Weeping Stranger

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The Weeping Stranger is purportedly a large black marble bust of a crying person whose face is distorted from extreme grief. Throughout Tevethi history, this statue has appeared numerous times in many different locations along the Samatkhaoul River. The first mentions of the Weeping Stranger appear during the Meso-Tevethi period, which attributes the statue to the pre-Imdjic Chamices. The last reported appearance of the Weeping Stranger occured in 4601 CY, appearing on a farm on the outskirts of Ottex, for a period of several weeks until its unexplained disappearance.

Connections to Chamice religion

Archaeological evidence supports that the Chamices revered an unnamed weeping figure, but the surviving cult objects are generally small bone or stone carvings approximately one cubit in length. These differ sharply from the Weeping Stranger, which is described in later Tevethi sources as a large black marble bust. For this reason, most scholars believe the two traditions share a visual motif of weeping, but not necessarily a common object or identity.

Attempted explanations

Conflation with other monuments

Some historians believe that the purported sightings reflects a conflation of unrelated busts or statues carved from a dark material, which were conflated over time to form the Weeping Stranger narrative.

Political omen-making

Some believe that certain factions may commission new Weeping Stranger busts as propaganda tools against the ruling regime.