. "Fellowship (MTAs)"@en . . . "Mages in the Dark Ages often joined a group of like-minded mages, often called a fellowship. Prominent fellowships in Europe at the time included: \n* The Ahl-i-Batin, a group of Middle-Eastern magi who exemplified subtle magic \n* The Order of Hermes, an Order made of many disparate Houses, each practising their own brand of ritual Hermetic magic \n* The Craftmasons, a splinter-group of the Order that rejects mysticism and concentrated more on sacred geometry \n* The Messianic Voices, a group who believed that they didn't so much use magic as act as channels for God's power \n* The Old Faith, a loose alliance of witches, herbalists and wise women \n* The Spirit-Talkers, a society of shamans \n* The Valdaermen, a group of Nordic rune-casters \n* The Circle of Red, a secret "@en . "Mages in the Dark Ages often joined a group of like-minded mages, often called a fellowship. Prominent fellowships in Europe at the time included: \n* The Ahl-i-Batin, a group of Middle-Eastern magi who exemplified subtle magic \n* The Order of Hermes, an Order made of many disparate Houses, each practising their own brand of ritual Hermetic magic \n* The Craftmasons, a splinter-group of the Order that rejects mysticism and concentrated more on sacred geometry \n* The Messianic Voices, a group who believed that they didn't so much use magic as act as channels for God's power \n* The Old Faith, a loose alliance of witches, herbalists and wise women \n* The Spirit-Talkers, a society of shamans \n* The Valdaermen, a group of Nordic rune-casters \n* The Circle of Red, a secret circle of demonologists and diabolists \n* The Itarajana, death-mages descended from the traditions of the Idran primary aligned with a secretive group of vampires"@en .