Page 1/2 It is said that Sylaveth was the most beautiful daughter of Einar, the goddess of light, and Lanquis, the god of darkness. She followed the will of her mother, Einar, to create a harmonious and perfect world by giving birth to numerous peoples with her brothers and sisters. But soon after, she earned Einar's wrath and was expelled from the world of gods. Her crime was falling in love with a forbidden being and conceiving his child. The creation that Sylaveth conceived was born with Sylaveth's resentment, justified as it was. This new creature was a dragon, a being that resists the will of the gods. Sylaveth rebelled against the gods along with the dragons, so the gods created messengers to stop them. After that, a massive war broke out between the dragons and the messengers of the gods. As the war dragged on, both sides grew desperate to end the conflict. To that end, the messengers of the gods created a huge Manastone to seal Sylaveth in a mountain called the "Grace of God." When Sylaveth fell into a trap and appeared alone on the mountain, the magic of the seal wrapped around her body and began to absorb her into the Manastone. The Manastone absorbed her power and shone a dazzling violet. Page 2/2 Upon hearing Sylaveth's screams, the dragons flew in and tried to save her, but to no avail. The moment Sylaveth was about to be completely sealed in the Manastone, the dragons could hear her final rage-filled words: "I will remain in the world forever." Incensed, the dragons sacrificed their bodies in last-ditch effort to free their mother by crashing en masse into the Manastone. The Manastone exploded, and the huge mountain disintegrated into powder. And so, the Manastone containing a sealed goddess exploded into a thousand, thousand shards both large and small. To human eyes, the scene looked like a huge star exploding with violet light. Appropriately, the humans named the sealed Manastone the Star of Sylaveth and did not forget its origin. This is the most accepted of the various myths surrounding the origin of the Star of Sylaveth, which was compiled by analyzing literature obtained from distant Trutizan as well as from Solisium. - Idrissia Lavirian, Mythologist