Know Your Lore: Dalaran

Welcome to Know Your Lore, where each week Alex Ziebart brings you a tasty little morsel of lore to wrap your mind around. Sweet, sweet lore. Mmmm. Have suggestions for future KYL topics? Leave a comment below!
Dalaran, located in the heart of former Lordaeron territory, has been the center of Arcane knowledge since its creation, and could be considered the Humans' answer to Quel'Thalas, though the nation accepts Elves (and many others) in its ranks as well. Magic is Dalaran's lifeblood, and is even ruled through the strength and wisdom of its magi. Dalaran is a magocracy, a government ruled by a council of mages known as the Kirin Tor, elected by citizens of the nation. Their icon is the Violet Eye, with Violet being the motif used for the nation itself, and the color purple representing the Arcane as a whole in Warcraft (Arcane Missiles, Netherstorm).
Dalaran has been at war (or recovering from it) pretty consistently since the Second War, when Dalaran joined the Alliance of Lordaeron. The Second War being what it was and the Orcs being Orcs, Dalaran was quite nearly sacked but managed to hold on by a thread. The Magocracy quickly rebuilt, using an artifact they created and dubbed the Eye of Dalaran... and was immediately assaulted yet again. Teron Gorefiend, under orders from Ner'zhul (fulfilling a request from Deathwing), stormed the city yet again to steal the Eye.While the Eye was later retrieved by Khadgar and the Alliance Expedition, its current whereabouts are unknown. It's extremely likely that it ended up back in the hands of the Kirin Tor, but it's never been specifically stated. Either way, Dalaran rebuilt. Again.
Then it was destroyed in the Third War. ...Again. This time its destruction came at the hands of Archimonde, summoned into Azeroth by the Scourge, who still feigned allegiance to the Legion at the time. Archimonde made it look really, really easy, too. He basically built a sandcastle that looked like Dalaran and kicked it over. Through the power of magic, the real thing crumbled, too. Ah, magic. We love you so.
Archimonde, being the bonehead that he is (was), walked away without finishing the job. The Kirin Tor sealed the remains of the city within a supposedly impenetrable shield so they could rebuild yet again, this time rebuilding far more than just their city. In the Scourge and Archimonde's assault, the nation lost more than it ever has before, including some of its ruling council and the de facto leader Archmage Antonidas.
Very recently, Dalaran has emerged from its shell and rejoined the world to thwart the Blue Dragonflight, led by the aspect Malygos who believes mortals are not meant to wield magic at all. To some extent, the Kirin Tor agrees with the Blue Dragonflight; magic shouldn't be thrown around as haphazardly as it is... but they don't really agree with taking it away complete, for obvious reasons.
Not only has the Kirin Tor stepped up to stop Malygos, they've taken the fight to him in the most literal sense possible. They've used their magic to dig Dalaran right up out of the ground, sewers and all, and float it up to Northrend. At the behest of the new Archmage of Dalaran, Rhonin, the Horde has been allowed into the city en masse for the first time. Well, the first time they've been invited in, anyway. History has shown they sort of have a tendency to trample on through whenever they want.
While many see it is a necessary step, others such as Rhonin's own wife still haven't forgiven the Orcs or the crowd they roll with such as the Forsaken and Blood Elves. The Kirin Tor have managed to spark a cold (gang) war of sorts within their own city because of this. The High Elves of the Silver Covenant lay claim to half of Dalaran and the Blood Elves of the Sunreavers claim the other half, in the names of the Alliance and the Horde respectively.

While those were the major historical events for the nation, most parts of modern civilization have some ties to the city, whether it be something such as Jaina Proudmoore having trained under Archmage Antonidas, or something as simple as rulers and major figures having passed through the city. While the coins you can fish up in Dalaran are meant to be funny, they really drive the point home about how many stories have had crossroads in Dalaran. Arugal, Kel'thuzad, and Kael'thas have all had their 'beginnings' in Dalaran, and many, many more have passed through on their journeys.
Even if Dalaran doesn't have the best record when it comes to war, the city certainly has a special place in the hearts of Humanity, and probably even Elf-kind these days. Plus it's super pretty.
Filed under: Mage, Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Wrath of the Lich King
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
Doug Dec 5th 2008 2:33AM
In response to Balius' question on why the blood elves don't like the blood elves, I can think of one large reason. The blood elves and high elves were at one point the same race, but the blood elves were the people who went with Kael'thas into Outland while the high elves are the people who stayed behind. The High elves hate the blood elves because they are basically 'betrayers' of the high elves. After the blood elves went with Kael'Thas, they also split up between people who followed Kael'thas and the people who didn't agree with what Kael'thas was doing with the demonic magic in Outland. Those who left Kael'thas then joined the horde to fight against him and to regain the Sunwell. If you ever play with the Blood elves, you will sometimes click on a blood elf npc and they will say 'For Quel'thalas!' which is the high elf capital.
Marco Polaris Dec 5th 2008 5:32AM
Er, Quel'thalas was the name of the high elven nation, not a specific city as I recall. A nation that the blood elves are currently in possession of, with as much a reason to consider it theirs as any high elf who wants it back.
el ranchero Dec 5th 2008 11:15AM
@Doug: I think the history you laid out is a little confused. The blood elves did not all go to Outland with Kael'thas; otherwise, the inhabitants of Quel'thalas (a realm, not a city) would all be high elves. Those who are blood elves are the ones who were gathered by Kael'thas back together after the destruction of the city and rechristened the sin'dorei. The rest, those who did not adopt Kael as their leader for whatever reasons, are still high elves, and are generally Alliance. Quel'thalas later forged ties with Sylvanas Windrunner's Forsaken and, through them, joined the Horde after Kael and the blood elves were branded as traitors by the Alliance general Garithos. The blood elves' turn against Kael'thas did not occur until the Sunwell patch (at least outside of the Scryers), and not until well after they had joined the Horde.
The enmity between high and blood elves is partly factional (one is Alliance and one is Horde) and partly due to blood elves' use of fel magic.
Debesun Dec 4th 2008 8:01PM
What exactly are we fighting for at Wintergrasp? Sure the big glowy golden ball looks pretty cool but does that mean we're just fighting for a over sized floating ornament?
William Dec 5th 2008 8:49AM
This is my question exactly... i mean the buff is cool... getting shards from bosses is cool.. but how's that all play out in the lore?
Zetazones Dec 11th 2008 11:36AM
and I'd bet you're one of the people saying PvP is too hard, PvE is too hard. Blizz need to cater to CASUALS!!! But implement more Lores so that blizz need to satisfy Hardcore Lore followers? Oh comon.
/facepalm
MusedMoose Dec 4th 2008 8:16PM
Nifty article, very informative.
Also: I now totally want to see a West Side Story-style gang war in Dalaran between the two factions. Seriously. The mental image of a group of orcs coming toward you out of the shadows, all snappign their fingers in time, is something that everyone should share. *grin*
Kylenne Dec 5th 2008 6:03AM
When you're an orc, you're an orc all the way
From your first crushing kill to your last dying day...
(When my two greatest addictions come together, WoW and musical theater, bad things usually happen.)
Turtlehead Dec 5th 2008 10:56AM
"(When my two greatest addictions come together, WoW and musical theater, bad things usually happen.)"
While I share only one of the two addictions, I've tried across many games to get buddies to agree to naming a guild Spackletastic!. (Say it aloud with gusto. Trust me, you'll grin like an idiot for an hour. Only thing close is hemisemidemiquaver, and need to toss on a Southern drawl for that one. "kway-ahh-vhrrr") The "All Singing, All Dancing, All Home Improvement" guild.
No luck so far. Not a bit. Still hoping. One day!
fahsky Dec 4th 2008 8:25PM
I think the removal of Mana Tap kinda points to the redemption of the Blood Elves.
Taytayflan Dec 4th 2008 8:50PM
Now that I think about it, that makes total sense.
RogueJedi86 Dec 4th 2008 9:12PM
It was removed?
Malkavos Dec 5th 2008 1:17AM
That is exactly what I was about to post after reading some of the earlier comments. It's kind of cool that one of the many recent racial changes actually might have some lore behind it.
vanye111 Dec 5th 2008 9:36AM
RogueJedi,
Mana tap (where you take mana from the target) was removed. Arcane torrent, which silences foes and returns mana, was reworked a bit (returns, iirc, about 6% of max mana).
Muse Dec 4th 2008 8:46PM
About how old is Dalaran? It says in wowwiki it goes back to the Arathor nation days, but that article doesn't have any definitive numbers on it either.
Jason Dec 4th 2008 9:24PM
Excellent use of a Dance-Fight picture.
jam Dec 4th 2008 9:35PM
Lorewise it doesn't make much sense that the Horde (especially orcs) are allowed inside the city, but of course, Blizzard tends to ignore things like logic sometimes for the sake of the game.
Zelius Dec 4th 2008 11:31PM
Actually, it makes perfect sense. Dalaran has always been a human/high elven nation. The majority of the high elves became blood elves. A number of them were citizens of Dalaran and members of the Kirin Tor. These members probably left (or were banned from) the Kirin Tor when the blood elves joined the Horde. However, they now want back in. As a matter of fact, I think it was stated in-game that the blood elf Archmage Aethas Sunreaver was the one responsible for letting the Horde into Dalaran and not Rhonin (although he probably was the one who approved it).
Besides this, there's also the fact that the Horde has mages as well, so it would be in the best interest of both groups to work together against Malygos.
Seems like a perfectly reasonable explanation to me.
Mordrag Dec 4th 2008 11:57PM
actually Rhonin became friend of an orcish warrior named broxigar who fough the legion with krasus and him in the sundering so I guess he has a few reasons to think some of the horde races can be trusted.
Also he seems to be very open minded lorewise whhen it comes to gathering help form other races in times of war for example if you take a look at his memorable quotes in wowiki there´s one where a night elf noble says something about having tauren in their cites is barbaric and Rhonin asks him if would they rather have demons? like saying "we need all the help we can get so don´t complain"
Rij Dec 5th 2008 2:47AM
Beyond the influence of the Blood Elves and their redemption after the events at the sunwell, there's also the matter of the red dragonflight. Alexstratza has seen fit to accept the Hordes help in the fight against Malygos, so who are the Kirin Tor to turn us away?
Also, take a look at the history of the new Horde. We've comitted ourselves full force to the battles against the old gods, the black dragonflight, the Legion, and the full movement of our troops against the Lich King. At this point (I'm not including the events at Angrathar) we've shown that we all have the same goals, and are willing to lay down our lives in the defence of Azeroth against any foe.