Know Your Lore: The humans, part 3

Imagine for a moment that you are, right now, a human of the same age that you are, but living in Azeroth. Depending how old you are, you either lived through or were born into the aftermath of three of the most devastating wars your world has ever seen. Keeping in mind the trouble with timelines, every human alive in the Warcraft setting has endured loss and hardship on a scale almost unimaginable; many were driven from their homes by invading monsters or demons from other worlds, or were forced to flee in advance of legions of walking corpses that relentlessly tried to kill them and dogged their steps all the way to safety.
The humans who congregate today in centers like Stormwind and Theramore have survived when vast numbers of their people died. Only the former high elves have lost more of their kind. The fact that humanity manages to remain a force to be reckoned with despite the loss of almost all of its former northern domains in the Eastern Kingdoms, the deaths of uncounted numbers of their people and the usurpation of their inheritance is a testament to their origin as a seed race of the Titan's first arrival on Azeroth. Indeed, much like their dwarven cousins (for now humans and dwarves truly know they share a common origin, as do their gnomish relations), humans harbor a stony resolve in the face of adversity that could crush or corrupt another people.
Let us look at humanity's most recent travails.
The end that should have ended war
After the events of the Second War, it appeared that humanity had finally triumphed over the orcs and their invading Horde, driven the forest trolls of Zul'Aman back into exile, and otherwise saved the world as they knew it. Ruined Stormwind was to be rebuilt (most likely as much to honor Anduin Lothar, the Lion of Stormwind and architect of the Alliance of Lordaeron). Traitorous Alterac lay in ruins itself, crushed by Uther the Lightbringer and the Alliance forces. Those orcs who didn't have the good sense to die with their fellows were held in camps, after an internal debate among the kings of the Alliance's nations.
To win the war, the Alliance had held together. Dwarves, high elves, humans and even gnomes had fought side by side, welded together by the force of will of the greatest warrior and general Azeroth had seen in generations. It may be fairly said that only Anduin Lothar could have brought all the kings of Azeroth's humans together, as he was the last descendant of Thoradin and in fact, if not in name, ultimately the one, true king of humanity. Furthermore, only Lothar could have brought the high elves to the table, as their nation owed his bloodline a debt it could not refuse. However, while his life brought unity and victory, his death on the slopes of Blackrock Mountain just as surely led to the end of the very Alliance he had founded. What would have happened, had he lived? Would the grateful nations of the Eastern Kingdoms have acclaimed him king? Impossible to say, but what happened following his death is clear enough.
With no force of will so strong as Lothar's to hold them back, the kings of humanity fell to squabbling, bickering, and infighting. Proud Gilneas and Kul Tiras didn't see much point in continuing to contribute to projects like internment camps and Nethergarde Keep in the deserted Blasted Lands, watching over a hole in the ground where the Dark Portal had once stood. Stromgarde, bled white during the war, hungered to take over Alterac and her rich farmlands -- Gilneas too, though Alterac was a rich prize. While the minor lord Daval Prestor served to smooth over some of these tensions as a compromise candidate for rulership of Alterac, his sudden disappearance left the question open and the nation leaderless and often lawless.
Whimpering and crawling an Alliance dies
Eventually, both Gilneas and Stromgarde left the Alliance, Gilneas out of a general sense of dissatisfaction with the idea of Gilnean lives being spent on what they saw as the problems of other nations, and Stromgarde more specifically over Alterac and the orc internment camps. Gilneas objected to these, as well, but moreover the idea that they would be expected to pay to keep orcs alive. If Terenas was fool enough to want to feed and house alien monsters that had murdered his fellow kings, that was his foolishness. But to Stromgarde, the oldest human nation, the deaths at the hands of the orcs were far more personal, as the Horde had actually marched across her lands and burned her people's homes. Few Gilneans truly felt the ravages of the war the way the other nations had. Keeping orcs alive was an insult to every human who had died, heads torn off and stuck on pikes to amuse the warchiefs of a savage, invader race. It was an insult to the death of Lothar on the slopes of Blackrock, and worse, the loss of Danath Trollbane as a member of the Alliance Expedition. Thoras Trollbane did not take this well at all.
While all of this was progressing, Stormwind was rebuilding. There was a setback as Horde from beyond the Dark Portal invaded to steal a magical artifact. But after the Second War, the city of lions rose proudly once more, rebuilt by the stonemasons under Edwin VanCleef. Sadly, the dragon Onyxia, posing as Katriana Prestor, managed to manipulate the House of Nobles of Stormwind (a greedy and selfish, short-sighted lot) into refusing to pay what VanCleef's masterful designs cost to realize. A riot broke out that killed Tiffin Wrynn, wife of the young king Varian. Already distracted from rule by his desire to bring his father's betrayer and murderer to justice, Varian sank into a years long depression.
In just a few years, the Alliance of Lordaeron had gone from a collection of victors to a fractured, almost impotent body. The elven, dwarven and gnomish allies had all retreated to their own affairs. Gilneas built her infamous wall and vanished from history. Stromgarde, alone and with few resources, began her slow decline. Alterac became a land of criminals who were once rulers and who ruled in fact through crime, even as Lordaeron tried to enforce an untenable martial law over the place. Magical Dalaran barely concerned herself with the affairs of the world around her. Only Lordaeron and Kul Tiras were ruled by active monarchs, and while Terenas was mentally fit, he was aging. His son Arthas, the heir apparent, had witnessed his father's growing weariness during the Prestor affair (when despite having previously promised otherwise, Terenas nearly forced his daughter Calia to marry Daval Prestor) and vowed to be the strength his father's rule required.
Dreams die, as do those who dream them
To cover the entire Third War would not only divert us, but it's already been done. What is sufficient is to demonstrate what happened to humanity during this nearly apocalyptic war. The First War destroyed one human nation. The second destroyed another but also rebuilt Stormwind. At the end of the First and Second Wars, humanity had ultimately held onto all of its territory from before them, even if there had been destruction and travail.
But at the end of the Third War, humanity had completely lost Lordaeron, had effectively lost Stromgarde, had no idea that behind the Greymane Wall the people of Gilneas were enduring civil war and the worgen curse and could no longer maintain contact with Kul Tiras. Dalaran had ceased to exist. Left effectively alone, Stormwind struggled on under a king who barely wanted to rule, while the remains of Lordaeron and Kul Tiras had either left for Kalimdor or flocked to Stormwind to be taken in as refugees. Kul Tiras was doubly abandoned, as Jaina Proudmoore took much of their fleet with her, and her father Daelin followed with almost all that was left.
In recent years, Varian Wrynn went from a distant, barely present ruler to a vanished one and then returned to reveal the deceit of Katriana Prestor and her true idenity as Onyxia. In so doing, Varian became a figure of hope for his people, who had endured so many defeats and so much loss over the past decades. It's hard for others to understand how Varian has galvanized not only the Alliance but his own people. With so many humans dead -- with so much territory lost, so many nations wiped out, with the Horde expanding on all fronts, with monsters like the Lich King and then Deathwing menacing a people who have already lived through waves of terror and death -- how could Varian not prove popular at first? Even those who fomented dissent against him had to use the chaos of the times to do so. His approach contrasted greatly with that of Jaina Proudmoore, the ruler of the only human settlement on Kalimdor.
In the decade since the Third War, Stormwind has managed to expand its power, concentrating much of what remains of humanity in the territory under its control. The influence of Katrina Prestor has left Stormwind's control over the regions surrounding it weak at best, and the ruinous expense of the war against the Lich King has prevented Stormwind from improving the situation. Poverty in Westfall has allowed the Defias Brotherhood to thrive and rebuild after Edwin VanCleef was hunted down and killed. Redridge continues to try and fend off Blackrock ocs with little to no help from Stormwind. Duskwood struggles against marauding worgen and undead. The few settlements in Stranglethorn contend with trolls, the jungle itself, and ancient magics. Theramore, for its part, is the wedge driven into Horde domination of eastern Kalimdor, and it is constantly under pressure, following the successful Horde invasion that slew Daelin Proudmoore after the Third War.
The last stand of mankind
Humanity is at present the most battle-hardened it has been since the time of the Troll Wars. Most living citizens of Stormwind and Theramore are refugees from former nations now destroyed or were themselves once refugees when Stormwind itself burned. Human settlements destroyed in what is now the Swamp of Sorrows are still rememberd and fought for by the children who were forced to watch their parents die at orcish hands.
Every human alive in all of Azeroth remembers those three wars, which all took place in living memory of almost any adult human. These aren't the distant wars of night elves, the most recent one before the Third War a thousand years ago, or the War of the Three Hammers that took place centuries ago. No, these are wars so recent that even short-lived humans can remember them, remember the people lost in them, and lament the choices and missed opportunites of the peaces between them, short as they were. To some, the Third War almost never seems to have ended, with the battle in Northrend so fresh in their minds.
Now, humans like Greymane and Trollbane look like prophets, as the children of the same orcs who murdered Tess Blueheart's family bring war to humanity once again. Spared in the camps, they bring death, seeking to invade Stormwind from the sea and burn it as they once did via a traitor's dagger. The Cataclysm that shook the world seems like more of the same, and the scars of a dragon's claws on Stormwind remind its people of how close they have come before to being totally wiped out. For humanity, times have never been this interesting, and the stakes never this high. Now is humanity's chance to stand or fall, to be remembered as its finest hour or its final one.
For more information on the people and places and events mention in this Know Your Lore:
- Anduin Lothar
- The Defias Brotherhood
- King Varian Wrynn
- The Alliance of Lordaeron
- Lady Jaina Proudmoore
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, Arts and Crafts
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Shadowtwili Aug 3rd 2011 9:20PM
Well written article, but I did see some flaws in it.
First of, the Dwarven Kingdom of Khaz Modan and there Gnomish allies, never ever left the Alliance of Lordaeron, or it's succesor, the Grand Alliance.
Secondly, it's Katrana Prestor ;)
Thirdly, Lothar would have never been King, most likely only regent of Stormwind until Varian came of age.
Dalaran did concern itself about the goings on in the other Kingdoms, they where councelling King Terenas on matter of the plague, for instance.
Great article none the less ;)
Jonisjalopy Aug 3rd 2011 10:09PM
I will always be Horde through and through, but Anduin Lothar is by far my favorite character in Warcraft lore. Glory to Stormwind!
Kolumbus Aug 3rd 2011 11:47PM
"Only the former high elves have lost more of their kind."
Didn't the gnomes also lose about 90% of their population? No love for the poor little gnomes.
Angus Aug 4th 2011 7:52AM
Gnomes lost that to a traitor, not an assault. And as has been shown, you can reclaim the lost gnomes. Making a new gnome character has you being fixed after having been one of the mutants.
Eatz Aug 4th 2011 5:49PM
I am also pretty sure it said they lost nearly half due to troggs and irradiation, not 90%. Without hard numbers though (dream on) it remains nebulous at best to speculate on these things.
Tfish92 Aug 4th 2011 1:20AM
Oh Em Gee
Clearly you are biased, and your biasness is clearly a result of blizzards biasness. I can't believe how anti-horde you and blizzard are. Blizzard tries to trick us into thinking they don't favor one faction over the other but if they really didn't prefer the alliance to the horde then why is there an alliance?
Al Aug 4th 2011 2:13AM
A faction's existence is proof of bias? Uh... what?
Miz Aug 4th 2011 2:19AM
By your argument, how could Blizzard not be biased in favour of the Horde if there is a Horde?
I swear if I gave you people a bag of gold, you would complain that it is too heavy.
Edge00 Aug 4th 2011 11:12AM
There are two factions because the game is called WARcraft, and because conflict makes a cool story. If you want to play the one faction version that's called farmville.
These comments about "bliz is biased toward faction x" or "blizz hates class y" make no sense. You might play just alliance or shaman is your favorite class, but they are all blizzard's.
Tfish92 Aug 4th 2011 11:18AM
are you people mentally handicapped in some way?
Terethall Aug 4th 2011 2:10PM
The Internet hasn't discovered sarcasm yet, Tfish92. After sailing across the tremulous Sea of Debate, they landed at the Isle of Ad Hominem and decided to stop exploring the New World of Conversation and settle there.
Be patient and gentle with them, as they are but children attempting to grasp the ineffable. Next time, consider explaining things using something easier, like a puppet show, instead of words.
That said, if you'd clean up your punctuation and spelling a bit it might make things easier next time. Sarcasm is all in the tone, and a technically-poor comment destroys whatever sense of tone you were trying to cultivate.
mariodcole Aug 4th 2011 1:45AM
Yet another biased Rossini article. Its fiction so who cares right but " orcs who didn't have the good sense to die with their fellows" made me stop reading. Oh well at least the other Know Your Lore writer is easy to read.
Tonic Aug 4th 2011 2:27AM
It is written from the point of view of the human nations who refused to contribute to the costs of maintaining these Camps. That's how they viewed paying royalities in order to give orcs free food and shelter, and rightfully. As far as they knew, orcs were just a race of monsters who would kill them at first sight.
I swear that once some of you see a formation of three words that you don't like, you instantly stop reading and go on complaining. It's called CONTEXT and you should read it from time to time before QQing.
Angus Aug 4th 2011 8:00AM
ALL the Know your Lore articles about a race are based. They use the viewpoint OF THAT RACE.
The Orcs are bittersweet in tone, making it obvious that they screwed up, but try to be noble warriors anyway. The Humans are a proud, defiant race that has suffered greatly. The Blood Elves has been betrayed by the race that they thought were their greatest allies in their time of greatest need. The Dwarves are a strong, noble race honoring debts and friendships while having internal issues that they try to keep hidden. etc...
It is a strong author that can depict such differing views and write them all in a positive light.
Zetsubou Aug 4th 2011 2:16AM
I i find it difficult to play humans
1: because they are kinda short for my tastes (as a person who spent a lot of his time playing draenei and Nelfs) i don't have that problem with the horde, partly because tauren feel terribly slow and horde really doesn't have any other tall characters. im also not fond of how they look. i do like gilneans, but i wouldn't say for the human form.
2: because playing humans when there are so many unique races seems backwards to me. they have so much more lore and ties to the story because its easy to project whatever is needed from real life. not only that, but due to humanity, most races that could be better are held back to keep humanity relevant. there is no exploration or expansion of certain races, because humanity is a safe ground that will probably not stop players from looking at the game. i suppose its important to promote one's race/existence, and i have no issue with humans being a competitive race, but it just feels lazy to have humans always be a core race.
almost all games are guilty of this, but i suppose i respect wow for at least expanding on orcs. in a lot of games they are simple enemies or have loose knit villages/factions. now if only they could treat other races with more love... :/
Amaxe Aug 4th 2011 12:49PM
"Only the former high elves have lost more of their kind."
I guess this explains why the Belfs are such jerks... all their kind people got killed
/flees the mob ;-)
Tfish92 Aug 4th 2011 2:57PM
Are you serious? You would have to be a complete and absolute moron to think that was any more that someone making fun of the general comments articles like this get regardless of punctuation.
And for the record nothing is misspelled or punctuated incorrectly in my original post. Obviously "biasness" isn't a word, but if that's what you're saying threw people into thinking it was a serious post then everyone legitimately needs help.
Tfish92 Aug 4th 2011 3:00PM
that was a reply to Terethall and was supposed to be a reply on my original comment, I'm not sure why it ended up it's own comment.
Al Aug 5th 2011 2:25AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poe%27s_law
Terethall Aug 5th 2011 3:38PM
I'm normally not this much of an Internet douche, but I happen to be drunk off of my ass at the moment, so let me help you out with your punctuation failures. (Obviously "biasness" is not a word. I was not chastising you for failing to use the correct term, "bias.")
"Clearly you are biased, and your biasness is clearly a result of blizzards biasness. I can't believe how anti-horde you and blizzard are. Blizzard tries to trick us into thinking they don't favor one faction over the other but if they really didn't prefer the alliance to the horde then why is there an alliance?"
In order:
The word "blizzards" should be capitalized. There should be an apostrophe before the "s" in "blizzards." The word "horde" should be capitalized. Once again, "blizzard" should be capitalized. There should be a period (or full-stop, if you hail from the delightfully quirky U.K.) following "... the other" and preceding "but if they ..." and the word "but" should be changed to "However" and followed by a comma. The word "alliance" should be capitalized. Again, the word "horde" should be capitalized. Apparently, you have trouble with the concept of capitalizing words in a lot of your posts. (You began your retort in the first thread with a word that was not capitalized, and you made the same mistake in your follow-up comment to this thread. Additionally, your use of the apostrophe in "it's" in this follow-up thread is incorrect; your usage of "it's" intends to denote the genitive case, that is, possession, which does NOT use an apostrophe in the word "its," because "it's" is a contraction of "it is." But I digress.) There should, in your original comment, be a comma following the (hopefully now-capitalized) word "Horde." Finally, "alliance" should be capitalized, as I have previously noted.
Obviously you missed the point of my previous post, as it was actually an attempt to defend you, with only a recognition at the end of the viewpoint opposing yours at the end as acquiescence to popular will. (I wouldn't want to risk angry downvotes from those who blasted you in the first place, after all.) But if I'm going to be attacked by someone I had hoped to at least rescue from the worst of the ignorant flames, then I have no pity.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm off to run my dailies.