Church of Vhaeraun

The Church of Vhaeraun was an organization composed of the followers of the drow god Vhaeraun, the Masked Lord.

They mostly consisted of drow and half-drow who wanted to see their people freed from Lolth's oppression, and united in reclaiming their rightful place and dominance in the surface world. Many males wishing for better opportunities than the absolute subservience reserved to them among the followers of Lolth, were also drawn to Vhaeraun.

Dogma
"The shadows of the Masked Lord must cast off the tyranny of the Spider Queen and forcibly reclaim their birthright and rightful place in the Night Above. The existing drow matriarchy must be smashed, and the warring practices of twisted Lolth done away with, so that the drow are welded into a united people, not a squabbling gaggle of rival Houses, clans and aims. Vhaeraun will lead his followers into a society where drow once again reign supreme over the other, lesser races, and there is equality between males and females. "

The church’s dogma markedly differed from other drow churches’ in that it read itself like a policy agenda and not a list of behaviors to please a deity. It clarified the organization’s goal and purpose, the steps to take towards its fulfillment, and under whose leadership the work was done.

The church viewed itself as the successors of Ilythiir and was unique among elven organizations. Their goal was unique, because, while drow culture resented their past, for it forced them to accept how much they lost, the church of Vhaeraun took account of the fact that they (and by extension the entire elven race) fell from power, and while elves mostly gave up on the idea to regain their strength in the face of human expansion, followers of Vhaeraun made remedying to their loss their goal.

The steps towards that goal were to unite the drow and claim territory on the surface, which was called the Night Above. They saw an existential problem in the drow race’s tradition of infighting, which resulted in intentionally hindering each others' growth, being unable to share into each others' joy, preventing cooperation for communal growth in power and resulting in physical confinement of their people's reach of influence inside their cities and caverns but never beyond. The Church of Vhaeraun tried to solve it by eliminating what they deemed to be the cause of said problem: the major drow deity Lolth--who promoted strife among drow--and her supporters, Lolth's matriarchy and priestesses.

Groups and organizations of the church generally revolved around one of these steps, for example the Jaezred Chaulssin focused on the destruction of Lolth’s matriarchy,, the followers in Cormanthor worked on settling the surface, those of Guallidurth were dissatisfied with their people’s lack of unity, and so on.

The church also promoted the--in drow society rare--idea of gender equality.

Attitudes
Members of the church weren’t necessarily evil but most were.

Their primary motivation was dissatisfaction at the limiting nature of their society and they weren’t very choosy about their methods to change it, though this had its limits, for example, visiting the Darkwatch, a site where one could gain an invigorating battle frenzy at the cost of madness, while actively sought out by followers of Cyric, it was something actively avoided by followers of Vhaeraun. They didn’t tolerate underhandedness from others against them. Their modus operandi was similar to that of Mask’s followers, that was to cultivate a cultured and trustworthy front and not committing unnecessary crimes, to the point of their activities being so similar to one another, that the two faiths were confused on the surface. The "building a trustworthy front"-modus operandi was further enhanced after a truce between their deity and Eilistraee was reached after the Second Sundering.

They shared a cooperative mindset that made them suffer the least infighting among all evil drow groups. This "cooperative mindset" didn’t translate itself into unconditional love towards each other. They shared a cooperative mindset and inside a given vhaeraunite group, the followers generally didn’t fight against each other. Which didn’t mean that a shared faith translated into instant unconditional love towards each other. They regularly interacted and traded with other groups, but aside from these, deeper organizational relationships were generally of temporary nature and stood and fell with mutual benefit and groups were expected to be ready to attack and be attacked when there was a reason, benefit included. For example, it was considered normal and to be expected among vhaeraunites in Cormanthor to kill trespassers regardless of religious affiliation, shared or not, but if a group gave a reason, like clarification that they had no desire to take one’s land, the landowners grew more permissive towards that particular group and given more reason, like a common external enemy, they banded together to a full alliance. All in all, they rarely fought each other and suffered from the least infighting among evil drow groups.

Vhaeraunites seemed to have a rather lax attitude towards divine commandments. For example, Vhaeraun forbade his followers to associate with dwarves and gnomes, but they frequently violated it on a regular basis. Starting with trade, to incorporation into large scale plans, such as Nimor Imphraezl’s cooperation with Gracklstugh, a duergar city during their assault on Menzoberranzan, or even organizational association, as did the Dark Dagger in Skullport by accepting Ahmaergo “the Horned Dwarf“ as one of their superior in the Iron Ring. Another example was that, while clerics shouldn’t be able to wear armor made of metal, it didn’t prevent High Priests to do exactly that in their temples.

Friction due to Attitude Differences
When Vhaeraun was killed, the church of Eilistraee experienced an influx of former vhaeraunites, their different conduct and modus operandi was a source of friction with orthodox eilistraeean, particularly the priestesses.

Eilistraee’s priestesses had a sexist mind set. For example, the Promenade of the Dark Maiden had a tradition of barring every male follower from the Evensong and considered their participation as something inherently wrong, those who tried anyway suffered mental mobbing by the priestesses including under usage of military authority. After becoming the Masked Lady, acceptance of male participation needed to be enforced top down after passive resistance started to occur.

Eilistraeean priestesses lived under the belief, that them being priestesses was a reason for subordination and not getting instant deference from the converts was a reason of friction between them.

An example regarding modus operandi would be the High Hunt ritual. The ritual consisted of followers of Eilistraee hunting game they considered dangerous, both of animal and sentient nature. While it was called “hunt“, the followers didn’t actually look for prey but killed whatever they happened upon, believing Eilistraee chose the prey for them. Clerics of Eilistraee were mandated to be naked and armed only with a single sword and killed their prey in a frontal battle, as a show of trust to their deity protecting them. The former vhaeraunites, did things differently. They employed magic to look for suitable prey by themselves, used additional protection, weaponry, including ranged ones or those allowing easy application of poison and even when hunting they hid, sneaked up and ambushed their prey instead of killing it in a frontal charge. Orthodox eilistraeean saw in this behavior a sign of insubordination, while former vhaeraunites saw in the orthodox followers’ behavior not only a sign of stupidity but a general lack of the ability to think for and by themselves, in short a sign of dependency to their goddess.

These kind of problems were prevalent in the initial phase but were mostly laid aside for cooperation’s sake.

Activities
Members and supporters of the church were varied, they were found among the disenfranchised people, common thieves merchants, consorts of priestesses and among the priestesses themselves.

They conducted active but also passive opposition, like promoting the idea that male drow were as valuable as female or inciting general disobedience and rebellion among them, and also conducted active resistance.

The methods used by the followers of Vhaeraun to reach their goals were also varied, required a degree of subterfuge, and were generally directed at increasing the own or decreasing the enemies’ power based on real assets like official positions in politics, money, manpower or land by disrupting or changing the status quo in some way. Underhanded means of any kind were acceptable including rumor, intrigue, thievery, poison manufacture, murder, assassination, inciting riots, and so on.

They were often spies and, as followers of a god of thievery, thieves, from the common cutpurse to burgulers, who broke into enemy temples, to all out raiders. Members of the priesthood helped thieves, provided healing and/or freed them from prison, if necessary by force.

They also acted as vigilantes, especially violence against male drow by female ones was avenged, and were also known for putting the blame committed murder on their enemies to cause dissent among their ranks.

More long-term plans revolved around gaining power. They manipulated trade, for example through opening individual trade channels and contacts, like the surface, to stockpile goods and causing a shortage of the same. They also opened opportunities to obtain power for others, like merchants, by killing those in power to fill the resulting void by the aforementioned commoners.

They also tried to increase their range of influence. Apart from the major cities, they built smaller settlements all over the Underdark, as well as on the surface, either by carving a niche (often of criminal nature) in existing cities or settling empty lands. Priests also cared for these surface settlements and strove to make them self-sustaining and encouraged contact with surface elves.

When they had the opportunity, vhaeraunites took power in open fashion, either by placing themselves into official positions by legal means, or violent takeovers.

Out of all drow groups, they were most likely to cooperate with outsiders when the objective involved hurting the church of Lolth in some fashion.

Vhaeraun’s followers were known for their usage of poison. They were known to manufacture and experiment with it and also to pay well for new ones.

Titles
Vhaeraun’s clergy was almost entirely male.

Collectively they were known as the Masked, novices Uncloaked and those past that stage Nightshadow. A large number of special titles were also used but they weren’t in any kind of hierarchic order. Most common titles included Ascendant Darkness, Black Moon, Dark Mantle, Deep Rogue, Enveloping Night, Raven's Cow, Shadow Hunter, Silent Sable and Twilight's Herald but self fashioned regional titles existed as well, like Shadow Sorcerer in the city of Sshamath.

Composition
The church of Vhaeraun was loosely organized in largely autonomous cells, mainly due to persecution from the priestesses of Lolth who ruled over the majority of the drow race. Despite aforementioned persecution it had the second largest following among the drow as a whole and the largest one among surface dwelling drow. His worshipers consisted mostly of elves (especially drow) and half-elves (especially half-drow), a few humans and a handful of draegloths.

Hierarchy
While Lolth-ruled cities (like Menzoberranzan or Undrek'Thoz ) and communities of faithful of Eilistraee (like the Promenade of the Dark Maiden ) were theocracies (their leadership was collectively part of the priesthood of their respective deities), Vhaeraunite organizations were different in at least three ways.

First, organizations affiliated with the Church of Vhaeraun fluctuated in how strictly and/or exclusively they followed the Masked Lord. For example, the Jaezred Chaulssin mandated to show any kind, if only token, reverence to Vhaeraun, while Clan Auzkovyn allowed worship of several deities (rare among drow organizations).

Second, the leaders were rarely also part of the priesthood, regardless of personal religiousness. An example was Mauzzkyl Jaezred, a sorcerer-assassin who led the Jaezred Chaulssin, who didn’t have qualms distancing his organization from the church of Vhaeraun, if he could evade frontally clashing with the church of Lolth. Another such example was the Dark Dagger. Its leader was Malakuth Tabuirr, a rogue-fighter, devoted follower of Vhaeraun (enough to fund at least one temple), and even clerics of the Masked Lord who were part of the Dark Dagger answered to him.

Third, the followers of Vhaeraun were proponents of gender equality, and the distribution of power was more balanced among them than other drow groups. On the other hand, while in theory the distribution was egalitarian, in practice, the distribution was tilted in favor of male drow. There were at least three reasons out of which the first was that male drow outnumbered female ones and thus had more representation among the leadership. The second reason was that males gave in to grudges and kept females from the high positions. This caused a wide spectrum regarding gender equality, from the egalitarian Holldaybim to the particularly crass city of Chaulssin that killed its rare female half-dragon offspring.

Orders

 * Clan Auzkovyn: Clan Auzkovyn was a group of drow who were driven out of the High Forest by wood elves who tried to found a state there too. In 1372 DR, they were the second largest group of drow in Cormanthor.


 * Dark Dagger: The Dark Dagger was a criminal group. They infiltrated the criminal milieu of the regions around the Sea of Fallen Stars with the goal to eventually take control of them.


 * Dragon's Hoard: The Dragon's Hoard was a merchant band led by Nisstyre of Ched Nasad that formed a small community in the High Forest. The band was involved in the slave trade in Skullport, and were almost completely obliterated in 1361 DR by a group of Eilistraeean followers led by Qilué Veladorn.


 * House Jaelre: House Jaelre was the biggest drow group on the surface, in 1372 DR. Their goal was to found a permanent home for themselves in Cormanthor. Towards that end, they tried to learn and take over old elven magic.


 * Jaezred Chaulssin: The Jaezred Chaulssin was an assassins’ guild. Their goal was to rid the drow of the tyrannical rule of Lolth and her priestesses. They believed that drow society was so far beyond help that the society needed to be destroyed from the ground to be rebuilt.


 * School of Shadow Weave: A school in Sshamath that concerned itself with the Shadow Weave. They tried to get into the city’s ruling body by legal means.

Rituals
Vhaeraun’s priests prayed for their spells at dusk, and whenever they accomplished something that made them closer to their goal. Apparently, it was a silent matter which consisted of meditating in shadows. It seemed that their rituals were safe and didn’t put them intentionally at risk or danger.

They had some means to communicate with their deity to share the spell, tactics and poison formulas, they invented. This wasn’t a one-way communication, for Vhaeraun distributed this knowledge with the entire clergy.

The most common ritual dedicated to Vhaeraun was the sacrifice of weapons and tools of defeated enemies, which was done by melting them into a bowl-shaped altar. While Vhaeraun appreciated the value of the sacrificed items, he considered diligence to be more important.

Another sacrificial ritual was held during nights of new moon. Followers of Vhaeraun, usually riding Underdark lizards, hunted a stag and then sacrificed its rack of antlers and still-beating heart to the Masked Lord. The ritual was considered a perversion of elven rituals.

The most holy ritual of the faith was called the Masked Lord’s Embrace and was held on Midwinter Night. Using their innate drow ability to conjure magical darkness, the participants surrounded themselves with a curtain of shadow, in order to block any eventual distraction. Vhaeraun's magic sustained the darkness, making it last up to a whole day (rather than its usual duration), and his followers spent that time meditating about new ways to further the goals of their faith, and to form new plans.

Vhaeraun was known to be unusually responsive for a deity. Having success at having a minion of the deity sent for help was comparatively easy for a vhaeraunite cleric, provided the proper ritual was conducted in a situation of real need. “Real need“ didn’t seem to equate life or death situations. Instances in which shadows were used as messengers to contact a large number of followers in a wide area were known.

Tactics
As followers of an evil deity, clerics of Vhaeraun were able to rebuke undead and to convert their spell energy into inflict spells.

They were expected to have an aptitude for trickery. They drummed up the dissatisfaction of drow, namely of the disenfranchised males, towards rebellion and disobedience.

Classes
Apart from divine casters, the church’s members generally consisted of assassins, bards, rogues and warlocks. . Due to Vhaeraun being the drow patron of shadow magic and spellfilchers, members were also spellfilchers or spellcasters who used the Shadow Weave.

Clerics had a habit of learning the skills of an assassin, divine seeker, rogue or shadowdancer. There were a number of special positions among the church.

Darkmask
Darkmasks were considered the elite and were the hands for special tasks.

Masked Traitor
A masked traitor was a type of a traitor priests, or more often traitor priestess for the majority was female. A traitor priestess was a cleric who posed as a cleric of another deity while in truth working for another one (usually Vhaeraun) effectively fooling the deity whose church was spied upon.

The church of Lolth sent their clerics into enemy churches as spies, but there was no known successful instance sent into Vhaeraun’s, despite its attractiveness for Lolth’s clergy. This had to do with how double spies worked. Double spies, who were trained as such, had to convincingly pretend their false allegiance, which mandated them to immerse themselves in their enemies’ philosophies and practices, in this case Vhaeraun’s. The idea of one their own being capable of doing all this while at the same time remaining loyal to Lolth was considered too inconceivable for it to become more than a thought.

While called traitor priestesses, they had both female and male members with the former forming the majority. Males ones were seemed to be under heavier scrutiny of the church of Lolth and were more often found despite the vast majority of the masked traitors being female. Collectively were the stuff of horror stories in the church of Lolth’s folklore and apparently at some point, recruiting male clerics of hers got so out of hand that Lolth lost any capability to trust males.

On finding one, Lolth personally alarmed her priestesses about the existence and ordered them to literally make a big public show out of the torture and execution of an uncovered spy. While these clerics lived dangerous lives like any other traitor priestesses and priests, unlike other traitor priestesses and priests, they were given special attention and powers from their actual deity, that dropped the risk of being found out.

Skulker of Vhaeraun
A skulker of Vhaeraun was a user of divine magic who wasn’t necessarily part of the priesthood and who was still active in the post-Spellplague era.

Regions
Prior to the Spellplague, the church of Vhaeraun was a growing organization among the drow. Most of the drow on the surface followed Vhaeraun and they built smaller settlements throughout the Underdark and had at least some presence in every community where drow were found. After the Spellplague, the church was one of the two more or less functional religious opposition groups in drow society with Ghaunadaur’s followers being the other one.

On the surface
As mentioned before, most drow on the surface followed Vhaeraun. They were found in the Forest of Lethyr, the Frozen Forest, the Lurkwood, the Forest of Mir, the Rawlinswood, the Trollbark Forest, Winterswood and in the High Forest, where the Dragon's Hoard was active. Clerics founded and supported new settlements, and those followers in the Underdark who couldn't bear the pressure of being found out, or those who were actually found out, tried to flee to the surface, among others, to such a community.

After the fall of Myth Drannor in 714 DR, surface elves started to feel a psychological compulsion to abandon their lands for Evermeet. Following this compulsion, their land became abandoned. Repopulating these lands was a part of the church’s strategy. For example, vhaeraunites were found in Cormanthor, where 90% of its elven population left for Evermeet. While all groups wanted first and foremost a steady life, the ultimate goals varied. The biggest surface drow group of House Jaelre tried to unearth and understand old elven magic and found their own permanent settlement, while Clan Auzkovyn tried to carve out a nomadic live. When the armies of Myth Drannor came from Evermeet a not small number of followers converted to Eilistraee to evade the violence at the hand of the elves.

An organization called the Dark Dagger was active throughout the area around the Sea of Fallen Stars, namely in Skullport, Turmish, Vilhon Reach and less prominently in Amn and Calimshan and grew in power. Their goal was to take over the control of the criminal milieu there.

Escapees from Guallidurth founded cities in the Forest of Mir and in the cavern of Ultoksamrin in Deep Shanatar. The Forest of Mir held three cities, Dallnothax, Holldaybim and Iskasshyoll. All three were built the same way, a large cavern as the main body and a few buildings on the surface, all three were further connected via tunnels with each other. Holldaybim had an egalitarian rulership while the other two were patriarchic and were specifically allied against Guallidurth.

In the Underdark
As mentioned before, the church of Vhaeraun was a growing religious organization among the drow in the Underdark as well as the second biggest one. They built smaller settlements throughout the Underdark and had at least some presence in every community where drow were found.

For example, the church was the biggest religious non-lolthite organization in the city of Guallidurth, and were regularly (without success) hunted. . After the Spellplague, internal strife caused Guallidurth’s formerly 80.000 strong drow population to be downsized by at least 80%. It wasn’t known how the Vhaeraunites in the city fared.

In Ultoksamrin existed a settlement, that grew around the Vault of Cloaked Midnight, also called the cathedral city because half of the cave was occupied by a temple to Vhaeraun. Ultoksamrin’s leader, Vokkrzyr Rualfren tried to recruit surface elves to bolster the ranks against the matrons from Guallidurth, though with unknown success.

A rare legal following was in Sshamath, where Vhaeraun, under the alias the Masked Mage or the Lord of Shadow, was primarily prayed to in his role as the drow patron of shadow magic and spellfilchers. First, there was the official church of Vhaeraun under Pharaun Lhalabar. They were situated in the Tower of the Masked Mage. Another group was the School of the Shadow Weave. Under the leadership of Nurissa Vyllshan, they worked as a cloak for the church of Vhaeraun to be accepted as a full School and with it as full members of the city’s ruling body.

The Jaezred Chaulssin, an assassins’ guild from Chaul'mur'ssin, a vhaeraunite city on the Plane of Shadow, ruled the city of Chaulssin where they were based. Apart from minor holdings in Skullport and Sshamath, they had a major presence in Ched Nasad, Dusklyngh, Eryndlyn, Jhachalkhyn, Karsoluthiyl, Maerimydra and Sschindylryn.

The Jaezred Chaulssin weren’t the only one active in Ched Nasad. The church kept a secret portal, called the Ched Nasad portal and keyed it to a male divine caster. The portal was connected two was to the Dalelands to their fellow followers and allowed flexible allocation of resources and trade for surface goods. The vhaeraunites in Ched Nasad were working at creating a food and water shortage in the city to weaken their enemies, so they could be taken down. The Jaezred Chaulssin under Zammzt Everharn caused the destruction of the city during the Silence of Lolth. It was done through an engineered slave uprising as well as large scale confusion that made hindered the city officials to effectively deal with their problems. After the city was rebuilt, the assassins obtained special influence in the rule of the city.

Eryndlyn was a city whose rule was divided in a ratio of 2:1:1 in lolthites, ghaunadans and vhaeraunites,. During the Time of Troubles an avatar of Selvetarm wreaked havoc against non-Lolthites which forced the two other factions into cooperation, that allowed them to drive the avatar away. During the Silence of Lolth, the Jaezred Chaulssin fosterage under Tomphael Arkenrret managed to urge the two factions into an alliance that completely destroyed Lolth’s influence in the city. Eryndlyn got destroyed in the Spellplague when the cavern changed into a spellcave, though its citizens mostly left before it happened, the assassins’ fosterage survived.

In Dusklyngh, Jhachalkhyn and Karsoluthiyl, the Jaezred Chaulssin managed to shift the power balance in favor of the merchant class from Lolth’s matriarchy. Jhachalkhyn was then practically ruled by the assassins under Xorthaul Barriath.

Maerimydra had a small cult Kâras was a part of and the Jaezred Chaulssin fosterage under Vesz’zt Auvryana. The assassins’ plot there was known to have backfired in that it allowed Kiaransalee’s followers to take the city. It probably consisted of urging the city’s archmage into organizing the destruction of the city’s matriarchy. The chaos allowed Kiaransalee’s followers to take over.

In the city of Menzoberranzan existed a growing church. Due to the virtual non-existence of other organized faiths, it was considered not a but the enemy by the church of Lolth and hunted as such. In fact, the city’s common law included ones directed against the church by name. The group proved to be resilient, it survived the death of its deity.

Temples
Temples to Vhaeraun were built both on and under the surface. On the surface, shrines were built in shallow woodland caves, usually where little light shone through the trees. As a general rule, it was inside a vhaeraunite settlement or in the vicinity of one. In the Underdark, deep natural amphitheater were the site for temples. They were hidden through multiple darkness spells, which looked like patch of black stone to darkvision. Interestingly, the Underdark temples were usually built with a "starry sky", actually beljurils placed into high ceilings to look like stars.

Known temples included:


 * Vault of Cloaked Midnight: a temple in Ultoksamrin, around which a settlement grew
 * Hall of Midnight Bloodshed: a dummy temple to avert attacks against the Vault of Cloaked Midnight
 * Onyx Labyrinth: another dummy temple for the Vault of Cloaked Midnight
 * Tower of the Masked Mage: a temple in Sshamath

Symbols
The holy symbol of Vhaeraun was a black blue-lensed mask. Combined with similar modus operandi, the symbol was confused with Mask’s on the surface. Some vhaeraunites on the surface used this similarity to recruit humans and half-elves for their cause.

Colors
The favored colors of the church was black. If given a choice between two things which are the same but for the color, vhaeraunites usually picked the black one.

Gems
Other symbols, they looked out for were specific gems, for they believed they could read divine favor or disfavor out of these gems. The specific gems were agni mani, black opal, black sapphire, hematite, black marble, obsidian, black onyx and black pearl. Specific (dead) animals were also considered potents from the deity.

Animals
They believed that the (illusory) appearance and/or behavior of black cats, ravens or dead spiders could be an attempt by Vhaeraun to tell them something. These animals were also kept as glorified pets in richer communities or were served as food in poorer ones. While not real animals, the same was concluded from an air or earth mephit, shadow, shadow dragon or yeth hound that appeared and helped a follower from danger.

Taboos
Like any other church on Toril, followers could buy themselves free for transgressions against their deity. With increasing severity an increasing amount of valuables and/or an increasingly long-term assignment for the church. Like any other church, they also had special forms of gross transgressions, that caused the deity to personally deliver punishment to the offender.

Unsurprisingly for a group that considered their deity as their leader, clerics were forbidden from impersonating the deity under whose employment they were. In the case of offending this, the deity himself cursed the offender. In the case oTellik Melarn, this was done by turning his disguise as Vhaeraun’s avatar permanent, practically a death sentence in the Lolth-ruled city of Ched Nasad.

Dress
A cleric of Vhaeraun’s regalia consisted of a half-mask that could also double as a holy symbol, form-fitting pants, silk shirts and leather boots, all in their favoured colour black. They also constantly had at least one black-edged dagger on their person, all at least in theory. As a general rule, members of the church had to hide their allegiances and it also seemed that some priests used other dress codes for their regalia. Masked traitors whose cover blew up kept the regalia of the church they spied upon, when they thought it to be beneficial to them.

Armor and weapons
Once attuned to it, a cleric of Vhaeraun didn't need to carry around a holy symbol to cast spells. They could but they just needed to be in a one mile radius of it. The holy symbol was a mask that could be used as a mundane one.

Clerics of Vhaeraun shouldn’t be able to wear metal armor but there were those who did anyway. Regarding weaponry, they used whatever was considered practical for a given task, while they had a number of favored weapons, daggers, short swords and long swords, "favored" wasn't as valued as "useful".

Clerics also used poison of different varieties, both in kind and toxicity, in fact the use of poison was the entire church's weapon of choice.

Fighting Styles
Vhaeraunites were generally proficient in the bautha z’hin and/or the sargh’elgg style, both drawing advantage of a drow’s heightened dexterity.

The former which meant “dodge and walk“ drew advantage from the natural dexterity of a drow by being about dodging, hit-and-run tactics and flanking foes and and was also favored by rogues.

The latter meant “valor of slaying“ and drew advantage from the natural dexterity of a drow by hitting an enemy more accurately and in a more critical manner with a light weapon. The name was given to bolster the confidence of the user because being a user of this style was a sign of poor training. Vhaeraunites mostly recruited themselves from the disenfranchised, who picked up the faith for its promise of change and while drow society was famous for the intrigue and strife among its high society, the common majority’s life was marked first and foremost by poverty, oppression, desperation and accompanying lack of education and training opportunities, making this style the only choice for most commoners. Also Vhaeraun's favored weapon was a shortsword, which was a suitable weapon for this style.

Magic Items
If the Dark Dagger in Skullport and the drow in Cormanthor were a measure, vhaeraunites were able to organize an infrastructure that allowed them to equip their armed forces with standardized mundane and magical equipment.

All the Dark Dagger, the drow in Cormanthor and the Jaezred Chaulssin primarily used magical equipment that were usable by everyone without distinction and which heightened their mundane base abilities. Tools that made a stealthy rogue stealthier, an assassin’s deadly attack deadlier, a weapon to strike more accurate and harder, etc..

Spells
The church of Vhaeraun stole access to a few spells from Lolth’s clergy. Among others, conceal item and also got access to darkfire by virtue of following a drow deity. Clerics had access to the chaos, drow, evil, travel and trickery domain. After the Second Sundering, they gained access to the new trickery domain. Several magical abilities and spells were under the exclusive use of the church of Vhaeraun. As a general rule, they fulfilled at least one of three different uses, namely aiding in stealth, protection or substitution of resources.


 * Blessing of Vhaeraun: increased one’s abilities as a thief
 * Dark embrace: substituted a holy symbol and could be used to rapidly cast and deliver a spell a certain distance
 * Deceive prying: fed falsified information to someone who used mental intrusion as a means
 * Elf disguise: changed elven features of an elf into that of another kind of elf, for example a moon elf into a sun elf, a sun elf into a drow, etc.
 * Grace of the Masked Lord: used to protect and recover from harm from a trap
 * Guise of the faithful: created an acoustic, visual and tactile disguise
 * Noxious step: short range teleportation designed to be a last ditch escape
 * Skulker's venom: coated the weapon with poison
 * Soul charge: used a part of someone’s soul to fuel a charged magic item
 * Soultheft: used an entire soul to fuel magic item, it was a way to sidestep the danger of death from casting elven high magic
 * Vhaeraun's nightshield: spell to protect one from harmful effects, with special protection against magic missile spell
 * Weapon of the deity: the vhaeraunite version turned a short sword into a shocking weapon with increasing enhancement depending on the caster’s strength

Vhaeraun once forbade his followers to call anything but his avatar, a rule that was substantially relaxed by 1372 DR. As mentioned above, he became —for a deity— easy to convince to send one of his minions. Air and earth mephits, shadows, shadow dragons and yeth hounds were the vhaeraunites’ additional choices for summon monster and planar ally spells, clerics who read the Obsul Ssussun had the additional option to call a vhaerath.

Clerics

 * Tzirik Jaelre, high priest of House Jaelre (1372 DR).
 * Xorthaul Barriath, Patron Father and head priest of the Jaezred Chaulssin (1373 DR).
 * Shakti Hunzrin, traitor-priestess of Lolth and Vhaeraun (1361 DR).
 * Henge, drow priest in the Dragon's Hoard in 1361 DR.
 * Vokkrzyr Rualfren, leader of the drow clans in Ultoksamrin (1372 DR)

Lay-Worshipper

 * Nisstyre, leader of the Dragon's Hoard (1361 DR).
 * Malakuth Tabuirr, leader of the Dark Dagger (1372 DR)
 * Amryyr Yauntyrr, courier and scholar of the Dark Dagger (1372 DR)
 * Alak Abaeir, an assassin in the service of the church of Vhaeraun

Others

 * Phalar, the Chosen of Vhaeraun
 * Aliinzir Gi'Leera, one of several proxies of Vhaeraun, member of the Revolutionary League

Proxies
Vhaeraun had several proxies. They were all male with the power of true seeing, cat's grace, thievery and to strike creatures hit only by magical weapons and others. For example, Aliinzir had immunity to light and could meld into shadow.

Relationships
Vhaeraun had a long list of enemies, which included the Dark Seldarine, the Seldarine and practically every deity with a presence in the Underdark.

The most important enmity was with the church of Lolth. Defeating that one was one of the vhaeraunites’ goals. This feeling seemed to be reciprocative for the church of Lolth considered them such a threat that they incorporated specific tenets against Vhaeraun’s church.

The other enemies seemed to be treated more like hypothetical enemies than actual ones. For example, like most drow, their most frequent partners in terms of trade were duergars and mind flayers, despite them being the ones with whom they most often clashed in the Underdark. Vhaeraun actually forbade his followers to associate with gnomes and dwarves, though at times they did it anyway, and it seemed that no punitive measure existed for violating this, neither on individual nor on organizational level (see Attitudes).

Their stance towards elves was more complex. On one hand, priests of Vhaeraun encouraged contact and marriage with other elven races, so the various elven races could stand together common advancement. Followers of the Masked Lord abandoned their racial hatred against their fair kin and considered the hatred on the elves’s side maniacal, even so their attitude towards the elves varied. Some groups of Vhaeraunites still fought them, although not because of dogmatic hatred (like House Jaelre with the Eldreth Veluuthra over the Elven Court), others accepted surface elves as members when they shared their temperament (as did Clan Auzkovyn), others even conducted actual recruitment campaigns, like the drow in Ultoksamrin. The only group of elves with whom they had a meaningful relationship which wasn’t always violent was with the Eldreth Veluuthra. As mentioned above, they fought each other if given reason but also had close enough ties, that caused the terrorists to have now and then internal discussions about accepting drow clerics into their group, even if only to counter their chronic lack of healing magic.

The elves’ hatred was also a problem in their dealings with humans. Humans who were on good terms with elves and saw their hatred against drow, due to the elven race’s good reputation coupled with the drow race’s bad reputation, became automatically their enemies while humans who were neutral towards elves like those from Sembia considered them stable enough to become partners. Though what shouldn’t be forgotten was that vhaeraunites practiced slavery. Their slaves were generally every kind of humanoids whom they didn’t send into battle for danger of desertion. Other allies of theirs came in the form of mephits and shadow dragons.

One relationship that underwent profound change in relative little time was the one to the church of Eilistraee. Vhaeraunites dealt in activities like slavery, or thievery (the Dark Dagger and the Dragon's Hoard were examples of this). This could lead to conflicts with the followers of Eilistraee (especially frequent in the area of the Promenade ), generally benevolent drow who strove to build their place in the surface world (much like the Vhaeraunites), but also to live in peace with the surface folk. This showed in Qilué Veladorn, the youngest of the Seven Sisters and high priestess of Eilistraee, who worked to convert worshipers of evil drow deities, particularly of Vhaeraun (whose Dark Dagger and Dragon's Hoard were very active near her temple of the Promenade), to the faith of her goddess.

When Eilistraee became the Masked Lady, many of such conflicts ceased in favor of an uneasy cooperation. After the Dark Dancer and the Masked Lord returned to life, in the 1480s DR, despite their choice to not fight each other anymore, their followers returned to skirmish often. However, avoiding conflicts was made easier by the subtle change in Vhaeraun's modus operandi: his followers were in fact then encouraged to behave as "good citizens", when it proved profitable and helped their relationship with other surface dwellers, and to practice shadier deeds with as much subtley and secrecy as possible.

Time of Dragons
Elves came to Toril around -27000 DR, these first elves didn’t worship the Seldarine, they couldn’t because they didn’t know that the elven pantheon existed at all. Among the first elves, those of the Ilythiiri tribe differed from all others in that they had higher ambitions than living in small tribes, they founded the first elven state Ilythiir, and the faith of Vhaeraun became the main religion there.

According to Eilistraee, the Ilythiiri dark elves who followed her brother valued and ruthlessly sought power above anything else, practiced slavery, and also attacked her followers. Ilythiir was indeed a nation with institutionalized slavery and which prized might, but the church of Vhaeraun at that time didn’t seem to have acted like rabid warmongers but followed a more careful but still aggressive approach to increase their power and succeeded at increasing their territory from what little was originally negotiated from the dragons, as well power. Ilythiir was in a special position to not fear dragons.

That said, the Ilythiiri society was characterized by the existence of conflicting faiths (Vhaeraun and Ghaunadaur, with a minority of followers of Eilistraee, ) and there were examples pointing to the fact that, while the faith of the Masked Lord was dominant, supporting the rival deity wasn't necessarily an unbeatable obstacle on the path to success (although that doesn't mean that followers of rival gods didn't clash). An example was Ka'Narlist, a follower of Ghaunadaur, who managed to advance to a position like one of the leaders of Attornash, Ilythiir’s capitol, be respected and also openly talk about his faith as well as voice disapproval and insults about the major faith to foreign diplomats whom he met for the first time.

First Flowering
After the Time of Dragons, a lot of things happened. The moon elf Kethryllia drew Lolth’s interest to Toril, the subsequent introduction of her faith in Ilythiir and growing political friction between Ilythiir and newer elven realms that escalated to skirmishes but for the church of Vhaeraun little changed until the Seldarine and their followers cast the Ever’Sakkatien with the First Sundering as a side effect. It was a ritual to create a dark elf-free land (followers of Eilistraee included), Evermeet. The ritual succeeded, the island was born, and the continent literally sundered in several pieces with corresponding casualties as collateral damage. Ilythiir suffered many deaths and destruction, among others its capitol. The church of Vhaeraun lost so many followers that they couldn’t keep their hegemonic position. Their efforts to salvage it were thwarted by the followers of Eilistraee, leaving the field open to Lolth’s and Ghaunadaur’s faith. Lolth’s dominance began.

Crown Wars
During the Crown Wars, the dark elves of Ilythiir, who were still refining their worship of the Dark Seldarine, used to portray their gods as spider deities. Vhaeraun, for example, was depicted as a Masked Spider,, but--as far as it is known--he was never depicted in poses that could lead to think to subservience (like it happened for Eilistraee, who was sometimes depicted as singing praises to Lolth ), nor was he confused with another deity, like Eilistraee and Kiaransalee on occasion as an undead spider with a sword. However, all those depictions were only the results of how some Ilythiiri interpreted the relationships among their deities, and the main gods of Ilythiir (Vhaeraun, Lolth, Ghaunadaur and Kiaransalee) personally killed their followers for such depictions.

After the Descent
It wasn’t very clear, what exactly the church did during the time between the Descent and the 14th century DR but at the very least, they were widespread and organized enough to be considered strong enough to protect the Yuirwood, though they didn’t become actually the forest’s protectors.

By the time of the 14th century DR, the church of Vhaeraun was a growing organization. They grew to become the biggest drow faction on the surface and the second biggest among the drow as a whole. They were considered the real rival by Lolth’s church, so much so that the church of Lolth included special tenets against the church of Vhaeraun by name.

War of the Spider Queen - Silence of Lolth
The Silence of Lolth was a golden opportunity for the followers to make large scale changes in drow society. They shifted the balance of power from Lolth’s theocratic matriarchy in favor of secular power holders and/or evened the distribution thereof between the genders. In some cities, they actually broke the power of the matriarchy or took over their positions. This all culminated in an assassination attempt against the comatose Lolth. The plan was to trick a follower of Lolth into guiding the priest Tzirik Jaelre to the body of the goddess and then call the Masked Lord to kill his mother, it failed.

War of the Spider Queen - After the Silence
After the Silence of Lolth, Eilistraee and Lolth started a divine game of sava over the destiny of the drow, with Vhaeraun himself stealthily joining the game. He and his followers plotted another attempt against Lolth’s life to end her reign. The idea was to open a gate between Ellaniath, Vhaeraun’s realm, and Eilistraee’s portion of Arvandor, via elven high magic, for the god to walk through and assassinate his sister, so the surface drow could be united under a single banner, thus increasing the number of Vhaeraun’s followers and giving him the necessary power boost to kill his mother.

However, that kind of magic was very taxing, and would have required the sacrifice of the souls of the casters. Because of that, the followers of the Masked Lord started to kill various priestesses of Eilistraee and collect their souls in their masks (a spell called soultheft), in order to use them as a fuel for the ritual.

Eventually, Qilué Veladorn, leader of the church of Eilistraee, managed to learn about their plan and started working to disrupt it, alongside the drow mage Q'arlynd Melarn (who had turned to the faith of Eilistraee). Q'arlynd's task was to take the place of one of the Vhaerunites and try to disrupt their ritual.

However, when the followers of Vhaeraun prepared their ritual, Q'arlynd failed to accomplish his mission and Vhaeraun managed to enter his sister Eilistraee's realm and attempted to assassinate her. Despite that, the Dark Maiden did not receive her brother unprepared, as she had been warned by her priestesses about his intentions. No mortal actually witnessed the battle that ensued, so what happened remained largely unknown. However, Eilistraee emerged from the battle alive, suggesting that Vhaeraun had failed and perished at the hand of his sister.

War of the Spider Queen - Under Eilistraee
After Vhaeraun died, the followers did several different things. Some converted to Eilistraee, out of a desire to have a hold over any kind of power or because she was the only thing that remained of Vhaeraun, others to Shar and others simply stayed with their old faith. According to Kâras, the church of Vhaeraun was to about 90% destroyed or subsumed by the church of Eilistraee.

Eilistraee took the portfolio of her brother and this had an effect on her followers. Eilistraee’s clerics became more violent and the former vhaeraunites kinder. For example, it didn’t take half a year, until fabricating the truth for propaganda’s sake and assassinating or bribing those who knew the truth with high positions became an acceptable course of action for Qilué Veladorn and the general Promenade of the Dark Maiden’s leadership. During the same timeframe, formerly vhaeraunite clerics were exposed to new allies they didn’t even consider before, such as deep gnomes, and learned to respect them, albeit when provided a reason like contribution to a task. Within the Promenade, the two groups lived separated from each other, celebrating different rituals, and the former vhaeraunites retained their title of Nightshadows. Inside of the temple they had to endure the priestesses’ sexist and elitist mind set and cases of bullying, even under usage of military authority. This kind of behaviour extended at least once to a dangerous mission in the form of sabotage, as former vhaeraunites were withheld the password to go to their own home base, though without the knowledge of the commander of the mission. These kind of problems were prevalent in the initial phase but were mostly laid aside for cooperation’s sake.

In 1379 DR, after the Masked Lady was supposedly killed by Halisstra Melarn. Her followers were killed en masse through invasion via the portal network of the Promenade. Meanwhile, in an attempt to cut losses, a High Magic ritual performed by Q'arlynd Melarn, who was chosen despite being a wizard because the massive casualties mentioned before didn’t leave suitable divine casters alive, transformed hundreds among the drow who were not tainted by Wendonai's blood, or who were followers of Eilistraee (including the former Vhaeraunite converts) into dark elves, though neither with their consent nor with informing them about it beforehand. Corellon Larethian thus permitted the souls of Eilistraee's faithful and the newly transformed dark elves to enter Arvandor, making them safe from Lolth.

At least some of those who converted to Shar made it their goal to kill those of their former faith who turned to Eilistraee.

Those who held on Vhaeraun, even those hadn't converted to the Masked Lady, weren’t completely deprived of their spells (although they lost their most powerful magic). At least some tried to infiltrate and take over the Promenade under the (wrong) assumption that Vhaeraun was masquerading as Eilistraee to get additional followers.

Post-Spellplague
After the Spellplague, with her rivals gone, Lolth became the only drow deity.

The church of Vhaeraun survived the death of its deity. Its followers at that time were mostly drow who prayed to Vhaeraun because they were either in the unknown or denial about his death. The prayers of these skulkers of Vhaeraun were answered, divine spellcasters regained their magic and lay-worshippers also got access to minor divine magic which they used to continue their work with.

Post Second Sundering
Vhaeraun and Eilistraee managed to return to life as separate entities during the event known as the Second Sundering. They returned in Flamerule 1489 DR, with the same power and portfolio that they had before 1375 DR. After the time spent as the Masked Lady, despite having very different ideals and modus operandi, the two siblings reached a truce, although their followers still skirmished often. Both deities personally let their return be known, manifesting through their avatars to their followers, who enthusiastically spread the word. They both had a functional following, mostly made up of drow. However, according to Corellon’s messengers, only a few hundred of drow were affected by Q’arlynd’s spell, while the Masked Lady, as a lesser power, had at least a few thousands of followers. On one hand they were killed en masse as mentioned above and this could lead to a number of speculations. It could be that Corellon was simply lying, it could be that Q’arlynd's spell didn't in fact affect all the followers of the Masked Lady and Corellon, due to not properly understanding elven high magic, was simply wrong about the numbers or it could be that the followers were mostly of a new generation like those of the many other deities who were resurrected over the course of the Second Sundering.

Appearances

 * Novels:
 * Condemnation
 * Resurrection
 * Sacrifice of the Widow


 * Sourcebooks:
 * Demihuman Deities
 * Faiths and Pantheons
 * On Hallowed Ground