Trebulance is a strange deity. A figure who exists in a cultural dichotomy: Undeniably important yet looked over. Some who have attempted studies on the vague literature written of him seem to agree that this is in part thanks to the Church of Hormus and its power of the direction of cultural thought. Others believe this is wholly an aspect of Trebulance, a piece of his essence so to speak. A god of tricks, pranks and oddities would not care to be known or visualized for such perception would diminish the power of his very domain. Still more academics argue it is simply the way of society to recognize those deities who have some direct hand in the lives of a sentient group that forms and influences culture, Lielun created the Krest and thus she is well known thanks to their people’s held importance of her nature and figure. Hormus of course requires no introduction, believed by the majority of cultures to have built the land they stand on before creating Humans and Elves. Even Yami and Hikari hold strong positions in the hearts and minds of the Drakonos. Trebulance is credited only with the creation of sapient species and therefore has no “representatives” who keep his name and image as sacred or ancestral.
Trebulance does have worshipers. He has small churches even. They are small and often intertwined with nature, recognizing that true diversity of the continent would not have occurred without the mischievous and childlike makings of the Lamderchad, or “never settled one”. These people refer to themselves as Meleyashvu and though few, they are faithful and committed. The Meleyashvu tell many stories of Trebulance’s adventures in the Attovian forests, hillocks, mountains, rivers, lakes and caves where he wondered during the Times of Terror filling the world with difference such that the homogony desired by Graskoroth and The Hebdomad would not bring his home to monotony. It was a unique way to fight against the onslaught. A way generally agreed to have been cowardly by the Church of Hormus, but the Meleyashvu and many commonfolk see beauty in the naive appearance of his actions.