Shaymin
Persephone
Infinite Screms
- Pronouns
- her/hers
- Partners
-
This entry was commissioned by bronzonghittransplant on Thousand Roads.
Shaymin - Sinnoh
Overview
Shaymin are an extinct species of pokémon alleged to still live in Sinnoh. The Hisuian clans described them as being the spirits of gracidea trees and the heralds of spring. Shaymin were also psychopomps that could ferry the souls of the dead to the afterlife and then bring them back for reincarnation. While shaymin were not gods, they were still treated with reverence. The largest religious festival in Hisui was dedicated to them.
Early colonists occasionally reported seeing a Shaymin, although none were ever photographed. Over time sightings decreased in frequency before coming to an almost total halt. The scientific consensus is that shaymin were a real species that went extinct due to habitat loss shortly after the colonization of Sinnoh. Sightings have occasionally been reported in the last century. Shaymin have had a long history in the folklore of Sinnoh, first as harbingers of life and death and then as a cryptid rumored to still lurk somewhere in Sinnoh. Even if they are not necessarily gods, their folklore is interesting enough to warrant inclusion in this book.
Appearance
There are two variations on shaymin’s appearance. The first is a rodent-like pokémon that resembles togedemaru. A mat of grass grows from the back instead of quills. Other depictions describe these shaymin with pine needles growing from their back instead of grass, furthering the comparisons to togedemaru. A gracidea flower grows from somewhere on the head. The fur on the underside is usually described as being white.
The second variation more closely resembles a deer than a rodent. Their legs are thin and long. A mane of red gracideas rings the neck. These descriptions alternatively feature long white ears that are used for flight or actual wings on the back. These shaymin are usually not depicted as having moss on their back, although some artists include it. Mossy legs or grass-stained paws are more common instead.
These two forms are remarkably consistent. The same general shapes and colors are used from Celestica cave art to Galaxy Team field sketches. The names of the forms varies. The Hisuians preferred ‘night and day,’ or ‘dormant and awakened,’ for the rodent and deer forms, respectively. Galaxy Team biologists referred to them as ‘land and sky’ forms instead.
In Sinnish Mythology
Shaymin were the favored children of The Dread One, ruler of the Hisuian underworld. They were the only living beings he allowed to leave his domain. Despite being cute in appearance, shaymin were reapers of the dead and could be vicious if threatened. A shaymin’s attacks were described as actively corroding everything they touched. Buildings would be consumed by vines and torn down, metal armor would rust away to nothing, and even natural defenses would fracture and crumble. The life force they stole in these attacks would be transferred into the shaymin, making them all the more vibrant.
Shaymin were said to sleep inside of gracidea trees. Some legends even claim that shaymin’s spirit infused the trees and destroying one could kill the shaymin. However, doing so would ensure the shaymin would reap not only the person who felled it but their entire family and potentially their entire clan. The only way to halt the spread of the sin was to kill and bury the offender and his direct ancestors and descendants. A gracidea seed would be planted in the graveyard, fertilized by those who offended the shaymin. If the felling occurred unintentionally only the offender would need to be killed and buried. This is the only known clan ritual involving human sacrifice.
On warm, sunny days the shaymin would grow wings and play. Witnessing them playing was said to be a sign of good fortune so long as the shaymin did not notice you in turn. Drawing the attention of a shaymin was an omen of impending death. Offerings to the shaymin were not presented directly. Instead, they were left in Soonoo Flower Field at night when the shaymin were sleeping. The dormant form was what shaymin used in poor weather or when they were still resting after absorbing a soul.
At the end of the autumn, shaymin would gorge themselves on souls, especially those of plants. After they had consumed all they could they would return to the underworld to deposit the souls and greet their father. In the spring they would return with cleansed souls to be reincarnated, leading to a surge of life. Shaymin were feared, but their return was met with celebration as it meant that those who were lost had returned and the earth was about to become more hospitable to the hunter-gatherers of Hisui. Dying in winter, with the shaymin absent, was said to doom a soul to wandering the earth forever as a lingering ghost. Their return also meant that those who died were not lost to the cycle of rebirth.
Having a shaymin settle near a village in the early spring was seen as an omen of fertility. Conceiving a child near a newly returned shaymin was said to ensure success, as the newly returned soul needed a body to reincarnate into. Getting too close, however, could still risk the shaymin’s wrath.
Origins
Shaymin date back to the earliest Celestica art. Most of the information about the Celestica religion has been lost. What evidence we do have suggests that the Celestica heavily associated shaymin with the most ancient of gods, Arceus, Sinnoh, and Giratina. Shaymin depicted between humans and the high gods or shaymin performing rituals are common motifs. Shaymin were also frequently drawn over doorways leading into holy sites. It is believed that shaymin were threshold guardians that linked together the mortal world with the world of the gods. Very little in the way of actual mythology exists. Almost no evidence of Celestica settlement has been found in the far northeastern reaches of Sinnoh or in the Sonoo Flower Fields. These may have been sacred places that no one dared to enter.
The clans were also reluctant to settle in the areas. The odd priest would live there. Common people, and even clan leaders, rarely ventured out. They were considered among the holiest sites in Hisui alongside the peak of Mt. Tengan, Returning Cave, the Temples of Mind, and the Taishi no Dōkutsu.
The early Galaxy Team colonists occasionally reported encountering shaymin of both forms. They theorized that sky shaymin was the evolution of land shaymin, although the clans insisted that an individual shaymin could move freely between the two. They were documented as being common north of Jubilife in the Sonoo Flower Fields and along the northern reaches of Ultramarine Sound. Explorers constantly lamented the shaymin’s shyness as they would flee or hide the moment a camera appeared. One claimed to have captured a photograph only for the shaymin not to appear when the film was developed. Shaymin mostly avoided the colonists. As the Sonoo area was turned into farmland they reportedly abandoned the site altogether. The last credible sighting of shaymin was in 1889.
Worship
In the days of the Celestica and the clans, dedicated priests went to live with the shaymin. They resided alone in makeshift shelters and did their best not to have any permanent impacts on the environments. Shaymin’s priests tended to be highly eccentric hermits and mystics who claimed to hear the souls of the dead and speak with Sinnoh, Arceus, and Giratina. Even other priests gave the followers of shaymin a wide berth when they entered their settlements. Giratina had no priests. Religious matters related to the dead were handled by shaymin’s church. Every winter the priests would return to the clans and perform a ritual honoring that year’s dead. At the end of the winter the priests would perform an exorcism to help the winter dead move on. They would then gather offerings from the clans and bring them back to the meadow to present to the shaymin. Clan leaders were buried in the Sonoo Flower Fields so their bodies would fertilize the flowers and provide food to the shaymin.
The winter exorcism and gathering of offerings were modified by the Japanese colonists into the modern Gracidea Festival. The festival consists of two phases. The first is an evening festival consisting of speeches from government and religious officials, plays reenacting scenes from Japanese mythology, and a nighttime procession honoring the year’s dead. The next morning a street festival is held. Brightly colored pastries are commonly eaten, gracidea crowns are worn, and people are expected to express thanks to those they are grateful for. This is both a celebration of family and of young love, as teenagers and young adults will often use the festival to express their feelings towards a current or prospective partner.
The Gracidea Festival has become popular among the Japanese diaspora, as well as in areas containing a large number of Japanese people. In these areas the religious implications and the evening portion of the ceremony are sometimes omitted in favor of a more jubilant, secular festival. This version has become popular among all ethnicities in Alola and California, although people of Japanese descent usually still observe some variation of the evening rituals.
Shaymin’s last priest along the Ultramarine Sound died in 1905. The last priest in Sonoo died in 1926. Most Hisuian priests were persecuted by the Japanese government. The priests of shaymin were mostly left alone. What threat did a priest pose when everyone could see their gods were dead and gone? The clans did not replace the final priests due to a weakening of their religious and political power and the lack of shaymin to appease.
Today
Following the collapse of formal shaymin worship in 1926 and the rise in popularity of the Gracidea Festival throughout Japan, interest in the extinct species began to increase. Over the decades there have been many reported sightings of shaymin, including at least one blurry photograph. In 1934 the military governor of Sinnoh reported seeing a group of sky shaymin in the place now known as Flower Paradise. The emperor quickly declared it a national park. The land is still protected and entry is heavily restricted. The governor would later admit they made up the shaymin sighting to convince the government to establish a park there. Cryptozoologists and botanists still make pilgrimages to Sonoo and Flower Paradise in hopes of seeing a shaymin. Even if they do not glimpse a shaymin, they will still see some of the prettiest wildflowers in the world.
Researchers have attempted to replicate shaymin’s legendary decay attacks with ghost-types. They have had some success in having ghost types attack the concept of armor rather than a physical object. This actually led to the discovery of the offensive applications of the move curse. These researchers also made the first TMs for spite and perish song, further increasing their popularity. Researchers of grass-types have yet to have the same success. Frenzy plant can collapse some structures by rapidly burrowing into them, but it cannot produce the sort of conceptual decay that shaymin could allegedly cause. Whether shaymin were actually capable of crumbling walls, rotting wood, corroding armor, and shattering bone plates with a single attack remains disputed. It is a common motif in their folklore. However, this could simply be a metaphor for their role as a psychopomp. The colonists never documented these effects, but they also almost never saw shaymin fight. They were also unable to hold a captive specimen. Pokéballs failed to capture them. This was a common problem for powerful grass-types at the time and one that would not be easily solved until the popularization of metal and plastic pokéballs. These only became common after shaymin were already extinct.
Shaymin have become a popular symbol and plants in Asia. Multiple grass gyms have one as a mascot. Garden statues of shaymin are also popular, especially around gracidea trees. Gracidea trees have also become popular decorations in graveyards and other memorials due to their lingering connection to the psychopomps of Hisui.
In 2017 researchers at Kurogane University announced that they had uncovered multiple fossilized skeletons similar to togedemaru during a dig near Sonoo. They plan to attempt revival of the species, with a target dates of 2023 for the first partial revival and 2028 for the first fully organic specimen. The project has proven controversial, both for the usual reasons fossil revivals are controversial and because some members of the public insist that shaymin are not actually extinct. If shaymin are still around introducing genes from surrogates and populations long-gone could functionally end the species as it exists today.
Shaymin - Sinnoh
Overview
Shaymin are an extinct species of pokémon alleged to still live in Sinnoh. The Hisuian clans described them as being the spirits of gracidea trees and the heralds of spring. Shaymin were also psychopomps that could ferry the souls of the dead to the afterlife and then bring them back for reincarnation. While shaymin were not gods, they were still treated with reverence. The largest religious festival in Hisui was dedicated to them.
Early colonists occasionally reported seeing a Shaymin, although none were ever photographed. Over time sightings decreased in frequency before coming to an almost total halt. The scientific consensus is that shaymin were a real species that went extinct due to habitat loss shortly after the colonization of Sinnoh. Sightings have occasionally been reported in the last century. Shaymin have had a long history in the folklore of Sinnoh, first as harbingers of life and death and then as a cryptid rumored to still lurk somewhere in Sinnoh. Even if they are not necessarily gods, their folklore is interesting enough to warrant inclusion in this book.
Appearance
There are two variations on shaymin’s appearance. The first is a rodent-like pokémon that resembles togedemaru. A mat of grass grows from the back instead of quills. Other depictions describe these shaymin with pine needles growing from their back instead of grass, furthering the comparisons to togedemaru. A gracidea flower grows from somewhere on the head. The fur on the underside is usually described as being white.
The second variation more closely resembles a deer than a rodent. Their legs are thin and long. A mane of red gracideas rings the neck. These descriptions alternatively feature long white ears that are used for flight or actual wings on the back. These shaymin are usually not depicted as having moss on their back, although some artists include it. Mossy legs or grass-stained paws are more common instead.
These two forms are remarkably consistent. The same general shapes and colors are used from Celestica cave art to Galaxy Team field sketches. The names of the forms varies. The Hisuians preferred ‘night and day,’ or ‘dormant and awakened,’ for the rodent and deer forms, respectively. Galaxy Team biologists referred to them as ‘land and sky’ forms instead.
In Sinnish Mythology
Shaymin were the favored children of The Dread One, ruler of the Hisuian underworld. They were the only living beings he allowed to leave his domain. Despite being cute in appearance, shaymin were reapers of the dead and could be vicious if threatened. A shaymin’s attacks were described as actively corroding everything they touched. Buildings would be consumed by vines and torn down, metal armor would rust away to nothing, and even natural defenses would fracture and crumble. The life force they stole in these attacks would be transferred into the shaymin, making them all the more vibrant.
Shaymin were said to sleep inside of gracidea trees. Some legends even claim that shaymin’s spirit infused the trees and destroying one could kill the shaymin. However, doing so would ensure the shaymin would reap not only the person who felled it but their entire family and potentially their entire clan. The only way to halt the spread of the sin was to kill and bury the offender and his direct ancestors and descendants. A gracidea seed would be planted in the graveyard, fertilized by those who offended the shaymin. If the felling occurred unintentionally only the offender would need to be killed and buried. This is the only known clan ritual involving human sacrifice.
On warm, sunny days the shaymin would grow wings and play. Witnessing them playing was said to be a sign of good fortune so long as the shaymin did not notice you in turn. Drawing the attention of a shaymin was an omen of impending death. Offerings to the shaymin were not presented directly. Instead, they were left in Soonoo Flower Field at night when the shaymin were sleeping. The dormant form was what shaymin used in poor weather or when they were still resting after absorbing a soul.
At the end of the autumn, shaymin would gorge themselves on souls, especially those of plants. After they had consumed all they could they would return to the underworld to deposit the souls and greet their father. In the spring they would return with cleansed souls to be reincarnated, leading to a surge of life. Shaymin were feared, but their return was met with celebration as it meant that those who were lost had returned and the earth was about to become more hospitable to the hunter-gatherers of Hisui. Dying in winter, with the shaymin absent, was said to doom a soul to wandering the earth forever as a lingering ghost. Their return also meant that those who died were not lost to the cycle of rebirth.
Having a shaymin settle near a village in the early spring was seen as an omen of fertility. Conceiving a child near a newly returned shaymin was said to ensure success, as the newly returned soul needed a body to reincarnate into. Getting too close, however, could still risk the shaymin’s wrath.
Origins
Shaymin date back to the earliest Celestica art. Most of the information about the Celestica religion has been lost. What evidence we do have suggests that the Celestica heavily associated shaymin with the most ancient of gods, Arceus, Sinnoh, and Giratina. Shaymin depicted between humans and the high gods or shaymin performing rituals are common motifs. Shaymin were also frequently drawn over doorways leading into holy sites. It is believed that shaymin were threshold guardians that linked together the mortal world with the world of the gods. Very little in the way of actual mythology exists. Almost no evidence of Celestica settlement has been found in the far northeastern reaches of Sinnoh or in the Sonoo Flower Fields. These may have been sacred places that no one dared to enter.
The clans were also reluctant to settle in the areas. The odd priest would live there. Common people, and even clan leaders, rarely ventured out. They were considered among the holiest sites in Hisui alongside the peak of Mt. Tengan, Returning Cave, the Temples of Mind, and the Taishi no Dōkutsu.
The early Galaxy Team colonists occasionally reported encountering shaymin of both forms. They theorized that sky shaymin was the evolution of land shaymin, although the clans insisted that an individual shaymin could move freely between the two. They were documented as being common north of Jubilife in the Sonoo Flower Fields and along the northern reaches of Ultramarine Sound. Explorers constantly lamented the shaymin’s shyness as they would flee or hide the moment a camera appeared. One claimed to have captured a photograph only for the shaymin not to appear when the film was developed. Shaymin mostly avoided the colonists. As the Sonoo area was turned into farmland they reportedly abandoned the site altogether. The last credible sighting of shaymin was in 1889.
Worship
In the days of the Celestica and the clans, dedicated priests went to live with the shaymin. They resided alone in makeshift shelters and did their best not to have any permanent impacts on the environments. Shaymin’s priests tended to be highly eccentric hermits and mystics who claimed to hear the souls of the dead and speak with Sinnoh, Arceus, and Giratina. Even other priests gave the followers of shaymin a wide berth when they entered their settlements. Giratina had no priests. Religious matters related to the dead were handled by shaymin’s church. Every winter the priests would return to the clans and perform a ritual honoring that year’s dead. At the end of the winter the priests would perform an exorcism to help the winter dead move on. They would then gather offerings from the clans and bring them back to the meadow to present to the shaymin. Clan leaders were buried in the Sonoo Flower Fields so their bodies would fertilize the flowers and provide food to the shaymin.
The winter exorcism and gathering of offerings were modified by the Japanese colonists into the modern Gracidea Festival. The festival consists of two phases. The first is an evening festival consisting of speeches from government and religious officials, plays reenacting scenes from Japanese mythology, and a nighttime procession honoring the year’s dead. The next morning a street festival is held. Brightly colored pastries are commonly eaten, gracidea crowns are worn, and people are expected to express thanks to those they are grateful for. This is both a celebration of family and of young love, as teenagers and young adults will often use the festival to express their feelings towards a current or prospective partner.
The Gracidea Festival has become popular among the Japanese diaspora, as well as in areas containing a large number of Japanese people. In these areas the religious implications and the evening portion of the ceremony are sometimes omitted in favor of a more jubilant, secular festival. This version has become popular among all ethnicities in Alola and California, although people of Japanese descent usually still observe some variation of the evening rituals.
Shaymin’s last priest along the Ultramarine Sound died in 1905. The last priest in Sonoo died in 1926. Most Hisuian priests were persecuted by the Japanese government. The priests of shaymin were mostly left alone. What threat did a priest pose when everyone could see their gods were dead and gone? The clans did not replace the final priests due to a weakening of their religious and political power and the lack of shaymin to appease.
Today
Following the collapse of formal shaymin worship in 1926 and the rise in popularity of the Gracidea Festival throughout Japan, interest in the extinct species began to increase. Over the decades there have been many reported sightings of shaymin, including at least one blurry photograph. In 1934 the military governor of Sinnoh reported seeing a group of sky shaymin in the place now known as Flower Paradise. The emperor quickly declared it a national park. The land is still protected and entry is heavily restricted. The governor would later admit they made up the shaymin sighting to convince the government to establish a park there. Cryptozoologists and botanists still make pilgrimages to Sonoo and Flower Paradise in hopes of seeing a shaymin. Even if they do not glimpse a shaymin, they will still see some of the prettiest wildflowers in the world.
Researchers have attempted to replicate shaymin’s legendary decay attacks with ghost-types. They have had some success in having ghost types attack the concept of armor rather than a physical object. This actually led to the discovery of the offensive applications of the move curse. These researchers also made the first TMs for spite and perish song, further increasing their popularity. Researchers of grass-types have yet to have the same success. Frenzy plant can collapse some structures by rapidly burrowing into them, but it cannot produce the sort of conceptual decay that shaymin could allegedly cause. Whether shaymin were actually capable of crumbling walls, rotting wood, corroding armor, and shattering bone plates with a single attack remains disputed. It is a common motif in their folklore. However, this could simply be a metaphor for their role as a psychopomp. The colonists never documented these effects, but they also almost never saw shaymin fight. They were also unable to hold a captive specimen. Pokéballs failed to capture them. This was a common problem for powerful grass-types at the time and one that would not be easily solved until the popularization of metal and plastic pokéballs. These only became common after shaymin were already extinct.
Shaymin have become a popular symbol and plants in Asia. Multiple grass gyms have one as a mascot. Garden statues of shaymin are also popular, especially around gracidea trees. Gracidea trees have also become popular decorations in graveyards and other memorials due to their lingering connection to the psychopomps of Hisui.
In 2017 researchers at Kurogane University announced that they had uncovered multiple fossilized skeletons similar to togedemaru during a dig near Sonoo. They plan to attempt revival of the species, with a target dates of 2023 for the first partial revival and 2028 for the first fully organic specimen. The project has proven controversial, both for the usual reasons fossil revivals are controversial and because some members of the public insist that shaymin are not actually extinct. If shaymin are still around introducing genes from surrogates and populations long-gone could functionally end the species as it exists today.