Saunt Rambalf

Saunt Rambalf is a venerated figure within the mathic tradition, known in current accounts through references to the math that bears his name.

First appearance and context

Rambalf is mentioned in a dictionary entry explaining the origin of the phrase to go Hundred. That entry traces the expression to notorious incidents during a Centennial Apert among the Hundreders. At Saunt Rambalf’s math, the gates opened to reveal a mass suicide that had occurred moments earlier.

Relationships and affiliations

  • Namesake of a mathic community (“Saunt Rambalf’s”), indicating long‑standing veneration within the mathic world.

Relevant events

  • The events at Saunt Rambalf’s math are cited, alongside other irregular openings at peer maths, as part of the background for the creation of the Inquisition and the empowerment of Wardens Regulant in their modern form to inspect and impose discipline across maths.

Status

No biographical details (dates, works, or teachings) are given in current sources; Rambalf is treated as an historical saunt referenced via the community named for him.

Summary:

A venerated saunt of the mathic tradition. The math bearing his name is cited in a dictionary account explaining “to go Hundred,” where its gates opened on a Centennial Apert to reveal a mass suicide—an episode later linked to the rise of the Inquisition and Wardens Regulant.

Known as:
RambalfSaunt Rambalf