[RPG] In Pathfinder, can a destroyed lich be resurrected

monsterspathfinder-1espells

If the lich has been defeated and his phylactery destroyed at the same time or before his body was reconstructed (http://paizo.com/threads/rzs2l7ns&page=762?Ask-James-Jacobs-ALL-your-Questions-Here#38094) i.e the liche is truly destroyed, can it be resurrected afterwards?

Relevant SRD :

Rejuvenation (Su): When a lich is destroyed, its phylactery (which is
generally hidden by the lich in a safe place far from where it chooses
to dwell) immediately begins to rebuild the undead spellcaster's body
nearby. This process takes 1d10 days—if the body is destroyed before
that time passes, the phylactery merely starts the process anew. After
this time passes, the lich wakens fully healed (albeit without any
gear it left behind on its old body), usually with a burning need for
revenge against those who previously destroyed it.

Since the lich is an undead creature, I'm a right that they can't be ressurected?

TRUE RESURRECTION

School conjuration (healing); Level cleric 9

Casting Time: 10 minutes

Components V, S, M, DF (diamond worth 25,000 gp)

This spell functions like raise dead, except that you can resurrect a
creature that has been dead for as long as 10 years per caster level.
This spell can even bring back creatures whose bodies have been
destroyed, provided that you unambiguously identify the deceased in
some fashion (reciting the deceased's time and place of birth or death
is the most common method).

Upon completion of the spell, the creature is immediately restored to
full hit points, vigor, and health, with no negative levels (or
Constitution points) and all of the prepared spells possessed by the
creature when it died.

You can revive someone killed by a death effect or someone who has
been turned into an undead creature and then destroyed. This spell can
also resurrect elementals or outsiders, but it can't resurrect
constructs or undead creature
s.

Even true resurrection can't restore to life a creature who has died
of old age.

Best Answer

This GM has always read spells that bring back the dead as unusable for bringing destroyed undead creatures back from destruction. That is, undead creatures typically just can't be brought back from destruction as the same undead creatures they were before they were destroyed by using spells that bring back from the dead regular, everyday dead creatures. (D&D 3.5e, for example, has the spell revive undead (Spell Compendium 175–6) specifically for bringing an undead creature back from destruction as the same undead creature.)

When both the spells resurrection and true resurrection say, "You can revive… someone who has been turned into an undead creature and then destroyed," this GM has always played that the destroyed undead creature is brought back from the dead as the original and now-not-an-undead creature. (Of course, the soul may refuse to be brought back; see Special Spell Effects on Bringing Back the Dead.)

(As an aside, even other spells like raise dead and reincarnate may be able to bring back from the dead a destroyed undead creature as the original creature. For reasons I've never understood, these other spells say, "A creature who has been turned into an undead creature or killed by a death effect can’t be raised by this spell," yet they omit mention of the possibility of first destroying the undead creature. I don't know whether this is an accidental omission or intentional lessening of their power. Seriously, in this GM's opinion, typically, for every destroyed undead creature there's now a soul in the afterlife, and this is just an oversight, but ask your GM to be sure.)