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The Grey Book of the Selæ is one of the few records that survived Mankind's Great Migration to Laredhidan. The Selæ were a literate people who took especial care to record their history, particularly during and shortly before the Great Migration. The original book has survived to this day, being now a personal possession of Eramgol, who has kept it in his Great Library of Saræ. So many copies of it were made that they can now be found in libraries across the known world, though the great number of copies has also introduced versions which took excessive liberties with translations, or were rewritten in order to service some aim of the copiers.
The book is so-named because of its coloration, with the leather having been taken from a great reptile. Though it is tempting to suppose that this reptile was a dragon, the Selæ had never before encountered anything like a dragon until they joined the Great Migration.
Author
It is unknown who the author of the Grey Book was. It is probable that it was written by multiple scribes as a collaborative work, or perhaps by one scribe and his many assistants. It was customary among the Selæ for important historical works to go unattributed, as their belief went that no Man could lay claim to history, and that writing down something imparted some measure of ownership of it. Selæan scribes therefore wrote all of their works under the name of 'Selæ', the reason being that it demonstrated that the Selæ people, and not individuals, had ownership of the subjects about which they wrote.
A secondary author is believed to have amended the Grey Book with additional details, gained perhaps through his own experience or through other means. This second author took no care to disguise his handwriting as that of the first, and his manner of phrasing differed from the original author. There is a possibility that the Grey Book that survived to the present is a second edition, and that the second author amended the work after the Great Migration ended. This possibility was accepted as fact by the Brotherhood of the Loremasters of Selaminæ, whose members supposed that it was posterity that provided the second author the requisite knowledge to make his additions.
Contents
The Grey Book numbers eight hundred pages covering the whole of the history of the Selæ during the Great Migration and shortly after it. The sections pertaining to their pre-Migration life is one of the few written works of the Old Homeland that survive to this day; the majority of information regarding the Selæ old territories would have been familiar to the intended audience, and future generations - for whom the book was primarily written - would have benefited most from the history of the Migration.
It was customary among the Selæ to furnish a list of names and genealogies in their histories of all those whose names and families are known. The authors took especial care in this task, providing the names and personal history of both Men and nonhumans, with there being considerable evidence for the usage of necromancy in acquiring this knowledge. Tá-nabaris