What do you study in the College?
Teaching is both theoretical and practical. In addition to arithmetic, commerce, law, etiquette, geography, languages, alchemy and magic, the students must master physical training and learn to fencing with a staff.
Since they are supposed to accompany trade caravans, they also receive appropriate instructions: they practice building and defending a wagon, learn how to protect people physically and magically, and they are instructed in how to act confidently in threatening situations.
After the fourth year of training, it is decided whether the student will take the path of magical advisor or bodyguard. What counts here is whether he has distinguished himself physically or mentally. Only the few who are equally good at both are allowed to make the choice for themselves.
A magical bodyguard spends much of his advanced training outdoors. He learns to recognize ambushes and to protect his master on any occasion — be it a stately reception or a thunderbolt in the rainy jungle.
The scholars of the mental branch, on the other hand, are given more theoretical instruction: their areas of expertise include recognizing and defending against mind influence and evaluating people based on body language.