If Mab gives him a command, he has to obey it. Mab’s too smart to throw him many commands, it’s much smarter to just let him do his thing. Because it’s this mysterious Christmas-y stuff anyway, cheer and goodwill, whatever. She supposes it’s good to have somebody like that for PR. That at times could be useful. It’s like, oh, so, Winter Court, whole season of death, evil, but then it’s like,  yeah, Christmas! Oh, wow, yeah, you’re right. It’s like the schools are trying to buy the tobacco company. **unintelligible** It’s something of the same thing. And besides which, if she doesn’t give him a bunch of orders and stuff, then basically, when she does go to him and say, “I need to know something”, that really, what can you do, this is our game of give-and-take. So, in a way, it’s not really a subservient relationship, Mab’s too smart for it to be that.


Incidently, this also confirms my thought that Odin only becomes Fae when he dons the Mantle of Kringle  ;D.

EDIT: upon rereading I think this should actually be in the non-spoiler section. Mods?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: KevinSig on December 31, 2012, 11:16:50 AM
You missed this one...

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She gave me a look of skepticism you can really only get from children who have recently gone through the sobering trauma of discovering that there is no Santa Claus. (Ironically, there is–but he can’t operate on the sort of scale that used to make everyone believe in him. More modern living.)

Plus, there's the one from Changes about Santa playing football.

Yes, they aren't specifically references to Santa being a member of the Fae, but they do add a bit to the background.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 11:18:33 AM
You missed this one...

Plus, there's the one from Changes about Santa playing football.

Those don't say anything about Santa being a Fae though. It's pretty clear that Santa exists in the Dresdenverse. I created this list specifically for the people on the forums who doubted that Santa was one of the Fae.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: KevinSig on December 31, 2012, 11:50:28 AM
Those don't say anything about Santa being a Fae though. It's pretty clear that Santa exists in the Dresdenverse. I created this list specifically for the people on the forums who doubted that Santa was one of the Fae.

Well, I have my niggling little doubts,
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I guess it comes down to what exactly makes a member of the Fae, Fae to begin with.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 11:56:41 AM
Well, I have my niggling little doubts, as Odin's entire office was made of stainless steel.  And Santa's mail armor appeared to be steel, but Harry thinks it must have obviously been something else.

And I didn't pick up that he had to commit to the truth, like Mab might.

I guess it comes down to what exactly makes a member of the Fae, Fae to begin with.

My thinking is that Odin turns into a Fae when he dons the Mantle of Santa Claus. Also, I can't recall Santa lying anywhere in CD.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: wizard nelson on December 31, 2012, 12:01:13 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 12:10:34 PM
well its not so much that i doubt it as this: odin at some point started out in his most original form as a sidhe. after gaining followers and acruing power through various mean, he became more, hence his ability to handle iron. odin still holds(or perhaps captured it somehow, when people first believed in santa?) the kringle mantle which is a fae mantle. idk if as kringle iron becomes his kryptonite though... so yes, odin was fae, he holds a fae mantle. but he himself is not beholden to the nature of being of fairy anymore. specifically you might be able to say its because he has his own demense  :-\ but so does erlking, so thats inconclusive evidence.

I don't think this is true because Odin himself has 0 connections to Faeries in any of the myths. Heck, the only Fae connections I can see with Santa are the "elves" (may be brownies in the Dresdenverse) that work in his workshop.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: wizard nelson on December 31, 2012, 12:17:53 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: KevinSig on December 31, 2012, 12:59:13 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 01:25:02 PM
Not so much lying, but speaking plainly.  Something you don't get from the lesser queens much.  Heck, Cat Sith & Lea get more tricksey than Santa seemed to be.

Well that's more of a personality trait of most of the Fae than an ironclad rule (like the no-lying thing is). IMO it wouldn't fit for Santa to be deceptive and tricksy, it completely goes against his image. Besides the Little Folk aren't deceptive or tricksy at all (from what we've seen). Trolls, rawheads, and shellycobs don't seem so cunning either.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Ms Duck on December 31, 2012, 03:44:59 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 06:16:49 PM
beg pardon, but santa has tons of connections to faeries in the myths. they just werent called faeries. they were called Vanir (friendly people is one well known translation). also of course the svartalves, and other folks. Heck one of Odin's wives was the Jotun Queen of Winter.

 the Eddas are composed of a mix of germanic, celtic,scandanvain and christain mythologies. lots of fae in there.

Huh...goes to show how much I know about norse mythology  :P. Still, to my knowledge there's no indication in the myths that Odin himself is a Faerie.

Off-topic question: Do you think the Jotun are Winter Fae (and that the Jotun Queen of Winter is Mab or a Mantle of Mab's)?  Gard calls the Fomor "cousins of the Jotun" and we know that there was a ton of interbreeding between the Fomor and the Fae ages ago...

If this is true than a potentially interesting way to go would be for both Kings of the Courts to be the consorts of the Queens (as opposed to the Knights who are consort to all 3 of the trinity). This would have played into the "Kings are the opposite of Queens in their given season" thing that the Kings had going on. Unfortunately we know Jim has chosen a different direction due to this WoJ:

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Dudesan: You've described Santa Claus as being the Winter King. What does that title mean? Do Winter and Summer each have a trinity of Father/King/Prince, like they do with Mother/Queen/Lady? Is the King necessarily the consort of the Queen? If so, will we be seeing Oberon at some point?
Jim: 5) The Faerie realms just aren't that structured. It's more accurate to say that he is /a/ Winter King. Or even more accurately, that he is a free Wyld Fae who is of a power level that is on par with Mab's and happens to neighbor her sphere of influence, and finds it simpler to show up to family dinners during the holidays and make polite than to start staking out boundaries and establishing treaties.
Oberon... well, the guy kind of wound up between Mab and Titania in one of those romantic triangle things, back around Shakespeare's day. He didn't make it.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Ms Duck on December 31, 2012, 07:32:33 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Arcane on December 31, 2012, 08:31:39 PM
Here's a quote that might be relevant to Santa's true nature.

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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Orloth on December 31, 2012, 09:27:04 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: hank213 on December 31, 2012, 09:53:15 PM
Here's a quote that might be relevant to Santa's true nature.

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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 10:07:33 PM
Here's a quote that might be relevant to Santa's true nature.


Note the operative word.  He doesn't say to Harry that he is a being of Faerie, just that he made his home among them.  That could suggest that while he dons a Faerie mantle, he is not necessarily of Faerie himself.  A situation similar to Harry, in fact.  Harry's a mortal with the Winter Knight Mantle.  And Odin could be a god wearing (at least from Halloween to Christmas) the Winter King Mantle of Santa Claus.

I see no reason why it isn't possible for a Fae being to not stay with other Fae. The only other way I can imagine Santa making himself more clear is by saying something like "surely you knew I live among my own kind!". 

Really though, I would ordinarily say that both interpretations are equally possible but I think the WoJ's I posted make my interpretation much more likely.

One thing that I think is getting in the way here is the Iron weakness.  Are Fae weak to Iron because they are Fae? or is there something special about Iron that disrupts Ectoplasmic energies?  Has it always been so? or is that one of the rules that has changed over time (like Wizard's spoiling milk)?  ((Isn't Iron the most atomically stable of elements?  That might have something to do with it.))  What is also important, to my mind, is what Iron does to Harry in CD.  Whenever he gets iron under his skin, he stops being the Knight until it is removed.

We also know that many notable figures in the NeverNever were once Mortals who, after having accrued enough power and maybe a few worshipers, became something else.  Maybe Iron is used as a leveler to cancel out some of that power, setting the individual back at something closer to mortal.  To those who are no longer anything resembling Human, it can be lethal (like mixing a Cyborg and an EMP), but to those who have maintained some semblance of self over the years, it is much more like simply switching a business suit for lounge wear.  Therefore, Kringle is who he is with the power he currently has, Vadderung is who is in when he is at home and can kick off his shoes.  (To this end, I wouldn't be surprised if Dresden rigged up something similar so that he wouldn't have to deal with the WK urges on his off hours.  Maybe just a thumbtack on the arm.)

Iron hurts Fae because they are Fae.

The Fae are mercurial beings of changing temperment. They are constantly changing and shifting. Iron on the other hand is a potent symbol of industrialism. We use it in large amounts of our devices. It is one of the most stable elements and one of the elements most closely tied with humanity. The Fae are beings of chaos while iron is an element of order. It carries tremendous symbolic power (and symbolism is closely tied to magic in the DFverse). 

That was kind of how I interpreted Odin/Kringle's statements. I imagined he started out as a godhead figure (Odin) but as the world changed and his followers diminished he adopted a new role as Kringle. Even though Kringle has been referred to previously as fae, Harry's understanding of the supernatural world and it's provinces have proven to be somewhat fallible over the course of the series. Under both guises he has been an associate of Winter, not necessarily under Winter's dominion. Perhaps he, as Odin, was once charged with keeping watch of the outer gates? It certainly would fit that the association of one keeper to another could continue as well. From the wiki on Odin:  All these seem to fit with the personality that we are being presented in the books.

It's true that Harry is fallible when it comes to information about the Dresdenverse but Jim isn't and I have two quotes from him, the second of which flat out states that Santa is a Faerie.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: hank213 on December 31, 2012, 10:19:09 PM
I see no reason why it isn't possible for a Fae being to not stay with other Fae. The only other way I can imagine Santa making himself more clear is by saying something like "surely you knew I live among my own kind!". 

Really though, I would ordinarily say that both interpretations are equally possible but I think the WoJ's I posted make my interpretation much more likely.

Iron hurts Fae because they are Fae.

The Fae are mercurial beings of changing temperment. They are constantly changing and shifting. Iron on the other hand is a potent symbol of industrialism. We use it in large amounts of our devices. It is one of the most stable elements and one of the elements most closely tied with humanity. The Fae are beings of chaos while iron is an element of order. It carries tremendous symbolic power (and symbolism is closely tied to magic in the DFverse).

It's true that Harry is fallible when it comes to information about the Dresdenverse but Jim isn't and I have two quotes from him, the second of which flat out states that Santa is a Faerie.


Drat! Missed the WoJ confirmations. So what about a wyldfae that rose to godhood? I wonder if the same rules (extreme iron allergy etc) would apply? We've seen Toot grow in stature physically and presumably metaphysically since interacting regularly with Harry. Suppose a wyldfae becomes a leader to a group of mortals? Surely that would have an impact on his power. Then after a couple centuries as a god, he semi-retires and puts on the Kringle guise for a few months a year. Possible?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 10:33:22 PM
Drat! Missed the WoJ confirmations. So what about a wyldfae that rose to godhood? I wonder if the same rules (extreme iron allergy etc) would apply? We've seen Toot grow in stature physically and presumably metaphysically since interacting regularly with Harry. Suppose a wyldfae becomes a leader to a group of mortals? Surely that would have an impact on his power. Then after a couple centuries as a god, he semi-retires and puts on the Kringle guise for a few months a year. Possible?

I don't think Fae can become gods normally. They could probably take on the Mantle of a god sure but actually permanently turning into a god? Eeeh.

Of course since we don't really have an exact definition for what a god is in the Dresdenverse we really can't debate about it all that well...

We don't actually know that mortal belief causes gods to grow in power. It's very ambiguous. We do know that gods are tied to the world by mortal belief though.

I think that if a wyldfae became the leader of a group of mortals it would either keep growing or stop growing (since it probably isn't taking many risks at that point). It would probably still stay a Fae even if the group started to worship it.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Ms Duck on December 31, 2012, 10:49:21 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: KevinSig on December 31, 2012, 11:15:51 PM
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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: 123456789blaaa on December 31, 2012, 11:23:33 PM
fae/sidhe/ have ben worshipped as gods before. some are now. last i checked, there were about 400,000 pagans on the planet. Mab (under her various names) has real life worshippers, in the real world, right now. so does the erlking.

There are lots of fictional works that have gods as a distinct class of entities from other supernatural beings (faeries,demons etc). I was assuming that the Dresdenverse was following suit. If you define a god in the Dresdenverse as "anything that has worshipers" than yes, Mab is a god.

As I stated before, we don't actually know what makes a god a god in the Dresdenverse so this line of discussion is IMO pretty pointless. 

EDIT: Should I just add [CD Spoilers] in the subject line. All this spoilering is IMO getting annoying...
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Ms Duck on December 31, 2012, 11:31:56 PM
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EDIT: Should I just add [CD Spoilers] in the subject line. All this spoilering is IMO getting annoying...

sure !

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Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: vultur on January 01, 2013, 02:09:41 AM
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Odin seems to think the Lords of Outer Night count (or at least used to), and they're just super-powered Rampires. In "Welcome to the Jungle" the Hecatean hag was trying an ascension rite, which would apparently make her something like Hecate. Harry says the Darkhallow would have made a necromancer into a god -- and that's entirely unrelated to worship.

My guess is that a god (lower-case) can start out as anything (human, Rampire, hag, etc.), and then has a big power source/mantle of power/whatever slapped on top.

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We don't actually know that mortal belief causes gods to grow in power. It's very ambiguous. We do know that gods are tied to the world by mortal belief though.

Tied to the world by mortal knowledge (not necessarily belief), I think.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection
Post by: Orloth on January 01, 2013, 02:34:36 AM
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Thanks for that.  You completely missed my point, and helped it along at the same time.

Tied to the world by mortal knowledge (not necessarily belief), I think.

From a limited mortal stand point, there isn't much difference between gods gaining power through mortal knowledge/belief and gods gaining influence over the world through mortal knowledge/belief.  But I think you are largely right (or at least Bob might compliment your understanding of it).
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 11:43:53 AM
sure !

but is fun

Harry makes the disticintion between 'gods' (Mab, Odin) and 'GODS' (the WG, Zeus).. and i very strongly suspect there are also GODS above those.. Ferrovax served something after all, and I dont think its a human god. But in the text at least, mab is very much reffered to as a god.  ;D

It's fun but it also makes conversations hard to follow. I'm afraid I'll have to  :(. I'll also go back and remove all the spoilers from my previous posts.

I can't remember Harry ever calling Mab a god. Could you quote an example? I also don't remember him giving any god in the series a capital G unless they were the White God. I do remember someone talking about "lesser gods" which implies greater gods...Does it say that Ferro serves something? I can't remember. I do remember that Ferro was called a VP of Creation which is the same thing Uriel was called so...that might imply that they're on the same power level. If that is true though than why was he at Biancia's ball? All the other beings on Uriels power level (the mother maybe?) are sort of above things like that. 

Odin seems to think the Lords of Outer Night count (or at least used to), and they're just super-powered Rampires. In "Welcome to the Jungle" the Hecatean hag was trying an ascension rite, which would apparently make her something like Hecate. Harry says the Darkhallow would have made a necromancer into a god -- and that's entirely unrelated to worship.

My guess is that a god (lower-case) can start out as anything (human, Rampire, hag, etc.), and then has a big power source/mantle of power/whatever slapped on top.

Tied to the world by mortal knowledge (not necessarily belief), I think.

Odin did say that the LOTON had become something "more" than regular rampires. Also recall that whatever was possesing Murphy called them "false gods" so... *shrugs*

I meant to say knowledge. Sorry  :-[.
 
Thanks for that.  You completely missed my point, and helped it along at the same time.

From a limited mortal stand point, there isn't much difference between gods gaining power through mortal knowledge/belief and gods gaining influence over the world through mortal knowledge/belief.  But I think you are largely right (or at least Bob might compliment your understanding of it).

Would you mind telling me what your point was?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 01, 2013, 12:37:42 PM
It's fun but it also makes conversations hard to follow. I'm afraid I'll have to  :(. I'll also go back and remove all the spoilers from my previous posts.

I can't remember Harry ever calling Mab a god. Could you quote an example? I also don't remember him giving any god in the series a capital G unless they were the White God. I do remember someone talking about "lesser gods" which implies greater gods...Does it say that Ferro serves something? I can't remember. I do remember that Ferro was called a VP of Creation which is the same thing Uriel was called so...that might imply that they're on the same power level. If that is true though than why was he at Biancia's ball? All the other beings on Uriels power level (the mother maybe?) are sort of above things like that. 

Odin did say that the LOTON had become something "more" than regular rampires. Also recall that whatever was possesing Murphy called them "false gods" so... *shrugs*

I meant to say knowledge. Sorry  :-[.
 
Would you mind telling me what your point was?

sure, ill tell you when the conversation had, but i dont have the book right now (its on friend loan)

PG, a conversation with Charity, outside the gates of AT. Harry only makes the disticintion between little g god and big god because in deference to charity's religous beliefs.

my point is from Harry's- or annother mortals -pov, a 'god' is any being with sufficient power to wrok miracles on a planetary scale. Mab has that. Harry doesnt distinguish between them (hes religous switzerland) because he has no way to measure them at his scale.

he does say he knows for a fact the classical gods or the hindu gods could kick mabs butt tho.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 02:00:55 PM
sure, ill tell you when the conversation had, but i dont have the book right now (its on friend loan)

PG, a conversation with Charity, outside the gates of AT. Harry only makes the disticintion between little g god and big god because in deference to charity's religous beliefs.

my point is from Harry's- or annother mortals -pov, a 'god' is any being with sufficient power to wrok miracles on a planetary scale. Mab has that. Harry doesnt distinguish between them (hes religous switzerland) because he has no way to measure them at his scale.

he does say he knows for a fact the classical gods or the hindu gods could kick mabs butt tho.

Do you know that from another mortals POV a  'god' is any being with sufficient power to work miracles on a planetary scale? There really hasn't been any discussion in the series about what a "god" exactly is in the Dresdenverse. I think it's premature to paste a definition onto them before we know more. I mean, by your definition Satan is a god!
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 01, 2013, 02:32:15 PM
Do you know that from another mortals POV a  'god' is any being with sufficient power to work miracles on a planetary scale? There really hasn't been any discussion in the series about what a "god" exactly is in the Dresdenverse. I think it's premature to paste a definition onto them before we know more. I mean, by your definition Satan is a god!

..yup

and your point is?

heck, according to abrahamic mythology, (s)he is. as are half his/her vassals.. the princes of hell are pagan gods of darkness who were thrown down by the 'true god' when they took over as lord of the earth. Set, Ammon, Belial, Asmodeus.. they were all gods once.

youre dealing with two issues here:

in the historical sense, a god is any being that large numbers of people worship or worshipped. Even Uriel recongizes this; he refers to the rampies as 'usurpers' that is people who are pretending to be gods; but doign so implies that the archangel considers the real mayan gods to be real gods.

which has some validity ,  note the classic 'worship no pother god before me' is essentially the same thing. The original abrahamic religion was polytheistic after all; and the darkness (satan) was very much a god of it.

for the abstract POV If a being shows up who can literaly juggle the himmalays and says its a god, im inclined to not argue too loudly.

Mab qualifies under both catagories.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 03:11:03 PM
..yup

and your point is?

heck, according to abrahamic mythology, (s)he is. as are half his/her vassals.. the princes of hell are pagan gods of darkness who were thrown down by the 'true god' when they took over as lord of the earth. Set, Ammon, Belial, Asmodeus.. they were all gods once.

youre dealing with two issues here:

in the historical sense, a god is any being that large numbers of people worship or worshipped. Even Uriel recongizes this; he refers to the rampies as 'usurpers' that is people who are pretending to be gods; but doign so implies that the archangel considers the real mayan gods to be real gods.

which has some validity ,  note the classic 'worship no pother god before me' is essentially the same thing. The original abrahamic religion was polytheistic after all; and the darkness (satan) was very much a god of it.

for the abstract POV If a being shows up who can literaly juggle the himmalays and says its a god, im inclined to not argue too loudly.

Mab qualifies under both catagories.

My point Ms.Duck is that we don't know what the criteria for being a god is in the Dresdenverse. Sure a being can say it's a god but is it?

Let's use Neil Gaimans American Gods as an example. In this book "gods" are beings that gain power from belief. A powerfull creature might claim it's a god but since it doesn't get power from belief it is by definition not a god.

I'm not saying that the same is true in the Dresdenverse but the point is that it could be. In the Dresdenverse you may have to meet a certain criteria (power coming from belief or otherwise) before you can be called a "god". The historical perspective is useful as a reference point but no more. Jim changes mythological stuff all the time (I don't remember anything about narcotic saliva or ectoplasmic skin in the Mayan mythos for example).

For an example, remember in Dead Beat when Harry said that Cowl would become a god if he preformed the Darkhallow? Harry didn't say anything about people worshipping Cowl so that's a point against the historical perspective. 

If a king in europe claimed he was a lemon and executed anyone who disagreed I wouldn't be inclined to argue loudly. He's still not a lemon.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 01, 2013, 03:15:54 PM
My point Ms.Duck is that we don't know what the criteria for being a god is in the Dresdenverse. Sure a being can say it's a god but is it?

Let's use Neil Gaimans American Gods as an example. In this book "gods" are beings that gain power from belief. A powerfull creature might claim it's a god but since it doesn't get power from belief it is by definition not a god.

I'm not saying that the same is true in the Dresdenverse but the point is that it could be. In the Dresdenverse you may have to meet a certain criteria (power coming from belief or otherwise) before you can be called a "god". The historical perspective is useful as a reference point but no more. Jim changes mythological stuff all the time (I don't remember anything about narcotic saliva or ectoplasmic skin in the Mayan mythos for example).

For an example, remember in Dead Beat when Harry said that Cowl would become a god if he preformed the Darkhallow? Harry didn't say anything about people worshipping Cowl so that's a point against the historical perspective. 

If a king in europe claimed he was a lemon and executed anyone who disagreed I wouldn't be inclined to argue loudly. He's still not a lemon.

both have some validity- for example number of believers / knoweledgable has little to do with thte power of  a god that has been shown, and more to do with is the god allowed to do anything ? thats what the whole oblivion war is about.

as to cowl, is suspect he would have ended up with worshippers, eventually.

and then there is the whole issue of purpose

my point is, you may be right. but if there is some sort of 'minimum requirement' its in the 'power you can use' catagory. and that makes mab a god.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Darkshore on January 01, 2013, 03:19:19 PM
Lot's of interesting stuff here. As for the conversation about Iron, Jim seems to have made a lot of his own nuances with this in the Dresden Files. In many cultures iron is a long standing protection against evil, spirits, and magic. In fact iron is believed to have the power to not only block magic but drain it as well. Jim seems to only take irons significance in terms of damaging the Fae, but doesn't offer explanation as to why it's other uses are null and void.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 03:20:14 PM
both have some validity- for example number of believers / knoweledgable has little to do with thte power of  a god that has been shown, and more to do with is the god allowed to do anything ? thats what the whole oblivion war is about.

as to cowl, is suspect he would have ended up with worshippers, eventually.

and then there is the whole issue of purpose

my point is, you may be right. but if there is some sort of 'minimum requirement' its in the 'power you can use' catagory. and that makes mab a god.

We don't know though so why speculate about it? We have no idea what makes a god a god in the Dresdenverse. The best we can do is make shaky guesses.

Until we get a definition, I will only call a being in the Dresdenverse a god if it's called a god in the books.

Where is it suspected that Cowl would have eventually ended up with worshippers? i can't recall anything like that in DB. It doesn't really matter anyways since he would still have been a god even if he hadn't ended up with worshippers.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 01, 2013, 04:18:58 PM
We don't know though so why speculate about it? We have no idea what makes a god a god in the Dresdenverse. The best we can do is make shaky guesses.

Until we get a definition, I will only call a being in the Dresdenverse a god if it's called a god in the books.

Where is it suspected that Cowl would have eventually ended up with worshippers? i can't recall anything like that in DB. It doesn't really matter anyways since he would still have been a god even if he hadn't ended up with worshippers.

pardon, thats my dyslexia. it should read 'I suspect' .. because thats what i think; the godhood comes first from ascension then worshippers come later.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 07:44:35 PM
pardon, thats my dyslexia. it should read 'I suspect' .. because thats what i think; the godhood comes first from ascension then worshippers come later.

In that case the worshippers are basically just a side effect of becoming a god then. They're not required for you to be a god.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Orloth on January 01, 2013, 08:34:21 PM
Would you mind telling me what your point was?
My point is very similar to that which Ms Duck and you are arguing.

Why is it what it is?  What are the qualifications?  What are the reasons?  Granted, I was rambling a bit, I do that a lot, but still.

'Fae are weak to iron because they are Fae' is a statement that needs qualification, and you qualified it, but it does not answer whether Fae existed before they were weak to Iron; or if they did exist before then, were they still Sidhe?

Just like you too are arguing whether or not so-and-so is a god based on unknown and assumed qualifications.  (Though In that case, I blame Jahovah for claiming exclusive licencing on the title of 'God'.  Few Religious figures were ever that ballsy.  How about use the word 'deity' so you don't get His panties in a twist, Eh?)  Ms Duck is extrapolating data, and the Count is taking the conservative approach.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 09:06:16 PM
My point is very similar to that which Ms Duck and you are arguing.

Why is it what it is?  What are the qualifications?  What are the reasons?  Granted, I was rambling a bit, I do that a lot, but still.

'Fae are weak to iron because they are Fae' is a statement that needs qualification, and you qualified it, but it does not answer whether Fae existed before they were weak to Iron; or if they did exist before then, were they still Sidhe?

Just like you too are arguing whether or not so-and-so is a god based on unknown and assumed qualifications.  (Though In that case, I blame Jahovah for claiming exclusive licencing on the title of 'God'.  Few Religious figures were ever that ballsy.  How about use the word 'deity' so you don't get His panties in a twist, Eh?)  Ms Duck is extrapolating data, and the Count is taking the conservative approach.

When I saw your post it didn't really seem like you were making any points at all. Rather, you were asking a bunch of questions and speculating about them. I chose to answer one of them (Are Fae weak to Iron because they are Fae) and left the rest alone since I think we don't have nearly enough information to answer them.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Orloth on January 01, 2013, 09:28:24 PM
That is pretty much what I was doing, yes, but with the aim of speculating on the current question (I don't remember what that was at the time, something about whether Santa should have been weak to Iron, I think.).  What's the fun of obsessively following something if we can't extrapolate wild theories about it?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 01, 2013, 09:35:08 PM
That is pretty much what I was doing, yes, but with the aim of speculating on the current question (I don't remember what that was at the time, something about whether Santa should have been weak to Iron, I think.).  What's the fun of obsessively following something if we can't extrapolate wild theories about it?

I can't see the appeal. You are of course, free to do whatever you wish  :).
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: PilgrimDan on January 01, 2013, 11:18:37 PM
Just to throw this bone into the conversation... Have we ever seen or are we ever going to see Kringle and Donar Vadderung in the same place at the same time?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: wizard nelson on January 02, 2013, 05:15:57 AM
In that case the worshippers are basically just a side effect of becoming a god then. They're not required for you to be a god.
worshippers provide a power boost. you don't have to actually be a god or even be from the NN. iirc the time before the WC was said to be a time of dark god warlock wannabe's. i interpreted this to mean warlocks of the past exploited their power and demanded worship as a 'god' hence increasing their power.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: King Ash on January 02, 2013, 05:31:43 AM

I can't remember Harry ever calling Mab a god. Could you quote an example? I also don't remember him giving any god in the series a capital G unless they were the White God. I do remember someone talking about "lesser gods" which implies greater gods...Does it say that Ferro serves something? I can't remember. I do remember that Ferro was called a VP of Creation which is the same thing Uriel was called so...that might imply that they're on the same power level. If that is true though than why was he at Biancia's ball? All the other beings on Uriels power level (the mother maybe?) are sort of above things like that. 

Quote
6. ferrovax - is this because he's the OLDEST dragon? (i thought it was an empty boast) or because he's a dragon?
Ferrovax feels absolutely no need to boast.  It's because he /is/ a Dragon, large D, an elemental force of the cosmos.  He isn't some kind of Smaug hanging around a nice apartment.  He's a Dragon in a more Asian sense of the concept, a semi-divine being who was once given authority over various portions of the mortal universe, and who was responsible for their orderly procession.  There /are/ Smauglike dragons (though not nearly as many now as there have been in the past, thanks George!) but they are essentially nothing but emissaries and servitors created in the image of the real thing.
Regardless of big D or little d, dragons almost universally resent humanity for usurping the balance of power in the world.
2009 Independence signing

That says that Ferro was given authority which means that there was someone above him. And that quote makes him sound more like he had a job similar to Mab/Titania that a VP of creation to me. Afterall, given that she is mostly immortal she could be called semi-divine and she controls various portions of the mortal universe. And Mab is in no way equal to Uriel. So I can't understand why people think Ferrovax was once a VP of creation.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 02, 2013, 05:47:57 AM
In that case the worshippers are basically just a side effect of becoming a god then. They're not required for you to be a god.

i think thats what I said. or tried to say? I list two definitions of a 'god' in the DF- historical and raw power. Never meant to say- or imply- you need both. some have one, some have another; there is a definate corelation between the two in that the amoutnof power you are allowed to use is in some way limited by the number of believers you have (according to the oblivion war).. but it has little effect on the amount of actaul power a god has, i think.

that comes from:

-purpose
- sacrifices
-feeding (some gods may be able to feed thru worship)
-number of servants (?)

Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 02, 2013, 09:07:03 PM
i think thats what I said. or tried to say? I list two definitions of a 'god' in the DF- historical and raw power. Never meant to say- or imply- you need both. some have one, some have another; there is a definate corelation between the two in that the amoutnof power you are allowed to use is in some way limited by the number of believers you have (according to the oblivion war).. but it has little effect on the amount of actaul power a god has, i think.

that comes from:

-purpose
- sacrifices
-feeding (some gods may be able to feed thru worship)
-number of servants (?)

I don't recall the Oblivion War implying anything like that  ???. All Thomas said in Backup  was that those beings are tied to the world through mortal knowledge. That's it. Nothing about power level or the ability to use it.

Anyways, while you are of course free to believe whatever you wish, I wouldn't state it as fact (like when you said that Mab was a god). Instead I think it would be better if you made it clear that it is your own opinion. 
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 03, 2013, 01:04:01 AM
the vast majority of the information about the oblivion was isnt in the story itself, its in the WOJ. Heck, thomas and Lara dont even know they work for the archive. The oblivion war wa something jim thought was very nea, said he planned to put in but has now decided there is no room for it.

for example:

Quote
I'm pretty sure this will never make it into the actual Dresden Files, since Harry has no idea the Oblivion War is happening, along with everyone else.  So I'll share it here.

The Archive was constructed /for/ the Oblivion War.  Specifically.

Yes, the Archive (and Ivy, the two aren't really divisible) know about these forgotten beings.  The Archive is in essence the keeper of the dead, where they are concerned.  Once the archive believes one of them has been consigned to oblivion, she holds on to the memory of that being briefly, for another thousand years or so, watching for any mention of that being in print in an effort to make sure that she is the /last/ person alive who remembers whichever hideous entity has been consigned.

And once the safety period has elapsed, and the Archive is confident that no one else remembers, she deletes the memory from the Archive.  Bad guy, /gone/.

She also tries to keep track of the enemy players in the Oblivion War via watching for communications and so on.  When she finds a trace of them, somewhere, she lets a cell of operatives (like Lara and Thomas) know what's up, through a blind drop, and sends them off to handle the problem.

The Oblivion War is a huge, /slow/ thing.  Stuff happens every few decades, at most.  That's why the Archive was created--to be an immortal awareness, something that could track and intelligently direct responses to the enemy in a war happening on an almost geological scale.

All that other stuff she says the Archive is for?   Smoke and mirrors.

Kincaid, by the way, has no idea that the Oblivion War exists.  It isn't like Ivy explains this stuff.  She just gives orders.

as to Mab's godness.. enh its up to you. Im just going by the books, and woj. Harry is very ambivalent on who is or who is not a god; he's 'theological switzerland'. Odin says he used to be a god, that the loons used to be but fell; while uriel disagrees. Jim, in his own words, refers to beings at the Mab level as "semi-divine".. aka a demi god. good enough for me. 
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 03, 2013, 01:08:36 AM
the vast majority of the information about the oblivion was isnt in the story itself, its in the WOJ. Heck, thomas and Lara dont even know they work for the archive. The oblivion war wa something jim thought was very nea, said he planned to put in but has now decided there is no room for it.

for example:

as to Mab's godness.. enh its up to you. Im just going by the books, and woj. Harry is very ambivalent on who is or who is not a god; he's 'theological switzerland'. Odin says he used to be a god, that the loons used to be but fell; while uriel disagrees. Jim, in his own words, refers to beings at the Mab level as "semi-divine".. aka a demi god. good enough for me.

I've actually read that WoJ and unless you're referring to different WoJ, I don't see anything in that WoJ that implies that gods need believers to have power or the ability to use it  ???.

Where does Jim refer to beings at mab's level as "semi-divine"? Can I get a quote?
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 03, 2013, 06:35:31 AM
I've actually read that WoJ and unless you're referring to different WoJ, I don't see anything in that WoJ that implies that gods need believers to have power or the ability to use it  ???.

Where does Jim refer to beings at mab's level as "semi-divine"? Can I get a quote?

he refers to beings at the mab level as semi divine:

Quote
Ferrovax feels absolutely no need to boast.  It's because he /is/ a Dragon, large D, an elemental force of the cosmos.  He isn't some kind of Smaug hanging around a nice apartment.  He's a Dragon in a more Asian sense of the concept, a semi-divine being who was once given authority over various portions of the mortal universe, and who was responsible for their orderly procession.  There /are/ Smauglike dragons (though not nearly as many now as there have been in the past, thanks George!) but they are essentially nothing but emissaries and servitors created in the image of the real thing.

he's also used that term in regards to shaggy (tho i cant find the quote). I think Bob uses it to describe shaggy at that point as well. And, well, by my definition, he says she has godlike powers:

(about Mab and sanity)
Quote
Then again, "crazy" is generally considered to be a lack of connection with reality--and a lot of characters in the Dresden Files can MAKE reality.  They might have a seriously skewed idea of the way reality should be, but if they can make it happen then they aren't crazy, per se.

its juts IMO, but immortal semi divine being who can change reality, raise the dead, and perform just about every miracle thats not in the first page of genesis? thats at the very least a demi god.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 03, 2013, 08:02:58 PM
he refers to beings at the mab level as semi divine:

he's also used that term in regards to shaggy (tho i cant find the quote). I think Bob uses it to describe shaggy at that point as well. And, well, by my definition, he says she has godlike powers:

(about Mab and sanity)
its juts IMO, but immortal semi divine being who can change reality, raise the dead, and perform just about every miracle thats not in the first page of genesis? thats at the very least a demi god.

He doesn't really say that beings at Mab's level are "semi-divine" he says that Ferro is like a dragon in the asian sense of the concept. Ferro might be powerfull but that doesn't mean his power is the thing that makes him semi-divine. Correlation does not equal causation.

 Not only that but we don't know that Ferro is at Mab's level or above. Heck, we know that Shaggy is far below Mab's level too. I actually think those things strengthen my position more than yours.

Where did Mab (I assume that's who your talking about) raise the dead? It's stated in GS that Harry was actually at the brink of death, not fully dead.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: TheCuriousFan on January 03, 2013, 08:12:30 PM
Relevant in the "does Mab count as a Demigod' discussion.

Quote from: Small Favour Chapter 6
"There's a shock," I muttered under my breath. Whew. My banter gland had not gone necrotic. "But you missed the point of the question, I think. Why would Mab need such a thing? She's an immortal, a demigod."
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: 123456789blaaa on January 03, 2013, 08:22:42 PM
Relevant in the "does Mab count as a Demigod' discussion.

Huh. So it turns out she is a demigod (unless Harry is wrong or just being poetic).
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: Ms Duck on January 03, 2013, 10:06:54 PM
Relevant in the "does Mab count as a Demigod' discussion.

thanks. I rembered him syaing that, just wasnt sure which book it was in.
Title: Re: Santa Claus is a Fae reference collection [CD Spoilers]
Post by: TheCuriousFan on January 03, 2013, 10:08:08 PM
thanks. I rembered him syaing that, just wasnt sure which book it was in.

No problem.