Eärwa, the Land of the Felled Sun, in the days before the Fall. Nine High Mansions were built by the Cûnuroi (or Nonmen). Only the locations of Ishoriöl, Viri and Cil-Aujas are known with certainty. The locations of Siöl, Nihrimsul and Illiseru are more speculative. Both the names and locations of the other three mansions remain debatable.
Before the dawn of human history the lands of Eärwa were the domain of a beautiful, ancient and
long-lived race. They called themselves the ji'cûnû
roi (or, more familiarly, Cûnuroi), the People of the Dawn. Men, not known
for their flights of the imagination, would later call them Oserukki, "Not Us", or in everyday parlance, the Nonmen.
The Cûnuroi in those days were not immortal, but their
lifespans were measured in centuries. They raised great citadels - mansions -
within the mountains of Eärwa and forged mighty artifacts and items of glorious
beauty. They were the first to master the art of sorcery through their Qûya
mages. Their warrior caste, the Ishroi, became renowned for their absolute
mastery of combat. The Cûnuroi did not give up their long lives lightly in
battle, but from time to time strife was incurred and the mansions would go to
war. But for the most part they lived in peace.
A powerful Qûya, one of the sorcerers of the Cûnuroi.
At first they paid little heed to the savage race of
fur-clad primitives who spread across Eärwa, dwelling in the forests and
between the mountain peaks. They called this race j'ala roi (more familiarly, Halaroi), the People of Summer, for
their lives were fleeting but flamed hot and passionate. But as the Halaroi
spread in number, breeding at a far faster rate than the slow-burning Cûnuroi,
they saw the wisdom in subduing them. The Nonmen Mansions broke the spirit of
these men, reducing them to become the Emwama, a tribute race who existed as
slaves of the Cûnuroi. They delved the deep mines for their long-lived masters
and tilled the fields for them. The sole exception was in the uttermost north,
where the Cûnuroi of Viri instead employed
men and treated them with more respect, to the derision of their peers.
The total number of Nonmen Mansions is unknown, although it is
known that the mightiest, the High Mansions, numbered nine. The names of six have survived through recorded history. Greatest, most powerful and most
populous was Siöl, lying under the titanic peaks of the Northern Kayarsus. The proudest and most fiercely independent was Nihrimsul, located under the south-eastern Yimaleti Mountains.
Cil-Aujas lay in the east, under the peak
of Aenaratiol at the south tip of
the Osthwai Mountains.
Ishoriöl, the Exalted Hall, lay in the far west, beyond the Demua
Mountains near the shores of the Great
Ocean. Viri, in the north, lay under the peak of Antareg
in the Urokkas, a small range of mountains overlooking the Neleöst, the Misty
Sea. Illiseru lay far to the south, under the Betmulla Mountains. Other High Mansions lay under the Araxes and Hinayati Mountains, and the last in the hills near what is now the city of Domyot, but the names of these last three mansions remains unknown to us.
Viri controlled a great swathe of territory. Its dominion
extended across either side of the River Sursa, reaching north and westwards
through thickly-forested lands to the frigid Yimaleti Mountains and eastwards
around the curving shoreline of the Misty Sea. Many Halaroi dwelt in these
lands, but the Cûnuroi of Viri treated with them and bartered for their service,
to the amusement of their southern kin. The Nonmen of Viri nevertheless lived
peacefully and prosperously. Until the waxing of Imburil.
Imburil was the name given by the Cûnuroi to the pole star,
the brightest star in the sky. Men would later call it the Nail of Heaven, the
star around which all others turned. One night the star suddenly blazed with a
strange, sudden intensity. This waxing lasted a time and then abated. The
Cûnuroi could not explain it, but then dismissed it as a curiosity and moved on
with their lives.
Three years after this curious event, death came swirling
down.
Some scholars date the arrival of the Golden Ark to more than five thousand years before the time of Kellhus, over a thousand years before the legendary Breaking of the Gates. The dating of this event remains fiercely debated, however.
A colossal crack
sounded around the world, briefly shaking even the foundations of Cil-Aujas
some two thousand miles to the
south-east. The skies turned red as far away as Siöl, and it was clear that
something momentous had happened in the far north-western corner of Eärwa, in
the southern reaches of the Yimaleti Mountains.
The Nonmen of Viri had a far closer view.
There, the shaking came as terrific, terrible waves of
destruction. Some of the lower halls of the mansion collapsed. Passages caved
in and the great mines were laid waste. Tens of thousands of Cûnuroi was
killed. Some, in desperation, attempted to flee the mansion altogether. Those
who did beheld - briefly - a firestorm sweeping out of the west, destroying all
before it. The great forests of western Viri were vapourised, the farmlands
obliterated and the outer walls of the mansion scorched.
The devastation was total and the intensity of its fury was
terrifying: Viri was four hundred miles from where the cataclysm had taken
place. Almost equidistant was Ishoriöl, which lay to the south-west of the Yimaleti
Mountains beyond the Leash, the
long straits linking the Great Ocean
to the Misty Sea.
Ishoriöl was luckier, however. The south-western Yimaleti
Mountains and the hills around
Ishoriöl helped deflect the worst of the damage away. Furthermore, the fertile
hinterlands of Ishoriöl - Injor-Niyas - were located further to the south and
were not affected by the cataclysm. Although damaged, Ishoriöl was able to
recover without outside help.
Cû'jara-Cinmoi, High King of Siöl, accounted the greatest Cûnuroi ruler of the age. However, his wisdom and might were later threatened by his hubris, and his great victory on the fields of Pir-Pahal was later undone by his ill-advised alliance with the Inchoroi and the unleashing of the Womb-Plague.
The same was not true of Viri. Its rich tributary lands had
been utterly destroyed, its population reduced catastrophically. Its few
surviving Halaroi client-tribes were reduced to begging at the gates
of Viri for aid. Foreseeing disaster, King Nin'janjin sent word to Siöl
and begged for aid from King Cû'jara-Cinmoi, the
greatest Cûnuroi ruler of the age.
The Sky has cracked into potter’s shards,Fire sweeps the compass of Heaven,The beasts flee, their hearts maddened,The trees fall, their backs broken.Ash has shrouded all sun, choked all seed,The Halaroi howl piteously at the Gates,Dread Famine stalks my Mansion.Brother Siöl, Viri begs your pardon.
Cû'jara-Cinmoi read the message and realised he had no
choice but to act: his armies swept across the borders of Viri and invaded the territory
of Nin'janjin. Incredulous but
unable to resist, Nin'janjin chose subjugation. He allowed the forces of Siöl
to occupy his kingdom without giving battle. It was humiliating, but it also
saved his mansion. The forces of Siöl sent aid and succour to Viri and
prevented its extinction.
His bloodless victory assured, Cû'jara-Cinmoi turned his eye
west to where the cataclysm had taken place. The land was still scarred and
blackened, but the immediate firestorm had burned out and the way was passable,
for someone with the will. Cû'jara-Cinmoi chose Ingalira, a great hero of Siöl,
and sent him into the heart of the storm to learn what had transpired.
The Golden Horns of Golgotterath. The Horns are all that can be seen of the Incû-Holoinas, the Ark-of-the-Skies whose cataclysmic arrival foreshadowed the ruin of Cûnuroi civilisation.
Ingalira returned to Viri three months later with his
report, which was hard to fathom. According to him, a great golden vessel had been responsible for the
devastation. It had fallen from the sky with great speed and crashed into the
mountains with tremendous force. A vast circular depression (estimated at well
over a hundred miles wide) had been created by the impact, with a new range of peaks,
the Occlusion or Ring Mountains,
thrown up around its edges. Most of the vessel was buried underground, with
only two titanic golden horns reaching skywards from the site of impact. This
vessel was dubbed the Incû-Holoinas,
the Ark-of-the-Skies. Ingalira attempted an exploration of the vessel, but its
inhabitants were unpleasant to look upon and made noises devoid of meaning. For
this reason, and the fact that they came from the empty skies, they were dubbed
the Inchoroi, or People of Emptiness
by Ingalira. Ingalira brought two of these creatures back with him, but Cû'jara-Cinmoi
was so revolted by their aspect that he had them slain on the spot.
History may have been better served had the Cûnuroi marched
on and destroyed the Ark
immediately, but Cû'jara-Cinmoi had already seen a greater opportunity afforded
by the Arkfall. His forces bolstered by the survivors of Viri, he chose instead
to make war. His armies marched on Cil-Aujas and Nihrimsul and subdued both in
battle. Cû'jara-Cinmoi became the High King of Four Mansions, his reach
extending from the Sea of Neleöst
to the Sea of Meneanor.
The might of Siöl was uncontested.
The skies above the Incû-Holoinas cleared and the lands
cooled. Western Viri had been reduced to a wasteland, Agongorea, the Field Appalling, which
stretched from the edges of the Ring Mountains
to the River Sursa, under the very walls of Viri. Nothing would grow there and
nothing could live there. Viri's power and might had been exhausted, even
before its conquest by Siöl. Nin'janjin brooded on Cû'jara-Cinmoi's betrayal
and the reduction of his mansion, and dreamed of vengeance.
A Watch had been placed on the Incû-Holoinas. The Ark
was ringed by sentries and forts, but somehow a delegation of Inchoroi slipped
through their lines. They came to Nin'janjin in secrecy and spoke to him, but
this time in the Ihrimsû tongue of the Cûnuroi. They claimed that the descent
of their vessel was uncontrolled and the devastation suffered by Viri
unplanned. They regretted the cataclysm and offered to make amends. The
Inchoroi would make alliance with Viri and stand with them against Siöl. They
would give Nin'janjin the power to avenge Cû'jara-Cinmoi's treachery. Against
the advice of many of his Ishroi and Qûya advisors, Nin'janjin agreed.
Viri revolted. The Siölan forces present were slaughtered or
enslaved. The Inchoroi swarmed from the Ark
under the command of their king, Sil, and overthrew the Watch. Only the two
great twin heroes of Siöl, Oirinas and Oirûnas, survived to relate news of the
peril to Cû'jara-Cinmoi. The High King gathered his armies and marched west
to meet the threat on the field of Pir-Pahal, south-east of the Sea
of Neleöst. Nin'janjin assembled
the might of Viri there to await them. However, when the Inchoroi host arrived
the Ishroi of Viri became disturbed, for the Inchoroi wore festering bodies as
garments of war. Their obscene appearance offended the Cûnuroi of Viri as it
had Cû'jara-Cinmoi. Gin'gûrima confronted Nin'janjin and realised that the
king's desire for vengeance and redress had overthrown his reason. "Hate
has blinded him!" he cried, and soon most of the host of Viri had taken up
the cry. They refused to fight alongside the Inchoroi. The Inchoroi, fearing
that the Nonmen planned to join Cû'jara-Cinmoi and turn on them, attacked
first, hoping to destroy them ere the arrival of the might of Siöl.
The battle was hard-fought, the Cûnuroi valour and skill at
arms and sorcery proving a match for the Inchoroi's lethal weapons of light, which
scythed through their ranks with abandon. The Inchoroi would have likely won
regardless, but the Nonmen of Viri only had to hold back the threat until the
armies of Siöl arrived. Finding his once-vassals beleaguered, Cû'jara-Cinmoi
threw himself into the fray.
Cû'jara-Cinmoi, High King of Four Mansions, faces Sil, King of the Inchoroi, at the Battle of Pir-Pahal. At this battle Sil wielded Sûrgoil the Shining Death, which history remembers better as the Heron Spear, the most famous weapon in the history of Eärwa.
The battle lasted a day and a night. The armies of Siöl were
tested by the Inchoroi weapons but triumphed. Cû'jara-Cinmoi himself faced and
defeated Sil, slaying him where he stood and seizing his weapon, Sûrgoil,
"Shining Death", which in a later age men would call the Heron Spear.
The Inchoroi broke and ran, fleeing back to the Incû-Holoinas. The Cûnuroi
followed, planning to destroy them once and for all, but word came of disasters
in distant corners of the Siölan empire: Cil-Aujas and Nihrimsul had revolted
and broken free of the yoke of Siöl. Believing the Inchoroi broken and
finished, Cû'jara-Cinmoi ordered Oirinas and Oirûnas to return to the Ark
and set a renewed Watch on it. Cû'jara-Cinmoi then took the bulk of his forces
back south to retake the rebellious mansions. He won back Cil-Aujas in a hard
campaign, but Nihrimsul and its king, Sin'niroiha, refused to concede. Dozens
of bloody battles resulted to no end, but proud Cû'jara-Cinmoi refused to treat
until Sin'niroiha became King of Ishoriöl through marriage. Hearing the
news, Cû'jara-Cinmoi relented and sent a message to the King of Nihrimsul:
"A King of Three Mansions may be Brother to a King of Two."
During this time Cû'jara-Cinmoi had been forced to denude
the Second Watch of Ishroi warriors. To replace them, Oirinas and Oirûnas
recruited from the primitive tribes of men. Among them was Sirwatta, a man who
had seduced the wife of a high-ranking Ishroi and gotten her with child, a
daughter named Cimoira. Cimoira was raised as a Cûnuroi but Sirwatta was
banished to the Watch. During his exile, he chose to enter the Ark.
He disappeared for a month and was assumed dead, but then emerged, deranged and
speaking stories so worrying that he was borne directly to Cû'jara-Cinmoi. What
news was related was unknown and Sirwatta was ordered to be put to death. For
reasons unknown, this order was rescinded and Sirwatta merely had his tongue
removed.
More years passed and Cû'jara-Cinmoi grew old and infirm.
His eyesight dimmed and the end seemed to approach. At this time Nin'janjin
returned, begging Mercy and Penance as per the ancient codes. Cû'jara-Cinmoi
granted him audience, but was amazed to see that Nin'janjin had not aged a day
since he last saw him on the Field of Pir-Pahal. Nin'janjin confirmed that the
science of the Inchoroi preserved him. He told Cû'jara-Cinmoi that the Inchoroi
lived in stark terror of the might of Siöl, so remained in the Ark
in misery. They begged to sue for peace. Nin'janjin asked what tribute they
could pay to temper the High King's fury.
The High King said, fatefully, "I would be young of
heart, face and limb. I would banish Death from the halls of my people".
His counsellors urged him otherwise, but Cû'jara-Cinmoi had seen Nin'janjin's
vigour and it awoke in him a greed for the return of his own youth and strength.
The Second Watch was disbanded and the Inchoroi allowed to minister to the
Nonmen of Siöl as their physicians.
The Inchoroi gave the treatments and ministrations to the
Cûnuroi that would both bless them with immortality and doom them. Soon their
effectiveness became clear, as the Cûnuroi of Siöl grew in strength and skill,
their youth restored to them. The other Mansions abhorred the Inchoroi, but the
fear of death gripped them all. One by one, they gave in and allowed the
Inchoroi to practise their arts on them as well.
All seemed well and the power of the Cûnuroi grew again,
until Hanalinqû, the legendary wife of Cû'jara-Cinmoi, died of an affliction.
The Inchoroi strove to save her, to no avail and Cû'jara-Cinmoi praised their
diligence. But soon other Cûnuroi women started to die, first a few and then
scores. The Inchoroi fled en masse,
abandoning the mansions to return to the Ark. Cû'jara-Cinmoi realised with
utter horror that he and his entire race had been deceived, and poisoned. The
Womb-Plague, as it was called, consumed the entire race and killed every single
woman it touched. Within a few scant years fully half of the Cûnuroi race had been obliterated, and the ability of it to reproduce ended.
Cû'jara-Cinmoi called for a muster of arms like nothing
before seen in Eärwa. Not just the mansions under his control, but every
stronghold of the Nonmen between the Yimaleti
Mountains and the shores of the Three
Seas in the uttermost south
responded. The might of the Nine High Mansions assembled. Cû'jara-Cinmoi led this
army through the Occlusion and onto the Inniür-Shigogli, the Black Furnace
Plain that lay about the Golden Horns of the Incû-Holoinas. There he laid down
the body of his slain wife and demanded that the Inchoroi answer for their
crimes.
A Nonman Qûya battles a Bashrag, a foul creation of the Inchoroi.
But the Inchoroi had prepared for this day. For many long
years they had practised foul skills, melding technology and flesh to create
hordes of horrific servants: Sranc, a piteous abomination of man, given to
hungers of the flesh; powerful Bashrags, tall, fierce and hideous warriors of
tremendous size and strength; and Wracu, winged beasts whom men would later
call dragons.
The Cûnuroi may have yet carried the day, for their numbers
were immense, their shields tall and their sorcery strong. But the Inchoroi had
seduced the Qûya practitioners of the Aporos, the form of sorcery focused on negation. These sorcerers had created
for the Inchoroi devices they called Chorae,
trinkets, later called by men "Tears of God". Each Chorae was a small
iron sphere, banded in runes inscribed in the Qûya language and one inch in
diameter. Anyone wearing a Chorae was rendered immune to sorcery. If a Chorae
came into contact with a sorcerer, it killed them instantly, transforming their
bodies into pillars of salt. The Chorae turned the tide of battle, slaughtering
the Qûya by the dozens and reducing the struggle to one of swords, teeth and
talons.
The heroes of Eärwa struck back. Ciögli the Mountain,
strongest of the Ishroi, broke the neck of Wutteät the Black, the Father of
Dragons. Oirinas and Oirûnas fought side-by-side, slaughtering Sranc and
Bashrags by the score. Ingalira strangled Vshikcrû, one of the mightiest of the
Inchoroi, and cast his burning body down into the screaming hordes. The Cûnuroi would not relent and
would not yield.
The battle only turned when Nin'janjin, his hatred not dimmed
by the passage of generations, found and battled Cû'jara-Cinmoi. He slew the
High King of Siöl and severed his head from his body. The mighty Gin'gûrima
fell, gored to death by a Wracu. Oirinas was slain by an Inchoroi spear of
light. Sin'niroiha, the High King of Nihrimsul and Ishoriöl, rallied the
surviving Nonmen and they began a fighting retreat, withdrawing to the Ring
Mountains.
The Chorae, or Tears of God, are fatal to sorcerers, destroying them utterly and reducing them to piles of salt upon contact. They are the creation of the Aporotic school of sorcery, all knowledge of which has been lost to the modern age. Tens of thousands of Chorae still exist, allowing the non-magical rulers of Eärwa to check the power of the sorcerous schools.
The Inchoroi, despite their hordes of slave-warriors and
their Chorae, were reluctant to pursue. They had suffered grievous losses. The
Black Furnace Plain was covered in the bodies of Sranc, Bashrags, Wracu and
Inchoroi themselves. The Inchoroi chose not to pursue their foe but to regroup.
This proved to be a mistake, although at first it did not
seem so. The Cûnuroi retreated to their mansions to raise fresh troops, but
they could not replenish their losses. The Inchoroi bred countless more Sranc
and Bashrags to throw at their foe, and the Isûphiryas,
the record of Cûnuroi history, recorded nothing but defeat after defeat for
decades. But the Inchoroi were also a dying race: they could bree more Sranc but they could not replenish
their own ranks, and every Inchoroi that fell was a major victory for the Cûnuroi.
And the Cûnuroi were, even in their reduced state, far more numerous.
The Inchoroi were also overly reliant on their weapons of
light and their technology, but these were reliant on the Ark
and the Ark itself seemed to be failing (some reports say that the Ark was even alive in some unfathomable sense, but that it had "died", either in the Arkfall or afterwards).
One-by-one, the Inchoroi weapons ceased working. Their other weapons
likewise failed, and their ability to create countless Wracu, Sranc and
Bashrags became reduced. They were forced to let the creatures breed instead,
and this was a slower process.
Finally, nigh on five centuries after the defeat at the
Black Furnace Plain, the Inchoroi were driven back into the Ark. No longer did
the Cûnuroi call it the Incû-Holoinas, the Ark-of-the-Skies. Now they called it
Min-Uroikas, the Pit of Obscenities, Golgotterath in the tongues of men. The
Cûnuroi set about a methodical eradication of the Ark,
scouring it hall by hall. It took twenty years to explore and secure every last
hold and every last corner of the vessel but finally it was done. The Inchoroi
were pronounced eradicated, destroyed and defeated. Unable to actually destroy
the vessel itself, Nil'giccas, King of Ishoriöl, ordered the Qûya to raise a
glamour about it to hide it away from the rest of the world. The Cûnuroi were
forbidden from speaking of the accursed place, or telling others where it lay.
The Cûnuroi had achieved their victory, but at catastrophic
cost. Millions of their race had been slaughtered. Every last Cûnuroi woman had
been killed. There was no way to restore their race, or save it. They were
ageless, but not invulnerable. They could die in battle or they could be
gripped by madness. The very passage of time exacted a toll on their souls, their
memories fading until only the most horrific and scarring remained, and soon
they began to descend into madness, becoming Erratic.
The Age of the Cûnuroi dwindled even as, in the lands of
Eänna beyond the great eastern mountains, the Age of Man began.
Credits
All of the artwork for this article was created by Jason Deem, known as Spiral Horizon, and used with his permission. You can find more of his spectacular work here.
The Prince of Nothing Wiki was helpful in providing spelling checks and putting the timeline of events in better order.
Scott Bakker provided a few new bits of information for this history (the locations of the High Mansions and a few more names), and of course wrote the Encyclopedic Glossary, which provided the first account of the Cûno-Inchoroi Wars.
Obviously, Scott Bakker also wrote the Second Apocalypse novels, for which this history is merely the backdrop and the scene-setting that comes before. Those novels are:
The Prince of Nothing
The Darkness That Comes Before (2003)
The Warrior-Prophet (2004)
The Thousandfold Thought (2005)
The Aspect-Emperor
The Judging Eye (2008)
The White-Luck Warrior (2011)
The Great Ordeal (2016)
The Unholy Consult (2017)
Awesome! I've been wondering about the location of Siol for basically ever.
ReplyDeleteFantastic! Thanks for doing this.
ReplyDeleteThat's really cool, Wert :).
ReplyDeleteAs a long time fan of r Scott Bakker I was surprised to find bits of history, that I did not recall reading. Thanks for writing this and looking forward to more.
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot! Sadly, princeofnothing wiki is stub on many accounts. Hopefully you will do recaps as well.
ReplyDelete>A powerful Qûya, one of the sorcerers of the Cûnuroi.
More precisily it would be 'One of Qûya, the sorcerers of the Cûnuroi', since Qûya = nonman sorcer (member of sorcery cast)
Thank you, Adam. This will make getting back into Bakker's world a lot easier for me.
ReplyDeleteWell done. Nice work.
ReplyDeletebrilliant work again dude.
ReplyDeleteA terrific write up (as always)
ReplyDeleteThis was great. I loved the bit about the Nail of Heaven!!
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome
ReplyDelete"It took twenty years to explore and secure every last hold and every last corner of the vessel but finally it was done. The Inchoroi were pronounced eradicated, destroyed and defeated."
ReplyDeleteSo clearly their investigation wasn't thorough enough lol. I assume the Inchoroi's return is going to be explained in Part 2? Amazing summary btw very helpful
Thank you so much Wert. This is great background that I have been trying to find on other sites this past 12 months after reading all of the series again to get ready for The Great Ordeal. I am waiting impatiently like a child at Christmas for July 5th.
ReplyDeleteThanks a ton Adam -fantastic work as per usual! I'd forgotten this was coming out, and being in the middle of reading "Fall of Light" by Erikson, there's no time to do a re-read. Look forward to reading all your posts and then jumping right into The Great Ordeal! :)
ReplyDeleteI haven't read any of bakker's work but I was getting ready to start the darkness that comes before but wanted some foundation of the world before I started, will these articles spoil my reading?
ReplyDeleteThe first four parts should be fine, although they do incorporate some worldbuilding revelations from later books in the series.
ReplyDelete