Baali

The Baali are a fictional bloodline of vampires, from White Wolf Game Studio's and books and role-playing games. The Baali are very strongly rejected from both Camarilla and the Sabbat, because of their infernalist nature - they are called "monsters" and "demons" even by the other vampires. Much of the Baali symbology is Mesopotamian and Phoenecian in origin. The very name Baali is originated from Phoenecian word Ba'al meaning great lord. The Baali are infernalist who deal with the names of ancient beings that existed before the "Let there be Light" of Genesis. Baali legend says there was a group of people called the "First Tribe" who discovered the existence of those old ones and became acolytes of them. They were degenerates who murdered their parents and raped their children. One day, an unknown vampire (speculated to be Saulot) encountered the First Tribe and killed every one of them, and then spread drops of his blood over their corpses. Only three - Nergal, Moloch and the Unknown Third - crawled out of the pit of bodies and the vampiric bloodline Baali was created. In the Dark Ages era, many Baali imitate this when they embrace mortals - that is, to create a new vampire, a Baali sire-to-be will drain all the blood out of a target mortal and throw his body to into a pit of corpses, where the vampire has hid some of his own vampiric blood in a human heart. Only the strong-willed who find the heart and drink the blood within it can survive and become Baali. This is very different from the practice of other vampires. Baali aren't vampires made by their sires; they become vampires on their own. (In the modern era, this practice has been largely abandoned, due to the difficulty of procuring the number of corpses required without attracting the attention of law enforcement.) Another origin story of the bloodline speaks of a single progenitor, called Shaitan, who was in life a slave-boy with a beautiful singing voice who attracted the attention of an unknown vampire. This version of their creation doesn't explain the origin of the corpse-pit Embracing tradition. In the modern era, the Baali are in decline, having been hunted to near extinction. Thematically speaking, this is because a bloodline of satanist vampires is more appropriate in a game set during the middle ages and focusing primarily on religion, and less appropriate in a game set during the modern era and focusing on moral ambiguity.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
southeast train station
letter from america
municipalities of the canton of vaud
brewster, new york train station
bolinas lagoon
coinage act (1792)
coinage act
dublin high school
denis mccullough
stanton a. coblentz
mark clifton
health science center brooklyn
wihtred of kent
marquess of crewe
rockrose
bbc home service
guilford, maryland
shingo tsukino
drakes estero
richard maxfield
trapper john mcintyre
private parts
christians and muslims for peace
packet filter
saint just
john herbert turner
point reyes
hms charybdis (f75)
the great republic of rough and ready
sportsman of the year
lynn abbey
stampede
kotte
sean heuston
gudendag
st. mary mead
danzig iii: how the gods kill
danzig 4
dr. william sears
chipper jones
buford pusser
thieves world
second robotech war
blackacidevil