Living idol

Living idols were animated, semi-intelligent statues of stone, presumably created to serve as foci of ancient religions in Zakhara.

As of 1367 DR, they were sometimes worshiped by small cults, who empowered the idols with sacrifices appropriate to the type of living idol. The four different types were:
 * Animal (e.g., rat or scorpion)
 * Death
 * Elemental (air, earth, fire or water)
 * Healing

All living idols were considered opposed to Zakhara's predominant culture of Enlightenment.

Combat
Physically powerful, living idols could both take and deal a lot of damage by attacking with a stony appendage. They were immune to mundane and lowly enchanted weapons as well as many spells, while they are especially vulnerable against magic attacking stone. They possessed the ability to charm nearby creatures, and each variety had a different major magical power.

Animal idol
These most common of living idols were shaped like an animal, usually some kind of vermin. Given sacrifices of small valuables, these idols granted protection from the type of pest they depict to the worshipping community. Its major power supposedly also benefited its cultists, but was not known to outsiders.

Death idol
These most feared and hated of living idols usually looked like some hideous monster or undead. They demanded human oder demihuman as sacrifices from their followers, and protected them from aging in return. They also granted a powerful necromantic spell to the cult leader each week. Successful cults often attracted intelligent undead as members and leaders.

Elemental idol
These idols came in the shape of a man without a face. There were four different types of these promotors of chaos, air, earth, fire and water elemental idols, each demanding a different kind of sacrifice in return for protection against the ravages from their element. They were not evil, however, and only used their charm abilities against hostile persons. Their major power was the conjuration of a related elemental. Elemental mages viewed them as particular threats.