Know Your Lore: Uther the Lightbringer
I have never been able to get a paladin past level 50 in game.Oh, I've tried to do it. My first character was a paladin, back in the days after release: my wife had been playing since Beta and wanted me to try the game out, and I often played paladins in other games. I got him to his mid 30's or so before I realized that, unlike in other games I was used to, paladins in WoW are actually very capable healers and are often expected to heal in runs. Since at that time I had no desire to do so, I rerolled warrior and the rest is history.
But as I became somewhat of a lore nerd, there were certain characters that I found out about who inspired me to go and try new classes. I played a druid because Malfurion is pretty damn awesome. I tried a warlock because of how unrepentantly evil Teron Gorefiend is. And I keep going back to paladins, thinking this time will be the time I get to the level cap, because of one man.
Uther. The Lightbringer. The first paladin of Azeroth, who lived his whole life in the shadow of orcish armies and demonic invasions, who fought for what little peace he knew in his lifetime, who died at the hands of his own student, a man who should have been as great as he was but whose flaws drove him down a road even Uther couldn't follow to save him. He lived and he died as the Light in him demanded, a hero who would not kill the innocent, would not take the path of expediency over honor and justice, would not put down his hammer even when it was death to hold it up.
Who has frustrated me time and time again by luring me back to playing a paladin even though I'm just no good at it, now that I think about it. But that's just how cool Uther was. You watch him in the WCIII cinematics and next thing you know you've rolled a paladin. You can't stop yourself. So who was this man who has caused me to swear bloody murder at my screen and yet keep going back for more?
Few people know this about Uther, but he actually rerolled pally from priest.
Uther was a cleric of the Holy Order of Northshire as the First War started. A young man of 20, an apprentice to the Archbishop Alonsus Faol. Uther watched as his order was almost totally wiped out and was forced to retreat with the rest of the survivors of Stormwind to Lordaeron, and he came to believe that the error of the Clerics was in attempting to fight the brutality of the orc invaders with faith alone. Working with Faol, Uther helped recruit others from the old Holy Order and founded the Knights of the Silver Hand, becoming the first leader of the order. The first Paladin in Azeroth.
Uther fought throughout the Second War: It was Uther who helped bring the treachery of the Perenolde family to light and exposed the lord of Alterac as a traitor to the Alliance itself, and he was on the front lines when Gul'dan betrayed Orgrim Doomhammer and took half of the Horde's forces across the sea to the Tomb of Sargeras. While the Alliance forces weren't sure what was up, they did know opportunity when it presented itself, and soon they'd driven the orcs back to the foot of Blackrock Mountain itself. During that battle Anduin Lothar died, Orgrim Doomhammer was defeated, and Turalyon, one of Uther's fellow paladins, bestowed the name 'Lightbringer' on the first of his order. Uther even led the Alliance forces that ultimately broke the back of the Burning Blade Clan near the end of the war.
All of his heroism during and after the war caused him to be seen as not just the first, but also the best of the Knights of the Silver Hand. Still, even then he could make a mistake: it was Uther who performed the ceremony that supposedly cut off Tirion Fordring from the Light after Tirion attempted to defend the orc Eltrigg but the Light did not forsake Tirion. Either Uther wrongfully believed he could remove a paladin's connection to the Light and was thus mistaken or he went along with a judgement that could not be enforced and was thus guilty of deception. Either way, it was a small mistake that was the harbinger of mistakes to come.
As Uther's reputation spread, he became mentor, instructor and friend to Prince Arthas Menethil, heir to the throne of Lordaeron. Uther was the future king's friend and teacher, and when the spirit of the orc shaman Ner'zhul sent his minion Kel'Thuzad to spread the Plague of Undeath through the land, it was while Uther and Arthas were facing Jubei'Thos and his Blackrock Clan. Entrusting Arthas with the task of finding and defeating the Plague, Uther ended up having to reinforce the town of Heathglen when tainted grain transformed the people into mindless undead. He followed Arthas to Stratholme, and their ultimate parting of the ways, when Arthas found out that the people of the city had already eaten the grain and would therefore become undead . The future King of Lordaeron ordered his mentor and friend to kill the people of the city in order to keep the plague from spreading, but Uther refused to kill men, women and children who were not currently undead. Enraged at Uther's refusal, the prince declared the Knights of the Silver Hand disbanded (which was not in his power to do) and Uther guilty of treason. He then purged the town himself with those soliders personally loyal to him.
While Arthas was running after Mal'ganis and his own destiny in Northrend, Uther returned to speak to King Terenas, who far from supporting his son's battlefield pronouncements instead agreed with Uther that the young prince was out of control and sent an order to recall him. What happened next... Arthas' treacherous burning of the boats, the fall to darkness and rise as a death knight... Uther could know nothing of. All he knew was that he had done his duty by his king and nation, and so, when Arthas returned he may well have hoped that the young man had finally come to realize the folly of his actions.
Instead, Uther heard of the death of King Terenas as the hands of his own son as the Scourge erupted throughout Lordaeron itself. Uther, grief stricken and still attempting to do his duty to his fallen King, would stand watch over Terenas' ashes in Andorhal until, as he may well have suspected, Arthas came for them. The mentor met his student in combat and, although he fought valiantly, fell. Whether Uther secretly desired death rather than witnessing the full depths of Arthas' corruption or whether he could have defeated his fallen friend if given a chance to face him in fair combat we'll never know.
The loss of Uther, as well as other leading paladins such as Gavinrad, Turalyon (lost in the Alliance expedition to Draenor years earlier) and Tirion (exiled for his refusal to betray Eltrigg) effectively gutted the Knights of the Silver Hand and ended the existence of the force of paladins as a unified whole in service to the Alliance. While they themselves would still fight against the Scourge and the Burning Legion, it was Arthas' betrayal and the destruction of the order that would allow the existence of the Scarlet Crusade. It would have been impossible for an order of paladins devoted to vengeance to have existed while the man who swore that 'Vengeance cannot be a part of what we must do' still lived.
Uther was among the most steadfast, brave and heroic people Azeroth ever produced. He was not perfect: some still blame him for his errors in training Arthas and his decision to banish Tirion from the Order was clearly not one the Holy Light itself agreed with, but Uther strove to the utmost to defend his people and his nation. Whatever your feelings about paladins, about honor, or about the factions in Warcraft, there's no disputing that Uther the Lightbringer sought every day to earn, not merely wear, the accolades he was given, and his failures stemmed from the very source of all that was noble in him, his unwillingness to turn his back on his fellow man or assume the worst of anyone.
Yeah, I know this one hasn't really been very funny. I can't make fun of Uther, sorry. He's just too cool.
We see Uther's spririt in World of Warcraft as part of rival horde and alliance quest chains. The horde one comes from Melhar Dawnblade at the Bulwark in Tirisfal Glades, while if you're alliance you can look up Anchorite Truuen at Chillwind Camp. If you haven't done either of these quests I recommend doing it just from a lore perspective.
If this was an afterschool special I'd be telling you to read more about Uther at your local library. Since this isn't, I'll point you to some online resources instead: the always wonderful WoWWiki article on Uther, Blizzplanet's lovely transcriptions of in-game books mentions Uther here and here and also here.
Next time I'm up we'll see a bit of a change of pace.
Filed under: Paladin, Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
CK Jan 29th 2008 12:58PM
The weirdest thing i've never understood, why the hell does Uther have a big beard in WC3, then has a small - lengthed beard in WoW? He shaved his beard as a ghost?
Nathan Oct 31st 2007 8:39PM
Wow. I've only ever seen him in WC3. All this time, I thought he was a dwarf.
Cisie Oct 31st 2007 8:22PM
Uther is the reason - only reason - I leveled that fugly paladin from level 1 to 70. If not for his "awesome", and the wonderful lore that was included behind him, I would have never fought through to kill all those darn Death Knights that forsoke The Light. Made me feel really good doing it too.
Frederik Oct 31st 2007 8:12PM
Great article, Matthew! I knew most of this already (I played and loved WarCraft III), but I still can't get enough of the "Know Your Lore" articles. Keep up the good work.
FelDork Oct 31st 2007 9:47PM
Great post...definitely gave me a chuckle reading about how certain lore characters make you wanna roll certain classes in WoW, I'm the exact same way. After reading the War of the Ancients trilogy I was itching to roll a Druid, after reading Rise of the Horde I had to make a Warlock and these pallies in WC3 periodically call on me to make a pally. None except the warlock have made it past 14 though =)
Krianna Oct 31st 2007 9:50PM
*cheer*
Yeah, gotta admit it, the Uber Pali is cool.
Ian Nov 1st 2007 12:01AM
He was the Optiums Prime of the Allience. Only thing he's lacking is the ablity to come back from the dead.
This is the problem with the Alliance heros, their all dead or missing. I still kind of have a hope a Narru will zap Uther's grave and rez him in some dark hour to come.
Shawn Nov 1st 2007 2:42AM
My main is a Paladin I leveled from 1-70 as Ret and have just recently re-specced because my guild needed a tank.
I am all about Paladins, their lore, and The Lightbringer. Every single piece of armor that bears his mention, that I have found, is in my bank.
To be honest, sometimes I just go stand guard at his tomb. Sometimes I am outnumbered, but that just makes me feel like Uther must have while defending the Kings ashes. If you are a true Paladin, before every action, you ask yourself:
"What Would Uther Do?"
Tuberon Nov 1st 2007 3:54AM
My reasoning for going paladin was not purely Uther.
My vision of the paladin is a man of the Light, throwing himself into the wall of enemies, at times certain of his own death, so that those he cares about are not brought to harm, the Light guarding and protecting him, while harming those who would seek to destroy him.
Is there any question, then, why I feel most comfortable as a Protection Paladin?
Autumnbear Nov 1st 2007 6:02AM
Priest to Paladin, huh?...
I thought dual-classing wasn't allowed in Warcraft!
^_^
Bastinator Nov 1st 2007 6:55AM
Uther was the reason I rolled a Paladin as well :)
Caribbean Nov 1st 2007 7:39AM
Uther light our darkest hour! We need you buddy more than ever!
RogueJedi86 Nov 1st 2007 8:26AM
Uther is why many Paladins are Ret, and steadfastly refuse to go Holy. Uther was a Holy Warrior, a defender of the defenseless. Even Uther himself said they would be weak if they stuck only the Priest/Cleric ideals of Faith, that they needed to pick up arms to defend their allies, and defeat their foes.
Don't forget that the Alliance honor Uther during Harvest Festival.
Yeah, I really love Uther too. Some fault Uther for not killing the infected citizens of Stratholme before the Plague of Undeath could spread, but he was a great man through-and-through. A real Hero to Paladins everywhere.
Thontose Nov 1st 2007 8:33AM
OK; Ok! I will finally give in - much as I hate elves, I will roll a pally when I get home. The one class I have never gotten past level two...I suppose it's time.
KateJaneway Nov 1st 2007 9:06AM
I love my 70 Prot Pally soooo much, she was my first roll and still is my main. I was very interested in learning about Uther, especially when I dinged 50 and got to see all of what was going on in WPL.
I always felt like Pallies had an interesting past, even before I know what it was :]
Kire Nov 1st 2007 9:19AM
@12 AGREED!! "Uther is why many Paladins are Ret, and steadfastly refuse to go Holy."
Mel Nov 1st 2007 9:59AM
I only started to (role)play a Paladin after BC came out. Uther always struck me as a "holier-than-thou" goody-two shoes kind of character. Exactly the kind of character that I loathe.
So, thumbs down for Uther. Tirion Fordring at least put his brains before his faith.
cearrdorn Nov 1st 2007 11:04AM
@16 No, Uther was not holier than thou at all. He was actually simply good. He didn't attack and kill things for existing, he fought to DEFEND against Evil. Even when Arthras showed to claim his father's ashes, Uther still tried to reason with him, even after Strathholme. A Holier than thou sort would have just laied into Arthras, as soon as he presented himself.
He held him and those who followed him to a high standard. You can even see this in how Tirion remained in personal exile after Uther's proclamation, most of the other lore related characters didn't care what others told them to do. He knew he was ultimately wrong in what he chose to do even if his reasons were right. And that type of thinking came from Uther.
If Uther hadn't let himself be lost so easily to Arthras, he might have well seen the plague lands cleared, instead of the unrelenting miasma it still is today.
Sephirah Nov 1st 2007 11:15AM
Yes, Obi-One Kenobi should never had teach to Darth Vader, he could have knewn he would be corrupted by Palpatine!
Oh wait...
bhunt Nov 1st 2007 11:29AM
Uther was the best pally, he fought and died for what he believed. Can there be anything nobler they to die for a cause that only help people? In the question of whether he should have burned Strath, if he would have done it (slaughtered innocents before they became undead) would he not then been a monster and murderer?