how did the terms fae gaian and commoner come to be?
Good question. Throughout history, different cultures have had different names for these classes, and some of these names are still in use today. The terms "fae", "gaian", and "commoner" are just the ones that the World Athenaeum decided to use.
"Fae" was pulled from a language called Elvish, which was widely spoken among elves in the Arcadian Forest. The word meant "magical" in that language.
"Commoner" was pulled from the Blue Valley region. In the language spoken by ancient proto-Evangelites, it means "mundane"--aka: not magical.
The term "gaian" has a more in-depth history originating in the Midland Jungle, where modern-day Matuzu Capital City now lies. In olden times, there were many conflicts between the local peoples as each species grappled for supremacy in the new budding kingdom. The local fauns, centaurs, satyrs, and minotaurs formed a political/religious faction called "Guild of the Gaians". They called themselves "gaians", reasoning that their animal-like features meant that they were part beast, and beasts are inherently part of Gaia.
This guild believed that they were not created by Gaia, but were part of her all along, and that's why they were superior to other species and more deserving of special privileges. This group grew huge at one point, but eventually petered out as time passed and sensibilities changed. Once in a while you'll still get some modern-day weirdos who adopt this ancient ideology and try to revive it.
The Guild saw a resurgence after the mass exodus of gaians from Matuzu Kingdom, which led to the birth of Etios Nation. Today, the Guild only exists in small, scattered groups, the vast majority of which are in Etios Nation. This ideology isn't tolerated very well elsewhere. They're seen as prejudiced wackos in Matuzu Kingdom, for example.
Nevertheless, they did manage to spread the term "gaian" around like wildfire in their heyday and it really caught on throughout the Midlands. At some point the Athenaeum picked it up and decided to make that the term for "semi-magical peoples" in Universa, since so many cultures were already familiar with the word.
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