Know Your Lore: High General Turalyon

The World of Warcraft is an expansive universe. You're playing the game, you're fighting the bosses, you know the how -- but do you know the why? Each week, Matthew Rossi and Anne Stickney make sure you Know Your Lore by covering the history of the story behind World of Warcraft.
He saved his people.
Not many people can say that, but High General Turalyon can. On the slopes of Blackrock Mountain, when the greatest warrior the humans of the world of Azeroth had ever produced went down to dusty death, one man turned shattering defeat into hallowed victory. That man was Turalyon, paladin of the Order of the Silver Hand, strategist of the combined forces of the Alliance of Lordaeron during the Second War. It was Turalyon's hand that raised Lothar's broken sword in outrage over orcish perfidy. It was Turalyon's voice that roused the fury of the Alliance at the sight of the dead hero. And it was Turalyon's will that broke the orcs once and for all, that drove Doomhammer to his knees in defeat.
Turalyon beat the Horde at Blackrock Mountain. Turalyon led the Alliance to the very site of the Dark Portal, where Khadgar destroyed its physical form. And beyond that, it was Turalyon who led the Alliance Expedition beyond that same portal, to face the shaman Ner'zhul and his twisted ambitions. Turalyon's forces managed to seal the Dark Portal and prevent Ner'zhul's destruction of Draenor from affecting Azeroth, and in so doing, possibly saved the world entire.
Since then, no word has of his ultimate fate reached those he led, saved and left behind. It is indisputable that this paladin is one of the greatest heroes of his people, possibly even the greatest paladin who has ever lived. (With all due respect to Uther, Turalyon's record is unambiguous in its greatness.) Yet Turalyon never felt himself to be great. Struggling with doubt every day of his life, convinced the death of Lothar was his fault, he endured and pressed on, steadfast unto the edge of death and perhaps even past it.
He saved his people.
Not many people can say that, but High General Turalyon can. On the slopes of Blackrock Mountain, when the greatest warrior the humans of the world of Azeroth had ever produced went down to dusty death, one man turned shattering defeat into hallowed victory. That man was Turalyon, paladin of the Order of the Silver Hand, strategist of the combined forces of the Alliance of Lordaeron during the Second War. It was Turalyon's hand that raised Lothar's broken sword in outrage over orcish perfidy. It was Turalyon's voice that roused the fury of the Alliance at the sight of the dead hero. And it was Turalyon's will that broke the orcs once and for all, that drove Doomhammer to his knees in defeat.
Turalyon beat the Horde at Blackrock Mountain. Turalyon led the Alliance to the very site of the Dark Portal, where Khadgar destroyed its physical form. And beyond that, it was Turalyon who led the Alliance Expedition beyond that same portal, to face the shaman Ner'zhul and his twisted ambitions. Turalyon's forces managed to seal the Dark Portal and prevent Ner'zhul's destruction of Draenor from affecting Azeroth, and in so doing, possibly saved the world entire.
Since then, no word has of his ultimate fate reached those he led, saved and left behind. It is indisputable that this paladin is one of the greatest heroes of his people, possibly even the greatest paladin who has ever lived. (With all due respect to Uther, Turalyon's record is unambiguous in its greatness.) Yet Turalyon never felt himself to be great. Struggling with doubt every day of his life, convinced the death of Lothar was his fault, he endured and pressed on, steadfast unto the edge of death and perhaps even past it.
Chosen of the Light
Before I get started on this post, (yeah, yeah, ship has sailed), I will say this: some of the most awesome characters in WoW lore are paladins. Of those awesome characters, two really stand out, and those two are Uther and Turalyon. Of those two, Turalyon is most likely my favorite by an extremely narrow margin because Turalyon was so haunted. (I don't really like playing the paladin class in WoW all that much, but I love them in its lore.)
Turalyon was one of the first five to be chosen by Alonsus Faol to become members of the Order of the Silver Hand at its inception, along with Uther, Saiden Dathrohan, Gavinrad the Dire and Tirion Fordring. Unlike his fellow knights, however, Turalyon almost immediately drew the attention of Anduin Lothar as the Alliance of Lordaeron's military was created and the Second War began, and the Lion of Azeroth chose the young paladin to be his second in command.
It was during this time that Turalyon made the friendships that would serve him for the rest of the war and beyond, meeting the mage Khadgar and the elven ranger Alleria Windrunner. Serving alongside Lothar, Turalyon first met the Horde's forces in Hillsbrad before pursuing them north into Aerie Peak, home of the Wildhammer Dwarves. The young paladin soon discerned that the supposed Horde advance north to Aerie Peak was in fact a feint meant to distract the Alliance's main forces while the Horde and their new trollish allies under Zul'jin decimated northern Lordaeron and carved their way through the Eversong Woods to Quel'thalas itself. Indeed, despite taking Plaguemist Ravine as a shortcut, the Alliance forces Turalyon led were too late to save Caer Darrow or prevent the Horde from laying waste to Stratholme.
Race to Quel'thalas
Turalyon managed to keep the Horde from reaching Quel'thalas and eventually drove their forces south, but the experience of the Horde feint showed the young man the true face of the enemy he'd enlisted against. Their tactical acumen was far greater than he'd expected, and the devastation they wreaked across Lordaeron and into Quel'thalas' borders was shocking. Combined with their enlisting the trolls (one of the ancient enemies of humanity and the very force the humans of Strom had united to defeat) and their fast march north, the new situation greatly troubled him. Around this time, he first began his troubled relationship with Alleria as well, in part due to her distraught reaction to the destruction of so much of her homeland at the hands of the Horde. However, the relationship mostly simmered, due to her developing obsession with killing every single member of the Horde she came across and due to his responsibilities to Lothar and the Alliance.
Turalyon managed to use the attack on Quel'thalas to convince the elves to fully commit themselves to the Alliance, leaving on board elven ships that arrived at Lordaeron just in time to save the city from a clever Horde advance through the traitorous nation of Alterac. Combined, Turalyon and Lothar's forces (with some help from the traitorous Gul'dan's choosing this exact moment to abandon Doomhammer and his forces) drove the Horde away from its greatest chance at final victory and began pushing them back down the length of the entire Eastern Kingdoms. It was during this chaotic time, while Uther cleaned up the mess left behind by the traitorous Aiden Perenolde (which allowed the Horde to use Alterac as a path straight to Lordaeron in the first place), that Turalyon and the other Knights of the Silver Hand first encountered death knights, the twisted necromantic creations of Gul'dan.

Even these horrors didn't stop the Alliance push south. Eventually, the main forces of the Alliance and Horde met at Blackrock Mountain, the home base of Doomhammer's Blackrock clan. In that battle, Lothar met his end (some argue because of orcish treachery; others credit Doomhammer's might), and Turalyon finally lost control of his anger at all the atrocities he'd witnessed across the campaign. From the burning of Stormwind to the destruction of the Eversong Woods, from the siege of Lordaeron to the long battles south, these atrocities had been one long series of horrors inflicted by the orcish warchief in his relentless desire for victory at all costs. It was more than Turalyon or the Alliance could endure to lose the one man who had led them, united them and given them their focus.
Turalyon lifted the Great Royal Sword of Lothar, shattered during his last battle, and drove himself like wrath itself into the teeth of the orcs, who had expected Lothar's death to demoralize the humans. Instead, under Turalyon, it galvanized them. It drove them wild. They crushed the orcs, and Turalyon crushed Doomhammer with a brutal assault the orcs simply did not believe possible from a human, driving him defeated to his knees.
It might have been a very different world had someone other than Turalyon been the one to defeat the orcs at Blackrock Mountain. Even in his battle rage, Turalyon remembered the lessons he'd learned at Alonsus Faol's feet, the essence of what it was to serve as a paladin, and he could not murder a defeated foe. Doomhammer was spared, and while the Alliance forces struck further south and destroyed the Dark Portal itself, the simple act of mercy that Turalyon displayed at the site of Lothar's death made the eventual rise of the new Horde possible. Would Thrall have ever been able to unify his people without Doomhammer's tutelage? Impossible to say.
Beyond the Dark Portal and disappearance
After the defeat of the Horde, Turalyon was fairly idle for a few short years. But when the Horde of Draenor breached the ruined Dark Portal and returned to Azeroth, Turalyon answered the call of King Terenas Menethil of Lordaeron. Soon, Turalyon and his old friend Khadgar and sometime-lover Alleria found themselves joined by Danath Trollbane and Kurdran Wildhammer and the forces they commanded, in what would be called the Alliance Expedition to Draenor. Thus this assemblage of heroes was the first to set foot on a world once verdant but now drained and corrupted by demonic warlock magics. In the process of working to stymie Ner'zhul's plans, Turalyon found himself alongside Khadgar and Alleria in direct combat with the black dragon aspect Deathwing (an enemy so fierce that they found themselves allied to Gruul himself, father of the Gronn) to reclaim the Skull of Gul'dan. It was during this series of battles that Alleria and Turalyon resumed their relationship, and their son Arator was either conceived following the burning of Eversong or at this time. (I'll admit I don't know how long half elves take to gestate.)
In the end, Ner'zhul's descent into madness could not be stopped, but thanks to their reclaiming of the Skull, the Alliance Expedition managed to shield Azeroth from the effects of his magics by sealing the Dark Portal again. They escaped Draenor's destruction by leaping into the indecipherable madness of an alien world. Returning to the shattered remnants of Draenor (what would become known as Outland), Turalyon led his forces back to the Honor Hold base and began entranching his people, trapped as they were with no contact from Azeroth. However, while his son Arator is seen trying to discover his whereabouts, both Turalyon and his lover Alleria are (as of this writing) missing. Unlike Danath, Khadgar and Kurdran, no one knows the whereabouts of the High General or his Ranger. The last known act of the High General was to erect a memorial in Outland for his former mentor, Lothar.

Turalyon saved his people. In so doing, he may well have saved even his enemies. He defeated Doomhammer in single combat. He stopped the Horde. He fought Deathwing. Alongside the greatest heroes of his generation, he fought back the shadow and bought Azeroth a tomorrow.
He is, although he would never admit it, the greatest paladin who has ever lived.
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.com's Guide to Warcraft Lore.Filed under: Paladin, Analysis / Opinion, The Burning Crusade, Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 5)
Al Sep 8th 2010 4:07PM
Wasn't that written before they ret-conned where the Orcs came from?
I vaguely remember they originally came from Hell, or the Azerothian equivalent.
Zanathos Sep 8th 2010 4:08PM
You can read it as the orcs are from another plane and therefore bad (also, demons), or you can read it as the orcs are empowered by demons (and also, from another plane). Either reading is defensible. You've chosen the first, I'd say the paladin/demon thing makes more narrative sense so I'll stick with the second.
Dreyja Sep 8th 2010 4:09PM
Well Mike I did read the book and I just find it interesting that you see that single moment in that same light (ha ha).
It's Turalyon that the Naru reach out to near the end of Beyond the Dark Portal to give him a vision of people in other worlds fighting the same evil he is facing in Draenor. It's that same vision that galvanizes him into stopping Ner'zhul and keeping even more Aliens from suffering the same fate as those that were slaughtered by the Horde. It's interesting that if he's such a douche-bag about aliens that the Naru would have reached out to him, of all people.
So, sorry if I don't see that one single moment as a blatantly "racist or ... planetist (??)" act. This is where he realizes that the horde weren't even just blood thirsty enemies (and possibly neighbours) that, for whatever reason, were bent on the destruction of humanity out of need but that they were people doing the same thing because they destroyed the goodness of THEIR own world first. Yes, that wasn't implicit in that moment either but given everything that had gone before concerning that character and the behaviour of Doomhammer, sorry, it's a lot easier to attribute a positive to Turalyon’s actions. So, there is my bias I guess. ;-p I think it's pretty well-rounded though.
There are Orcs I admire like Thrall, his parents etc but I'll never see Doomy as a hero.
OH and yeah, I think there is a place for compassion in warfare, that’s why I believe in the term: War Crime.
Zanathos Sep 8th 2010 4:11PM
No, tides of Darkness is pretty recent, it was written while WoW's been up and running. The orcs being a bunch of dopes manipulated by demons is current lore.
Vodkamartini Sep 8th 2010 4:17PM
@ Mike
Trolls are a playable race in WoW worthy of respect.
There also exists a race of trolls on chat boards, but they are amusing but sad creatures.
Have this feeling that Warcraft's next RTS (if WoW doesn't end with a global deathblow or pacification) will break the hearts of many -- particularly on the Horde side.
/played both sides in WoW, preferred the Horde when it was sinister in WC2.
Mike Sep 8th 2010 4:18PM
Honestly Dreyja? I hadn't considered that Turalyon's personal revelation might be of that nature. It would change things a little bit.
I always hated that scene mostly because I found the immediately preceding battle between the two awesome badass warriors Lothar and Doomhammer so gritty and impressive. Then it was Turalyon's time to shine, and strike back and win the day...and the reason they gave him for finding the strength to do so just felt so contrived. I always felt that of all the awesome reasons he could have had to put aside his inner demons and become the chosen champion everyone predicted he would be...the fact the orcs weren't from Azeroth was the weakest reason possible. It ruined the climax of the novel for me, haha.
Dreyja Sep 8th 2010 4:23PM
Well Mike, I guess we have VERY different things that attract us to a character and that's at the heart of it. :)
Grovinofdarkhour Sep 8th 2010 4:35PM
Mike, you talk like a raving fundamentalist who genuinely believes the Earth was created in exactly 7 days which is exactly 168 hours which is exactly 10,080 minutes which is exactly 604,800 seconds and not even one second more or less because damnit, it says so right here in My Perfect And Infallible Bible That The Lord Wrote In His Own Blessed Hand!!!
I'm not really concerned with when, or why, you decided that Aaron Rosenberg is the absolute end-all, be-all authority on every thought that ever passed through Turalyon's head and exactly how they collectively motivated his actions. I can tell you that if I was Blizzard, and they ran this by me, and I actually had time to read it cover to cover in order to make sure it lined up perfectly with all existing canon and portrayed every character at every moment exactly as I wanted, I would have told him to rewrite this entire section, because it makes our hero's profound and world-changing actions come from a stupid and hastily thrown together premise which insults what we're trying to do and we're sure as hell not paying him for that. But as I'd be a little preoccupied with, I dunno, making great video games?, because I'm, I dunno, a video game company?, rather than a publishing house, I probably wouldn't have time to do all that, and would just go on faith that MOST of the readers are already familiar with the Warcraft universe and have the intelligence to take what they're reading with a grain of salt.
Do you believe with all your heart that every word of the bible is correct and perfect and absolutely must be taken literally?
Do you believe with all your heart that every law on the books of the good ol' USA is exactly perfect as written and should be defended to the death against change or tweaking of any kind, even against potential conflict with other laws?
Your absolutism is showing. Might want to zip up.
Dreyja Sep 8th 2010 5:16PM
@ Mike
I wouldn’t' go so far as to accuse you of extremism Mike. You are coming at the reading of that precise moment in the book from a completely different mindset than myself which just goes to show how rich this game can be.
It would never have occurred to me to read it that negatively. /shrug I wasn't looking forward to the big smack-down/gritty fight that you were. I was looking for someone to do the right thing. I'd been waiting for one of the Orc leaders to do just that from the beginning.
shows to go. XD
Mike Sep 8th 2010 5:35PM
Grovin, it doesn't really matter what you, or me, WOULD have done. You don't like how Turalyon was characterized in the book. Neither do I. But regardless, the WoW novels are canon (unless retconned or revised later) and what Rosenberg wrote for Turalyon ARE what he was thinking at that moment.
(Desperately trying not to point out that the person accusing someone of raving is talking about the bible, the USA, and 600,000 seconds or something??)
scherbaddie Sep 9th 2010 1:59AM
"I vaguely remember they originally came from Hell, or the Azerothian equivalent."
The manual for the first Warcraft RTS talks about Draenor, the Orcs as a bloodthirsty warrior race who've run out of things to kill & coming through the Dark Portal to Azeroth. So no, they did not come from hell.
Dreyja Sep 8th 2010 2:51PM
All I can say is that I adore this character. I'll never play a pally in the game but Turalyon is the definitive hero for me. He's not a walking ego in plate. He's genuinely moved by the light and thereby, used by it in a more thorough way than those that went before.
He is also a tender heart wrapped in Plate. He doesn't become a monster so the monster will not take him (nod's to a U2 lyric). As much as that very thing is done in Wow and attractive to players (nods to Warlocks), it is the unwavering line that Turalyon NEVER crosses. That makes him the most human of characters and more beloved because of it.
MLKJr. said something about how you can afford a tender heart as long as you have a hard head. I think Turalyon is a wonderful example of this. You can stay true to who you really are if you use all of yourself to protect that part of yourself. You do that mostly, by living for others, ironically. :)
Sorry, I'm not the best writer as I'm addicted to passive sentences. I hope it makes sense and does some justice to this wonderful character. /bow
Pryn Sep 8th 2010 3:09PM
I love strapping on my human paladin's Tier 9 gear, not because she looks especially devout/smitey/cute in it but merely because of its namesake. As long as I'm playing WoW she'll have a Turalyon's armour set in her bags. Its inspiring to ride up the approach to Stormwind and see his statue standing watch, and a real shame that so many have no idea who he is.
Tides of Darkness & Beyond the Dark Portal are the finest of the Warcraft novels I've read to date and would highly recommend them, Turalyon & Alleria account for a signifigant chuck of why they are so enjoyable and memorable.
Clint Sep 8th 2010 4:04PM
Great article!
Maybe this question is better for the queue, but any hint at all to Turalyon and Alleria's fate in the Cataclysm beta?
arawn.chernobog Sep 8th 2010 4:27PM
Well...
Wouldn't it be nice if he were to show up as a Forsaken "Warrior of Sorrow", had his self-doubt consumed him into some state of undeath? To see another "glorious hero" rise as a hollow shell of what he once was, now some deformed "dark" Paladin fighting in the name of sorrow and sacrifice?
- totally unbiased opinion of a Forsaken Shadow Priest and Forgotten Shadow Cultist
Krem Sep 8th 2010 4:35PM
Turalyon just.. doesn't really do it for me. Yes, he was a hero and all that, but he seems to be, well, unoriginal. Greatly so. A goody-goody who's unsure of himself? Gasp. That's not been done before.
Don't get me wrong, the article was fine, it's just that this character.. I'm not sure why so many like him.
Feel free to explain it to me.
Grovinofdarkhour Sep 8th 2010 4:36PM
Please describe for us a character type that you're quite sure has never "been done before".
Matthew Rossi Sep 8th 2010 4:46PM
The issue with Turalyon is not that he was unsure of himself. It is that he was plagued by doubt. If anything, Turalyon was very sure of himself. He simply didn't view himself in the same light that others did.
The reason he's a great hero is that he never let his doubt overwhelm him.
Dreyja Sep 8th 2010 4:53PM
Interesting... I'm curious as well. I mean the pendulum has swung so far the other way for so long that the dark or Un-hero has gotten pretty old for me. It could be that I've been reading Miller Comics for longer than a lot of players have been alive but I find true Good-Guys a breath of fresh air.
Miller, Morrison, Jona Hex stories, etc...
If there is ANYTHING about Turalyon or Rhonin for that matter is that it’s ANOTHER pairing of an female Elf and a Knight in Shining Armour (Or Mage in … shiny robes?!). As a female player I’d love to see a Dwarf FEMALE hero hook up with someone completely different (*Cough*TAUREN*Mybias*COUGH*/shame). I mean, come on. Talk about being done.
Tolkien did the human/elf thing first and did it best. ;-p Since then it's been done to death and it's VERY old. I mean I get it, guys like pretty, delicate looking, vapid stuff ( no offence guys but that's the only reason it still happens.) ;-p I’m not asking for dumb fan-fiction pairings but if they are going to do couples in the lore then for the love of the GLOD, mix it up a bit.
Wow that was supposed to be a short answer and I went to rant-ville. X-p Sorry.
Krem Sep 8th 2010 4:57PM
But why is he, as a character, considered interesting? What is it about him that makes him that much better than most other characters?
And to Grovin, you should read more. At the very least, tvtropes. I strongly doubt that there are character descriptions 100% unique, but there are plenty who've not been done to the extent that, as an example, Turalyon has.
..blegh, this is probably my neutrality bias; see good and evil as simple and shallow. Haha.