Know Your Lore: The VanCleefs, the rise of the Defias, and Westfall

Hope? Is that what I was supposed to feel when I saw my father decapitated by your henchmen? Hope is a cruel joke, played upon us by a harsh and uncaring world. There is no Hope, there is only Vanessa. Vanessa VanCleef.A little girl watches her father's demise, manages to escape, survives, and then dedicates her life to rebuilding everything her father stood for. It sounds like the sort of story heroes are made of, doesn't it? Ordinarily it would be, but the villains in this particular story are the nobility of Stormwind, including its king, Varian Wrynn -- and heroes just like you.
The story of the Defias Brotherhood begins during the First War, when the orcish Horde first burst forth from the Dark Portal into Azeroth with the help of Medivh. From there, they launched an assault on the kingdom of Stormwind. With the help of a cleverly mind-controlled assassin, the Horde took out King Llane Wrynn, and with his death, the city crumbled. Lord Anduin Lothar, forced to make a decision, led the people of Stormwind and young prince Varian Wrynn north, retreating to the kingdom of Lordaeron to recoup and grieve.
The once mighty city of Stormwind lay in pieces.
The Second War saw a united front as the Alliance of Lordaeron formed and the human race, together with their allies the dwarves, gnomes, and high elves, managed to crush the Old Horde. King Terenas Menethil encouraged the Alliance of Lordaeron to fund the rebuilding of Stormwind, and Varian Wrynn, no longer a little boy, returned with his people to the gates of Stormwind, encouraging his people to rebuild what they had lost and flourish into the kingdom his father had once lovingly ruled over.

It seems like a big mistake to make, but then one has to consider who was at the head of the House of Nobles -- a woman named Katrana Prestor. Prestor wasn't just a noblewoman; she was the black dragon Onyxia, disguised and placed in a position of power in order to keep the humans busy while her brother Nefarian took over Blackrock Mountain. Katrana was the one who made the deal with the Stonemason's Guild and its leader, a man named Edwin VanCleef -- and she deliberately led them to believe they were going to be paid a handsome sum of money for their services.
The Council of Nobles, however, had no idea this arrangement had been made. The money simply wasn't there to pay the workers; it had already been used to expand Stormwind's military presence. Regardless of the reasons, the Stonemason's Guild wasn't happy -- they had worked their fingers to the bone for this particular job under the impression that they were going to be paid, and now, they weren't. Edwin VanCleef, in particular, wasn't going to stand for this kind of treatment -- he and the fellow members of his guild were owed for their time, and they weren't going to leave Stormwind until they got their due pay.

As for Edwin VanCleef ... the man wasn't just a simple stonemason. A master engineer, VanCleef was also a former assassin who'd served under Master Mathias Shaw. VanCleef looked at those who had been turned away, tired, poor, hungry and without work or homes. He looked at them, and he looked at what they had done -- rebuilt the city of Stormwind, a city of glory and truly a masterpiece of architecture. It was glorious, grand, and filled with people who used the city, lived in the city, sat on the stone benches, gazed at the beautiful fountains, walked the cobbled streets and didn't give a second thought to who had put those stones in place.
That was the moment the Defias Brotherhood was formed. If Stormwind wasn't going to pay her people for their hard work, the people would have to rise up and take their payment -- one traveler at a time. VanCleef spoke to his fellow guild members, rallying them around the cause, and one by one, they joined the Brotherhood, marking themselves with cog tattoos. Why the cog? Because Stormwind was a machine, a machine run by nobles and those with enough money to order others around, but the machine wouldn't run smoothly if the parts decided to go renegade.

Though Westfall and its citizens were regularly assaulted by the Defias, Stormwind sent no military aid, citing no reason whatsoever for its lack of action. The money that was owed the Defias, money that had supposedly been spent shoring up Stormwind's military, certainly wasn't seeing any use in Westfall at all. The king himself was mysteriously absent, his son Anduin, a mere child, having been placed on the throne as a figurehead. So the citizens of Westfall, led by Gryan Stoutmantle, decided to take matters into their own hands as a result, forming the People's Militia.
So here we have two renegade groups, bent on fighting each other in the outreaches of the kingdom of Stormwind -- and both were formed as a result of Stormwind's abandonment. One fights for revenge, because of payment never supplied; the other fights simply to survive and keep a foot in the land they rightfully owned. But though the Defias knew that the problem lay directly at the foot of the House of Nobles, the People's Militia either wasn't aware or didn't seem to care that the cause of all their sorrows pointed back at Stormwind.

Shortly after King Varian's return to the throne and the death of the black dragon Onyxia, Stormwind was under attack once again -- this time, by the Scourge. Forces were immediately dispatched to Northrend. The People's Militia renamed themselves the Westfall Brigade and moved to the Grizzly Hills in order to assist the war effort, joining the Valiance Expedition and the Alliance Vanguard.
This, when you think about it, is a little odd. The People's Militia originally formed due to a distinct lack of support from Stormwind and the military forces. Yet once the problem at hand was dealt with, the People's Militia promptly renamed itself ... and joined the military forces, the same ones that deserted them years before. This pretty much illustrates the kind of man Gryan Stoutmantle is -- a selfless man who doesn't hold grudges and will stand his ground against any enemy that threatens his people.
The war in Northrend was long, bloody, brutal, and expensive. The Shattering caused many homes in Stormwind to be utterly destroyed. Between the expenses of war and the damages of the Shattering, many former Stormwind citizens found themselves without homes and without work. These homeless and orphans of war ended up in Westfall, where they fought tooth and nail with each other over shelter and scraps of food.

Given what Gryan did years before, when Stormwind abandoned him, is it really any surprise to him at all how upset, how angry, how betrayed the people of Westfall, the homeless who had come to him for support, felt? It was only natural that the homeless would gravitate to Westfall, after all -- look at the example that had been set. Westfall rebuilt itself and stood strong despite tragedy, despite the lack of support from Stormwind -- so naturally, those cast out of Stormwind due to lack of homes or jobs would have traveled there. But there's a little matter that hasn't been mentioned yet ...

Vanessa found her way out of the Deadmines and stumbled into the home of the Saldean family, who took her in, named her Hope, and raised her as their own child. What they didn't realize was that the little girl who stumbled into their home was the child of the leader of the Brotherhood, the group that had been terrorizing them for years. Hope grew up, dedicating her life to tending the homeless and destitute of Westfall, a charitable act -- and also preparing those selfsame homeless for an eventual return to power.
Because Vanessa, as a child, didn't know anything other than what her father told her. That the kingdom of Stormwind was corrupt; that it was full of promises it didn't keep and jobs it didn't pay for. That it was responsible for the home in which she was raised, deep in the Deadmines and far from sunshine. That every ounce of suffering she had to endure as a child, every once of suffering her father and his people had to fight their way through, was the sole responsibility of Stormwind's simply not caring about its people or their hard work.

That's the biggest tragedy in all of this -- Onyxia was dead, yet her efforts still plagued the kingdom of Stormwind as if she were alive and still breathing over the king's shoulder. Had Varian sat down and spoken with the leaders of Westfall, Redridge and Duskwood, this would probably all have been sorted out upon his return to the throne. But there simply wasn't time -- the Scourge attacked so soon after Onyxia's demise that forces were sent to Northrend before Varian could begin to sort out the damage Onyxia had done.
Once the Northrend war was over, it made little difference whether Varian talked to anyone or not -- because there were no funds to pay anyone what they were owed due to the expenses of that war. And now with the Shattering, Stormwind has even more chaos to deal with. Thoughts of what Onyxia accomplished while she was in the House of Nobles were very, very far away.

The entire story of Westfall is a story of oppression and standing up against that oppression. It's a story of justice and injustice, of people taking that justice into their own hands and meting it out accordingly. It's a story with no heroes and no villains, simply misunderstanding after misunderstanding, an avalanche of needless death and poverty that can all be traced back to the meddling fingers of a black dragon who is no longer alive.

For more information on related subjects, please look at these other Know Your Lore entries:
- The First War
- The Second War
- Current Alliance Politics: The humans
- King Varian Wrynn
- The Black Dragonflight
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: Lore, Know your Lore






Reader Comments (Page 2 of 6)
Shanic Apr 10th 2011 8:54PM
Nah, there is a villain. As much as this article attempts to make Vanessa seem slightly more sympathetic, she is definitely a villain.
Proof? Furlbrows.
Regardless of anything else, Vanessa has only been attacking Stormwind as a result of vengeance for her father's death. This would be fine, and possibly even noble, if she was only attempting to kill the people of Stormwind. She doesn't. She directly attacks anyone and everyone for her vengeance, so long as she can even slightly defend it to herself, or they might have been in her way. Her one noble act, feeding the poor, is immediately counteracted by the fact she doesn't actually care for them, and is just seeking to recruit more for her cause.
RetPallyJil Apr 11th 2011 2:29AM
Not to mention she's batshit crazy ... she killed a HORSE so she wouldn't identify her!
Oh Blanchy /weep
clundgren Apr 11th 2011 4:00PM
The horse knew too much!
Seriously, though, although Vanessa can be a zealot, I see her as more hero than villain. Suggesting she doesn't actually care for the poor because she also wants to recruit them is unfair; I don't see it suggested anywhere that she only supplies food to those who agree to join her. It rather makes sense that she would look for recruits among those who are the most downtrodden.
It is very difficult to play through the Westfall storyline and not question some of Varian's attributes as a leader. Sure, he's great in battle, but when huge numbers of your people are starving and homeless while others live in evident wealth and luxury (much of it created by the first group of people!), there's something wrong.
The outfit they gave Vanessa is very unfortunate, though. It makes her look more like Queen of the Hookers than Defender of the Poor.
SillyString Apr 11th 2011 5:51PM
"I am Mister Ed!"
*BLAM*
;_;
Murdertime Apr 10th 2011 8:56PM
http://biggerthankologarn.blogspot.com/2011/01/varian-wrynn-has-strategy.html
The Alliance leadership: First Up Against The Wall Come The Revolution.
Amaxe Apr 10th 2011 8:55PM
She isn't a hero. Nor is her father. They were individuals twisted by hatred and their desire for revenge.
When wrong is done, one can seek moral or immoral means for redress.
The Van Cleefs chose the mentality of "The ends justify the means," and were corrupted by it terrorizing Elwynn and Westfall with their banditry.
Someone above mentioned the Dark Factions book. Let's look at the description from that book:
"Alignment: Lawful evil.
Regions of Influence: Agents of the Defias
Brotherhood are active throughout the kingdom of Stormwind, terrorizing small hamlets and townships in the Elwynn Forest, bullying farms in Westfall and Duskwood, and infiltrating the noble houses of Stormwind. The Brotherhood’s central base of operations, however, is found in the Deadmines of Westfall and the outlying town of Moonbrook. Beyond Westfall and Elwynn, its influence is diminished. They are allied with gnolls, kobolds, and a few goblins in Booty Bay, but orcs and trolls consider them to be just another annoying human faction and are as likely to attack them as any human (which limits their influence in Lakeshire and Stranglethorn Vale).
Activities: The Defias Brotherhood performs highway robberies and constructs harvest golems to terrorize farmsteads while engaging in labyrinthine plots to undermine Stormwind’s leadership."
It also speaks of Varian's role in all this:
"After the guild finished the job, though, the corrupt House of Nobles refused to pay the guild for its work. King Varian was unable to fix matters because the House of Nobles held too much political power and outmaneuvered him repeatedly."
So unless Blizz introduced new things which contradict this, I would say it is false to blame this on King Varian.
In terms of RP, my main would be willing to hunt the Defias down because regardless of their grievances they have gone too far.
jslim419 Apr 10th 2011 9:02PM
"if justice had only been met and people had only sat down to talk."
yeah i could see that.. every boss fight in the 85 heroic deadmines turns into a litigation battle that the players mediate..
WARcraft.. we kill things in this game, we do not sit around a campfire and sing kumbaya.
Garfuncle Apr 10th 2011 8:58PM
This all sounds like a biased sob story if you ask me. Vanessa murdered innocent people and BURNED down the very homes Varian and Stormwind were building for the homeless. She, and the Defias, deserved what they got for being complete dicks in a completely uncalled for way.
And what do you mean, Stormwind doesn't care? They care enough to send you, the player, to save the bloody day in Westfall, Redridge, and Duskwood. He cares a LOT. He PERSONALLY sends you to help on some occasions.
Also, Varian has undone the corruption Onyxia wrought. His has been EXTREMELY decisive with aiding his Kingdom in every way.
Seriously, this is just bad. Get your facts straight.
Iirdan Apr 10th 2011 10:42PM
Homes they were building for homeless? You mean the homes in Sentinel Hill, the fortified stronghold that crowds of homeless were denied entrance to?
Anne Stickney Apr 10th 2011 11:28PM
I’m pretty sure you didn’t read the article correctly. The whole of the situation in Westfall, in Redridge, in Duskwood in vanilla was completely due to Stormwind turning a blind eye. Was it their fault? Absolutely not -- they had a black dragon in their midst cleverly pulling them around like puppets and lining them up like dominos, then flicking them over. Stormwind didn’t care because Stormwind didn’t know -- and Onyxia was very good at keeping everyone running in circles and not actually looking at the issues at hand.
Were the Defias right to do what they did? Absolutely not -- but they thought they were in the right. This is a story about the Defias, and how they came to be, and about the VanCleefs, and how they came to be. What they thought was what they thought; the perceptions of what’s right and what’s wrong are entirely up to the player to decide.
What makes the Defias situation and Westfall so interesting is the fact that it’s a story wrapped around vigilante justice, whether it’s the justice meted out by the Defias, or the justice meted out by the People’s Militia. It’s a story about the upper and lower classes, and the clashes between the two. It’s a story about how one kingdom completely lost control due to the persistent meddling of a black dragon that nobody knew about.
And once they knew about her, once Varian figured out who he was, he was immediately swept back into trying to pull his kingdom together, then immediately confronted with the Scourge assault. Varian is one of my favorite characters to be perfectly honest, which is why I wrote a twelve -- yes, twelve -- page article about him on my old blog. http://greyshades.wordpress.com/2009/11/17/character-focus-king-varian-wrynn/ Feel free to give that a read and then tell me I’m Horde biased.
This story wasn’t written from the vantage of Horde OR Alliance, it was written from the perspective of an outside observer that took a look at all the strings connecting all parties involved and the correlations and similarities between all those parties. There were no heroes or villains here, just a bunch of people that made a bunch of really terrible decisions based on what they believed was right at the time. That includes the Defias, the People's Militia, AND Stormwind. Were any of them right or wrong? Maybe some of them were, maybe some of them weren't -- but the entire situation was due to Onyxia. Not the Alliance. So hold your horses on calling me out for Ally hate, because there isn't any here.
As for Vanessa, was what she did wrong? Absolutely. But consider for a moment that she was a child raised by a man that believed he was in the right, and was never presented with any other truth than that. She believed what she believed because she was raised with that perception, and everything she witnessed from the point of her father’s death onward did nothing but bolster her opinion further. That was her viewpoint, and she had nothing but that viewpoint to base her opinions, motives and actions on.
When you look at something through the eyes of one viewpoint, and one viewpoint only, it’s easy to judge things in your favor.
Al Apr 11th 2011 2:14AM
No matter how evil they are, in order to make a decent story the villain has to believe they're in the right.
Apart from the Naga, you'll won't find many characters who ignore their internal logic just so they can be evil.
clundgren Apr 11th 2011 4:11PM
So for all of you who want to judge Vanessa in such black and white terms, what do you make of a ruler who allows a large portion of his population to suffer and starve. Yup, Stormwind and the alliance have faced serious trials, but at the same time, some people are doing pretty well. Apparently there was even enough money after Deathwing's attack to build new statuary celebrating King Varian. How many mouths would that money have felt?
Put yourself in the place of the poor people in Westfall. They have no homes. They are literally starving. They are being preyed on by gnolls. Yet they see that in the capitol, there is enough money to rebuild the city *again*, bigger and better than ever. There is enough money to build a giant new citadel on Sentinel Hill. Do you think Varian looks like a good king to them? Now take Vanessa's point of view. Everything that her father told her is born out by the evidence around her. She's watching children starve while the powers that should protect them use their weapons to keep the people out. Is it any wonder she sees her actions as justified.
Varian Wrynn is an unelected monarch. He is self-evidently ignoring the needs of some of his people (think of them as colonies) while spending vast sums are his home kingdom and capitol. Those people are getting fed up. They are starting to revolt. And they are *right* to revolt.
clundgren Apr 11th 2011 4:32PM
@ Garfunkle:
Please explain to me where Varian sends us to help the poor and starving people of Westfall?
What's that? He doesn't? He sends us to help crush a revolt of poor and starving people? We are on the side of the guards who keep the mob, many now too weak to even stand, *outside* of the protective walls while gnolls prey on them?
Wow. Varian's a real hero, he is.
Well, is there *anyone* who actually gets us to do something to directly help the poor people? Say, by finding food for them? Anyone at all? What's that? Vanessa Van Cleef? Huh.
Sooooo...if I'm a parent in Westfall, and the king is not only letting my child starve, but even using his army to deny us shelter, while Vanessa is trying to get us food and bring us Hope, which one do I support?
Yes, her actions are violent. But isn't passively letting your people starve while you have new, giant statues of yourself erected a lot more morally reprehensible? There is just no way that you can argue that Varian Wrynn is anything but a villain to the people of Westfall. He drove them out and abandoned them, and now recruits adventurers to assassinate the one person who is helping them.
Garfuncle Apr 10th 2011 9:10PM
Actually...you know what? Screw you Anne. I want someone who actually knows Alliance lore to make articles about Alliance lore.
Not some God damn Hordeling wearing red-tinted shades.
Seriously, not even going to bother with WoWInsider until this is rectified.
Either FIX this article immediately.
Or LOSE Alliance readers. Your choice.
Rai Apr 10th 2011 9:31PM
Bye.
Moranya Apr 10th 2011 9:44PM
u mad bro? lawl
MusedMoose Apr 10th 2011 9:43PM
You don't have to agree with the writers or the content of their articles. If they make mistakes, I'm sure they appreciate corrections. That's the sort of things people expect when they post their work online.
But you come in here making demands and threats you have no way to back up, cussing out the author and calling her names, and generally acting like a child trying to bully people. That's horrible behavior and you should be ashamed of yourself. I hope they ban you, because this site will be better off without people like you.
Matthew Rossi Apr 10th 2011 9:48PM
You know, I play Alliance and have for five and a half years now (closer to six, but I did play horde for a year in the Vanilla/BC period). And your response is so completely out of line that it makes me wonder about your perspective. The whole POINT of the VanCleef storyline is how good ends can justify bad means, and those bad means eventually twist you to the point where your noble ends no longer matter.
Edwin was, initially, a good man who just wanted to do right by his city and his fellow Stonemasons. He fell prey to his own ego and Onyxia's subtle manipulation and eventually turned what he'd learned from Mathias Shaw against his own people, and it IS a tragedy that someone with so much promise fell so far.
Vanessa is even worse, because she clearly cannot reconcile her desire to help others with her overwhelming urge for revenge. She's young, and she saw her father killed in front of her (Like Varian did) and has spent her life hunting for a way to make the people responsible pay for it, to the point where she can't see what she's doing anymore. She's as blinded by what she went through as her father was. If Varian hadn't been blinded by grief, he may have stepped in sooner and stopped Westfall's plight. If the Lich King hadn't attacked right after Varian regained his identity, he might have had resources to prevent Westfall from suffering the aftereffects of Onyxia's manipulation and the Defias' assault on the place.
At any rate you can feel sympathy for Vanessa without excusing her actions. It doesn't make her less of a villain, it just makes her a relatable one with goals we can understand. She's not an ancient monstrosity, she's a young woman who wants revenge so much she can't count the cost. It's not anti-Alliance to state that. There were many factors to the tragedy ongoing in Westfall, and many, many quests in the game point out that one of them is that Stormwind failed to act. We know why it did. That doesn't make it less tragic.
If pointing that out is anti Alliance I guess I'm anti Alliance.
Chris Apr 10th 2011 9:54PM
LOL - thank you. that was the best laugh I've had in ages.
Now why don't you go try and take Wintergrasp now that you have an actual chance...
SaintStryfe Apr 11th 2011 5:51AM
the clear difference was that Vanessa saw her father killed - he was in vicious combat with them. It wasn't even 5-on-1, there were adds in that fight if you remember.
It was absolutely nothing like Varian's father's death. The King was killed by someone he trusted, Garona Halforcen, an act of foul assassination and murder. While I'm sure it was very traumatic, Edwin was a wanted man - a man who went so far as to always wear a mask to protect his features. He knew what he was doing was wrong.
He might have started with noble aims - getting Stormwind to pay and to help the poor - but we saw the results. Roadside Banditry. Destroying farms (see: pre-Cata Northshire), building a war machine which to fight Stormwind?
I'm sorry. He wasn't a noble thief - nor was his daughter some sort of idealistic Utopian. Both were killers, thieves and villains to the core. They got what traitors deserve: Death.