Know Your Lore: The naga, part 1, page 2

There, Vashj found the leader of the blood elves, Kael'thas Sunstrider. Kael'thas was working under the orders of a racist human named General Garithos, growing more and more frustrated with the general's menial orders and insults. Vashj played upon this, offering Kael'thas aid when needed. When Kael'thas and Vashj were discovered working together, Garithos had Kael'thas and his men thrown in jail to be put to death. The naga managed to escape, and Vashj found her way into the underground prison where Kael'thas was held, freeing him and his men and killing the guards.
Vashj was just as cunning as Queen Azshara in many ways. She told Kael'thas of their common lineage and pointed out that the weakness he and he people felt was due to the destruction of the Sunwell -- that he and the other blood elves were addicted to magic, and without it, they would die. And then, she offered a solution: Ally with Illidan, her master, and he could surely cure the blood elves of their condition. Kael'thas agreed, and he and his remaining troops sought refuge through the remains of a portal, followed by Vashj and her allies. They emerged from the portal on another world that Vashj simply called Outland.

Lady Vashj never returned to Azeroth. Instead, she made her home in Zangarmarsh and continued to faithfully serve Illidan, though his defeat at the hands of Arthas seemed to be driving him slowly mad. Instead of returning to her queen, Vashj began her own project. Zangarmarsh was teeming with water, and Vashj began to drain it all into Coilfang Reservoir, where she made her home. Why? There are a couple of reasons this could be the case, one logical, and one based a little more on speculation and what we're seeing in Azeroth today.
Lady Vashj had been entrusted with one of seven vials of water from the original Well of Eternity that Illidan had saved just before the Sundering. It is entirely possible that Lady Vashj was seeking not just to make her home a more comfortable place but that she sought to recreate the Well of Eternity, just as the high elves had done with the Sunwell. With a new Well, Vashj could create a kingdom of her own and rule over the naga of Outland just as Queen Azshara ruled over the naga of Azeroth. After all, the downfall of the Highborne was that they sought power -- and what greater power could exist than the Well of Eternity, or a facsimile thereof?

Lady Vashj was defeated by "a group of adventurers" (players who killed her in Serpentshrine Cavern), and with her death, the threat that loomed over Zangarmarsh has begun to fade. But the naga of Azeroth still have their own plans in mind. According to the official website's description of the Borean Tundra, the naga are still up to something, and it's very similar to what Vashj was up to in Zangarmarsh:
The Alliance has established a smaller presence here as well, and as both factions prepare to launch an offensive against the Lich King and his undead armies, they must first address the more immediate threat: the naga. The sinister serpentine race is using massive generators to melt the surrounding glaciers and ice caps, threatening to flood the entire region.

Queen Azshara doesn't just want power -- she wants Azeroth fully underwater, in her domain. But to what purpose, exactly? The destruction of the night elves has been her top priority all these centuries, but what people tend to forget is whom exactly Azshara answers to. The voices that offered to help her, change her, transform her people into something greater than they'd ever been. And when the time comes ... she and her people will serve. That time is quickly approaching.
Come back next week when we take a closer look at the naga of Cataclysm: Queen Azshara, the kvaldir and the mysterious sunken city of Vash'jir.
Come back next week when we take a closer look at the naga of Cataclysm: Queen Azshara, the kvaldir and the mysterious sunken city of Vash'jir.
For more information on the people, places and history mentioned here, check out other Know Your Lore columns, such as:
- Current Horde politics, the Blood Elves
- History of the Shen'dralar
- The Deathwing Conspiracy
- Malfurion Stormrage
- Elven evolution
While you don't need to have played the previous Warcraft games to enjoy World of Warcraft, a little history goes a long way toward making the game a lot more fun. Dig into even more of the lore and history behind the World of Warcraft in WoW Insider's Guide to Warcraft Lore.





Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Dalrint Oct 10th 2010 12:11PM
I don't remember any naga in borean...am I just blanking on something?
Imnick Oct 10th 2010 12:15PM
Yes, there is a single naga questgiver who... gives you a quest.
It may be alliance only but I don't think it is.
MrJackSauce Oct 10th 2010 12:16PM
Yer same here. I'm pretty sure they were taken out due to "the naga were a huge presence in BC so we thought that players would have had enough of them for now!" (not verbatim)
RogueJedi86 Oct 10th 2010 12:18PM
Southwest corner, the ruins on the coast where you help a female naga fight the Kvaldir.
Shadowwind Oct 10th 2010 12:19PM
There were a few on the coast to the south of Warsong hold, and if memory serves, there's a friendly naga there who has a quest to go destroy a lot of Kvaldir for wiping out the naga who WERE in that area.
Imnick Oct 10th 2010 12:20PM
Nothing to do with massive generators to melt the ice caps though, I think they dropped that idea :P
Vladeon Oct 10th 2010 12:21PM
There's a quest started by a lone Kalu'ak in western borean tundra that eventually leads to you helping a Naga kill a sleeping giant fish. Apparently the Naga were wiped out by those mistwalker guys.
Shadowwind Oct 10th 2010 12:34PM
Ok, I went and looked it up. The quest line starts from a tuskarr named Karuk and he sends you to speak to a naga named Veehja, who tells you the kvaldir are busy freeing a leviathan that Azshara had trapped below the surface a long time back. They're sacrificing naga and tuskarr to do so, and Veehja wants you to kill a Kvaldir captain in order to obtain a weapon capable of slaying the leviathan. Blah blah blah, quest chain goes about like you'd expect from this point on.
What I find interesting is that the kvaldir are actively fighting the naga. While the kvaldir haven't exactly been the pinnacle of paragonism, their foes are working with Old Gods who are busy working to destroy what's left of the world. Enemy of my enemy is my friend, perhaps? Or are the kvaldir only fighting the naga because they inhabit the same environment?
Viator Oct 10th 2010 12:50PM
The naga, after seeing everybody riding on motorcycles and seeing gnomes polluting everything around them, decided that they dont need huge generators to melt the icecaps.
scotty_won Oct 22nd 2010 12:10AM
she overlooked the fact that garithos wasnt actually racist, he was being controlled by one of the nathrazem at the time of his persecution of kael. it was just a brief mention in war3 but one of the dreadlords comments on how he was controlling him. im not sure how this ties into the whole story but i should definitely considered.
Matthew Oct 10th 2010 12:30PM
Great Article! But wasn't spoiler heavy at all, no worries.
Is there a reason the zone in Kalimdor is named Azhara?
Sintraedrien Oct 10th 2010 1:08PM
Actually, yes, the zone Azshara is in fact the remnants of the closest location still on land to the palace/temple of Queen Azshara and location of the original well.
:)
Sintra E'Drien of the Ebon Blade, né Sindorei (still Worgen-curious)
ps. Thats also why (in vanilla) it is (was) swarming with those . . . NAGA! :P
Jiffah Oct 10th 2010 1:25PM
The zone named Azshara was known as Zin'Azshari before the sundering and it is where her temple was.
Aikou Oct 10th 2010 12:49PM
Very good article. im just that much more excited for cataclysm.
MusedMoose Oct 10th 2010 1:26PM
Excellent stuff. ^_^ It never fails to amaze me how much lore there is behind so much of WoW, and while I knew a bit of the naga history, this fleshed it out and answered a lot of questions. Eagerly awaiting the next installment.
Chokaa Oct 10th 2010 1:27PM
Man... I would love for naga to be playable. Great article, now I've gotta go back and play through TFT and do some Outlands quests, you left just as many holes as you explained! :D
Brenda Archer Oct 10th 2010 2:39PM
I would love love love to have playable naga.
Just for balance, we could have playable naga on Horde and playable murlocs on Alliance. I'd have one of each for sure.
BigBadGooz Oct 11th 2010 8:20AM
Unfortunatly lore wise if queen azshara was to die her people would rather serve the night elves than the hord. Even though they have had a grudge for the past 1000 years. They themselves have seen alot of pain from the hord.
Archipelagos Oct 10th 2010 1:33PM
Great article. The naga are possibly my favourite race and Queen Azshara my favourite villain.
Fierna Oct 11th 2010 4:15AM
She is pretty fantastic.... i just worry she will be the Yogg Saron of Cataclysm and will appear in a mid-tier raid,