Know Your Lore: Darius Crowley, Lord of Silverpine

The World of Warcraft is an expansive universe. You're playing the game, you're fighting the bosses, you know the how -- but do you know the why? Each week, Matthew Rossi and Anne Stickney make sure you Know Your Lore by covering the history of the story behind World of Warcraft.
I said last week that we'd be covering Broxigar Saurfang this week.
I lied, just like when I told Sully I'd kill him last. This week, we're going to talk about an honest to the Light Gilnean hero. A patriot, a rebel, a lord who cared for his land but could see beyond it, a killer, a father who would die for his daughter without hesitation.
Alone among the lords and ladies of Gilneas, Darius Crowley saw that without the Alliance, his nation was doomed. By his hand, civil war raged across the land behind the Greymane Wall. Forced to see his holdings in Silverpine truncated by a wall he opposed, he lost everything -- even his freedom -- fighting his misguided king. In the end, he cannot even take consolation in having ultimately been proven right.
Made a beast, he fights on for his homeland and his ancestral lands, stolen by Sylvanas Windrunner and the Forsaken. Forced to choose between his daughter and victory, he chose her and retreated into contested Gilneas. While the king of that land tries to rally Alliance support to retake the homeland, Crowley does battle in the moors and the streets of his homeland. Whether Gilneas is ultimately saved or destroyed by the Horde, one thing is clear: Darius Crowley will be found fighting there.
I said last week that we'd be covering Broxigar Saurfang this week.
I lied, just like when I told Sully I'd kill him last. This week, we're going to talk about an honest to the Light Gilnean hero. A patriot, a rebel, a lord who cared for his land but could see beyond it, a killer, a father who would die for his daughter without hesitation.
Alone among the lords and ladies of Gilneas, Darius Crowley saw that without the Alliance, his nation was doomed. By his hand, civil war raged across the land behind the Greymane Wall. Forced to see his holdings in Silverpine truncated by a wall he opposed, he lost everything -- even his freedom -- fighting his misguided king. In the end, he cannot even take consolation in having ultimately been proven right.
Made a beast, he fights on for his homeland and his ancestral lands, stolen by Sylvanas Windrunner and the Forsaken. Forced to choose between his daughter and victory, he chose her and retreated into contested Gilneas. While the king of that land tries to rally Alliance support to retake the homeland, Crowley does battle in the moors and the streets of his homeland. Whether Gilneas is ultimately saved or destroyed by the Horde, one thing is clear: Darius Crowley will be found fighting there.
"Lord, as you've described, the other nations seem eager to assist. If Trollbane, Perenolde, and the rest partake, I do not know how we can rightfully call ourselves neighbors or friends if we do not join with them," Crowley continued. Genn understood why he was so beloved. His words were spoken with acute vigor. There were no political angles at play -- just a man concerned for his fellow men. (Lord of His Pack, James Waugh)
The origin of a future rebel
Darius Crowley came to his lordship relatively young. He first rose to some prominence among his people as the foremost and most passionate advocate of the Alliance of Lordaeron among the lords of Gilneas. While some like Vincent Godfrey advocated aiding the Alliance on purely pragmatic and utterly self-serving grounds, Crowley truly believed that aid for the Alliance was ultimately not only the best course for the survival of Gilneas, but their duty to their fellow men and the act of a proper neighbor.
Unfortunately for Crowley, his king, Genn Greymane, did not agree with him. Genn's father Archibald had not only raised Gilneas to power as an industrial nation, but he'd infused his son with the ideals of isolation and self-sufficiency that led Genn, as king, to distrust and dismiss the other nations as weak and backward. While Gilneas sent a few troops to fight alongside the Alliance, Genn balked at the costs of continued membership and was angered by the Alliance's refusal to hand land in nearby Alterac over to him after the Perenolde family was deposed.
Genn's decision to build a wall to keep the rest of the Alliance nations (and any further problems, such as the orcs the Alliance refused to put to death) out of his nation might not have necessarily led to a falling-out with Darius. The Crowleys were proud Gilneans and held their lands in the north of the nation for the crown for generations. Crowley's own vassals included Baron Silverlaine and the peoples of Ambermill and Pyrewood. These lands would become known as the Northgate region when Genn, advised by Godfrey and his sycophants, decided to build his wall directly through the bulk of Crowley's land, cutting him off from the majority of his holdings and forcing him and his people to relocate south of the gate (thus becoming dispossessed) or to be cut off from Gilneas entirely, as Baron Silverlaine was.
Already displeased with his king for his actions during the war, Crowley saw this new act as a betrayal not only of Gilneas' allies but of her very people. However, even this paled in comparison with the threat of the Scourge, which reached Gilneas despite her wall. Crowley alone among his people was sympathetic enough to the Alliance cause to arrange for troops (the Gilneas Brigade) to assist the remnants of the Alliance under Jaina Proudmoore.
With the world seemingly falling apart and his king mired in an isolationism that seemed to be helping it shatter, with walking corpses assailing the Greymane Wall and Greymane himself turning in desperation to Archmage Arugal and his summoned worgen (the selfsame worgen who would overrun Crowley's lands on the other side of the wall, including Pyrewood and the former keep of Baron Silverlaine), Crowley felt forced to act.
The Northgate Rebellions
His loyalty and even friendship for Genn cost him, however. While he was preparing to strike against the king and his followers, smuggling weapons into Gilneas City itself, Godfrey and his supporters managed to arrange for Crowley's arrest. This act triggered the Northgate Rebellion, so named for the region of Gilneas where Crowley and his supporters had been stripped of their homes. Left homeless by their own king and knowing that their homes were now infested either by Scourge or feral worgen, the angry people of northern Gilneas fought the supporters of Genn, their rage triggered by the arrest of the one noble who actually seemed to care about their plight.
Crowley himself was imprisoned but still seen by many (even Genn) as the heart of the rebellion. However, while civil war wracked Gilneas City, a more insidious threat loomed. The worgen summoned by Arugal had not simply faded into the night after turning the tide against the undead hordes of the Scourge. Rather, they continued to lurk in the forests of Gilneas, spreading their curse and finally washing over the city itself. Soon, it mattered little what one's politics were; it was a battle for survival between men and cursed beasts.
Taken aback by the sudden onslaught and knowing that Gilneas needed every able-bodied defender, Greymane did what was unthinkable to Godfrey and his ilk. He turned to Darius Crowley.
Red in tooth and claw
Crowley also realized that fighting Genn would see Gilneas destroyed. He chose to ally with his once-friend and revealed the existence of the rebel arsenal, turning it over to the king for use against the worgen. Crowley even led a small force on a daring diversion that ended in a heroic last stand in Gilneas' Light's Dawn Cathedral, holding off the savage worgen long enough for the majority of the city's population to escape. Crowley himself and his men were not so fortunate.
Crowley was bitten during the stand at the cathedral, as were most of his men. While most succumbed to the bloodlust and frenzy of the curse, Darius managed to hold onto enough of his humanity and retreated to the Blackwald Forest to the south. He found himself at Tal'doren, the Wild Home, where he discovered the truth about the worgen curse and its origins, thanks to the presence of night elf druids. Crowley began capturing other worgen and helping them regain some measure of their self-control, and it was there that Crowley was confronted by Godfrey and Genn Greymane himself, who revealed his own similar struggle with the worgen curse. Despite Godfrey's horrified objections (and later own attempt at a rebellious coup), Crowley made common cause with his king. In the end, however, all they could do was evacuate most of their people on night elf ships.
Taking the war home
Crowley did not let it end there. First, he managed to return to the Silverpine Forest, making common cause with other worgen packs in the area, such as the pack led by Ivar Bloodfang. These forces, dedicated to the reclamation of all of Gilneas (including the northern lands lost to the Scourge during the period of the Greymane Wall), call themselves the Gilneas Liberation Front.
With the aid of the 7th Legion (an elite Alliance fighting force), Crowley managed to sneak past the Horde via a submarine and began waging an extremely successful guerilla campaign against the Forsaken invaders, pushing them out of the Wall and into Silverpine and then as far north as the border to Tirisfal itself.
Only by murdering and then using val'kyr to raise the native population as brainwashed undead and infiltrating into worgen-held territory can the Forsaken begin to retake ground. This culminated in a scheme in which Sylvanas raised Lord Godfrey from the dead in order to use him against his long-hated rival. Buoyed by her successful control over the former Dalaran wizards of Ambermill (who died fighting her but who immediately became loyal upon their forced conversion to Forsaken), the Banshee Queen likewise believed Godfrey to be her loyal servant, and so she used him to capture Lorna Crowley for use as a bargaining chip.
This plan ultimately worked: Godfrey indeed captured Lorna and used her against her father, who surrendered the fight in Silverpine to protect his daughter from being murdered and raised as a Forsaken slave to Sylvanas. (Ironically, had Lorna been exposed to the worgen curse, as Crowley himself exposed many of the former leaders of Southshore and Hillsbrad, she would have been immune; by protecting Lorna from his own curse, he left her vulnerable to the curse Sylvanas once condemned and now spreads to new victims.)
Crowley, his forces, and his daughter retreated back into the still contested regions of Gilneas itself. Ironically, in so doing, he failed to witness Sylvanas' own plan come to stab her in the back, as Godfrey proved more free-willed than Archmage Ataeric or others forcibly converted into Forsaken. While most of those raised by val'kyr in Silverpine switched from staunch opponents of the undead into suspiciously loyal minions immediately, Godfrey did not. Crowley might well have smiled at the irony as his old enemy killed his new one, only to fail to permanently defeat her. Ultimately, Lord Godfrey and his men retreated to Shadowfang Keep, which was technically Crowley's property once held by one of Crowley's direct vassals.
At present, Crowley and his forces hold ground in Gilneas. It seems unlikely that they can regain the nation, much less their former homes in Silverpine, from the Forsaken thieves without more direct Alliance aid. In the shattered world after the cataclysm, that seems unlikely. Gilneas is just one battlefront in the Alliance/Horde war, after all.
Still, Crowley fights on.
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.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Cataclysm






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
iwubyou Mar 9th 2011 1:04PM
lol on the arnold reference.
Sharalack Mar 9th 2011 1:18PM
After reading up about him being the "new Saurfang" I was really excited. Having played through the Worgen area now I'm fairly disappointed.
Yeah cleaving with bare fists was fairly cool, but it wasn't awe inspiring, if you weren't looking out for it you'd probably miss it. He plays a decent role after that part but it certainly leaves me wondering why people have this opinion of him.
One other thing, his voice acting isn't great either. There's certainly been worse, but to limit a supposedly large character to two phrases? It sounded like the voice actor was fairly disinterested. Not to say every character has to be frothing at the mouth screaming "FAWH GIL NEY ASS!", but a bit more spirit could've helped.
I enjoyed how he fit into the Worgen starting zone as a whole however, and as always people are free to oppose my opinion.
Dreyja Mar 9th 2011 8:09PM
The problem is that so much of the most EPIC stuff that happens, happens AFTER the rest of us get booted out of the storyline.
Sharalack Mar 10th 2011 10:34AM
Dreyja, whilst I agree he's an interesting character and fairly well written, I just don't understand the fascination with him.
I respect that other people's opinions may differ (which didn't save my other post from getting downrated anyway), but I can't see anything that makes him stand out from any other character with an average amount of plot development, like Koltira or Akama, to list examples from previous expansions.
Could someone explain this?
Cheeselandman Mar 9th 2011 1:38PM
I personally doubt Sylvanas trusted Lord Godfrey that much- it was more the level of audacity it took to assassinate her. The Forsaken are NOT slaves of Sylvanas- she's just the only one who will protect them against any threat. My best guess is that the undead are under control of the Valkyr as long as the Valkyr choose to exert that control. In essence, Sylvanas expected that Godfrey's hate would overpower any personal desire, she just misjudged how quickly he would switch once his hatred was sated.
Maymer Mar 9th 2011 10:23PM
So, let me get this straight.....
Lord Godfrey was a powerful noble and very talent at politics...in essence, very good at being forceful when needed...
He betrays his leader/teacher Greymane because he believes his ideals are now wrong, and will lead more Gilneans to die...
BUT he is THEN revived by Sylvanas as a member of the Forsaken, where he seems to follow her every whim and need without hesitation.
Yet, after a confrontation with Crowley, where he almost killed his daughter, he then defects Sylvanas by killing her........
Soooooooooooooooooooooooooo......Godfrey is Darth Vader.....*cuuuuuuu-KEH....cuuuuuuuuuu-KEH* The lore is STRONG with this one.....
Lumi Mar 9th 2011 1:41PM
Uh, how IS Silverpine either Crowley or Silvana's?
Tirisifal should obviously be owned by the forsaken, the undead that reside there previously did so in their human form; even though no such evidence exists for Silverpine.
Personally, I believe Silverpine is rightfully of the Forsaken, but I could be off there.
Kyle Mar 9th 2011 1:47PM
Not all of Silverpine, but the portion just north of the Wall did use to belong to Gilneas (and Crowley). Shadowfang Keep, Pyrewood Village too. And at least some of their owners are still alive, so they do kinda have a claim to it still.
Martinel Mar 9th 2011 1:54PM
If Pyrewood and Ambermill were holdings of Crowley's vassals, one might assume that the land north of those was under the kindgom of Lordaeron. The Forsaken, without the Lich King to focus on, are starting to move south to retake the lands that belonged to them in life, and are rightly theirs in death.
Matthew Rossi Mar 9th 2011 2:02PM
Do you currently own property? That's how Silverpine is Crowley's. The land belonged to his family for generations, and belongs to them now. Even when Genn built the wall, Crowley did as much as was possible to protect its people and take care of them.
It's his land. It's Gilnean land. The Forsaken are invaders out for 'unliving space' as it were. They're thieves and murderers who use plague and val'kyr to slaughter the inhabitants and turn them against their own people. It's very simple.
Cheeselandman Mar 9th 2011 2:40PM
Keep in mind, Pyrewood Village and Ambermill WERE cut off from the Gilnean country, and infested with feral worgen. While it may have been his land, Genn Greymane essentially forfeited it when the wall was built. That was why Crowley got so upset with Greymane in the first place, or am I wrong there?
I'd argue that Crowley does still have a claim on the land seeing as he fought and bleed for it even after the wall was built, although Gilneas as a country definitely does not. They sacrificed the people north of the wall with the same ruthlessness the Forsaken show.
Lumi Mar 9th 2011 2:48PM
How did I get down-voted for asking a valid question :S
Thanks for answering though. I just didn't know who owned that bit before all the infestations and such; figured it was still part of Lordaeron because of the big wall surrounding Gilneas.
Mal Mar 9th 2011 2:51PM
You may be confused by how the in game map shows Silverpine. Technically there should be a line right around the middle that says "everything north of this= Lorderaon, everything south of this=Gilneas." Those Gilnean areas belonged to the Crowleys.
Boobah Mar 9th 2011 3:57PM
"I'd argue that Crowley does still have a claim on the land seeing as he fought and bleed for it even after the wall was built, although Gilneas as a country definitely does not. They sacrificed the people north of the wall with the same ruthlessness the Forsaken show."
Crowley is sworn to Greymane and Gilneas; the general rule, therefore, is that all of Crowley's land has Greymane as its king (while you can make an argument that Northgate isn't part of Gilneas, it's much harder to argue that the survivors aren't subjects of Greymane's.)
Nations don't really mix with feudalism very well. Nations involve loyalty to an abstraction; it's possible for a nationalist to be loyal to his nation and yet disloyal to those who rule. Feudalism is all about people; the Kingdom of Bob is everywhere the people sworn to King Bob happen to live, and any subject disloyal to King Bob is necessarily a traitor to the kingdom... no matter how stupid Bob's policies are.
Cheeselandman Mar 9th 2011 4:18PM
And Crowley is a nationalist. He cares about his people, the nation of Gilneas, not the ruler, otherwise he wouldn't have dared to go against Greymane. Not to mention, he stays behind in Gilneas after everyone else leaves. Crowley is only loyal to Gilneas, not to Greymane.
matus Mar 9th 2011 4:31PM
@martinel ... moving south to retake the lands that belong to them while they lived?
then why are we just slaugtering all the people who are still living there right now...
that's the most confusing part for me to handle
Angrycelt Mar 9th 2011 4:53PM
Sorry Lumi, but that land belongs to the people who live there, continue to fight for it, and refuse to surrender it. The undead are only there at all because the Forsaken attacked them, killed, then raised them. By your argument, since those are Gilnean undead, Gilneas (even as a kingdom in exile) actually owns the land and the Forsaken are *still* invaders. Those lands were never Lordaeron's in life, they have no right to them in death, either.
Expanding your "we (sort of) were there first" argument, the Orcs should completely abandon the entire world, since they arrived after the original inhabitants, which is argued were proto-Night Elves or Trolls since they may or may not be related depending on which tinfoil hat you wear. Goblins are out of luck since Azshara was held by naga who used to be elves, so you're out of luck there as well... you get the idea.
I play Alliance, and while I hate the loss of a great world PvP area (despite my RP/PvE leanings), I can cede that Southshore, Tarren Mill, even Andorhal were all Lordaeron property, and your flawed "we're not the Forsaken, we're the Undead Lordaeron" logic would justify those conquests. Problem is, that's not the banner they're marching under, that's not the orders from on high, and if those poor former simple farmers of Lordaeron really have any emotional or loyalties binding them to their former homelands, it doesn't make sense that they'd do everything in their power to annihilate them. The corpses follow an increasingly unhinged foreigner who cares nothing for the legacy of Lordaeron. And when the opportunity comes to end her once and for all, I'll be there.
Death to Sylvanas. Oblivion for the walking dead. Unite and fight! For the Alliance!
anonymous Mar 9th 2011 6:36PM
@Matthew Rossi
"They're thieves and murderers who use plague..."
Woah, woah, WOAH! Hold on a second, sir. I'll have you know Hellscream's eyes are upon the Forsaken and they are not, repeat, NOT using the plague anymore. On anyone. Or anything. Nope. No more plague being used. Not. At. All.
So move along now; nothing to see here. Especially not plague.
Victory for Sylvan... the Horde!
*shifty eyes*
Cheeselandman Mar 9th 2011 6:58PM
Heh. The land belongs to the people who live there, continue to fight for it, and refuse to surrender it? Forsaken live there, fight just as hard as the worgen, and refuse to surrender no matter the cause. By your argument, Gilneas forfeits its right when Crowley surrenders to Sylvanas.
The banner the Forsaken are marching under isn't "We're Lordaeron". The banner they're marching under is "We're Forsaken". Their conquests start with the former kingdom of Lordaeron, and extend as far as necessary to ensure the safety and survival of the Forsaken. The entire conflict over Gilneas is a battle (from the Forsaken perspective) for survival. King Varian says before the battle for undercity- "Soon we march upon this cursed place and cleanse it of its evil taint!"
The Forsaken, for their continued survival, cannot allow an alliance stronghold to exist so close to them. The entire alliance, and even factions within the horde, view the Forsaken the same as scourge. When the Forsaken talk of being "Lordaeron reborn", it doesn't match their actions. But when considered through a lens of survival, of fighting for their very existence, the actions of the Forsaken make much more sense. Sylvanas may be an evil *****, but she's guaranteeing the lives of any of the Forsaken who choose to stay with her.
In truth, the Forsaken are perfect members of the horde, because they fight for survival. Each and every Forsaken is fighting for the survival of their people. For a Forsaken member on the front lines of Gilneas City, the only two options are victory or death.
Lok'tar Ogar.
Murdertime Mar 9th 2011 7:35PM
And the fact is, as part of your newbie Forsaken player orientation process, Sylvanas gives you a big long speech that is the whole Forsaken philosophy laid bare.
In fact, Silverpine pretty much is the Forsaken theme shoved right up in your face as a forsaken player. Yes, you are cold and ruthless and you do dark deeds. Yes, the rest of the horde doesn't trust you. But you're also capable of heroism and you're doing the things you do to ensure your survival as a people.
Sylvanas will utterly destroy any threat to the Forsaken's existence as a people in the most brutal and ruthless manner possible. Which makes her a villanous figure to those being destroyed in the most brutal and ruthless manner possible. Unless you're a member of the forsaken. In which case, it's pretty damn nifty.