Rebirth
Overview
Rebirth is a capitalized period label for a turning point after which the restrictive Suvin movement ceased to dominate the maths. Sources use it as a boundary marker in histories, glossaries, and displays, signaling a shift in attitudes toward theorics, library access, and practice.
Preceding Context
References place the Rebirth after earlier Middle‑Orth trends and before the industrially oriented Praxic Age. Prior to it, a suvin labeled by later writers as “Mystagogue” discouraged open theoric work and emphasized guarded instruction.
What Happens
Accounts so far describe the Rebirth as a named shift rather than narrating a single incident. It functions as a divider in periodized Orth and institutional summaries; specific causes, dates, and scope have not been detailed in available material.
Aftermath and Consequences
- The Rebirth is followed by the Praxic Age, during which avout and Sæculars mingle more freely and theorics see wide practical use.
- Sconic thought is described as emerging roughly halfway between the Rebirth and the Terrible Events, near the height of Praxic‑Age civilization.
- Later reforms are grouped under the Reconstitution, which serves as a renewed hinge for liturgy, Discipline, and dating.
Notes and Usage
- Period labels such as Rebirth, Praxic, and Reconstitution are commonly used in The Dictionary and in public displays to anchor definitions and practices.
- The term “Mystagogue” becomes pejorative in later usage; for the factional sense, see suvin.
A named historical turning point in the mathic timeline, used as a boundary in reference works and teaching. It marks the end of a restrictive suvin movement (often associated with Mystagogues) and frames later eras discussed in current accounts.
Part 1: Provener - Chapter 5: Mystagogue
Part 6: Peregrin - Chapter 27: Bazian Orthodox
Rebirth