Know Your Lore: Tauren origins and tinfoil hats

Where, exactly, do tauren come from? Yes, there's the old standby about a mommy tauren and a daddy tauren -- but in a world where some beings trace their origins back to stone constructs and ancient curses while others are native and still others were altered by the Well of Eternity, the question of where a people originated can be an important and convoluted one.
The most recent Ask Creative Development thread from the official forums managed to cover a lot of subject matter, from Elune and her relationship with the Naaru to whether Forsaken priests could actually blow themselves up by channeling too much of the Holy Light. But the question and answer that most interested me was the following:

Q: What races were on Azeroth before the coming of the titans?
A: Besides the elementals, the only known sentient races on Azeroth when the titans' forces arrived to subdue the Old Gods were the trolls, the race known as "faceless ones," and the aqir. Due to the Old Gods' war against the titans, as well as the extensive terraforming that followed the war's conclusion, records of what races existed before even the Old Gods' arrival have likely been lost forever.
A: Besides the elementals, the only known sentient races on Azeroth when the titans' forces arrived to subdue the Old Gods were the trolls, the race known as "faceless ones," and the aqir. Due to the Old Gods' war against the titans, as well as the extensive terraforming that followed the war's conclusion, records of what races existed before even the Old Gods' arrival have likely been lost forever.
Anne already discussed this to a degree, but I wanted to take a longer look at the tauren, their history and mythology, what they seem to believe about their origins, and why it might matter to this question. Where did the tauren come from?
Please remember the rules. This is all speculation, and while I try and build it on the framework of the lore we're supplied in game, I'm going to end up somewhere that is absolutely not at all in game.
So which came first, the tauren or Cenarius?
The tauren (or shu'halo, in their own language) have a long and complex oral historical tradition. Entities such as Xarantaur show that the tauren existed before the War of Ancients. Xarantaur even claims to have been trained as a druid by Cenarius himself. This places the tauren as having been both sentient and alive before the sundering of Kalimdor. What we do not know is how far before said sundering the tauren walked the land.
A great deal of tauren history is transmitted orally, as they apparently lacked writing (although they clearly are a literate people now) and so used a series of myths to instruct their young, projecting forward what they expected of every tauren. Xarantaur again indicates that at some point before the sundering, the druidic teachings of Cenarius were lost to the shu'halo because Cenarius left his people. It's not stated why, but without the direct presence of Cenarius, the tauren lost his teachings. This is interesting because Cenarius' father Malorne (Apa'ro to the tauren) is one of the Ancients, and his mother is Mu'sha, the moon known by the night elves as Elune.
Why is this interesting? Well, for one thing, the tauren take credit for Apa'ro and Mu'sha's mating in the first place, and thus, for the birth of Cenarius. This would mean that Cenarius owes his very existence to shu'halo hunters who chased his father into the arms of his mother. This would also mean that both Malorne and Elune might owe the tauren.
Elune, the moon goddess of the kaldorei, is interesting to us here also because she is known to have participated in a bit of uplift. The wildkin or moonkin are her creations, made by her to guard sacred sites (including, in at least one legend, her own son Cenarius). They combine aspects of bears, owls, and in some cases, the antlers of great stags. The wildkin usually do not speak but seem to be intelligent; the ones who died alongside the Keeper of the Grove Califax in fact could seemingly speak as well as understand Darnassian.
She breathed the mists of dawn
In shu'halo mythology, Mu'sha is the left eye of the Earthmother. Her right eye is An'she, the sun, which spins through the void to watch over the Earthmother herself. While we know little about the Sky Father mentioned in The Shattering novel, the Earthmother is far more often discussed. She is the land itself. While each individual elemental spirit and nature spirit has its own name and its own face, the Earthmother is effectively like a gigantic gestalt spirit, and she embodies the land the tauren live on, the natural world they live in and draw sustenance from. The tauren seemingly exist to honor the Earthmother. Therefore, we must ask ourselves: If the tauren did not exist before the titans fought the old gods, why did they exist after? Where did they rise from? How could they have existed in time for them to have hunted Malorne into the arms of Elune and cause Cenarius' birth?
According to the tauren myth Mists of Dawn and Sorrow of the Earthmother, the world came into being when the Earthmother breathed life upon the world itself and how the shu'halo came into existence from this act. It further details how the Earthmother tore her own eyes out in despair after "dark whispers from deep below the earth" taught the tauren the ways of war and deceit. This is interesting because if it was literally true that would mean that the tauren predate the existence of Elune as well as Cenarius. However, it seems clear that at least in some ways, these myths aren't necessarily meant to be taken as literally true. The whispers from deep below the earth, however, seems to indicate the same phenomenon that drove Deathwing himself insane and lead us to wonder: Are the tauren of today an entirely new race of beings made from another, older race?
Sorrow of the Earthmother
As the children of the earth roamed the fields of dawn, they harkened to dark whispers from deep beneath the world. The whispers told the children of the arts of war and deceit. Many of the shu'halo fell under the shadow's sway and embraced the ways of malice and wickedness. They turned upon their pure brethren and left their innocence to drift upon the plains.
So hunted her pure children
After the Earthmother tears the sun and the moon out of her face to chase eternally after one another, she still remains with the shu'halo, "her great heart was always with her children -- and her loving wisdom never fled from them," as the myth relates. Furthermore, in the myth The White Stag and the Moon, which relates Apa'ro's union with Mu'sha that led to the birth of Cenarius, we are told "into the brave hearts of her pure children, the Earthmother placed the love of the hunt," and it is that love of the hunt that leads the shu'halo to chase Apa'ro into the heavens.
Her pure children. You'll note that in none of these myths does it say what happened to the shu'halo that were corrupted by the whispers. Nor does it say, exactly, how the tauren were made pure. But we're led to consider several things.
Who is the Earthmother, exactly? Is she the creator of the world of Azeroth itself (a title also claimed by the titans), or is she somehow something they could never have planned for? Is it possible that Azeroth itself is, just as the tauren claim, a living being? And did that living being seek to emulate those that had shaped it and invaded it?
Imagine, if you will, an organism that is Azeroth. Does that organism want parasitic old gods infesting it? Does it want to be destroyed so that they can be freed? Or does it want to keep doing what it has been doing and survive?
If we concieve of the Earthmother as the living spirit of Azeroth itself, imagine how it must groan under the terrible onslaught it has endured. Titans and old gods, eternals and demons waging war over it, reshaping it, pitting elemental lords against armies of titan constructs. Imagine how the Earthmother must have suffered when the land was torn asunder by the sundering. Azeroth as an entity is in great and constant peril. Any living organism develops ways to endure, to defend itself from outside invasion and internal injury -- ways to survive, to defend and to heal.
Born of the land, children of the goddess
We know that Mu'sha, the eye of the Earthmother, made wildkin to defend sacred sites. Did Azeroth itself reach forth and grow stone constructs in imitation of the titans and their earthen, their giants, their vrykul? The shu'halo claim to have been born of the earth itself, thrust forth from the soil by the breath of dawn. Imagine that it was so.
Furthermore, imagine that it was done deliberately in a gambit to turn the enemy's greatest weapon against them. We hear that the pure shu'halo were gifted by the Earthmother. What made them pure? Clearly the myth means living, breathing, hunting tauren. Did the Earthmother make the shu'halo intending that they would be changed from creatures of rock and earth to creatures of flesh? Is the reason there were no tauren before the coming of the titans because she used the war of the old gods and the titan's creations to make the modern tauren out of constructs of stone?
We see tauren in the Halls of Stone and Halls of Lightning, in the peculiar constellation art of the Ulduar installation. We also see Ammunae, a titanic watcher, in Uldum's Halls of Origination, who resembles a tauren but with a ram's head rather than a bovine appearance. It's possible to imagine the Earthmother entity, whatever it is, taking control of a group of titan constructs and creating her own.
She brought the shu'halo forth from the land
We know that the Explorer's League has on two separate occasions taken to excavating ruins in tauren held areas in both Thunder Bluff and The Barrens, which could indicate a connection to the ancient titan vault at Terramok, beneath what is now Maraudon in Desolace. (Maraudon is interesting here because it is where Zaetar, a son of Cenarius, mated with Princess Theradras, daughter of Therazane. Maraudon is where the centaur were born, the same centaur who would hunt and harry the shu'halo for years.)
So the tauren claim to have created Cenarius. Cenarius sired Zaetar, who sired the centaur Khans, who then turned on the tauren. The centaur, children of an earth elemental princess, turned on the tauren, pure children of the Earthmother. The centaur are therefore much more directly linked to the element of earth than the tauren are. They directly descend from it. And yet, lacking this, the tauren are clearly more pure than the centaur, at least so far as the Earthmother is concerned. Is this because as fleshly beings, the tauren are more fully a part of the natural world, while the centaur are incapable of feeling the true connection to nature that would allow them to be more than despoilers? The Hatred of the Centaur myth both seem to imply that the centaur are listening to those same "dark whispers" that the shu'halo once succumbed to. Zaetar himself says that Theradras is a servant of the Old Gods, and it's not hard to assume the centaur inherit her tainted connection to them.
We can easily imagine a slowly coalescing intelligence encompassing the whole world and wishing to be free from outsiders meddling with her, be they titans or Old Gods. Did she make herself the shu'halo, possessed of great strength, from the very living rock and soil of her own body? Did she despair as they, too, slowly succumbed to the madess of the beings trapped within her very body, the cancers she is unable to excise? And did she, through her own machinations, manage to reclaim them after the Curse of Flesh changed them from beings of living earth into flesh and blood and taught them the ways of the natural beings that they now shared substance with? Did she in time use them to help her create more guardians, more beings who would protect the very natural world that makes up her being?
If Elune could make the wildkin, it is not hard to believe that the Earthmother could make the shu'halo. And having made them, she could make them part of herself, part of nature, and thus her most stalwart defenders, her champions ... her immune system.
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
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Utakata Jun 29th 2011 10:43AM
All this time I thought they where cows that became upright anf grew opposable thumbs.
Utakata Jun 29th 2011 10:45AM
*and...sheesh.
Cambro Jun 29th 2011 10:47AM
Interesting as always. When you first started, I thought you were going to draw a connection to the Faceless Ones, based on similar size and shape, as Blizzard seems to so often do (trolls/elves, humans/vrykul, gnomes/mechagnomes, dwarves/troggs).
So do you think the Taunka would be descendants of the original Tauren then? I don't remember if Northrend was its own separate continent prior to the Sundering. They could have either been created by the earth mother for that climate, or Tauren trapped on that continent after the Sundering and over time evolved to better survive their climate (which I think would indicate the earth mother's forethought rather than random chance).
I don't see the Ammunae connection, he looks very humanoid in proportions to me, but with a ram's head slapped on. I want to see those pics of Tauren in Ulduar though, I don't remember them.
That one Joey Jun 29th 2011 11:15AM
Very interesting you brought up taunka, which werent even mentioned in the article?
I think taunka are the "impure" that the article was talking about and the playable tauren are the "pure" ones. I say this because in dragonblight and eastern borean tundra, you can see ghosts of enraged taunka pathing around, and one who truly worships the earthmother wouldnt be left behind as a manifestation (in that matter). I've heard stories of tauren (and humans/nelfs) who's spirits appear in some great moment or to give world changing advice. (My favorite is when Terenas Menethil appears to tell Arthas "No king rules forever, my son.") But all these manefestations I've seen, none have been benevolent as the ghost taunka are.
Autoslizer Jun 29th 2011 11:55AM
Now that you mention it, I believe it has been stated that the taunka were more warlike than the "normal" tauren.
Also, and correct me if I'm wrong, I don't we've ever been told that the taunka believe in the Earthmother. Could the taunka be the corrupted ones? I mean they were pretty close to Yogg-Saron, atleast the Storm Peaks ones.
Tirrimas Jun 29th 2011 1:05PM
Another key difference is that the taunka coerce the elements into cooperation, rather than entreating them to, like the tauren do (for example, the elemental held imprisoned at Camp Winterhoof). This indicates (to me) a darker (less pure?) side to the taunka.
Killik Jun 29th 2011 6:27PM
Or the Faceless Ones are the impure tauren, who listened to the whispers from below.
herra.ledonne Jun 29th 2011 11:05AM
Hate to oppose a great article, but I've got a different theory, with Therazane being the Earthmother. I'm aware that the possibility has been somewhat dismissed before, but our newly implemented adventures to piece Thrall back together in the four elemental planes got me thinking.
"Great Therazane has not forgotten what it was to love..."
Remembering the ancestry of the centaur to be the daughter of Therazane and a son of Cenarius, and hearing the Stonemother speak the line above it could be considered that Theradras might not have been the first in the family to find love outside the elemental plane of earth. Perhaps Therazane discovered some demigod or similar being when the world was new and caused the Tauren - perhaps more stone-like back then - to be born. Then after their arrival the Old Gods might have corrupted the Tauren and introduced them to war for their own entertainment. Perhaps Therazane even chose to side with the Old Gods and become an Elemental Lord in exchange for the shu'halo to be left outside of the conflict. Would explain the story of why the Earthmother left her people, and by leaving the part about the Old Gods out of it, she'd ensure that her children wouldn't try to rescue her and get themselves killed.
As for some of the mythology that isn't clearly explained, it should be remembered that whether this theory is right or not, the tauren race is easily over ten thousand years old to have lore about Cenarius' birth, to the point of claiming involvement in the event. Since the stories were passed on mainly orally, it wouldn't be far-fetched if they got a tad wild over time. Thus Mu'sha and An'she being actual eyes of the Earthmother can be questioned, perhaps just becoming creative storytelling or some manner of parting words from the Stonemother, to comfort the shu'halo that her heart and gaze will remain on her children.
The argument relies quite heavily on Therazane's personality before being under the Old God's boot heel. Considering that even now she is understanding, if embittered as hell by the loss her daughter by mortal, fleshy hands, I find the above theory quite possible. Figured I'd put it here to offer another opinion, since it's tinfoil hat time.
Ilmyrn Jun 29th 2011 11:26AM
That's an excellent theory, really interesting. But isn't there a 'Stone Mother' figure in Tauren mythology who's supposed to be diametrically opposed to the Earthmother? I remember reading somewhere (don't remember where) about how where the Earthmother was warm, nurturing, and loving, the Stone Mother desires only endless grinding rock.
Also, if you can play through Deepholme and see Therazane as anything but a crazy, bitter, capricious tyrant whose only interest is being left alone to rule her realm, I'd be very surprised. And for that matter, when she says she remembers what it was like to love, she could just be talking about Theradras.
Kar Jun 30th 2011 7:10PM
"Great Therazane has not forgotten what it was to love..."
"the Stone Mother desires only endless grinding rock."
...anyone else go somewhere unpleasant with that?
Urthona Jun 29th 2011 11:19AM
SOMEONE has read Earth X.
aerrae Jun 29th 2011 11:27AM
This was an OK Know your Lore, I realize it was a TFH, but some of the ideas were a little mixed up here and there (jumpy). I found it to be one of the harder reads. I had to stop and re-read things often. All in all tho, the available lore behind it is sound, and the conclusions do make sense.
I do wish there was a bit more, because the Tauren do end up in Northrend, etc and I think there is a lot more that we can toss into the Tauren salad.
Nagaina Jun 29th 2011 11:34AM
My Tinfoil Hat Theory, and the one that I operate under as far as my group's roleplaying plots are concerned: The Earthmother is a benevolent Old God, the creatrix of the generative chaos known as Life, and the Life-giving and restoring Light in all its forms (including An'she and Mu'sha) are her offspring as are, through some remove, all living things from the sentient and sapient to the humblest blades of grass.
(The Old God called by the Nerubians Yogg-Saron is her twin sibling, being the shadow of life. They don't talk a great deal and the family reunions are currently pretty awkward.)
Onikuma Jun 29th 2011 1:01PM
This is my thought as well. Who ever said all the Old gods are evil? How many old gods are there? The Earthmother could have easily turned Ammunae's Earthen into tauren with her own Curse of Flesh.
We could also see a tie between faceless ones and tauren. Could Tauren be purified faceless ones?
Nagaina Jun 29th 2011 1:31PM
@ Onikuma ~
The only evidence we have that the Old Gods were *originally* evil is the somewhat unreliable word of the Titans' servants on that topic -- and, even there, the evidence is somewhat sketchy, as the Old Gods are described as being "incomprehensibly evil" by the Titans. I think the "incomprehensibly" part there is fairly important, as it sets up the very real possibility that the Titans and the Old Gods clashed not because either side was fundamentally evil, but their natures were too alien from one another to allow comprehension and mutual co-existence without conflict. Order cannot understand Chaos and all that.
OH, LOOK, AN OVERARCHING UNIVERSAL THEME.
Which is not to say that the Old Gods involuntarily imprisoned in/on Azeroth know aren't demonstrably pretty freaking evil. They *are* that. But I imagine that being imprisoned on dubious grounds for an unimaginably long period of time with your sole goal being to get out and take vengeance on the things that put you there isn't exactly conducive to maintaining a constructive worldview. Or, y'know, sanity. Whether that was *always* true is, however, substantially debatable, especially given that the Titans effectively wrote all the history books -- and their own servants do not exactly paint the Titans as completely devoid of morally questionable facets, what with that whole "destroying whole worlds that deviate from acceptable normative development" thing.
Personally? My ultimate Tinfoil Hat Theory is that all the sapient species of Azeroth are different and special because they combine and harmonize aspects of the Titans and the Old Gods into a functional whole. The orcs and draenei, being not actually of Azeroth, are special because they were both races touched by the true ultimate and destructive all-devouring evil of the universe -- Sargeras and his nihilistic desire to pervert everything into a twisted reflection of his own corruption -- and each escaped it in their own way, to warn other worlds by example (the orcs) and by word (the draenei). Sargeras' minions keep getting their heads handed to them by Azeroth because the union of the primal creative forces of the universe cannot be overcome by the mindless urge to perversion and destruction.
Stryker Boh Jun 29th 2011 12:24PM
I'd say the evidence points very strongly against the Tauren being Titan creations. When the Titans created something, there were examples of the creations spread throughout all of their big installations. There hasn't been anything that even resembles Tauren yet, which coincides with there being nothing that resembles night elf/trolls either. I'd say the Tauren pre-dated the Titans.
ninjivitis Jun 29th 2011 1:25PM
Plus all Titan creations started out in robo form and later became fleshy.
Glaras Jun 29th 2011 1:15PM
Long ago, Eredar explorers still untainted by any contact with The Legion, discovered the travel potential of Draenor's dimension-warping crystals, and built the first Dimension Ships. Small by comparison to later examples, they carried teams of Eredar to various places in search of knowledge or resources.
The entry of the scoutship T'Schuhaalu into Azerothian space had an unintended and terrible side-effect on the unamed ur-Titan whose body literally formed the planet: the dimensional hole through which the explorers arrived warped the local space so much that the Great Being's eyes were literally pulled out of Her head, and set orbiting the planet. Unaware of the pain they'd caused, the T'Schuhaalu landed on a grassy plain and begin to deploy its team.
The team became abruptly aware, however, when the Great Being, now royally pissed, smote the visitors' ship into a billion pieces and scattered the remnants across the whole of Azeroth. To the visitors, She spoke, informing them of Her displeasure, and "welcoming" them to a nice long visit on Azeroth. Then to make sure the squid-faces got the point, she covered them in fur, bent the backs of the males, stole the /waggle from the females for Her own purposes, and make some kind of sneering remark about how dumb their ship's name was: "shoo-ha-low, or something".
Which explains why the Draenei and the Tauren, enemies though they are, are still secretly suspicious that both of them having similar body mechanics means *something* they'd rather not think about.
Zetsubou Jun 29th 2011 1:45PM
makes me think of dwarves =D
"some people think there are no dwarven women. that dwarves just spring out of the earth, like daisies!"
except its moo cows XD
but seriously, it does make a fair amount of sense. tauren are one of the few races that started on azeroth and aren't assumed to be titan handiwork. its completely possible that tauren were made of earth like the dwarves and other constructs, succumbed to the curse of flesh, and split off into factions of pure and impure (which may also explain why they never united until thrall and cairne). elune/mu'sha is a fraction of the earthmother, so it would be highly likely that the earthmother could create life, at least from herself.
*TIN FOIL HAT HYPERMODE*
velen guesstimates that elune is a naruu. an'she is the sun, which could in warcraft be a naruu or powered by one. therefore, naruu are born of planets, and the explanation between the light, nature and arcane magic is cemented. they all function similarly because they can all originate from the same source.
Zetsubou Jun 29th 2011 2:03PM
actually it may explain shadow magic and demons too. not sure who(maybe TFH?) said that there is a connection between naruu and voidwalkers. if shadow magic is tied to death or the absence of light it could explain why almost anyone can access it.