Magic circle against evil, also known as protection from evil, 10' radius, was an abjuration spell that created a sphere of warding against mental and physical attacks from evil creatures.[2][13][14][15] The older version of this spell was reversible, called protection from good, 10' radius, and had identical effects on good creatures.[13][14][15]
Effects[]
This spell conferred the same benefits as protection from evil to the creature touched, except the aura extended to a 10 ft (3 m) radius sphere around the creature, and warded all those within the area of effect. The barrier prevented nongood summoned creatures from entering unless they managed to resist the spell. If the creature touched was too large to fit completely within the sphere, then the spell acted as a protection from evil spell for that creature. The protection lasted for tens of minutes to a few hours, depending on the experience of the caster.[2][13][14][15]
The newer version of this spell could be inverted to prevent nongood summoned creatures from leaving the circle drawn to cast the spell (see Components below). The creature had to be summoned immediately after the magic circle was empowered, and if successful would bind the creature inside the circle for many days. This circle was very fragile to all except the creature being imprisoned, so extreme caution had to be exercised to prevent even so much as a piece of straw from bridging the circle, breaking the spell and releasing the prisoner.[2]
Ranged attacks and spells in either direction were not stopped by the circle. The magic circle was also permeable to dimensional travel (astral projection, blink, dimension door, etherealness, gate, plane shift, shadow walk, teleport, etc.) unless strengthened by a dimensional anchor spell, either cast on the creature just after it was summoned (risky, because the creature had an opportunity to resist and/or act) or as part of the preparation of the magic circle (safer, but required a delicate, time-consuming act of Spellcraft).[2]
To bolster the magic circle with dimensional anchor required the drawing of an intricate tracery with no gaps or breaks, adorned with various magical sigils, all around the perimeter of the circle. This task took at least 10 minutes to complete and was difficult to perform successfully when under duress. If not pressed for time then the caster had the luxury of making sure the augmenting figure was complete and was practically guaranteed success. Once the tracing was finished, the dimensional anchor was cast just before the creature was summoned into the circle. The creature could not resist, dimensional travel was denied, and ranged attacks and spells or abilities could not cross the augmented circle. Anything that disturbed or bridged the circle immediately canceled the spell and released the prisoner, but the imprisoned creature could not directly or indirectly cause this to happen by its own actions.[2]
This spell did not stack with protection from evil or vice versa.[2]
Components[]
For the newer version of the spell, verbal and somatic components were required plus the caster had to draw a 3 ft (91 cm) circle around the recipient using powdered silver. For the containment version, this silver trace had to be full size (20 ft/6.1 m in diameter)[note 1] and could not be breached, disturbed, altered, or bridged for the duration of the spell or else the spell was canceled.[2]
For the older divine version, the circle was traced with holy water (on the ground) or burning incense (in the air). If the spell was cast in reverse for protection from good, 10' radius, the circle was drawn with unholy water or smoldering dung[16][17] or blood.[18] For the older arcane version, the circle had to be full size (20 ft/6.1 m in diameter) and made of powdered silver to ward off evil and powdered iron to ward off good.[19][20][21]
History[]
The arcane version of protection from evil, 10' radius was developed by Netherese arcanist M'dhal in 2819 NY (−1040 DR) and then called M'dahl's dispel evil II. (The earlier M'dhal's dispel evil was his name for protection from evil.)[1]
Appendix[]
See Also[]
- Magic Circle against Good
- Magic Circle against Law
- Magic Circle against Chaos
- Dimensional Anchor
- Lesser Planar Binding
- Planar Binding
- Greater Planar Binding
- Wall of good
- Holy sword
Notes[]
- ↑ The spell description in the Player's Handbook v.3.5 does not explicitly state the containing circle be full size, but there would be no way to imprison anything larger than a medium-sized creature inside a very cramped 3 ft circle.
Appearances[]
Adventures
Video Games
External links[]
- Protection From Evil, 10' Radius article at the Baldur's Gate Wiki, a wiki for the Baldur's Gate games.
- Protection From Evil, 10' Radius article at the Icewind Dale Wiki, a wiki for the Icewind Dale game.
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 slade, Jim Butler (October 1996). “The Winds of Netheril”. In Jim Butler ed. Netheril: Empire of Magic (TSR, Inc.), pp. 22, 24, 27. ISBN 0-7869-0437-2.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Jonathan Tweet, Monte Cook, Skip Williams (July 2003). Player's Handbook v.3.5. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 249. ISBN 0-7869-2886-7.
- ↑ James Wyatt, Darrin Drader, Christopher Perkins (October 2003). Book of Exalted Deeds. (TSR, Inc), p. 58. ISBN 0-7869-3136-1.
- ↑ Monte Cook (October 2002). Book of Vile Darkness. Edited by David Noonan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 56. ISBN 0-7869-3136-1.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (August 1989). Player's Handbook (2nd edition). (TSR, Inc.), pp. 28, 152, 219. ISBN 0-88038-716-5.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (April 1995). Player's Handbook 2nd edition (revised). (TSR, Inc.), pp. 39, 195, 278. ISBN 0-7869-0329-5.
- ↑ Cook, Findley, Herring, Kubasik, Sargent, Swan (1991). Tome of Magic 2nd edition. (TSR, Inc), p. 154. ISBN 1-56076-107-5.
- ↑ Richard Baker (1996). Player's Option: Spells & Magic. (TSR, Inc), p. 188. ISBN 0-7869-0394-5.
- ↑ Jeff Grubb and Andria Hayday (April 1992). Arabian Adventures. (TSR, Inc), p. 152. ISBN 978-1560763581.
- ↑ slade, Jim Butler (October 1996). “The Winds of Netheril”. In Jim Butler ed. Netheril: Empire of Magic (TSR, Inc.), pp. 121–122. ISBN 0-7869-0437-2.
- ↑ Gary Gygax (1978). Players Handbook 1st edition. (TSR, Inc.), pp. 24, 49, 75. ISBN 0-9356-9601-6.
- ↑ Gary Gygax, David Cook, and François Marcela-Froideval (1985). Oriental Adventures. (TSR, Inc), p. 661. ISBN 0-8803-8099-3.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 David "Zeb" Cook (August 1989). Player's Handbook (2nd edition). (TSR, Inc.), pp. 152, 219. ISBN 0-88038-716-5.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 David "Zeb" Cook (April 1995). Player's Handbook 2nd edition (revised). (TSR, Inc.), pp. 195, 278. ISBN 0-7869-0329-5.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 Gary Gygax (1978). Players Handbook 1st edition. (TSR, Inc.), pp. 49, 75. ISBN 0-9356-9601-6.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (August 1989). Player's Handbook (2nd edition). (TSR, Inc.), p. 219. ISBN 0-88038-716-5.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (April 1995). Player's Handbook 2nd edition (revised). (TSR, Inc.), p. 278. ISBN 0-7869-0329-5.
- ↑ Gary Gygax (1978). Players Handbook 1st edition. (TSR, Inc.), p. 49. ISBN 0-9356-9601-6.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (August 1989). Player's Handbook (2nd edition). (TSR, Inc.), p. 152. ISBN 0-88038-716-5.
- ↑ David "Zeb" Cook (April 1995). Player's Handbook 2nd edition (revised). (TSR, Inc.), p. 195. ISBN 0-7869-0329-5.
- ↑ Gary Gygax (1978). Players Handbook 1st edition. (TSR, Inc.), p. 75. ISBN 0-9356-9601-6.