<div>One of the many, varied things that drew my interest in the P&P game was an evident knowledge, on Richard Snider's part, of a deeper-than-average angle on mythology/folklore. The content and the substance of several of the creatures (and some of the spells also) seemed to have a quality I never encountered before in other systems.</div>
<div>One of these angles I recognized from the patterns of words, and this I've always summed up as 'Sumerian'. Technically, it would be a catch-all for 'Babylonian/Akkadian/Chaldean', of course, but the term 'Sumer' is kinda like the word 'Atlantis' (at least nowadays; it carries a lot of mystique with it; over the years, I've picked up Zecharia Sitchin's books at used book stores not hoping they were true or not but just to read them as ancient stories). I guess the best person to answer this question is Mr. Snider himself, but I know he has been busy and dealing with some heavy situations lately. But I was wondering if anyone had any info on this 'strain-of-meaning' in the milieu. </div>
<div>I have tried to do etymological research on some of the terms, but for some reason it seems to be difficult. I think the University Of Pennsylvania (and one other university, either in Britain or France, I can't immediately recall) has a decades-long research project into fully 'cracking' and putting into dictionary form the language of Sumer. As I recall, this lexicon is fairly expensive. What interests me in what Richard did is that it seems he had access to a lot of mythology and terms that at the time he wrote P&P were quite rare. Maybe I'm wrong, but given the relative difficulty I've encountered, I would guess he had some pretty scholarly source materials. </div>
<div>The word that fascinates me the most is "Akhkharu". I've combed the Web, and I can only find one list that simply says the word translates as "vampire", but there is no elaborative explanations or any details concerning this, at least as far as I've found. Everything is cursory. And most references on the Web seem to point to the same vague source: that list. I've even checked the Encyclopedia Of Vampires, a book about as thick as a metropolitan phone-book, and in its second edition: not a peep.</div>
<div>Now, I do come across some terms fairly often. Edimmu (or Ekimmu) is easy to find, and the deities. Wikipedia does (or did) make small mention Akhkharu (and also an Akhkhazu), but there's not much there, nothing that indicates source texts or the detailed nature of the creature. I know that possibly there are no details in whatever extant source materials scholars have drawn from, but what puzzles me nonetheless is WHERE it came from, and where did Mr. Snider draw it from (no later than, what, 1982 or 1983?)</div>
<div>I've also taken note of his Priesthood titles; clearly of that 'Sumerian' sound, but employed by all cultures in the Perilous Lands, whether based on quasi-Western or -Eastern analogues. </div>
<div>I was just wondering if anyone also asked similar questions, or happened to have some kind of inside angle on this stuff.</div>
<div>(You'll have to please pardon me... I'm REALLY into Worldbuilding...hope I'm not complicating the digestion of anyone's turkey dinner... I'll end it here for now...)</div>