Re: More Info - Edit 2
Before modification by uglycat at 26/02/2011 01:53:00 AM
this is more a general response,
one thing that is heavily implied throughout the series is that pretty much everything the Aes Sedai do in modern times either stems directly or is a secondary effect of the breaking and then probably solidified by the trolloc wars.
from simple things like determining rank by strength in the power (when people are dying all around, there isn't time to figure out who deserves to be in charge, and women can easily tell their relative strength) to being able to call to meeting of the hall without having everyone present (jane's out on the town, we can't wait for her to get back so we can decide how to stop the evil trollocs!).
i would venture to guess that this whole 'sit down in the order we came in' thing is more of the same.
they probably did just that-- sat down however they got there with the most senior getting preference.
remember also that in the AoL, ajahs were not fixed the way they are in the third age. i would guess they never bothered differentiating back then as much as they do now.
anyway, when things calmed down and everything was relaxed, they never really bothered to change the method they chose their seats, instead changing the seats themselves.
it's a little goofy, but it fits in with a lot of the other somewhat goofy traditions in the tower.
one thing that is heavily implied throughout the series is that pretty much everything the Aes Sedai do in modern times either stems directly or is a secondary effect of the breaking and then probably solidified by the trolloc wars.
from simple things like determining rank by strength in the power (when people are dying all around, there isn't time to figure out who deserves to be in charge, and women can easily tell their relative strength) to being able to call to meeting of the hall without having everyone present (jane's out on the town, we can't wait for her to get back so we can decide how to stop the evil trollocs!).
i would venture to guess that this whole 'sit down in the order we came in' thing is more of the same.
they probably did just that-- sat down however they got there with the most senior getting preference.
remember also that in the AoL, ajahs were not fixed the way they are in the third age. i would guess they never bothered differentiating back then as much as they do now.
anyway, when things calmed down and everything was relaxed, they never really bothered to change the method they chose their seats, instead changing the seats themselves.
it's a little goofy, but it fits in with a lot of the other somewhat goofy traditions in the tower.