 Individual orders vary by region, but can be divided into two primary types—Protosarct and Neosarct. These do not appear to represent divergent beliefs so much as environmental adaptations. Practitioners of protosarcticism do not operate in the open unless a location is significantly isolated. Such sex display acute technophobia and eschewed modernity. No one to go so far as destroy or disable advanced electronics when encountered. Footnote 36. Communication devices appear to be considered especially abhorrent. Protosarct calls generally valued humility and self-sacrifice. Known orders. GOI-0246. The Solomonari. The ancestors of the Solomonari likely settled in the Carpathian Basin between 1200 and 600 BCE. Footnote 37. Also historically recorded as the Grimtees or Houlton. It is presently hypothesized that the Sarcides assimilated the local Proto-Thracian people, eventually becoming the Dacians, a people recorded by ancient Greek and Roman sources. A Sarcac stronghold, since classified as SCP ██, was discovered in the Southern Carpathians and is believed to have once been the heart of the Solomonari cult. Footnote 38. Corresponding with the given location of the legendary Skullamants, a school of black magic and Romanian folklore, it has been hypothesized that the Solomonari are related to, or one and the same as, the Dacian cult of Zalmoxis, having culturally melded with the ancient Proto-Thracian people. Documents discovered at SCP ██ and SCP-2191 suggest that the Solomonari remain highly influential, albeit secretive until the 15th century, possibly destroyed by John Hunyadi, a leading Hungarian military and political figure. Several bulliers of Wallachia and Moldavia, most notably the good-killed clan of Hungarian nobles, are now believed to have been under the control of the Solomonari, an influence that would lead to the development of Neo-Sarcacism and its Western expansion. It remains debatable whether modern practitioners should be considered true Solomonari in a event of what has been learned at SCP ██. Most are located in isolated pockets throughout the Carpathians, with little to no connection with one another. Their religion and its current state is an amalgam of local folk traditions and Solomonari blood rituals. GOI-0074 Church of the Red Harvest The Church of the Red Harvest were discovered at SCP-2133 in 1936 by Gru Division P. The Foundation became aware of the sect shortly after gaining control of SCP-2133 following the dissolution of the USSR. SCP-2133 is an unnamed village located in the northern Neural Mountains, whose denizens are the only known members of the Church of the Red Harvest. The Church practices a regeneration ritual. The recent dead harvested of newborns from the turnip field found throughout SCP-2133. Churches refer to the regenerative process as a part of an old covenant, one that cannot be broken and is to last until the return of Paradise. Additum. It is currently believed that the Church of the Red Harvest is directly controlled by a Carcist, Carcist Alka, located in a subterranean dwelling beneath the nearby mountains, connected to the village by a series of tunnels accessible via the village church. GOI-0041 The Vatala The Vatala were initially mistaken for Agori due to several superficially similar rituals. Foot-known 39, Aschetic Shiva Satus known to engage in post-mortem rituals. Known to the Foundation since 1969, a Sarka connection was only established in 2010 through extensive research. The Vatala command fear and respect among the rural poor in the Indian states of Afghanistan, Hamachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Haryana, Punjab and Gojuret. They trace their origins to Carcis Baski, whom they claim arrived from the northwest, granting them his blessing and spreading a virulent play to their enemies.