whenceafter

Adverb

 * 1)  After which;.
 * 2) * 1918–1925, Booth Tarkington [aut.] and Alan Seymour Downer [ed.], On Plays, Playwrights, and Playgoers (1959), page 16
 * Its light came from thirty feet to the left of it, and the moon itself rose audibly until a stagehand juggled it, whenceafter it ceased to rise.
 * 1) * 1919, Holden Edward Sampson, Theou Sophia II: “Re-Generation” (2003 reprint), page 16
 * In the case of each [Master] his Mission was revealed to him at a certain period of his life-career, whenceafter he set himself apart from the world…in order to fulfil his Mission, free from worldly ties and entanglements.