Know Your Lore: Current Alliance politics -- the humans, part 2, page 2

King Varian was pretty much shoved into the middle of all of this and tried to negotiate some sort of agreement between the House of Nobles and the Stonemasons, but the nobility held too much political power and outmaneuvered him at every turn. Varian finally managed to negotiate payment for their work -- but it was far, far less that what they had earned. Furious, Edwin VanCleef spurred the Stonemasons into rioting among the streets of Stormwind, demanding just compensation. It was in the midst of these riots that tragedy struck -- an errant rock from a rioter struck Varian's wife Tiffin, killing her instantly. Varian, in utter shock as the idyllic world he'd worked so hard to rebuild came crashing down around his ears, could do nothing. He fell into a deep depression for years.

And all the while, Katrana watched and waited, smiling behind closed doors. For Katrana wasn't a noble -- she was Onyxia, daughter of Deathwing. She'd been sent to manipulate the humans while her brother Nefarian worked to cultivate a new brood of dragonkin and take over Blackrock Spire at the behest of their father. What better way to insure little to no opposition than to keep the humans tied up with political nonsense? And so she manipulated the House of Nobles like so many puppets, pulling the strings here and there and creating the riots that killed Varian's wife. And as Varian sank further and further into depression, she cultivated it, meanwhile continuing to manipulate Stormwind as she saw fit.
Requests for help from outlying cities such as Redridge and Darkshire were blatantly refused. Reports of black dragon activity in the area were glossed over, and as for the Stonemasons ... they were exiled from the city. Shocked and disappointed, the homeless workers were once more rallied together by Edwin VanCleef. It was the fault of nobility that they suffered, Edwin reasoned, and thus it was only fair that the Stonemasons take the payment that they were rightfully owed -- one robbery at a time. Edwin -- who coincidentally was also a former master assassin -- brought the Stonemasons together along with other thieves, assassins and pirates, forming the Defias Brotherhood and ravaging the nearby countryside of Elwynn and Westfall.
Westfall's frantic pleas for help were also ignored. The farmers and villagers decided to take matters into their own hands and formed the People's Militia to beat back the Defias and keep Westfall safe. The Defias, however, were far cleverer than any had given them credit for -- they even managed to secure a contact within the House of Nobles itself, and continued their silent takeover.

This is the key in understanding Varian Wrynn, something that most people tend to overlook -- at his heart, what he wants, what he years for is that idyllic time when his father was loved, his father's kingdom prospered, and he had no worries in the world -- a place where little boys could properly grow up to be men, or kings. Anduin's presence reminded him that there was more to life than simply mourning, that he had someone who was looking up to him just as much as he'd looked up to his father, and Varian began to take more and more note of the goings-on of his kingdom.
This was not something that Katrana Prestor was particularly happy about.

It was a series of incidents surrounding the resurgence of an organization of cultists called the Burning Blade that fueled the fires of hatred between Theramore and Orgrimmar. Thrall and Jaina managed to uncover the plot and put an end to it, but the tensions still remained. The interesting side effect of this mission was Jaina's discovery of Aegwynn, still whiling away the days in a remote location that her son, Medivh, had banished her to. Jaina managed to convince Aegwynn to return to Theramore with her, although the former Guardian was still bitter and angry over the foolishness and arrogance she had displayed in dealing with the Council, and with her son Medivh's birth and subsequent consequences that the world had to pay as a direct result of her actions.
This all happened just before the launch of World of Warcraft. Somewhere after the Third War, perhaps spurred by the actions of the Burning Blade and further Horde activity in the Eastern Kingdoms, the tentative alliance formed between the night elves, the humans and the orcs had all but evaporated. The orcs continued to encroach upon night elf forests, leaving the night elf leaders with little recourse but to sever all diplomatic ties with the orcs and focus solely on the humans for aid.

As far as power goes, the new Alliance didn't really have a defining reason for coming into existence like the Alliance of Lordaeron. There was no major war that served as the catalyst for the new Alliance's formation; it was simply born out of the old. The main source of the Alliance's careful watch however was, as always, the Horde. The continual encroachment of the orcs upon night elf forests led to the night elves' decision to join, and the dwarves and gnomes stayed allies as they had since the original Alliance.

As for King Varian, he watched his son grow and thrive into an incredibly intuitive and intelligent boy when yet more events occurred that would continue to shape Varian's view of the world. It was some time between the events with the Horde and the Burning Blade, and the launch of World of Warcraft that Jaina decided to arrange for a formal peace treaty between Warchief Thrall, and the last surviving leader of the former Alliance of Lordaeron, Varian Wrynn. King Varian was at first completely against the very idea of peace talks, but his change of heart came from an unlikely source -- his 10-year-old son, Anduin.
Anduin, being a sharp child, had read and heard much of the orcs' leader and told his father to at least give the peace summit a try. At 10 years old, Anduin was already displaying some of the same traits as Varian's father, King Llane -- a capacity for compassion, the wish for peace and the wisdom and understanding that comes with the realization that fighting may not always be the best answer. This was just what Varian needed, and while it's odd to think of it this way, in a way Anduin almost became something very much like the voice of King Llane. A voice of reason that Varian sorely needed after years of depression and a failing kingdom. At Anduin's insistence, Varian also left Katrana Prestor behind, and agreed to travel to Theramore and hear Thrall out -- after all, what was the worst that could happen?
Anduin was crowned king of Stormwind at Katrana's behest, in order to maintain the façade that all was well, despite the King's sudden absence. It was Bolvar who held the real power behind the throne however, and as regent of Stormwind he did his best to deal with incoming situations and to be a father figure to young Anduin, who was suddenly without mother or father. Various investigations were made and the closest anyone could come to any kind of conclusion was that Varian had somehow ended up on Alcaz Island near Theramore, but the King simply wasn't there.

It would have been a perfect plan had they not been discovered by a fleet of naga that lived on the island. In the ensuing fray both Varians were lost -- the tactician leapt off a cliff into rocky waters and was presumed dead, the pliable one was captured by the naga and promptly imprisoned on the island. One year later, he was ransomed back to Stormwind, though the "official" story to the public was that the Defias had held him all this time. His return was triumphant, though there were mutterings among his people -- in order to pay the ransom, a heavy tax had been imposed upon the people of Stormwind, likely put into action by Katrana.
The other Varian, the tactician, had indeed hit a rock during his leap off the cliffs, and washed up on the shores of Durotar. Upon awakening, he was set upon by a crocolisk, and while fighting the thing off, an orc caravan happened by. After observing the man's fighting prowess, he was captured by the caravan -- led by an orc shaman named Rehgar Earthfury -- and taken in to serve on Rehgar's gladiatorial team of pit fighters. Also on Rehgar's team were a night elf druid named Broll Bearmantle, and a blood elf named Valeera Sanguinar. The team didn't quite get along at first, but the man -- now dubbed "Croc-bait" by his captors -- slowly began to regain his memory.

Lo'gosh struggled to remember more, and with the help of Jaina Proudmoore finally realized he was Varian Wrynn, king of Stormwind. His travels took him closer and closer to home -- where Anduin was beginning to realize that the docile Varian Wrynn that had been returned was not the father he'd remembered. Anduin's suspicions raised the suspicions of Bolvar, and between Bolvar, Marshal Windsor, and Anduin the truth was finally uncovered: Lady Katrana wasn't a lady at all, but the black dragon Onyxia.

Next time we'll be addressing Varian's reputation, sitting in on Thrall and Varian's tea party (complete with surprise guest Garona), discussing Garrosh's uncanny knack for making inappropriate statements at the worst possible moments, tackling the tangled web of Jaina, Arthas, Varian and Icecrown Citadel and attempting to remove the brick wall surrounding King Varian Wrynn. Stay tuned!
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 4)
Boobah Jun 20th 2010 1:03AM
A hundred years? Not really a problem. Heck, Shakespeare is four hundred years past and he's understandable, especially if you don't bother figuring it out word-by-word. No, you're not going to pass as a native, but you're certainly understandable.
As for the War of the Ancients... Darnassian and Thallassian are very similar languages (to the point where I suspect they're mutually intelligible aside from game mechanics), and those past Night Elves are the same Night Elves in modern days. Heck, it's been less than five generations of High Elves since their exile, as I recall. Not a lot of time for linguistic drift, and Rhonin has some very good motivation (his wife) for learning Thallassian.
Korialstrasz is a freakin' dragon who's been alive since before the war. Brox presumably learned Thallassian; lord knows nobody has any trouble being understood in the RTS games.
Suntamer Jun 20th 2010 1:04AM
The comic wasn't that bad.. It was a decent read.. gave me some insight in to the characters and added some color to the lore. The art was okay and heck i enjoy all the characters.
gustav Jun 20th 2010 1:20AM
wooow i need to read some more of wow lore its pretty cool and garosh is a hater XD
my wow blog:http://wowgalarn.blogspot.com/
vinniedcleaner Jun 20th 2010 2:24AM
Varian needs to build a bridge and get over his emo self.
Sure Garona killed his father and it was traumatic, but he's not the only one who's suffered, yet he's the only one who can't put it in the past for the greater good.
Jaina was an accomplice in her own father's death.
Thrall had the one of the only people who showed him any compassion beheaded. Sylvannas had one sister go MIA and the other {shudder} marry some red-headed magician or something like that....
Garona was under a demonic influence when she killed his father, but that doesn't matter.
Medivh was under a demonic influence when he let the orcs in originally, but that can all be swept under a rug and forgotten.
The fact that he has such a vendetta against the orcs proves he is not fit to rule. If it were me, I'd be hunting down the people that killed my hot wife.
IvanZephyr Jun 20th 2010 2:45AM
Your comments make no sense here:
Varian you know...he has...at least twice.
First time Garona shows up and Garrosh taunts him afterwards.
And the second time, while not a meeting for peace between Horde and Alliance per se, Garrosh is the one who causes the fight in the Violet Citadel.
Thirdly, Varian has no idea that Garona was under a demonic influence. After she's kidnapped, Varian rushes off to prepare for Northrend while Jaina keeps her prisoner, refusing to let Varian slaughter her out-right (Which he has all rights to do but respects Jaina's opinion MANY times to the point where he lets her do almost whatever she wants).
And what are you talking about regarding Medivh and the demonic influence? No one's forgotten that, and it's really not connected to the Orcs themselves coming to Azeroth in respects to Varian's opinion of them. And you seem to have forgotten that Medivh is DEAD.
Jaina via her father: Shows saddness afterwards. However it's a one-time only thing.
Thrall still mourns Taretha, to the point where he had an Orcish song written about her, the only human in Orc history. As well as sending players to recover an artifact of hers. Again, however, this happens once. And is pretty much the opposite of Varian's experiences. Thrall met a Human who was compassionate towards him. All the Orcs young Varian met have either killed someone close to him or completely destroyed his homeland.
Sylvanas mourns her people and sisters as shown by the quest chain where you return her necklace. Again, a one time event.
Varian, on the other hand:
1.) Garona (Orc -- corruption or no doesn't matter) kills his father
2.) Stormwind is completely destroyed by Orcs
3.) Lothar killed by Orc leader.
Three extremely generalized examples in a large pot to pull them from.
I get really annoyed when people are like "lolololol---emo Varian get over it."
For Christ sake, would you try and be friends with someone whose people killed your actual father, your father-figure replacement, and completely destroyed your homeland?
I'd wager a guess of: Hell no.
The fact that Varian even agreed to try to meet for peace the first time shows he's a capable leader. The fact that has Jaina as someone to council him when he could go: "I'm King and I do whatever I want, don't like it? gtfo" shows that he has a level-head in regards to decisions.
You blaming Varian for getting mad at Garrosh and attacking him is like getting mad at somebody for punching another person who had just spit in their face.
Zanathos Jun 20th 2010 3:51AM
The people who killed his hot wife became the Defias (and onxyia was indirectly responsible), so I think they've largely been taken care of.
How is ignoring his personal experiences with the Horde and being buddy buddy with them serving the greater good? Greater good for the horde perhaps. This isn't a case of the horde want to be BFFs and Varian's stopping them. There's one pro-peace orc, and while he does happen to be the warchief, he's proven to be poor at keeping his dogs on their leashes. There's a few other orcs you meet here and there who follow Thrall's philosophy, but they're not represented as even a sizable part of the horde. Then you have things like Icecrown. The start of hostilities there was the horde interupting an Alliance/Scourge battle by surprise attacking the Alliance. The scourge retained their hold on that field, oddly. Good strategy, orcs.
So Varian's met with Thrall a couple of times. Each time, Thrall's second is running his mouth about something. Now, if Thrall can't keep his subordinate in line for a diplomatic meeting, no one is going to be impressed with his leadership.
Varian can really only conclude one of two things about Thrall and his horde. Either Thrall sincerely wants peace but is unable to control his bloodthirsty rabble. Or Thrall doesn't give a fig about peace and lets his Horde do whatever, while Thrall gives lip service to co-habitation. In either case, Varian should be wary and ready to strike.
Stirb Jun 20th 2010 2:55AM
Every time a picture from the comics is posted, it makes me not want to read them a little more.
Does every other word really need to be bolded, and do all the men need skin-tight shirts to show off their muscles that don't even exist on typical human anatomy?
Killik Jun 20th 2010 8:39AM
The comics do look awful. Although you could argue they at least share an aesthetic with the game's cartoony visual style.
Murdertime Jun 20th 2010 12:21PM
Oh, there's so much worse artwise.
At one point there's a close up of Thrall's face and his tiny, tiny eyes. With their tiny, tiny irises.
It's around this point you discover that Thrall has a lazy eye.
Zanathos Jun 20th 2010 3:23AM
I assume this was supposed to be in response to my post earlier. Those Shakespeare plays you've read are translations from Elizabethan English. Their "yee olde" feel is a credit to the translators, but not the original form. He's a bit of an odd case also, as he invented a lot of words we use today, however it's safe to say if you'd traveled back in time to visit him, the average person you're talking to on the street isn't going to know any of those words. He was not of his time, so much as ahead of it and shaping our own (linguistically).
And this is just the written word, pronunciation changes as time passes. You can have a hard enough time in the modern era understanding someone with a different regional dialect than yourself. Time does the same, but more so.
Here's an Elizabethan dictionary for people who really like Elizabethan stuff: http://www.elizabethan-era.org.uk/elizabethan-online-dictionary.htm
Elves probably would resist changes to language, being immortal and all, but as we have no real world analogue to that, who knows.
Everyone understanding each other in the games is a convention of the medium, it doesn't explain how they all understand each other. Thrall was raised by humans, so he would of course understand common. It's probably most likely he was speaking in common to the night elves and humans (not that the night elves would know common either....) and in orcish to his troops, presented in English for benefit of the player. It doesn't really matter, everyone understanding each other in the games doesn't provide any illumination for people musing on how the logistics of this would work. It's just like that to make the story easier to tell, it's not supposed to make sense.
Zanathos Jun 20th 2010 3:31AM
And this post itself became unhinged from what it was replying too. Amusing.
Undra Jun 20th 2010 2:07PM
So the Alliance of Lorderon was created by the humans, and included the dwarves, gnomes and elves. Before WoW, that was reduced to just Stormwind, Ironforge, and Gnomergan, though the gnomes would soon lose their home and move in with the dwarves.
The Night Elves cut ties with the Horde because aparantly the Warsong Clan only excel in busting heads and pissing people off and won't stop cutting down a thousands-year-old forest.
So with only Theramore as a international contact, both Theramore and Darnassus ree-establish contact with Stormwind. And because Stormwind was the last human kingdom involved with the AoL, Stormwind is considered the capitol of the Alliance of Azeroth.
So if Mad Dog Wyrnn barks at the Horde, the Nelves applaud because they want the Warsong off their lawn, Jaina sighs because she recognizes greater threats, the Draenei sigh because they also see the bigger threats but secretly smile because those green bastards deserve it, and the dwarves clap because they didn't like it when the Old Horde rolled through their mountain.
I think... I think I can understand, as flimsy a claim as it is, why Stormwind is in charge and why they let Varian run it. He is reasonable enough that they don't jsut put his kid back in charge, pays the doves enough lip service to keep them somewhat satisfied (off screen of course). But his patience is running dry and he garners more support when he's promising to wipe the Orcs and their allies off the face of Azeroth.
I still don't like Wrynn, and I hate that I have to go to some crappy comic for essential character information, but I finally have an understanding about him. Here's hoping his son can keep his ear as time goes by to at least keep a voice of reason near the throne.