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Citipati

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Revision as of 16:12, 16 January 2026 by Himeros387890 (talk | contribs)
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Citipati
Job: Black Mage/Red Mage
Family: Corses
Family 2: [[:Category:|]]
Family 3: [[:Category:|]]
Crystal: Dark
Weak against: Light Light
Resistant to:
Immune to:
Absorbs:
Notorious Monster
BCNM: [[{{{bcnm name}}}|{{{bcnm name}}}]]
ENM: [[{{{enm name}}}|{{{enm name}}}]]
KSNM: [[{{{ksnm name}}}|{{{ksnm name}}}]]
ZNM: [[{{{isnm name}}}|{{{isnm name}}}]]
HENM: [[{{{henm name}}}|{{{henm name}}}]]
Spawn Type: Lottery
Title Obtained:
EXP Party Type: Verification Needed
Zone Level Drops Steal Spawns Notes
Attohwa Chasm
From Dusk to Dawn
67 - 70 1 A, L, H, HP
??? HP
??? MP
A = Aggressive; NA = Non-Aggresive; L = Links; S = Detects by Sight; H = Detects by Sound;
HP = Detects Low HP; M = Detects Magic; Sc = Follows by Scent; T(S) = True-sight; T(H) = True-hearing
JA = Detects job abilities; WS = Detects weaponskills; Z(D) = Asleep in Daytime; Z(N) = Asleep at Nighttime; A(R) = Aggressive to Reive participants
Attohwa Chasm-NMs.png

Horizon Changes HorizonXI specific changes

none

Notes

Historical Background

In Tibetan Animist belief, Citipati are graveyard demons portrayed as dancing skeletons. Their name means "lord of the graveyard".


The Citipati are two skeletons, one of a man and the other of a woman, represented with arms and legs interlaced, dancing the Tsam dance. They are considered to be masters of the cemetery. The Citipati are one of the seventy-five forms of Mahakala and are visible reminders of the impermanence of everything worldly. Their mouths are parted in a large grin, showing all their teeth. Each wears a long scarf.


According to a Northern Buddhist legend, the Citipati were, in a former existence, two ascetics who were once lost in such deep meditation that they did not notice that a thief had cut off their heads and thrown them in the dust. Since that time they have been ferocious enemies of thieves, having vowed eternal vengeance. This legend is somewhat similar to that of Yama.


In the cemetery, the Citipati are supposed to perform a skeleton ritual dance during which they blow the Tibetan long horns. In most monasteries the dance, symbolic of the cycle of life and death, is performed in the monastery cemetery once in summer and once in winter by monks wearing masks.