The only other time I've seen the word Orichalc used is when referring to the Yokudan god Diagna, the "Orichalc God of the Sideways Blade".
"Hoary thuggish cult of the Redguards who originated in Yokuda during the Twenty Seven Snake Folk Slaughter. Diagna was an avatar of the HoonDing (the Yokudan God of Make Way) that achieved permanence. He was instrumental to the defeat of the Lefthanded Elves, as he brought orichalc weapons to the Yokudan people to win the fight. In Tamriel, he led a very tight knit group of followers against the Orcs of Orsinium during the height of their ancient power, but then faded into obscurity. He is now little more than a local power spirit of the Dragontail Mountains."
Orichalc Tower does interest me though. Part of me wonders if the Yokudans themselves built it, since their views of Mundus are more in line with Mer. Though then that begs the question why they went and blew it up. Who knows, maybe the Lefthanded Elves saw Mundus as good and Lorkhan their buddy?
Since we know little to nothing on it, I'll just go ahead and guess that the purpose of Orichalc Tower had something to do the Walkabout.
Tall Papa figured out how to escape the Hunger of Satakal and survive into the next kalpa. He taught the others gods this "Walkabout" and then set the stars in the sky to show others spirits how to do it too. When there were too many spirits to keep track of, Tall Papa created Sep out of the dead skin of past worlds/kalpas, so he could help out.
Then Satakal's hunger made Sep go bat[censored] and he tricked the gods into creating the Mundus, saying it would make the Walkabout easier. Instead it just trapped/bound the gods to the mortal plane, making it harder to survive Satakal. They got peeved and ripped his heart out. Or so I assume. Does Yokudan mythology have the heart removal bit? I'm not sure.
A few questions for you:
1. Given the seemingly primitive and simple names of the Yokudan pantheon, what are the Cyrodiilic or Aldmeri equivalents of said gods?
-Ruptga would be Akatosh? Or would he be Lorkhan, who designed Nirn and allowed for stability?
-What does the Walkabout correspond to in Cyrodiilic and Aldmeri myth?
-Kalpas: I think Yokudan myth is the only cycle that actually mentions them. The only other thing I can think of is the constant warfare between the Nords and Al(t?(d?)mer (or Falmer?) as seen in
Shor Son of Shor did that Ragnarok-like warfare happen in previous kalpas?
-Sep: Listed in
Varieties of Faith in the Empire as the Yokudan Lorkhan, but where does that leave Satakal? Again,
Varieties of Faith in the Empire lists his Western equivalent as Anu/Padomay, but it seems odd for the Yokudans to codify Anu/Padomay as a single entity when seemingly every other myth cycle starts the Universe off with that first ego split, thus creating two Forces instead of a single one. Going off of that, do the Yokudans actually have names for Anu/Padomay or do they just consider that duality as a single Force?
-Self-Eating Universe: Is this unique to Yokudan myth? In the only other case of kalpas being mentioned in racial myth, it's not the universe that destroys itself but a 3'rd party e.g. Alduin that does the deed. The Yokudans would say that Satakal has eaten himself innumerable times, and the cycle still continues. What are the other races thoughts on how many kalpas had existed before the current kalpa?
2. Your comment that the Redguard mythology is more in line with Mer than Men got me thinking.
-Suppose the Redguard built Orichalc Tower. If we assume that the Redguard share a Merish belief system, can we suppose the Lefthanded Elves shared a more Cyro-Nordic belief?
maybe the Lefthanded Elves saw Mundus as good and Lorkhan their buddy?
I like this idea, and I have a hypothesis: Is the term 'Lefthanded' literal or figurative? Could 'Lefthanded' refer not to hand orientation but instead
belief orientation?
-Given that a lot of Yokudan terminology is very to-the-point, and they have a strong martial mindset, a person who is different or acts in an opposing manner to the norm could be referred to as Lefthanded; i.e. a swordsman who uses his left hand could be seen as an incredibly odd person in a culture where swordsmanship is a cultural imperative. Therefor any thought or belief that seems backwards could be labeled as 'Lefthanded'.
-Keeping with that theory that Yokudan terminology is straightforward but could still hide a few tricky metaphors especially concerning important cultural icons, could the term 'Sword-Singer' be a metaphor for a spell caster?
-This is based on the tendency for other culture to do the aforementioned term plug-ins. E.g. in Khajiiti culture, most of the deities are different kinds of cats (Alkosh-First Cat, Magrus-Cat's Eye, Mara-Mother Cat etc.). Could Yokudans do the same thing with the Swords?
Does Yokudan mythology have the heart removal bit? I'm not sure.
This question is why I have reason to doubt that all the Yokudan gods neatly line up to Aldmeri and Cyro-Nordic gods. I can't remember the book (I read it ingame recently), but it states that Tall Papa tricked Satakal into biting his own heart and ending the eating, but Sep, the Hunger still remained even with Satakal dead. That book was confusing though, and I think I remember another bit later on saying that Satakal had bit his heart but was still alive too? That part doesn't make sense to me. Also if it hadn't mentioned the bit about Satakal eating his heart, I'd just explain it as a Sithis kind of thing, and the Yokudans interpreting Chaos as a never-ending hunger (makes sense in a way sans the heart bit).
Yokudan myth is intensely interesting but equally frustrating in my opinion. I once shot MK a similar list of questions about Yokudan myth, but never got a reply. He probably deleted it without looking at it while cleaning out his daily inbox of 99+ messages asking what CHIM is.