There is a page named "High Harvest Home" on this wiki. See also the other search results found.
- Articles
About 50 results for "High Harvest Home"
-
High Harvest Home
The High Harvest Home was a temple to Chauntea, the Grain Goddess, situated in the city of Elturel in the Western Heartlands in the mid–14 century DR. Circa 1358 DR and through 1367 DR -
Chauntea
Chauntea (pronounced:/tʃɔːnˈtiɑː/ chawn-TEE-ah listen ) was the Faerunian goddess of life and bounty, who viewed herself as the embodiment of all things agrarian. The Earthmother was seen as the tamer parallel of Silvanus -
Volo's Guide to the Sword Coast
Volo's Guide to the Sword Coast is a sourcebook for the Forgotten Realms using the 2nd-edition Dungeons& Dragons ruleset. This book is the third in the celebrated series of travel guides by Volothamp -
Raulauvin Oregh
favored servants of Chauntea in the Realms. By 1358 DR and through 1367 DR, she was the High Priest and Harvestmaster of the High Harvest Home temple in Elturel, overseeing eighteen priests and forty-two -
Harvesthome Abbey
Harvesthome Abbey was a Chauntean church located in the farm-complex of Goldenfields. As of the late 15 century DR, it was overseen by the Goldenfields's leader, Ellardin Darovik. The abbey was a large -
Kalach-Cha
This article or section is about elements from the Neverwinter Nights series of games. Video games are considered canon unless they contradict content in some other Forgotten Realms publication. “ Know this name our enemies have -
Heroes' Feast: The Official D&D Cookbook
This article is about the cookbook. For the spell, see Heroes' feast. Heroes' Feast: The Official D&D Cookbook is a cookbook with recipes inspired by different cuisines in the D&D multiverse. -
Retta Starling
This article or section is about elements from the Neverwinter Nights series of games. Video games are considered canon unless they contradict content in some other Forgotten Realms publication. Retta Starling was a female human -
Shandra Jerro
This article or section is about elements from the Neverwinter Nights series of games. Video games are considered canon unless they contradict content in some other Forgotten Realms publication. Shandra Jerro was a human farmer -
Icewolf
Icewolf was a small village located on the Ice Peak. The shaman, Bleak Sky at Morning, ruled over this village. The governor and the rest of the village were anti-Luskan, and would not support -
Katriana Donohar
was a priest of Chauntea. She was the daughter of the famed priest of Chauntea, Harandave Donohar, high priest of the Harvest Hall in Wheloon. She followed him into the priesthood and served as one -
Harrandave Donohar
Harrandave Donohar (or Harandave Donohar ) was a human man living in the city of Wheloon in Cormyr. He was a priest of Chauntea. By 1358 DR, Harandave was the high priest of the Harvest Hall -
Turnip
A turnip was a common root vegetable found around Faerûn, and eaten both on the surface of Toril, and underneath in the Underdark. “ The turnip trade is a demanding mistress. ” — Jan Jansen “ I can't -
Highmoon
This article is about the town. For other uses, see Highmoon (disambiguation). Highmoon was a large town and the capital of Deepingdale, known to be the most well-integrated settlement of humans, elves, and half -
Rolivar Brimbruir
Rolivar Brimbruir was a cleric of Chauntea with the rank of Trueseed that resided in the Bounty of the Goddess temple in Voonlar. Rolivar was a burly man with bushy brown hair that was mostly -
Temple of the Harvest Moon
The Temple of the Harvest Moon, which partially included the renovated Moon Tower, was a holy house dedicated to the worship of Chauntea within Harrowdale during the mid–14 century DR. It was a particularly -
Asmodeus
Asmodeus (pronounced:/æzmoʊˈdeɪʌs/ æz-mo-DAY-us listen or:/æzˈmoʊdiʌs/ æz-MO-dee-us listen ) was the Faerûnian deity of indulgence and ruler of all devils. Asmodeus was a patron of oppression and power, the -
Drow
Drow (sing& pl; pronounced:/draʊ/ drow or:/droʊ/ dro ), also known as dark elves, deep elves, night elves,, sometimes "The Ones Who Went Below" on the surface, and the Dark Ones among orcs, were a -
Second Sundering
The Second Sundering, also known as the Sundering of Toril and Abeir, was a great catastrophic event in the history of the worlds of Abeir and Toril, that took place during the decade of the -
Elturel
Elturel (pronounced:/ˈɛltɜːrˌɛl/ ELL-tur-ELL ) was a city-state lying on the River Chionthar in the Western Heartlands. In the mid–14 century DR, it was a center for agriculture and trade in the -
Mammon
Mammon, sometimes referred to as Minauros, was the lord of the identically named Minauros, and potentially the richest being in existence. Both literally and figuratively two-faced, the archdevil viscount was a feckless miser whose -
Skullport
This article is about the city of Skullport. For the sourcebook, see Skullport (sourcebook). Skullport, also known as the Port of Shadows, was a subterranean city located far below Waterdeep, within the 3 level of -
Osiris
in the afterlife. He was also a god of plant life, especially as it related to the harvest of food. He was known as Osirant in Thay, and by the name Ozrikotep in Unther. Osiris -
Saurial
Saurials were a rare breed of scalykind —specifically a "sauroid" race—not native to Toril. Several subraces existed, though only four were found on Toril itself, dwelling in the Lost Vale, also known as Tarkhaldale -
Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage
This article is about the adventure. For the board game, see Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage (board game). Waterdeep: Dungeon of the Mad Mage is a 5-edition Dungeons& Dragons adventure that takes place
- 1
- 2
Related Community
Dungeons and Dragons Wiki
games
10K
Pages1K
Images1
Video
The Dungeons and Dragons Wiki is a community of users that love Dungeons and Dragons and, in particular, creating and using homebrew. We like homebrew so much that we decided to build this community to cater to people who want…