Know Your Lore: Children of the Stonemother -- The elements, part three

We've talked about the elemental spirits in general and about those of fire in more depth. This week, we take a look at Therazane the Stonemother and the elementals of earth. Unlike the more active fire elementals, the more erosive water or the quicksilver air elementals, those of earth reflect the solidity of their element. In general, the elemetals of earth tend to be slower to anger and play the middle ground for the other, more energetic elementals. It would be a mistake to assume this makes them placid or unwilling to resort to violence, however. Earth elementals were among the prized soldiers of the Old Gods during their war with the Titans, and to this day, some of their strongest still reside in Azeroth.
The earth elementals owe allegiance to Therazane (we can see her name in game on a belt dropped by Nefarian and an off-hand available through old AV purchases). Her daughter, Theradras, seduced Zaetar (the son of Cenarius) and produced the centaur races of Azeroth. She can be found in Maraudon, which is holy ground to the centaur tribes of Desolace. While Therazane is often said to be the most peaceful and loving of the elemental lords, this doesn't mean members of her elemental court don't make trouble in Azeroth from time to time.
However, given Therazane's connection to the earth, it's interesting to consider just what her role might actually be in the history of Azeroth. It's often said that Therazane feels pain when the earth and stones are disturbed and that she hates Deathwing for his destructive rampages (and, presumably, out of a rivalry with him, since he is the Titan appointed Aspect of Earth, while she is the Old God summoned Stonemother). This begs the question of Therazane's identity. Is the Stonemother the same entity the tauren refer to as the Earthmother?
It's certainly possible ... Therazane is repeatedly described as the most benevolent and loving of the four elemental lords, constantly under siege from Ragnaros' flames, Al'Akir's winds and Neptulon's waves as they seem to wear away and change her basic nature. On the other hand, as a former servant of the Old Gods, Therazane might well lack the power to be considered a true goddess as the Earthmother is seen to be by the tauren.
But the roots of the elemental lords' origins as creatures of the Old Gods and the coming of the titans give us one possible link. When the titans finally defeated the Old Gods, they found they couldn't destroy them without endangering Azeroth itself. Why this is has never been made clear, but during their recitation of Azeroth's history the Tribunal of the Ages states that it is so.
Abedneum yells: Accessing. In the early stages of its development cycle Azeroth suffered infection by parasitic, necrophotic symbiotes.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: Necro-what? Speak bloody common will ya?
Abedneum yells: Designation: Old Gods. Old Gods rendered all systems, including Earthen defenseless in order to facilitate assimilation. This matrix destabilization has been termed the Curse of Flesh. Effects of destabilization increased over time.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: Old Gods eh? So they zapped the Earthen with this Curse of Flesh. And then what?
Kaddrak yells: Accessing. Creators arrived to extirpate symbiotic infection. Assessment revealed that Old God infestation had grown malignant. Excising parasites would result in loss of host.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: If they killed the Old Gods Azeroth would have been destroyed.
Kaddrak yells: Correct. Creators neutralized parasitic threat and contained it within the host.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: Necro-what? Speak bloody common will ya?
Abedneum yells: Designation: Old Gods. Old Gods rendered all systems, including Earthen defenseless in order to facilitate assimilation. This matrix destabilization has been termed the Curse of Flesh. Effects of destabilization increased over time.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: Old Gods eh? So they zapped the Earthen with this Curse of Flesh. And then what?
Kaddrak yells: Accessing. Creators arrived to extirpate symbiotic infection. Assessment revealed that Old God infestation had grown malignant. Excising parasites would result in loss of host.
Brann Bronzebeard yells: If they killed the Old Gods Azeroth would have been destroyed.
Kaddrak yells: Correct. Creators neutralized parasitic threat and contained it within the host.
What does this mean? Well, until Caverns of Time: The Titan/Old God War is released, we may never know. But we do know that the titans arrived on Azeroth determined to shape it according to their design, and after defeating the Old Gods and binding them within the earth, they set out to do so. They created the elemental plane and imprisoned the vast majority of elementals there, save for a few so powerful they could resist and remain on Azeroth of their own will, like Rok'Alim the Pounder. The shaman quest Test of Strength makes this explicit.
During the time of the Old Gods, elementals inhabited much of this world. They worshipped the Old Gods, and the Gods, through their power, kept the elementals bound to this world. When the Old Gods were banished, the elementals faded from our world and now only return at the bidding of powerful mages.
There are exceptions though. Some elementals were powerful enough to remain here on their own. One such elemental is Rok'Alim.
There are exceptions though. Some elementals were powerful enough to remain here on their own. One such elemental is Rok'Alim.
So we've seen that Theradras, a daughter of Therazane, was able to remain on Azeroth, as was Rok'Alim, a wandering elemental spirit. Why are earth elementals so capable of defying the ban of the titans? Perhaps Therazane is the cause. Why did the titans choose to imprison the Old Gods in the earth when the Old Gods were capable of enslaving powerful elemental lords to serve as their lieutenants? Why was earth, alone of those four elementals, suitable as a prison for the Old Gods? From where comes Therazane's supposed antipathy for Deathwing and his followers?
Imagine this: At the dawn of time, one of the four elemental lords, tired of being enslaved by the Old Gods and feeling no loyalty either to them or the fire, air and water elementals that constantly seek to erode her and her children, makes a pact with the titans. Therazane and her elementals defect from the Old Gods and either stand aside or even directly help the titans to subdue the Old Gods, and in return, the earth elementals are given more freedom than the others. While Deepholme is still created for Therazane's spirit, her element (in effect her material body) is shaped by Khaz'goroth and used to imprison her former masters. Khaz'goroth grants power over the deep places of the earth (in effect, Therazane's "body") to Neltharion, who would be driven mad by the selfsame parasitic Old Gods trapped within it. Why else would Therazane be said to feel pain when the earth and soil is sundered? Ragnaros doesn't feel pain when I put out a candle, Neptulon doesn't shudder when a lake is drained or water imbibed. It makes sense if somehow Therazane has a real, tangible connection to the earth that makes up Azeroth, if it is, in effect, her.
We know that the titans also summon and control elemental beings, even using them as raw material and servants: the earthen, mecha-gnomes, titanic watchers, giants and vrykul are all created by or descended from such titan-spawned elemental beings. Khaz'goroth is often credited with having created these beings, but no one knows exactly how or from what; earth elementals seem to be a decent possibility for the starting material for these crafted servitor beings. It would also explain why the creations of the titans are susceptible to the Curse of Flesh of the Old Gods, since the Old Gods would be equally intimate with elementals (they used to be the rank and file of their army, after all) and how to manipulate them.
Whatever the truth of the Therazane-titan-Earthmother connection, it seems clear that the titans have made and are making heavy use of Therazane and her children in their "design for Azeroth," using them to imprison the Old Gods, create servitor races and so on. Alone of the elemental lords, Therazane shares her elemental with a titan-appointed Aspect, and it may be significant that Neltharion succumbed to the whispers of the Old Gods, a reflection of earth's malleable nature and susceptibility to the Old Gods. Heck, the Troggs seem to have come into existence before the Curse, at least in some versions of the history.
Therazane's daughter Theradras even went so far as to mate with a child of Cenarius (himself descended from Malorne the White Stag and Elune, the moon goddess of the night elves), but again, Theradras' offspring were born so corrupt that they immediately slew their father, prompting Theradras to gather his remains and hide them in Maraudon, for fear that Cenarius himself would strike her children down for their patricide. The corruption of Maraudon is so great that even the Twilight's Hammer noted and attempted to make use of it, implying a connection with the Old Gods. Likewise, the Twilight's Hammer is deeply involved in the attempt to return Princess Myzrael from her prison within the world in the Arathi Highlands.
Myzrael herself is deeply suggestive of the titans' role in changing the elementals of earth. Despite her claim to be a princess of the earth, she resembles titan creations as seen in Uldaman, Ulduar and even held captive in Karazhan. Myzrael is imprisoned by giants (creations of the titans) even through she herself resembles one, and she claims to be a princess of the earth much as Theradras is. Is Myzrael an earth elemental spirit forcibly changed by the titans, only to rebel against them? Is this the secret origin of all such constructs of the titans ... are they elementals placed on Khaz'goroth's forge and remade? Myzrael clearly makes use of elemental allies when she battles players to attempt to retain her freedom.
Perhaps, then, this is the secret to Therazane's antipathy towards Deathwing. Perhaps she is literally the very earth he controls as Aspect. Perhaps her body makes up Azeroth itself, shaped by Khaz'goroth and imbued by Eonar, and it is her connection to the substance of the world and the raw material of the titan's creations that allows for the Curse of Flesh. Or perhaps not: I'm sure we'll see more of Therazane's children in Cataclysm.
Next week, water.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Cataclysm






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
brian May 19th 2010 3:18PM
It's surprising (perhaps even telling?) how little we know of the Stonemother. Then again, Ragnaros has basically stolen the spotlight, with Water and Air only gaining tidbits, and only because of their interactions with Ragnaros and Fire.
I have to wonder what the Old Gods got out of dominating the Elemental Lords, though. Were they trying to get them to have their conflict and fighting escalate until it broke them free, or were they simply enjoying playing puppetmaster? Would the Old Gods even need someone to break them free (if that's even what they want)?
busuan May 19th 2010 3:25PM
"what the Old Gods got out of dominating the Elemental Lords"
Endless supply of crafting mats.
Jamie May 19th 2010 4:06PM
[2. Trade] Yogg-Saron: WTS stacks of Ancient Fire - 210g per stack (Better than AH prices)!! /w me!!!
[2. Trade] C'Thun: lawl Yogg u nab u cant sell them the player base isnt there yet
[2. Trade] Yogg-Saron: -_-...
[2. Trade] C'Thun: :)))))
Amathir May 19th 2010 6:54PM
It seems to me that the Old Gods, who value chaos and destruction above all else, would want these powerful elemental forces to do just that: destroy and cause chaos. I believe it was in a previous KYL that the Old Gods had the elementals at war with each other for their pleasure. Even imprisoned in the earth, they continue to sew as much chaos and destruction as possible.
As for whether they want to be freed or not, we may never know. It does seem to me though, that they might be perfectly happy staying "imprisoned" while still having a significant effect on the inhabitants of Azeroth. Yogg's influence over the titans left in Ulduar, for example. He had all of them under his control, yet he did not leave his "prison." Maybe a more indirect influence and cause of destruction is preferred.
Think of it this way: You want to cause chaos and destruction for fun. The titans come along and stop you from doing so, as they value order above all else. You convince them that destroying you would also destroy the world they're trying to save, so they merely imprison you. "Please, don't throw me in the briar patch!"
Now you're sitting snug beneath the earth able to cause chaos and turmoil without getting too much notice. After all, if something were to happen to show that Azeroth was "beyond saving," then the titans might just send Algalon to reorder everything... such as killing Lokan, the prime designate.
Ok, so you can't kill your titan jailors, but you can corrupt and influence them. now they carry out your will and are under the impression is their own bidding. Do you really want to be let loose on the face of Azeroth? Probably not if it gets the titan's attention... or gets it too soon.
Lets say that you're waiting until you've got enough corruptive influence to build a new army out of the titans own creations. Myzrael was pretty upset that you had summoned her forth too early, even though you'd already freed her. Why not just pop out of the ground and start causing havoc? Because you need to wait until you and your armies are strong enough to take on the titans.
Earthen, vykrul, and their descendants are susceptible to the whisperings of the Old Gods. This includes dwarves, gnomes, troggs, and humans to name a few. Perhaps we're the source of the Old God's planned armies without even knowing it. Maybe they're just waiting for one or two really powerful mortals that they can shape and mold into agents of the titan's destruction... like Med'an? He's already heard the whispers of C'thun time and again. Just like Hodir, Lokan, Freya, and Cho'gall the Old Gods are collecting power beings to serve them and carry out their will without having to leave their "prisons." It's a matter of time before Med'an is going to have to deal with C'thun and his corrupting influence, or fall prey to it.
Lastly, we've not seen much of the Air, Water, and Earthen courts yet, but there was not a big reason for them to make themselves known. Ragnaros got lucky enough to be summoned by Thaurissan, or we'd probably not have heard much about him either. In the coming expansion, we've got Vashj'ir, Skywall, and Deephome on the zone lists. After the Aspect of Earth breaks free from the elemental plane, we'll see a much bigger elemental influence on Azeroth.
My prediction: The Cataclysm is going to sew enough chaos and destruction that the Old Gods can finally make their move. The old elemental powers are now freed upon Azeroth and they've collected a large number of followers in the Twilight Hammer sects. They'll try and gather enough of an army to claim Azeroth for their own once and for all. Now that mortals have found and learned the "all clear" code from Algalon, what's to stop the Old Gods from using it to keep the titans out of their affairs?
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Cure4Living May 20th 2010 2:16AM
"I have to wonder what the Old Gods got out of dominating the Elemental Lords, though"
Well I always presumed that since the old gods lived to so long ago, on a primordial azeroth, that there wasn't much else to dominate and control. This is before (or after, lore kinda gets fuzzy) the Titans came and created the earthen, giants, robo-gnomes, vrykul etc and before they created the well of eternity (so no elves yet either), so the old gods didn't have much to work with, it was either dominate the Elemental Lords or don't dominate at all. Remember that when the Silithus appeared C'tun was quick to enslave/manipulate them, so I imagine its more a issue of availability (since evil=domination they had to dominate something/one).
"Would the Old Gods even need someone to break them free "
Always wondered about that one myself, aren't the old gods technically immobile, you know got no legs and are literally rooted into the earth. Even if they did break out, its not like they can go anywhere.
So its probably a figurative 'free' as in 'allow my evil and influence to wash over the world unhindered'-type thing.
Brakkas May 19th 2010 3:20PM
It always makes me sad that there's so much doubt about the Earthmother not being who the tauren say she is. We already know that Elune is an actual goddess and excatly who the night elves say she is, why can't the Earthmother be treated the same way?
Umbra May 19th 2010 3:40PM
Because 'don't stand in the puddle' wouldn't have sounded so iconic :-)
Matthew Rossi May 19th 2010 5:05PM
"We already know that Elune is an actual goddess and excatly who the night elves say she is"
We do?
Elmouth May 20th 2010 12:21AM
Elune isn't a "goddes" she's a naru.
Cure4Living May 20th 2010 2:40AM
Agree with ,Matthew Rossi, we have no conclusive proof. All we have is some odd occurrence, what the Night Elves say and a dead Cenarius. The only reason we know she exists is because the WoW official website says so under the lore section.
Syme May 20th 2010 11:10AM
The most likely candidate for the Earthmother is the titan Eonar. Much of the Tauren creation myths fit well with her.
http://greyshades.wordpress.com/2009/11/09/tauren-history-part-one-why-do-cows-suddenly-appear-every-time-you-are-near/
Wulfkin May 21st 2010 3:55AM
To be fair, none of the Warcraft gods are really *GODS* in the sense that most of us here on Earth would mean. The Old Gods are necrophotic life-forms, the Titans are just big powerful aliens (nods at Arthur C Clarke), the Elemental Avatars are just really big elementals and things like Hakkar are just very powerful entities.
So its unlikely that Elune is a true goddess in that sense, but it is strongly hinted at that she is a) real, and b) very powerful, probably something akin to Hakkar but even more powerful.
Given that's the case, I agree it seems rather mean to the old Tauren (or indeed, the Wildhammer Dwarves) to say that the Earthmother isn't real, or that she's just a big earth elemental. The Earthmother seems to mean more than that, connected to all life on Azeroth. In Tauren religion at least, the Earthmother would be *more* powerful than (reasonably supported) Goddess Elune, as the moon is said to be just one part of the Earthmother.
Personally I think the Earthmother is perhaps something beyond being a simple Goddess. A Goddess has an identity, a realm and specific abilities. And in Warcraft, Gods are actual beings who can be killed, or at least fought. The Earthmother as described by the Tauren seems to transcend this. She is in all things, the essence of life itself. In this sense she is perhaps more akin to the Shamanistic spirit of the Wilds (as in the actual Shamanistic spirits, note NOT the elemental lords, who as stated are effectively just very powerful elementals). Like the Wilds, the Earthmother appears to be life-force itself, she can be found in everything, in the curious symbioses and seeming design that can be found throughout nature.
Anyway, to wrap up some rambling, I agree that it seems cheap to say Therazane=Earthmother. One is a powerful earth being, and one is the essence life itself. Perhaps the Earthmother is simply a philosophy, maybe she's a goddess, maybe she's more of a natural force, but I just don't think she's a giant rock creature.
Ilmyrn May 19th 2010 3:22PM
A very interesting article. I like your idea for Therazane's possible role in the Titan/Old God war, but I'm not sure I agree with it.
There's no real evidence that earth elementals are more able to manifest on Azeroth than other types. It seems to me that elementals just tend to manifest wherever their element is in abundance, and earth is pretty much everywhere. There's certainly no shortage of water elementals in every lake, stream, pond, and puddle, and you can't throw a rock at a volcano without hitting a fire elemental. No doubt when Azeroth develops an airliner industry, they'll have to worry about sucking air elementals into the jet engines. That's got to be worse than a Canada Goose.
Too, I'd be cautious about leaning too heavily on (story-wise) legendary sources like Therazane's 'pain' when the earth is dug up. Even in-game that's a legend, with who knows how much or little grounding in 'real' truth.
Anyway, I'm really enjoying this KYL series, and it's getting me pumped to roll a dwarf shaman come Cataclysm.
Adegan May 19th 2010 3:49PM
Wow.com's interpretation of the Warcraft lore is much more interesting and coherent than Blizzard's.
Blayze May 19th 2010 6:30PM
Know Your Lore for Supreme High Overfiend of Blizzard '10.
thegatherer May 19th 2010 7:43PM
I would actually say there will be a serious contender in KYL verses Abasik Kampfyre for War Chief.
Chief Bloodhoof May 20th 2010 7:59PM
"I would actually say there will be a serious contender in KYL verses Abasik Kampfyre for War Chief."
No contest, Abesik Kampfyre is still better.
Here's a few Abesik Kampfyre facts:
Abesik got the "Friend or Fowl" achievement without even moving.
Abesik has gotten the Outland and Northrend Gourmet achievements over 100,000 times.
Each.
Abesik knows what's for dinner.
Abesik is so powerful, he completely destroyed flint and tinder.
Abesik has spirit.
Abesik is so tough that things which kill toasty fires can't hurt him. Why this matters, I don't exactly know...
Grakaron May 19th 2010 3:55PM
Thats cause Blizzard's lore has kind of gone alittle south, mainly it now consists of "How do we make a lore reason for people to be able to go kill this character" usually followed up by "How do we allow them to kill this lore character, but at the same time give us the ability to bring him back and make their kill pointless" ala Lich King.
Deathknighty May 19th 2010 4:16PM
You forgot Knaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaak.
Aldarion May 19th 2010 9:10PM
No words shall be wasted for Knaak. They are much more precious than that.