The Tower of Enlightenment
The 1001 Steps of Sophocos are, according to the Ritualists, the stairway to heaven. Or at least an ambiguous and highly contested concept of what most Ritualist scholars contend to be a place of true spiritual enlightenment.
According to Ritualist tales, Sophocos, the great tower, was first climbed by a cadre of a hundred pilgrims who journeyed to the top at the beckoning of angels. At every man-height step they encountered a new trial, and walked away from each with a new understanding of how to better live their lives to achieve perfection. Whether or not this is true is yet another hotly debated topic among the Ritualist theological class, but the Tower remains an impressive sight, nonetheless.
At the base of the tower a small town has sprung up, eager to assist would be pilgrims with their assent, and even more eager to sell them tools to supposedly assist their journey. An elevator has been set up to help skip past some of the earlier steps, though there is much disagreement on whether using it counts as blasphemy or ruins any chance of enlightenment.