After the Sundering, magical storms swirled over the surface of Avendar, destroying or warping the creatures and civilizations that covered it. It was then that the early creations of Jolinn transmuted into the progenitors of the plethora of races of ages to come. It also was the dawn of newer, divine attention to the canvas of the Overgods. One such entity was drawn to the splendid multitude of potential futures that such a tapestry offered; divining their destiny as the sages of this world, this being centered its attention on the forefathers of the tree-like caladaran. As their faculty for language rapidly matured, a name emerged for this new deity: Chadraln.
In the glades of what is now the Rirro Jagka, the caladaran aptitudes for wisdom, enlightenment, and magic blossomed under the tutelage of Chadraln and His companion, Jalassa. Much like their deific parents, the caladaran found intense interest in knowledge, and by extension, that which preceded them. This curiosity was tempered by Jalassa’s discipline, ensuring that the young race did not repeat the spectacular and destructive fall of the alatharya. However, this did not hinder a distant speculation on the aims of the First Race; it merely transformed it into a potent object-lesson as to the fruits of hubris.
Chadraln revealed to His children the existence of the Overgods and their creation. Their racial state lending itself to order and justice, they took prodigiously to the study of Iandir and His divine nature. Their command of the magics of Earth grew tremendously, and this power to give form emboldened the caladaran to spread from their distant glades and seek out other children of the Sundering. Chadraln Himself encouraged this, as He had foreseen the results of the War of Fire and the intellectual fruit its aftermath would bear. Additionally, He knew that in time, the caladaran would bring to the wartorn humans the order they so desperately desired.
Much as the Seer had predicted, the caladaran encountered humans on the cusp of the founding of the Republic. From them, the caladaran discovered their aptitude for the magics of Water and Fire; in return, the humans learned of Iandir the Crown of Law and His magics of Earth. At the time, many humans dismissed tales of Chadraln and Jalassa. They believed them merely the great king and queen of the caladaran, much in line with the human empires that preceded the Republic. As law flourished and the Republic grew, Chadraln took great pleasure in watching from afar the ripple-effect of His children’s actions on the events to come.
With the coming of the War of Night, followers of Chadraln quickly found themselves enmeshed with the growing study of Void. This, too, did the caladaran find talent in, although their natural wisdom disinclined them from siding with the shuddeni in their campaign of terror. However, the pursuit of knowledge and the association with the dark practices that brought such suffering stigmatized Chadralnite beliefs outside of caladaran circles. This was mitigated, in time, by the vigorous pursuit of the magics of Spirit, and later, Air. In the modern era, Chadraln and His followers find themselves in the same position as they have always been: distant, but interested, observers of the dramas yet to be.