Know Your Lore: The Old Horde

Last week we discussed the formation of the Alliance in response to the Horde invasion of and destruction of the Kingdom of Azeroth via the Black Portal, and the Alliance's eventual triumph over the Horde, expedition to Draenor, and the events of Warcraft III that saw the destruction of Lordaeron and creation of a new order. This week, we talk about the events that caused those events.
Yes, this week we're discussing the origins of the Horde, that organization that began as the manipulated, deceived and then ultimately demonic blood addicted orcs of Draenor. It's not a simple tale: we've already told parts if it before when we discussed Gul'dan, Ner'zhul, Teron Gorefiend, Grom Hellscream and many others. It all really began untold thousands of years ago on the planet Argus, home world of the Eredar and their Draenei, or exiled, cousins. Thus, ironically, while the existence of the Horde caused the creation of the Alliance, it was an Alliance race that helped start the events that led to the creation of the Horde. Symmetry in origin.
Note: the events I'm about to outline are the current version as Blizzard presents it, which is considered to be the canonical version. If you remember differently from the RTS, that's because it was different then.
Untold thousands of years ago, Sargeras, the champion of the Titans, went mad. Confronted with the unfathomable evil of the Nathrezim, the corruption of the old gods, and chaos itself, he decided that the Titan's plan for order and creation in the cosmos was doomed to failure. Oblivion and chaos were not only the destined fate of the uncountable reaches of existence, they were all existence deserved. And so, Sargeras sought to undo the work of his fellows and destroy everything they sought to make. To do this, he needed a host as terrible and powerful as he himself was, and he found the seeds of this dread army on the world Argus, in the already magically gifted and potent eredar. So mighty were the eredar that they no longer feared death through natural causes or age, and the three mightiest and wisest of their people were Archimonde, Kil'jaeden and Velen, a triumverate among them. To this triumverate Sargeras appeared in all of his titanic majesty and offered them power and knowledge beyond that which they could possibly aspire, to walk the surface of countless worlds and see existence in a way none of their people ever had. It sounded perfect. It was perfect.
A perfect lie. Velen, suspicious of the offer, was given a vision of the future: his people corrupted striding the surface of world after world not as explorers, but as destroyers. Aided by the mysterious Naaru, Velen gathered what few of his people he could and fled the inescapable doom that awaited them if they remained on Argus. Enraged, his fellow triumvirs (especially Kil'jaeden, who had been as Velen's brother and who felt personally betrayed by him) stalked these exiles, or Draenei in the original eredar language, throughout the cosmos from world to world. The pattern always the same. Always the draenei would settle on a new world and for a time be at peace, always Kil'jaeden would find them, always the hunt would resume. It might have continued indefinitely, in fact, had the draenei and their naaru allies not crash-landed on a relatively pleasant but unremarkable world whose native inhabitants had not even bothered to give a name.
The draenei named it Draenor, a world meaning 'exile's refuge' and settled in. They found relatively little to conflict with their new neighbors, a race who called themselves orcs. For over five thousand years, the orcs and draenei coexisted, the draenei in their salvaged crystalline cities, the orcs in their nomadic, shamanistic society. They occasionally met but for the most part left each other be, the orcs finding the draenei strange and aloof, the draenei not wanting to interfere in the development of orc society. Then, as had happened before, one of Kil'jaeden's agents found them. But this time, Kil'Jaeden was almost more interested in the orcs than his old enemies. Here were a people perfectly balanced between savagery and restraint, raw fury and contemplation. Their grasp of shamanistic magic was unlike his own people, and yet presented opportunities, as clearly orcs had an aptitude for summoning and controlling entities that rivaled that of the eredar themselves. This, thought the master manipulator, this is a people I can make use of. The orcs had a potential that, for all their wisdom and power, the exiles hadn't understood. (Save perhaps Velen himself, when he met Durotan and Orgim Doomhammer.)
And so Kil'jaeden the Deceiver did exactly that, deceiving first Ner'zhul and through him, the orcs as a whole. Slowly at first, and then more quickly through Ner'zhul's more compliant apprentice Gul'dan, Kil'Jaeden taught demonic magics to the orcs, while also teaching them to use the aggressive nature they once employed in hunting and testing their strength against the elements to dominate and destroy the draenei instead. Not expecting attack from a quarter they'd so long been at peace with, the draenei fell, and were nearly destroyed by this unexpected threat which turned both numbers and new powers against them. (It didn't help that among the orcish numbers were Durotan and Orgrim Doomhammer, who'd been inside a draenei city and knew how to bypass its defenses). An attempt to broker peace at the site the draenei came to land, the sacred mountain Oshu'gun, only exacerbated the issue and ultimately led Ner'zhul to be replaced by his even more aggressive and power hungry apprentice, and Gul'dan prosecuted the war with the draenei with no regard to the truth of Kil'Jaeden's original accusations.
In order to make sure the war moved forward even as the orcish shamans began to lose their powers (the elemental and ancestral spirits abandoning them) Gul'dan moved quickly to teach warlock magic to the former shamans of the orc clans, especially his own Shadowmoon and those of the Blackrock clan offered to him by Blackhand the Destroyer, Gul'dan's chosen puppet and first Warchief of the Horde. This Horde was born out of orcish traditions from the long wars with ogres and gronn twisted to a new form, and eventually Blackhand even offered his own children (and those of others) to the Warlocks and their demonic, life draining magics, aging the children to adulthood so that they could fight sooner. The orc traditions of honor were turned inward, creating a society ripe for Gul'dan's last act of betrayal and destruction against his own people.
On the orders of Kil'jaeden, who wished to ensure orcish obedience, he called forth a demon, the dread Mannoroth. This pit fiend had once walked the surface of Azeroth during the events of the Sundering, and it was his blood that was poured forth into a great vessel, and it was Grom Hellscream of the Warsong Clan who first drank of it: indeed, all the various orc chieftains save for Durotan of the Frostwolves and his childhood friend and ally Orgrim Doomhammer (second of the Blackrock Clan and thus Blackhand's second in command) drank of the blood, and felt at first the enormous power and later the far more enormous cost of the power so gained. Fueled by this new demonic lust for battle, the last draenei cities were destroyed by the Horde, and their inhabitants driven into hiding in swamps and other desolate corners of the world. So triumphant, Gul'dan's Horde began consolidating under the secretive Shadow Council of the corrupted Temple of Karabor (now the Black Temple) and only the actions of a disgraced Ner'zhul helped preserve the Frostwolves as the last uncorrupted clan of orcs.
While this occurred, their ancestral home in Nagrand was turned into a quarantine zone when a mysterious disease known as the Red Pox struck many orcish children and other uncorrupted orcs. Unlike the Frostwolves who, despite not drinking the demon blood turned the same greenish color as those who had, those survivors of the Red Pox who were quarantined in Nagrand avoided that fate and are today the last remaining brown orcs in existence.
Meanwhile, Gul'dan had been seemingly abandoned by Kil'jaeden, who grew disenchanted with his blood crazed army now that they'd seemingly killed his ancient enemies. However, Sargeras himself had never forgotten his defeat on Azeroth and was in the process of taking steps to remedy it - he discovered that Kil'jaeden, his student, had either consciously or unconsciously done the same as he himself once had and corrupted a race with great potential to act as servants. Seeing more in Gul'dan's power lust than Kil'jaeden had, Sargeras reached across the Twisting Nether and led the Arch Warlock to construct the Dark Portal itself in order to breach the Nether and lead his Horde to Azeroth. Stranded on a slowly dying world where the spirits refused to answer and which only grew more sterile and desolate with each demon they summoned, the Horde was eager for a ripe, lush world to conquer. The Black Morass was brooding, forbidding, and teeming with dangerous life... but to a blood crazed orc, it didn't matter. A fetid swamp full of insects and reptiles and enormous arachnids seemed positively inviting compared to the lifeless wasteland of Hellfire, and the Horde eagerly poured forth into Azeroth.
Next week we'll take a look at both the Horde and Allaince through the First, Second and Third wars and how we got to the current state of affairs with a unified Alliance and new Horde.
Filed under: Shaman, Warlock, Analysis / Opinion, News items, Features, Lore, Know your Lore, NPCs
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Reader Comments (Page 5 of 5)
Clydtsdk-Rivendare Jan 6th 2010 4:03PM
"Even their line of succession is a joke: punch the Warchief hard enough and you get to be the new Warchief!"
So we're ruled by forty random guys from Stormwind? That explains everything else you just said.
LOK'TAR! :D
mtwcmarsh Jan 6th 2010 4:04PM
Sure, Blizzard *could* have portrayed Orcs as something other than how works of fantasy always portray Orcs, but why would Blizzard do that? Every fantasy has to have its "greedy, wanton savages."
What Blizzard has done well in its lore is allow for, set a precedent for complexity among the stereotypes. Even among the "bad guys", there can arise a Thrall. Even among "savage" cultures, there are admirable aspirations or values which individuals can cultivate. Players (if they care about the RP) can portray their orcs any way they want, be it noble or otherwise.
The converse is also true in Warcraft lore. That is, even among cultures so virtuous that the would sacrifice their own immortality to save the world, there can be found some very ugly biases and certainly some downright awful individuals. But Night Elves are still somewhat stereotyped high fantasy elves. Players (again, who care about such things) can play their elves as close to the stereotype or with whatever flaws they'd like.
linkers746 Jan 6th 2010 3:27PM
After reading this article, the novel Rise of the Horde, and countless articles on wowwiki, I can only say "Please Garrosh, damn the orcs again so we can kill some allies. PLEASE!"
Lok'tar Ogar, Victory or Death
Matthew Jan 6th 2010 5:18PM
Well written!
I feel bad about killing the propeht Velen now (extinguising the light).
Well, I got a black war bear out of it, I will live ;)
Dragundam Jan 6th 2010 10:32PM
It's late and I doubt anyone will see at this point, but...
What the hell were the Draenei thinking when they landed on 'Draenor'? I mean I get the whole running thing and going from planet to planet and after a couple millennia folks got tired of being cooped up in their ships, but what did they *think* was going to happen? Did they honestly think it would be different or they'd finally outrun their kin?
Draenei: You know.... the Legion's just going to find us here too. And then they'll try to kill us and those funny looking brown guys on the other side of the valley, too. It'd be kinda messed up if we brought that kind of trouble on them.
Velen: *pfft* Nooo. Look, they don't even have arcane magic to attract the Legion. Poor devils. All we have to do is lay low. Even if Sargeras found us, they'd probably just leave them alone; just saying surly as they are it kinda looks like leading them would be like herding cats. If it makes you feel any better, we probably won't even stay that long.
Draenei: ....if you say so...
*5,000 years later*
Gul'dan: HAY GUYZ! >:D *stab*
Draenei: Lightdammit....
Kylenne Jan 7th 2010 3:59AM
I have to ask though--what, pray tell, you think was their alternative? They'd been on the run for eons. Eventually, there's going to be nowhere left to run. Somewhere, at some point, they were going to have to stop and make a stand, and what better place than a verdant paradise with plentiful natural resources and a strong, vibrant race of naturalistic warriors? Just how many completely uninhabited worlds capable of sustaining life do you think there are?
Velen might well have decided that the alternative was the greater of two evils. Yes, it sucked mightily in the interim for everyone involved, but ultimately? I don't think you can argue that the Draenei are worse off now, in Azeroth, than they were before they landed on Draenor. And even as hard a road to tow as the Orcs have had, they're far better off having come to Azeroth too. (As to what the future holds, that's subject to a bit more debate.) You could make a fair argument that neither race would be on Azeroth if not for the Draenei landing on Draenor, and thus would have been worse off.
Also, along the lines of prophecy: what if the ordained Army of the Light that the naaru spoke of is not just the Alliance, but the combined might of the Alliance and the New Horde? Perhaps all those awful things had to happen in order to get both races to Azeroth to play their part, and that may have been why the naaru guided Velen to Draenor in the first place. Keep in mind that when we're dealing with beings who are eons old, they are not thinking in terms of small steps here and there, and individual tragedies--like someone said on page one, this is a massive chess match that's been going on almost from the beginning of time. There's some real food for thought.
Kylenne Jan 7th 2010 4:08AM
Also, something I forgot to add: Each time Kil'jaeden caught up to them, the naaru gave Velen more gifts to protect his people. Velen might well have thought things would go differently on Draenor, that they were strong enough to win that time if the worst came to pass.
Terethall Jan 7th 2010 6:45AM
Quest in Nagrand as Horde. Or read lore. Or read the article you're commenting on.
The Draenei crash-landed on Draenor. They had no choice of which planet to land on, or whether to land at all, because it was a crash-landing. When you crash, you rarely get to take a look at the pros and cons of your possible destinations.
Kylenne is also 100% in identifying why the Draenei continued to flee Kil'Jaeden and why they didn't just assume that Draenor was a death trap.
Also, @Kylenne, I seriously doubt the New Horde as it stands currently will be part of the Army of Light. Lore currently states that the Light has abandoned the Forsaken (hence the name) and the day cannibal Trolls and green-skinned Orcs become paladins is the day that... well actually, I guess Metzen could just forget some shit again and rewrite everything... Meh, anything's possible.
jasonkidd1234 Jan 8th 2010 10:42PM
I'd like to note also that the Troll Compendeum also strongly suggest that the Trolls found the Well, and turned into the Night Elves. It also states that the Elves themselves deny this, but I'm leaning towards the Trolls turning into the Elves.
Odds are the Trolls turned into the Elves, the Elves eventually grew into a more "civil" society, and in order to keep people from thinking they are Troll-like deny any relation.
But thanks for the breakdown. I suspected most of what you said (You also didn't mention the Harpies being former elves as well, though I'm not sure if that's ENTIRELY correct) and it's nice to see somebody who at the least has looked into it a bit is confirming what I said.
Arbitor Jan 9th 2010 7:18AM
Wow. Again.
I thus far have not read any of the older novels yet, just Ashbringer and the 1st volume of the Varian Wrynn back-story thing (it gets to the point when he's about to go back to SW and then stops *_*).
I hadn't thought about Gul'dan wanting to take the horde to Azeroth himself, that was quite a cool concept as a desperate race for something to destroy.
Also, Icehart, you are 100% right, I hadn't thought about that either.
Now that I think about it, the only major lore characters that spring to mind that WOULD pass up absolute power (and corruption) would be....
Tirion Fordring,
Jaina Proudmoore
Thrall.
Varok Saurfang.
Tyrande Whisperwind (maybe, you saw what she did in the Illidan's prizon).
Malfurion Stormrage.
Brann Bronzebeard (I guess? Brann as an expansion antagonist would be super weird and cool at the same time, he just doesn't fit into any major story-lines as a bad guy or a good guy, he simply... explores.).
Sylvannas (Ironically, she probably knows not to trust demons).
Vol'Jin (Probably? I want more lore about him, he seems really cool but takes the role of tails in a Sonic the Hedgehog game :S).
Cairne Bloodhoof (And his son).
Ringo Flinthammer Jan 13th 2010 6:51PM
"And so Kil'jaeden the Deceiver did exactly that, deceiving first Ner'zhul and through him, the orcs as a whole. Slowly at first, and then more quickly through Ner'zhul's more compliant apprentice Gul'dan, Kil'Jaeden taught demonic magics to the orcs, while also teaching them to use the aggressive nature they once employed in hunting and testing their strength against the elements to dominate and destroy the draenei instead. Not expecting attack from a quarter they'd so long been at peace with, the draenei fell, and were nearly destroyed by this unexpected threat which turned both numbers and new powers against them. (It didn't help that among the orcish numbers were Durotan and Orgrim Doomhammer, who'd been inside a draenei city and knew how to bypass its defenses). An attempt to broker peace at the site the draenei came to land, the sacred mountain Oshu'gun, only exacerbated the issue and ultimately led Ner'zhul to be replaced by his even more aggressive and power hungry apprentice, and Gul'dan prosecuted the war with the draenei with no regard to the truth of Kil'Jaeden's original accusations."
Wait, what were the original accusations? How did he trick them into attacking the draenei?