Seriph: Difference between revisions
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By the time of ''[[Jingo]]'', whilst a Seriph remained at least nominally at the head of Klatchian government, affairs of state were seemingly handled by a number of princes, in particular Prince [[Cadram]]. | By the time of ''[[Jingo]]'', whilst a Seriph remained at least nominally at the head of Klatchian government, affairs of state were seemingly handled by a number of princes, in particular Prince [[Cadram]]. | ||
[[William de Worde]] was his | [[William de Worde]] was his correspondent in Ankh Morpork. | ||
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Presumably Seriph is a cross between that and "Seraph" - a celestial being: the first of the nine orders of angels in medieval Christian angelology - as well as a reference to a seriph/serif, the typographical term for the flat bits that stick out at the end of the main line of a letter (this font is ''sans serif''). | Presumably Seriph is a cross between that and "Seraph" - a celestial being: the first of the nine orders of angels in medieval Christian angelology - as well as a reference to a seriph/serif, the typographical term for the flat bits that stick out at the end of the main line of a letter (this font is ''sans serif''). | ||
[[Category:Discworld concepts]] | [[Category:Discworld concepts]] | ||
[[Category:Discworld culture]] | [[Category:Discworld culture]] | ||
[[de:Serif von Al Khali]] | [[de:Serif von Al Khali]] |
Revision as of 04:22, 9 February 2014
The Seriph is the ruler of Klatch (the nation - not the continent). The last known Seriph was Creosote, at the time of Sourcery.
By the time of Jingo, whilst a Seriph remained at least nominally at the head of Klatchian government, affairs of state were seemingly handled by a number of princes, in particular Prince Cadram.
William de Worde was his correspondent in Ankh Morpork.
Annotations
The Roundworld equivalent is "Caliph".
A "Caliph" (pronounced khaleef in Arabic) is the head of state in a Caliphate, and the title for the leader of the Islamic Ummah, or global Islamic nation. It is a transliterated version of the Arabic word خليفة Khalīfah, which means "successor" or "representative".
Presumably Seriph is a cross between that and "Seraph" - a celestial being: the first of the nine orders of angels in medieval Christian angelology - as well as a reference to a seriph/serif, the typographical term for the flat bits that stick out at the end of the main line of a letter (this font is sans serif).