Elephant

Elephants were enormous plant-eating animals known for their prehensile trunks. In some lands, they were used as beasts of burden or mounts.

Description
The tusks of these creatures were made of ivory.

Behavior
Some elephants in the wild would be found in isolation, but they also had herd societies of between six and thirty animals.

Combat
If attacking, elephants boldly charged at their opponents and trampled them.

Varieties
Elephants came in two kinds, a larger and stronger variety that was more unpredictable and a weaker, smaller elephant that was far easier to train. In addition, there were prehistoric elephants known as mastodons and mammoths.

A brown-skinned short-eared species of elephant was a very common beast of riding and burden in the Utter East, namely, in the country of Doegan. The Mar people long ago learned to train and domesticate these elephants and relied on the beast for their day-to-day activities. After the Utter East's colonization by the Ffolk, most horses died off from diseases, leaving red oxen and elephants to be the dominant beasts to ride and to push carriages.

Relationships
Elephants were sacred in the Mulhorandi pantheon. The god Anhur favored battle elephants. His fellow gods Hathor, Nephthys, and Osiris would sometimes send celestial elephants to followers in need. The deity Red Knight also considered elephants special beasts, as did Thard Harr, the dwarven jungle god.

In the land of Malatra, the Nubari tribe known as the Wise Ones worshiped the spirits of elephants through totems. Shamans within the tribe spoke daily with local elephants, of which there were always around eight near the edge of their village, to learn of recent events in their area. Whenever an elephant in the area got injured it would wander to the tribe in order to be healed by its shamans. In the Kuong Kingdom, the creation story of the Lords of Creation held that Malatra was created in the footprints of a great elephant ridden by the goddess Indra. Naturally, the elephant was sacred to her. However, in neighboring Laothan, in Kompoa, elephants were simply slaughtered for their hides, and the Kuong believed this to be sin.

The Zakharan island of Afyal was called the Isle of the Elephant. Elephants there were unusually intelligent and easy to be trained, and were inviolate by law. They were also connected to Afyal's former main deity, the Lost One.

Elephants were once common on the peninsula of Chult, and images of elephants featured notably among the massive stone carvings found in the ruined temple of Nangalore. As of the late 15th century DR, however, living elephants were no longer found on the peninsula.

Halruaan farmers bred a cattle bred of fuzzy elephants, alongside aurochs, and rothé. The creatures were allowed to graze in pastures and eventually butchered for food. Despite their meat being very gamey in flavor, they were sold during Halarahh's Monster Fairs.

Usages
The ivory tusks of elephants were a valued commodity in much of Faerûn and in Kara-Tur; Jejima Horoto of Akkaido, Wa, imported eight tusks on a typical day in 1357 DR.

Notable Elephants
A fiendish elephant named Tusk was a known combatant of the Underdark coliseum of Maerimydra. This elephant belonged to Kurgoth Hellspawn.

Trivia

 * Because of their immense strength, elephants were one of the animals commonly created by figurines of wondrous power.

Appearances

 * Novels:
 * Errand of Mercy
 * The Ring of Winter • The Council of Blades • The Magehound
 * Board Games
 * Mertwig's Maze
 * Organized Play & Licensed Adventures
 * Cloaks and Shadows
 * Cloaks and Shadows