Lior

Lior, one of the first places visited by the Elric brothers in their quest for the Philosopher's Stone. Lior is located in the middle of a desert, making it only of moderate importance and minor economic strength. The State Military's lack of oversight in Lior, combined with the strong religious sense of the citizens (in this sense Lior is similar to Ishbal), made it possible for an ambitious man named Father Cornello to institute a sort of theocratic government with himself as the unquestioned ruler. Fashioning himself as a prophet of Leto, the solar god of Lior, and as a miracle worker, Cornello promised riches and everlasting life, even resurrection of dead loved ones, for those who followed him. Though the people of Lior believed he could truly perform miracles, Cornello was merely performing alchemy, using a small Philosopher's Stone, mounted on a ring he wore, to violate the Law of Equivalent Exchange. This attracted the attention of the Elric brothers when they visited Lior, as they initially thought what he had on his ring was what they were looking for.

Another notable inhabitant of Lior is Rosé Thomas, a follower of Cornello until Edward showed her the truth and deposed Cornello from his seat of power. Rosé went on to assume a more active role in the small Lior society, leading the people after Cornello's fall from grace and through the civil conflict that consumed the city in its wake.

Though Alphonse and Ed believed they had managed to overthrow Cornello's theocratic regime and free the city, the two brothers had no idea until much later that in many ways they only made things worse. When Lust, the Homunculus who had originally given Cornello the incomplete Philosopher's Stone he wielded, learned of Cornello's failure, she refused to equip him again with a Stone and allowed Gluttony to eat him. Envy, a shapeshifting Homunculus, impersonated Cornello and took his place, claiming that the Cornello that had just been deposed was an impostor and that he was the true prophet. Cornello's followers were now divided. Some, like Rosé, refused to believe that God's purpose for humans was to turn them into an army of fanatics. Others believed in the false Cornello, remaining loyal to him. Civil war engulfed the city.

The State Military was dispatched to Lior to stop the fight. The two factions briefly re-united in the face of a common enemy, only to suffer major devastation and suffering at the hands of the Amestris military. The military captured as the supposed ringleader of the rebellion, Rosé, imprisoning and raping her for almost a year. When they released her, not only she gave born a child (presumably of the rape), but the atrocities had rendered her only a mute shell of the woman who she was before.

Then Lior was noticed by Dante, who wanted to use the conflict in Lior to create the Philosopher's Stone, much as Ishbal was used to try to create a Stone. Now in the body of a young alchemist named Lyra, Dante befriended and to some extent protected Rosé and her child. She then used Scar to win the citizens to himself, using the alchemical powers of his right arm to perform "miracles" in the public plaza, just as Cornello had done before. He managed to convince people that he derived his power from Rosé, now called the Holy Mother, herself. Having gained the trust of Lior's citizens, Scar dug a massive transmutation circle through the whole city - a special array from the Grand Arcanum, an ancient form of alchemy secretly passed down among the Ishbalians for generations. The array used in Lior to transmute a true Philosopher's Stone once again gained the attention of the military, and this time, Ed was sent in to the city to investigate, based on reports that Scar was in the city. Photos taken from the military's new hot-air surveillance balloon showed Scar's massive transmutation circle, which Ed recognized immediately as an array used to create the Philosopher's Stone. When Ed arrived, he confronted Scar and demanded he destroy the array, expecting that Scar planned to use Lior's inhabitants as components for the Stone. Scar revealed that his plans did not involve using the citizens as components, but rather the soldiers currently surrounding the city. He gave the people strict instructions to not retaliate to anything the military did, thus forcing the military to come in of their own accord, so that the military would not be able to blame the Liorites for starting the conflict. Then, once the military was inside the city, the citizens were to evacuate the city via a secret escape tunnel. The military, led by Colonel Frank Archer, marched right into Scar's trap, intending to capture Scar, annihilate the population, and bring the city to the ground.

When the military arrived, Scar activated the Grand Arcanum circle, wiping out almost the entire military contingent. The deaths, along with the numerous souls already trapped in Scar's right arm, were enough to complete the creation of the Philosopher's Stone, though it was not quite how Scar envisioned it. He had sacrificed his Right Arm of Destruction to stabilize Al's metal body, which the Crimson Alchemist had turned into a bomb. Al's body, therefore, became the focus for the souls engulfed by Scar's transmutation, and the Philosopher's Stone was created inside Al's body. Lior was all but wiped from existence in the process of creating the Stone.

After the death of Führer King Bradley and the restoration of democracy, the refugees from Lior are able to safely return to rebuild their city. With Cornello long gone and Rosé living as a normal and happy woman at Winry's home in Risembool, Lior is on the road to restoration, with help from Major Armstrong.

Lior was also part of Conqueror of Shamballa. There, a gate was opened and suits of armor came out of the circle. However, Alphonse Elric used tornadoes to sweep up the suits of armor. On the other side of the gate (where Edward was) Ed accidentally opened up the gate from his side, and thus, the armor went right back to where they had come.

Lior has little importance in the manga, and has not been mentioned very much after the very first story arc, which dealt with the downfall of Cornello. The only other time it has been mentioned is a short reference by Ed and the Briggs officers in chapter 67 to the wars in Amestris, and how the central army came in and made the whole situation, which seems to still be going on at the time, much worse.