Know Your Lore: The Alliance

This week on KYL, we move away from the Fall of the Lich King (although in the months to come expect more Icecrown related KYL's) and out to the larger world and the major factions that contend across it. I thought we'd start with the Alliance this week for a number of reasons, the first and most important among them being that the Alliance would not exist without the Horde, while the Horde's existence owes itself to forces transcending the Alliance. Because of this, doing the Alliance first will leave open questions that the Horde section next week will help answer.
The Alliance as it stands at this moment in time is a far different entity than the one originally known as the Alliance of Lordaeron. That Alliance was one of seven human nations (Azeroth, Lordaeron, Stromgarde, Kul Tiras, Alterac, Dalaran and Gilneas) with the Dwarves of Ironforge, Gnomes of Gnomeregan and High Elves of Quel'Thalas. This Alliance was born directly out of the statecraft of King Terenas Menethil of Lordaeron and the military leadership of Anduin Lothar, the Lion of Azeroth and last living member of the original Arathi bloodline.
Each member of this alliance had various reasons for being in it and varying degrees of loyalty to it (the High Elves, for example, were only in the Alliance because as the last Arathi, Lothar could compel their loyalty due to ancient pacts and abandoned it as soon as it was possible for them to fulfill said pacts, while Gilneas retreated behind the Greymane Wall not long after the end of the Second War over differences of opinion with Lordaeron) and it certainly lacked in coherence compared to the Horde it was opposed to.
In fact, it's fair to say the Alliance of Lordaeron would never have existed if the Kingdom of Azeroth (Stormwind) hadn't fallen to the Horde in the First War. Lothar's desperate journey away from the ravaged capital of the southern human kingdom with the child king Varian Wrynn in his arms and his arrival in Lordaeron at Terenas' court is the stuff of legends now, but then it was a very near thing, a flight from bloodthirsty marauders who dogged their heels at every step and could easily have caught and killed them all. Even after Lothar made that dread trip north and roused the other human kingdoms, got Terenas on board, convinced the dwarves, gnomes and elves to join up (and even there, the Horde helped by doing things like recruiting the Trolls and attacking Quel'Thalas) the lack of unity in the Alliance of Lordaeron nearly cost it the Second War, Alterac being the most obvious example. If not for Gul'dan's treachery, in fact, the Horde most likely would have won the Second War and destroyed the Alliance of Lordaeron.
The aftermath of Gul'dan's decision to take the Stormreaver and Twilight's Hammer and go get eaten by demons at Sargeras' tomb was that the Alliance finally had the chance to push the Horde back, confronting Doomhammer and his forces at Blackrock Mountain, where Lothar met his death and Turalyon took up his shattered sword, defeating the Orcs and capturing or pushing them back through the Dark Portal. While the Alliance managed to exist long enough to mount the Alliance Expedition to Draenor following Ner'zhul and Teron Gorefiend's theft of the Book of Medivh, it disintegrated into squabbling and infighting not long after as Genn Greymane pulled out entirely over the question of letting the Orc prisoners from the Second War live in internment camps rather than exterminating them.
It's also necessary to mention the effect Daval Prestor had on the Alliance at this time. An unknown nobleman claiming relation to the deposed Perenolde dynasty of Alterac, he nearly managed to get himself married into the Lordaeron royal family and placed on the throne of Alterac at the same time. Luckily for Calia Menethil, for some reason Daval Prestor disappeared and she never had to marry him. Unfortunately for Alterac, this left the place to the mercies of the ogres and the Syndicate.
Ironically, the Alliance as a cohesive entity basically didn't exist during the Third War. Ner'zhul as the Lich King struck at Lordaeron alone, using Kel'Thuzad (a former archmage of Dalaran) to help corrupt Prince Arthas, who sailed to Northrend sans his father's approval after the atrocities at Stratholme, and returned, Frostmourne in hand, to slay his father and destroy his kingdom. The loss of Lordaeron and the creation of the modern Plaguelands spelled the end of the Alliance of Lordaeron as it stood, as did the destruction of Quel'Thalas and the pollution of the Sunwell to raise Kel'Thuzad as a Lich. The destruction of Dalaran followed hard upon. Jaina Proudmoore's flight to Kalimdor helped sever Kul Tiras from the remnant as well, as Admiral Daelin Proudmoore soon took the Navy to find her. This left a rebuilding Stormwind in no position to take action against the Burning Legion and the Scourge, and ragged bands of survivors throughout the Plaguelands under the command of men like Garithos acting on their own.
Meanwhile, the remnants of the Alliance under Jaina found themselves at first in conflict with, and then allied to, the Night Elves of Kalimdor. To this motley alliance were added the orcs, trolls and tauren under the young Horde Warchief Thrall, after subtle and not so subtle meddling by Medivh himself, no longer insane or possessed by Sargeras (and also no longer dead) - this assortment of mortals stood against the Burning Legion and its advance up the slopes of Mount Hyjal, but they fought at best a delaying action to give Malfurion Stormrage time to take action and make the ultimate sacrifice, destroying the World Tree Nordrassil and the night elves' immortality in the process.
To be honest, how we get from this moment to the current state of affairs between the Horde and Alliance is kind of vague. Part of it can be laid at Grom Hellscream's feet: while he and Thrall stood together against Mannoroth and earned Grom a hero's death, his previous actions in Kalimdor (drinking Mannoroth's blood in a tainted fountain and slaying Cenarius, the demigod patron of the druids and teacher of Malfurion himself) had earned the orcs a lasting enmity from the kaldorei. The Warsong Clan's further expansion north into night elf lands stoked the fires of hostility, and it's fair to say that without the actions of Grom and his Warsong Clan, the night elves would have had no compelling reason to join the new Alliance that rose after the Third War. Likewise, with the Scourge having destroyed Lordaeron by this point, human power was at its lowest ebb.
Gilneas remained sealed behind its wall, Dalaran was destroyed, Kul Tiras bereft of its ruler and most of its navy, Alterac a blighted land of thieves and ogres, and Stromgarde (already weakened by Thrall's campaign to free the orcs that destroyed Hammerfall and Durnholde Keep in occupied Alterac) found itself overrun with Syndicate from Alterac and ogres as well. This left only the former Kingdom of Azeroth (now calling itself Stormwind) as having any power and influence of the original seven, and Theramore Isle in Kalimdor populated by various refugees from the destroyed nations consumed by the Scourge and the Legion. We're still not aware of what, exactly moved the dwarves and gnomes to join the Alliance following the Third War (although we know the fall of Gnomeregan is what kept the gnomes out of the Third War) aside from general hostility from the Second towards orcs and trolls. It's possible one strong motivation to join was the existence of the Forsaken to their north, almost indistinguishable from the Scourge and slowly moving south through Silverpine Forest and the ruined lands of Alterac. Once the Forsaken joined the Horde, it only became more compelling to be part of an organization that could oppose them, one suspects.
At present the Alliance stands more united than ever. The admission of the shipwrecked draenei gave the night elves a closer ally in their attempts to reclaim Ashenvale and protect it from Legion demons and Horde incursions alike, as well as helping the Alliance make inroads with native draenei and lost ones in Outland. The return of Varian Wrynn spurred the Alliance into Northrend, where for the first time night elves, humans, gnomes and dwarves can all be seen fighting side by side against the Scourge and the Horde alike. Muradin Bronzebeard's return from seeming death has had a similar effect for Alliance unity, as has the more bellicose attitude of Garrosh Hellscream, Overlord of the Warsong Offensive and son of Grom, slayer of Cenarius. The very legacy of the Old Horde that serves to often unite the Horde seems often to unite the Alliance even more effectively.
Next week, we'll talk about the cost of all this: the deaths and worse of the Forsaken, the xenophobic betrayal of the Quel'dorei and their transformation into blood elves, the redemption of the orcs and their pacts with tauren and troll allies that helped create the New Horde from the ashes of the Old.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Odds and ends, Lore, Factions, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 6 of 6)
RogueJedi86 Dec 31st 2009 11:13PM
Oh yeah, blood elves made total sense. "We were betrayed by some dick human after our kingdom was destroyed by trolls and undead, so let's join a faction filled with trolls and undead!" And you think the Draenei are the only ones who make no sense?
KronosIII Dec 31st 2009 2:38PM
Why do people always call garrosh a bad guy for killing Cenarius?
The orcs were just cutting down tress and CENARIUS WAS THE ONE THAT ATTACKED HIM!
How can they remain angry at a person for defending himself? I don't understand it at all.
If you charge the enemy be prepared to get killed.
What was he supposed to do? Back down and let his people die?
Shizukera Dec 31st 2009 8:29PM
Yeah, that's right, why be mad at someone who killed your demigod - the demigod who personally taught your archdruid, who also happened to be the first druid? And why wouldn't they be angry at the people who, I don't know, invaded their home (knowingly or not) and are trying to destroy it just to piss you off?
For God's sake, please stop posting and go read your lore. >_
Fojar Dec 31st 2009 3:08PM
Cenarius wasn't a threat to the Orcs at all, he wanted the Orcs to stop cutting down his cousins and get off his land. The Orcs were the invaders; there's a reason that their WC3 campaign is called "The invasion of Kalimdor."
Grimgold Dec 31st 2009 4:50PM
I played WC3 RoC and TFT, and I was originally surprised to see the night elfs and not the high elves in the alliance.
The only thing I can think of was that the night elves natural isolationism kept them from joining the horde or the alliance, at least at first. During the 10 years between TFT and WoW they were faced with the hordes growing power in Kalimdor, and their inability to stop the hordes aggressive expansion into their territory. This left the Nelfs with two choices, be conquered by the horde, or seek allies capable of defeating the horde. With the dragons unwilling/unable to intervene, and their wood land allies such as the furbolg being in a state of disarray after the fight against Archimond, this left only the Alliance of Lordaeron.
The Alliance would have been happy to have the night elves join, after the third war they knew the night elves to be a powerful nation, and they too were worried about the hordes growing power. By aiding the night elves they kept the hordes attention on kalimdor, and the night elves would provide a logical staging area should the alliance ever need to attack the horde directly.
Tainnym Dec 31st 2009 7:30PM
http://greyshades.wordpress.com/2009/11/17/character-focus-king-varian-wrynn/
Read that. The King of Stormwind IS right.
erines Jan 2nd 2010 12:25PM
No where in any of the Warcraft RTS do you find space goats. Get over it. This is where WoW came from and frankly to the first players the only source of Lore. The wiki article was 'madeup' lore to satisfy once again 'even teams'. Lore is always made up to satisfy changes in the WoW story line that do not make sense to people who actually played the first games. Bye bye scrub.
Auriokboy Jan 3rd 2010 1:04PM
@Erines.
The Lore retcon regarding the Draenei and Eredar, is canonic and valid because Blizzard says so. basically Blizz is saying, "hey you guys remember what we told you about the eredar and sargeras at first??' well... forget about it!!!! now the story goes this way." So your point about the RTS games's lore is null, because Blizzard wanted it that way. Get over it, and accept it.
Worse than being racist in a game, is being racist in real life. Your comparison Earth = Mexico, Azeroth = US so humans should be deported back to Earth sounds racist, and disgusting.
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Personally, I don't like any of the Alliance races (except dwarves, they're cool) each of the other races has some degree of responsiblity in bringing pain and suffering to Outlands and Azeroth due to their own choices, as a race, nation or individuals:
from less to worse:
* Gnomes: Basically, they commited genocidal suicide blowing up their own city.
* Humans:The mages of Dalaran were those who weakened again the Veil between the Nether and Azeroth, even when the High Elves told them to be cautious with the use of the Arcane Magic, that takes us to the Council of Tirisfal (wich I think was a good Idea) and to Aegwyn, who is one of my fav characters and I love her, but she was not very smart when she decided to go up and try to defeat Sargeras... we all know what happened later: Medivh, the opening of the Dark Portal, etc etc... As if that were not enough, instead of staying together after the victory of the Second War, they splitted again, Leaving Lordaeron alone to the attack of the plague (not even the mages of Dalaran helped a little to prevent it) who was the person who led the fall of Lordaeron?? its very own heir prince... hence... who created the Scourge and the Forsaken?? the former members of the Alliance who refused to help Lordaeron when the plague began.
*Night Elves: They were the first to draw the Burning Legion to Azeroth. Period. and their Idea of saving the world form destruction basically consist in blowing things... little things such as Wells of Eternity and World Trees. (don't try this at home unless you want to cause World Sunderings and Loss of inmortality)
*Draenei: The Light Loving cousins of the Eredar... who escaped from Draenor and smashed to Azeroth, causing some sort of Chernobyl in Azure an Redmist islands... I can't undertand why the NElves are so upset about some chopped trees, but seems to be okay with the massive mutation of an ecosystem closer to their current homeland than Ashenvale, and furthermore, ally with the responsibles of that mess. Plus, if the Draenei had not fled to Draenor first place, Kil'jaeden had never looked up at the Orcs, and they should still be living shamanistic in a lush, beautiful PLANET.
Horde has it's flaws too, but for me, the Alliance races seems to be Behind every single cathastrophe in Azeroth and outlands
The Alliance was a response for the Horde?? yes, but were the Alliance races with their actions who created and shaped the Horde, in more than one way.
Siaperas Jan 6th 2010 1:29PM
It's interesting if you read the books, during the second war, humans admire the high elves and value them as allies very closely. The elves are portrayed as arrogant, yet curteous. They tend to be very polite to humans outwardly, but think of them almost as children. They may have initially joined the Alliance during the Second War because of the Arathi bloodline, but their interest in the Alliance intensified when the Horde attacked Quel'thalas, stole one of their Cairn stones, and razed a good portion of their forest. Alleria in particular is portrayed for having a blood lust for orcs for a good while, seeking out vengence on the Horde.
This in my opinion, is one of the reasons why there is a split in the High Elves. After the events of the Third War, Kael'thas led his people to siphon magic from demons in an effort to stem the magic withdrawals caused by a now destroyed Sunwell. The Alliance was not comfortable with the Blood Elves using fel magic; almost all of their major threats could be linked to fel magic. With the Alliance shying away from the Blood Elves, the Sindorei turned to the Horde to seek protection from possible threats (as the elven population was almost wiped out by the Scourge).
Stop and think about how bold that is. The Highborn were exiled from Kalimdor after the sundering. Those that went East became the High Elves. Their history pitted them against demonic magic; indeed they helped create the initial Order of Tirisfal for the sole purpose of fighting demons. They wanted to be careful because of they essentially almost destroyed the world with demonic magic. So not only do the High Elves have a history of knowing better than to use demonic engergy, they were also attacked visiciously by the orcs and many still hold grudges on the orcs for the crimes committed during the Second War.
Most of the High Elves follow the path set out by their prince, Kael'thas. In an effort to survive they embrace using fel energy and join the Horde. Many continue to follow Kael'thas down his path of madness into Outland and into the service of demons. Many stay with the Horde. First, because they're not comfortable to sell out completely to the demons, then when the Horde aids them as Kael'thas himself attacks Quel'thalas, their loyality and appreciation for their new Allies grows. Some stay with the Alliance. Mostly the High Elves were in Alliance areas when Quel'thalas fell choose to stay with the Alliance. Those elves did not agree with using fel magic, and most of those also so no sense in joining what they believed the "savage and blood thirsty" Horde. As the two factions show in Dalaran, the High Elves still with the Alliance feel the Blood Elves betrayed their own society.