Know Your Lore: The Third War part one

I had intended to go over the events of the novel Day of the Dragon this week, but I decided to save that for a more Cataclysm oriented post and instead work on this, the final of our overview of the wars that made the Warcraft setting. In a very real way, Wrath of the Lich King is basically a third chapter in the saga of the Third War that unfolded in the Reign of Chaos and Frozen Throne storylines. Furthermore, while a great many aspects of the setting debuted before it, the Third War introduced the Kaldorei, or night elves, to the setting, helped bring the Burning Legion to prominence, first showed us the Draenei, and otherwise helped set the stage for the world of Azeroth as it appeared when World of Warcraft launched.
You can trace the existence of the Forsaken, the loyalty of the Trolls and Tauren to the formerly purely Orcish Horde under Thrall, the establishing of a human colony on Theramore Isle, and even the activities of former and current luminaries such as Illidan Stormrage, Kael'thas Sunstrider, and even the Lich King himself to the events of the Third War.
It's hard to say when, exactly, the Third War actually began, since it was really a rather complicated affair. Certainly, the capture of Ner'zhul by Kil'jaeden and his transformation into the Lich King is of great importance to the Third War, but it's not the beginning of that comflict. Not even the moment when a nascent Lich King was hurled into the glaciers of Northrend can be called the start of the Third War, nor the moment when the sorcerer Kel'Thuzad answered the summons of that dread entity and made his way north to become the kernel of the Cult of the Damned. These moments are all important, for without them there would have been no Third War, but they are not the war's starting point.
For me, the starting point of the Third War is when the prophet, former Guardian of Tirisfal and now Eternal named Medivh began prodding mortals of importance to see their impending doom. Medivh's warnings were taken differently by different people, of course... Thrall, warchief of the remnants of the Horde left behind on Azeroth was more quick to heed the Prophet's warnings than was King Terenas Menethil. But it was the Prophet and his appearance that herals the beginning of the Third War to my mind, even if the war itself doesn't seem as immediately apparent.
Terenas responds to the visitation of the Prophet (who doesn't exactly help matters by not saying who he is, and since I don't know that Terenas ever directly met the man, I can't tell you if he should have recognized him or not - it's fair to say that Jaina Proudmoere, Antonidas' apprentice and a highly placed member of the Kirin Tor, also doesn't recognize the Prophet as Medivh when she directly encounters him) with defiance. The Prophet's message, that Terenas should take his people and abandon Lordaeron, sailing west, didn't sit well with a king who'd managed to sit his throne through the Second War.
In the end, the orc made the right choice: Thrall rallied his people, freed the impetuous Grom Hellscream from captivity at the hands of Lordaeron's soldiers, and stole ships from the humans to sail west. It's not terribly surprising that the orcs chose flight when the humans chose to stay. Lordaeron was hardly home to the orcs of the Horde, after all, it was just the place they found themselves after escaping the internment camps. It's much harder to convince people who've lived somewhere for their entire lives to uproot and head west on the say so of a talking raven that doesn't even bother to identify itself.
While Thrall and Grom were leading the orcs westward, Terenas wasn't idle, nor was Antonidas of the Kirin Tor. Before the Prophet made his appearance, in fact, they were already preparing to investigate a strange series of rumors that were filtering down from the furthest northern reaches of the Eastern Kingdoms. Ironically, the gathering of the orc clans and their seizure of the ships was occupying the majority of Lordaeron's attention at the time (since the orcs were an immediate and known threat, based on their activities during the First and Second Wars) and as a result, there just weren't a lot of resources to investigate. In order to determine the truth, Terenas sent his son Arthas and Antonidas sent his apprentice Jaina Proudmoore to investigate. It most likely seemed like a much better idea at the time than it turned out to be.
We know what happened ultimately to Arthas, of course. He arrived in Brill and then Andorhal to discover that the plague they'd heard rumors of in Lordaeron City was far worse than he ever could have imagined: in Hearthglen they learned that those stricken with it did not merely die but rose from the dead as abominable mockeries of life, soulless corpses that fed on the living. After confronting Kel'Thuzad and slaying him, Arthas and Jaina were visited by the Prophet who again warned against remaining in Lordaeron and demanded that they heed his warning and sail for the west if they wanted to save their people. Like his father, Prince Arthas did not take this message well and refused to abandon his people. Jaina, however, thought that the stranger spoke with a strange authority and considered his message.
The difficulty here is that events unfolded as they did in part due to the meddling of greater powers. The Lich King as it then stood was tinkering with events, sending Kel'Thuzad to found the Cult and hide the plague cauldrons as part of a deliberate plan to create a minion out of the Prince of Lordaeron, but as skilled and powerful as the former Ner'zhul was, it too was being manipulated by the Burning Legion and sought to escape their grasp. At the same time Medivh as the Prophet repeatedly appeared to people he must have known would never listen to him as well as to those he intended to actually aid, imparting his message to Thrall knowing that the orcs would steal ships and leave, knowing that in so doing they would make Kel'Thuzad's job easier. Knowing that in warning Arthas all he was doing was paving the young prince's road to damnation, intending all along that Jaina would take his warning to heart, intending that in Stratholme she would turn away from her childhood love and towards a different destiny. How much of this was the Lich King's meddling, and how much the Prophet? Medivh had contended with Sargeras himself, had fought a war in his very soul with a mind so vast and cosmic in its madness that it dwarfed even that which made the Lich King. Is it too much to believe he intended to sacrifice Lordaeron in order to save Azeroth?
Arthas and Jaina reached Stratholme, finding Uther, and discovering that they'd arrived too late. The plagued grain had already been distributed, the city and its residents already doomed. Their choices were few. They could have attempted to seal the city and wait for the plague to kill and raise every single man, woman and child then strike the horde of undead down as it attempted to spread across the countryside. This course of action would most likely mean horrific casualties, and a chance of their forces also converting into undeath. It's interesting to me that Medivh, who clearly knew the future, didn't feel the need to share it with Arthas or in any way act to spare the people of Stratholme this fate. It's possible he was afraid that doing so would merely force events down even more dire paths and the deaths and undeaths of so many paled in comparison to allowing the Burning Legion free reign across the surface of the world. It's even possible to assume that Medivh viewed the Well of Eternity and the World Tree as far more crucial to protect since they were the prize Archimonde sought as well as the means of his destruction.
The facts remain thus: Medivh knew what was going to happen, and he didn't tell anyone. Vague warnings may have served to protect the ultimate prize, but in the chess game against the lords of the demonic armies, Medivh can be seen as having willingly sacrificed a great many pawns, the people of Lordaeron who died to Arthas, to the plague, and eventually to the Scourge, in order to ultimately take a Legion rook, the Lich King, off the board entirely. (If you've been to Karazhan, you'll note that Medivh is an avid chess player.)
Arthas did not choose to wait out the plague. He did not choose to lay siege to Stratholme and watch the people turn into the undead. In so doing he lost the support of his mentor and his first love, and walked out of a ruined, burned Stratholme burning with a hatred for Mal'Ganis (and not the Lich King himself) that drove him on the path to madness and obsession. And in so doing, he fulfilled both the Lich King's plan for him, and Medivh's plan for the Lich King.
After Stratholme and its destruction (I won't belabor it, if you've done the Culling of Time you've seen the events firsthand) we move into high gear. Arthas seeks his destiny in Northrend, Lordaeron meets its final fate, the orcs make their way across the ocean (meeting surprising new allies at every turn) and all the while, the self-proclaimed Prophet plays with the fate of the world, while the shadow passes ever closer and the Burning Legion edges ever closer to making its way back to Azeroth. Next week, we'll discuss these events, as well as the fall of Quel'Thalas, Grom Hellscream's fall, and the return of the children of the moon.
Filed under: Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Oznak Feb 17th 2010 5:22PM
A very nice summary of WCIII indeed. Nothing to replace the story of the game itself, of course, but for those silly enough to not play through it, an excellent summary.
I do have to take slight issue with your (what I can only assume is purely speculative) paragraph about the greater games Medivh is playing post-resurrection. If there's been blue confirmation that his plan was this widespread and involved, I would very much like to know, but your assertion is, from my understanding, that Medivh knew where Arthas' path (indeed, Azeroth's path) was going, and took steps to ensure that in some strange predestination paradox? That his intent was to, by offering Arthas up to the Lich King, refocus the Burning Legion onto the LK through Illidan, whilst occupying the Lich King with his games? I'm not entirely sure if that's what you meant by "removing him from the board"
Even for a mind such as Medivh, that seems a slight reach. Now, especially given our knowledge of what happens after Arthas' death, isn't it possible that Medivh's endgame was to send the orcs, and ultimately Jaina, west to Kalimdor, while sending Arthas north to contain the Lich King? We know Arthas has a deep-seated hatred for orcs similar to that of Daelin Proudmoore. Medivh could've foreseen a similar chain of events to the Frozen Throne orc campaign, and decided that Jaina would be a more diplomatic leader for the humans in Kalimdor.
As for the Lich King, is it possible Medivh meant to send an uncorrupted Arthas to Northrend, to Icecrown, and have the Lich King possess him (or attempt to) then? At the very early stages of his corruption by Frostmourne, Arthas may have been able to hold the Lich King's malevolence in the same manner as it can be presumed Bolvar will. I would, however, credit the Lich King with the ability to hold off that possession until Arthas was more fully his creature. After all, Arthas kills his father, destroys his kingdom, and so much more ... and still, the Lich King is rendered comatose for the years between Frozen Throne and the Wrath cinematic. I think it's very possibly that Medivh's endgame was for that internal conflict to occur when Arthas might have held the upper hand.
All speculation, of course. And if you could clarify your version of Medivh's intent concerning the Lich King, I'd be grateful.
Sleutel Feb 17th 2010 6:13PM
"In so doing he lost the support of his mentor and his first love,"
I never knew that Arthas felt that way about Uther. :D
Sir7 Feb 17th 2010 7:35PM
Lolenhausen.
Andrew Feb 17th 2010 6:59PM
Medivh setting up Arthas to become a Death Knight is in fact important, if he did that. Arthas killing Kel'Thuzad, becoming a death knight, ressurrecting KT, and helping open the portal for Archimonde was stage one of the Lich King's plan for escaping the thumb of the burning legion.
Due to Arthas' intervention on Kalimdor, tipping off one Illidan Stormrage about a certain magical Skull, the Legion's reserve forces under the command of Tichondrius were destroyed. This took enough strength away from Archimonde's main host that the mortal races could defend Nordrassil long enough for the Night Elves to enact their plan.
EteNew Feb 17th 2010 7:02PM
It seems you are a bit bitter at Medivh. Now, as previously mentioned, is there any lore confirmation that Medivh knew that far into the future and was playing that complicated a game of chess? Honest question since lore these days has exploded much more than before and they may have alluded to it in a book.
To which my point of view was always that Medivh was simply playing with previous knowledge, and may have even been unaware of the connection between the Lich King and Burning Legion. He knew the Burning Legion was targeting Azeroth, witnessed visions of things to come if nothing was done to warn the races (orcs and humans rushing at each other while infernals fall from above on the unsuspecting armies), and that their target would most likely be the World Tree. To that extent, he was more trying to get the pieces on the board in the first place rather than already playing a game with the Burning Legion. Otherwise, if he knew all things about the fate of every individual on the field, then why even go to the King in the first place? Why not just appear to Antonidas and then Jaina later on and be done with it if he knew it was enough. In the story, it seemed there was no reason for warning the King than to hope his warning was heeded, thus giving the impression he wasn't playing some masterful strategy and simply warning any who might possibly listen.
So, I don't know, but to me; you can't really blame Medivh for the entire fall of Lorderon.
Cambro Feb 17th 2010 7:11PM
Fair to say that King Terenas probably thought Medivh was a...raven lunatic? >.>
lumacman Feb 17th 2010 7:34PM
i take a great issue with how Medivh is speculated on in this article. That he could see the future is not in doubt. what he intended to change in that future and his motives, I believe are far less sinister then what is being offered here.
fist look at who he is. he is hands down the greatest mortal magic user ever, period. his body was the incubator of the spirit of the greatest warrior of the titans, and the most evil. he lived in a ancient tower that had the ability to show visions of the past and the future and the present as if they were overlapping wormholes, you were actually there in present and the "vision".
this man had every possible advantage and power the world could offer him. to say he could be arrogant and bullish is an understatement. this does not change the fact that he is always correct. there is much to debate about what he wsa trying to do, what he did know and what he didn't, but im sure of this. look at his character, in his heart he is a man that was in thrall from the moment of his conception. it was his mothers love and her last sacrifice of her magic that gave him a second birth. now free of the titan, the true man is revealed. he is still tainted by the evil but he is not evil any longer.
knowing what was coming, he went to the the three powers of the time. thrall and Terenas and mal'furion. 2 followed him one didn't. would you force someone aginst their will to do you bidding? even if you know that if they dont the cost in blood will be monumental. do you think that after spending his entire life enslaved to that titan, that he would dare do that to another? even showing them what he knew, would that not still be taking their choice away from them? for a man that is forever tainted with the evil of that titan, i think he swore in his heart to never force anything on anyone ever again. that choice, right or wrong, was his goal. hopeing that they would make the choice for survival.
look what happened as a result.
now imagine what if Terenas had listened. the grand alliance would have been in retreat when the scourge began. the undead would have had no champion. the entire events of the third war would have played out wholly differently. the horde night elves, humans, would have been ready to deal with the world tree and the well when Kt would have eventually showed up, with far weaker forces as most of the humans having fled when they were supposed to had not become fodder for the scourge. the undead would have been wiped out with the collective might of the combined armies. then with Medivh spurring them on to northrend, they would have slaughtered the nacient scourge and destroyed the lich king forever because his forces would be so small to have them run mindless would have been a manageable thing then.
Medivh wanted to stop the future he saw without makeing it one that he crafted for himself. he wanted a future where the people chose to make it what they wanted.
alpha5099 Feb 18th 2010 3:50AM
I never played through much of the old RTS games unfortunately, but I'm curious to what extent the Burning Legion was known before WC3 came out. Specifically, that the orcs were being used as pawns to help take over Azeroth. Was there any sense of this in 1 or 2, or was this explanation only provided in 3?
Fletcher Feb 18th 2010 12:15PM
Regarding the Medivh-hate; he gets a solid "meh" from me, with an aside of "Dear God, why couldn't you use contraception and avoid siring a mary sue?"*
Terenas was hardly likely to listen to Medivh, perhaps even more so if he'd revealed himself as Medivh; recall that the last the Alliance heard of him, he'd been killed by Khadgar et al, having brought the Horde to Azeroth. As far as I know the fact that he was carrying Sargeras about in his head was not common knowledge, so Terenas would have had no reason to differentiate between "insane, stupidly powerful sorcerer who unleashed ravening barbarians upon us all" and "cryptic, stupidly powerful sorcerer who wants to avoid having the Legion faceroll us all". The point being that Medivh was not exactly considered a trustworthy source of information - and more to the point, he was supposed to be safely dead!
*Said Mary Sue being Me'dan, the half-human(plus Warden of Tirisfal-ness plus Sargeras-ness) quarter-orc quarter-draenei son of Medivh and Garona. He's in the comics, and he's certain to worm his way into the game eventually.
Kharon Feb 18th 2010 9:19PM
Wait, wait -- as far as I know, Medivh never knew what was really going to happen. He was trying to save everyone by doing what he could. No one knows for sure and exactly what is going to happen.
And, IF he knew, I'm actually pretty sure he followed the safest and best course of action. I'm not sure why the article is so filled with Medivh-hate-conspiracy theories.
Surely the writter is jealous.
Vanya Feb 19th 2010 2:43AM
Great articles, this one really helped me forget about this damn cold, now to bed, achooo.
Whaiting for the next part to be as good :)