Teglon

Definition

The Teglon is a named, classical tiling problem of geometric form. Its exact statement has not been provided in the available accounts, but tradition roots it in the culture of the Halls of Orithena and associates it with formal spaces such as the Decagon before the temple.

Context and Usage

  • Historical allure and hazards: Stories describe thinkers brought to grief while fixated on the Teglon. Metekoranes is said to have stood on the Decagon at Orithena contemplating it when an ash fall buried the site; Rabemekes was thinking on it when he was killed on a beach; Suur Charla of the Daughters of Hylaea believed she had the answer scratched into dust but later lost her sanity. Accounts emphasize that efforts to solve it have spun off entire sub‑disciplines and, for some, unhealthy obsession.
  • A rumored Lineage: Over centuries, fascination with the Teglon is said to pass from one generation to the next in a loosely connected “Lineage” (also called the Old Lineage). This is described as a tradition rather than a chartered Order; details remain vague and are often treated as rumor.
  • Present relevance: Estemard, a former avout linked to the Concent of Saunt Edhar, pursued elaborate tiling as an avocation—work visible in the New Laundry’s geometric tilework—and is reported to have studied very old writings on the Teglon. Companions infer that his tile practice served as cover for sustained attention to the problem.

Related Terms

  • Halls of Orithena: classical setting linked to the problem’s origin.
  • The Decagon: the named forecourt at Orithena tied to tales of Metekoranes’s contemplation of the Teglon.
  • Concent of Saunt Edhar: community where Estemard’s tilework appears; his interest in the Teglon is part of how some remember him.
  • Estemard: former avout whose reported avocation and studies focused on the Teglon.
  • Hylaea: invoked indirectly through mention of the Daughters of Hylaea in a famous (and tragic) Teglon anecdote.
  • Complex Protism: not the Teglon itself, but a metatheoretic framework discussed by the same theors who debate classical diagrams, providing context for how abstract structures are modeled and argued about.

Notes

  • Statement withheld: No authoritative statement of the Teglon’s specification has been shown; references stress its reputation and cultural footprint rather than formal details.
  • Ambiguity preserved: Reports of a clandestine “Lineage” remain unconfirmed and are recounted as rumor; the problem’s allure and risks are emphasized without claiming a resolution.
Summary:

An ancient geometric tiling problem associated with the Halls of Orithena. The Teglon is notorious for inspiring intense study and, in many accounts, unhealthy obsession; in current accounts it figures in Estemard’s avocation and rumors of a long‑standing Lineage devoted to it.

Known as:
Teglon