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The Utter East was a land in the extreme southeast of Faerûn, bordering the continents of both Kara-Tur and Zakhara. It was home to the Five Kingdoms.[6][7][8][5]

Geography[]

The Utter East lay on the isthmus joining the great continents of Faerûn and Kara-Tur in the north to Zakhara in the south. The Wu Pi Te Shao Mountains, the southern arm of the massive Yehimal Mountains, ran down the center of the isthmus like a spine. The Utter East lay on the western side, between the mountains and the sea, in a narrow landscape less than 100 miles wide (160 kilometers). It was the only easily traversable land-bridge between the continents; the Sempadan Forest on the eastern side was much too dense.[6]

The coastline was dry[6] and rugged. It was lashed by the Great Sea, which in its wake formed whirlpools and maelstroms.[9]

In the north lay vast and uncharted plains, which bordered the eastern side of Ulgarth.[10][11]

Society[]

Blood & Magic game map

A distorted map of the Utter East, showing some realms and locations.

Utter east tharkar

A map of the Utter East.

The Utter East was dominated by the Five Kingdoms, which were ruled by the Ffolk and by the Northmen.[1][5][12] They included:

They ruled over the indigenous human Mar tribes. The Mar were once subjugated and enslaved by the Ffolk and Northmen, before they demanded their freedom following the Bloodforge Wars. Yet they still had no lands of their own or a say in the courts of the Five Kingdoms, even by the 14th century DR.[2][3][4]

The barbarian Horde dwelled in the northern plains, and regularly raided or invaded Ulgarth in the north.[10][11]

Language[]

The indigenous Mar people spoke Maran, which was most closely related to the languages of Zakhara.[1] It was melodious but rapidly spoken, with short syllables and throat clicks.[14]

The Ffolk colonists spoke Waelan, the native tongue of the Moonshae Isles, but their Five Kingdoms dialect was heavily influenced by both its isolation and by Northmen settlers and by corsairs and merchants from across south Faerûn and north Zakhara.[1]

Relations[]

For much of their history prior to the 14th century DR, the cultures of Faerûn and Kara-Tur saw the isthmus as only a bridge to nowhere, not seeing the lands of Zakhara to the southwest, and so, for the most part, turned their backs on the Utter East.[6] The Utter East therefore marked the end of the Western Realms of Faerûn.[9] Western folk saw instead the Shining Lands around the Golden Water as the last "civilized" realm before one ventured into the Utter East. Even so, as the Durpari people of the Shining Lands had acquired some cultural practices and weapon and armor styles from their Utter Eastern neighbors, they were seen as barely Faerûnian themselves.[15][8][16]

Thus, to the West, the Utter East was a little-known and bizarre collection of lands, with only legends considered too fantastic and fanciful to be taken as fact filtering back to Faerûn.[8] Even in the Hordelands, lying betwixt Faerûn and Kara-Tur, folk saw the lands beyond the Gate of IronDurpar, Ulgarth, and points further south—as a strange and incredible place, telling of mages without bodies and gods that lived like mortals, of islands that rose and fell beneath the waves and valleys filled with gems.[17]

History[]

Prehistory[]

According to a legend, at the "beginning of all things", the land was "a frenzy of creation". The first primitive nations of the Utter East were said to have emerged out of this turmoil.[18][note 1]

In prehistoric times, a great horde of fiends and undead horrors became trapped in prisons buried deep beneath the land. There they would wait for thousands of years.[4]

The first humans of the Utter East were the Mar, who settled along the coastline in past ages. Their histories told they had known only oppression since that time.[4]

In time, the lords of the Circle of Order arose to govern the early nations of the Utter East, those east of the Great Sea. The Realm of Lands was ruled by the Lord of Lands, the Realm of Tides by the Lady of Tides, and the Realm of Fire by the Lord of Flame, who believed order brought progress. However, there was one other of the Circle, who engaged in chaotic plots in the belief that chaos brought challenge, change, and strength, and so was exiled and cast down, bound in a subterranean kingdom. In his imprisonment, he adopted the name Tartyron and was called the Lord of Chaos. Loathing this place, Tartyron constantly struggled against the wards, his rage bolstering his strength and spent on those who happened into his deep realm. He waited, knowing those of the Realms would grow comfortable, lazy, and weak, and then he would escape to spread chaos once again.[18]

Nuts And !Bolts Intro a

A barrow tomb of the ancient clans, wherein the Pearl of Power was kept.

When the clans of these times warred, defeated champions were buried in barrow tombs, together with their weapons and magical relics like the Pearl of Power. The sensible living would shun such places. Curses were said to bring grief and misfortune to those who disturbed them.[19]

In ancient times, a mighty city was built atop the high mountains. However, it later fell into ruins, was stripped of its wealth and resources, and was by-and-large forgotten, known only as Old Stone Keep. Nevertheless, it was part of a legacy of great mages, and rumored to hide secrets of arcane magic.[20]

Folk of the Uttermost East, notable for their "dazzling raiment", were noted as visiting the city of Medinat Muskawoon in the Raurin to the north, before the city's decline in the mid-300s DR.[21][note 2]

Western colonization[]

In the Year of Nineteen Swords, 621 DR, in the far Moonshae Isles, the Ffolk princess Bridget of Callidyrr was to marry the Northmen prince Scothgar of Rogarsheim, but she and her whole royal entourage vanished on the voyage to Norland. Ffolk and Northmen each blamed the other for the disappearance, which worsened relations between them.[2] That same year, Moonshaes Ffolk arrived on the shores of the Utter East, where they chose to settle.[2][3][4] They were later joined by Northmen settlers.[1][note 3]

The native Mar welcomed the Ffolk, who spoke of peace and brotherhood between the two races. Indeed, relations were friendly for the first few years. However, Ffolk soon turned greedy, and they seized Mar lands for their own, and then subjugated and enslaved the Mar tribes themselves. They carved these stolen lands into their Five Kingdoms.[2][3][4][note 4]

Invaders led by Rathgar the Raider overran Doegan, besieging the capital. To pacify his poor clansmen, Rathgar plundered the realm. Finally, he seized the crown itself, and the king was slain upon his throne, cursing that the dead would depose Rathgar. Escaping the invaders, the princess of Doegan sought a way to fulfill her father's prophecy. She went to Old Stone Keep and enlisted the aid of Aelric, a mage of Doegan and heir to the Keep's great magical legacy.[20]

The Bloodforge Wars[]

Legendary Campaign 1b

It's all about the bloodforges, baby.

The bloodforges were discovered in the Year of the Dancing Daggers, 648 DR, first by King Grewe of Konigheim and within tendays by Ffolk across all the Five Kingdoms. These ancient devices of war could mass-produce entire armies of living golems, eliminating overnight the cost of mustering and maintaining armed forces. Losing all restraint, turning war-mad, the Ffolk rulers of the Five Kingdoms each manufactured great golem armies and marched them against one another, bursting into the Bloodforge Wars.[4][5][22] They were drawn into battle by thoughts of conquest and revenge, rivalry and intrigue.[22] The kingdoms throve on the arcane magic of the bloodforges and were governed by military might.[23] The Mar, meanwhile, could only be helpless witnesses, recording events for posterity.[4]

There is no satisfaction for the Mage who desires more than enough.

A number of conflicts large and small raged back and forth across the Utter East, with all sides commanding bloodforges and basal golem armies.[23] In the Howl of Vengeance, Aelric and the princess of Doegan raised an army of bloodforge undead in an effort to liberate their homeland. They were opposed by Rathgar's own bloodforge warriors.[20] In the Harvest of Horrors, the monstrous Redfang the Reaper and his voracious kind in the Kingdom of Nix assaulted the town of Vanesci Hamlet, seeking to catch, cook, and devour the villagers, as the mage Haradan the Hermit led a desperate defense.[24] However, the conflicts soon turned frivolous, with bloodforge battles taking the place of contests and duels. In the so-called Matchmaker Mayhem, Princess Roxanna and her would-be suitors fought bloodforge battles to choose her husband and decide who would rule Edenvale.[25] The feuding, treasure-hunting brothers Garrulos and Wormskull delved into an ancient barrow tomb and uncovered the Pearl of Power; their inventions and bloodforge battles laid waste to Konigheim in the so-called Nuts and !Bolts (sic) escapade.[19] Tartyron himself broke free of his subterranean prison and into the world above, spreading chaos through the Realms of Lands, Tides, and Fire, opposed by the Circle of Order, in the campaign of Tartyron Unbound.[18][note 5]

Legendary Campaign 1d

Fighting for peace is like that.

As the wars dragged on, kingdoms came and went, their lands were devastated, but the power struggles were unending. In time, people at all levels of society hoped for a legendary leader who, regardless of whether their motives were virtuous, selfish, or immoral, could end the wars, unify the kingdoms, and bring peace to the Utter East. Unfortunately, one did. Emerging from obscurity, this leader made a sovereign claim to rulership and swore to unify the realm and give mercy to anyone who recognized their claim. All the current rulers, of course, rejected it completely. Regardless, the new leader rallied their handful of golem followers and embarked on the Legendary Campaign. They would not be alone in this. The mage Venar Orknal also made a claim to the realm and embarked on an identical campaign to win it, while countless others opposed them. They engaged in bloodforge battles up and down the land, fighting rival claimants and warlords, challenging other bloodforge mages, aiding the needy, defeating the wicked, attacking the good, and, in short, doing exactly the same as everyone else.[26]

Finally, when the last of the bloodforge mages was defeated, all conflicts came to an end and all the rival factions of the Utter East capitulated to the leader of the Legendary Campaign.[26]

A Moment's Peace[]

Legendary Campaign 2b

Sure it was all worth it.

With the title "overlord", the leader of the Legendary Campaign ruled alone over one unified realm, in a manner said to be always true and diligent. However, they stood ready for a time when the bloodforges would be needed in battle once more.[26]

Finally, at the end of their reign, the leader was destined to fight another great bloodforge battle, this time at the Gate of Immortals. Victorious, they broke through into the Hall of Legends, and became an Immortal themselves. Their name would live forever in legend.[26][note 6]

Except they left behind an Utter East devastated by a decade of unending warfare, leaving the defenses of the Five Kingdoms wrecked and the cities lying in ruins or rubble, while the ancestral lands of the Mar were despoiled. The Ffolk were at last growing weary of warfare, and utterly unprepared when another foe entered the game.[4]

The Scouring of the Utter East[]

It transpired that every use of a bloodforge had steadily weakened the ancient prisons binding the fiends and undead beneath the Utter East. Finally, in the Year of the Nine Stars, 657 DR, the horde of antediluvian horrors escaped and rampaged across the ruins of the land, killing without regard for kingdom or race. This was known as the Plague of Fiends. The Ffolk sent ships out north and south, desperately begging for aid from their neighbors. Unfortunately, they got it.[4][5]

Grand Caliph Arash bint Sanjar of Zakhara answered the Ffolk's pleas for help, sending an armada of sambuk to the Utter East in early Mirtul of 657 DR. But the corsairs launched a surprise attack on the Five Kingdoms, swiftly overrunning and seizing their defenseless port cities. Then legions of askar warriors, clad in djinn-forged lamellar and wielding killing katars, disembarked and marched across the land. With murderous efficiency, they razed every village and slew all they encountered, whether fiend or Ffolk, in what became known as the Scouring of the Utter East. The Grand Caliph saw the people as only heathens and barbarians, the land as infected and ravaged, which he had no plans to occupy. Their bloody work done by the time autumn fell, they boarded their sambuks and sailed home again.[4][5]

But though we are not proud, we are patient. We are the Mar.
— An unnamed Mar writer.[4]

They left behind a wasteland, of burned and ruined cities, of corpses rotting where they'd fallen. The Five Kingdoms were in chaos, but the Mar had, at least, survived. They stood up and demanded their freedom, and the Ffolk, weary and sick of warfare, yielded it, however reluctantly. Nevertheless, the Mar still had no land of their own, nor were they heard in the royal courts. This state of affairs continued for centuries.[4][5]

Modern history[]

In the Year of the Banner, 1368 DR, Atreus Eleint of Erlkazar and his ogre companion Yago made an expedition to the Utter East in search of the fabled realm of Langdarma. Together with the Mar bahrana Rishi Saubhari, they journeyed into the Yehimals, and were never seen again by the outside world.[4]

The Year of Rogue Dragons, 1373 DR, saw Shining Lands merchants journey to the Utter East, as well as to places as far-flung as Waterdeep, Zakhara, and even Maztica, in order to purchase wares for trade.[27][28]

Magic[]

The Utter East had a local magic unfamiliar to the spellcasters of Faerûn.[29][note 7] Mana was extensively used to power the bloodforges, create basal golems, and cast spells during the Bloodforge Wars.[23]

Appendix[]

Background[]

The "Utter East" was first mentioned in the original Forgotten Realms Campaign Set (1987), but where it actually lay has varied over subsequent sourcebooks, with earlier lore altered to refer to different locations. On page 81 of the Cyclopaedia of the Realms, it is said that ivory from the Utter East arrives in Suzail, but the Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting 2nd edition: A Grand Tour of the Realms (1993), page 55, changes this to the Unapproachable East. Forgotten Realms Adventures (1990) on page 105 refers to the "mysterious Utter East", but says this is Kara-Tur. Page 45 of the Campaign Set's DM's Sourcebook of the Realms mentions the Blue Diamond, a flying ship created in the Utter East, but The Shining South (1993) associates these skyships with Halruaa. The Forgotten Realms Atlas (1990) finally located the Utter East, placing it beyond the far south and east corner of Faerûn, somewhere past Ulgarth, and joining Zakhara. The Shining South followed suit (but with a reference to Horde barbarians in the plains east of Ulgarth, it may have been referring to the Hordelands and Kara-Tur). Nevertheless, Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting 3rd edition (2001), page 209, still describes the Golden Way as connecting Faerûn and the "Utter East"—meaning Kara-Tur.

The Utter East became the site of the Blood & Magic computer game in 1996, which set a rather typical European-style fantasy setting in the area, rather than the expected Eastern- or Arabian-style setting that might fit with the surrounding cultures of this part of Faerûn. The Utter East was developed further in 1998, with the novels Faces of Deception, the Realms of Mystery short story "Darkly, Through a Glass of Ale", and the Double Diamond Triangle Saga all published in that year and set in and around the Utter East. These all made efforts to adapt details from the Blood & Magic game and to incorporate South Asian and more fantastical elements so it better suited the area.

However, with no further development or appearances, the area was later forgotten and remained little known to fans. Eventually, however, discussions on the Wizards of the Coast forums (now deleted) rediscovered the area. Following the popular "Kara-Tur Redux" thread, interest grew in the Utter East, prompting Mark "Markustay" Taylor to start the "Utter East Campaign + MAP!!!" thread for research, speculation, and homebrew development, with the goal of producing a fan-written netbook. No netbook was produced, but some related articles were written for Candlekeep Compendiums. The thread was long-running, being active from June 2007 to June 2009. The thread produced a great deal of speculation and fanon on the Utter East, and author Brian R. James used some of this in The Grand History of the Realms (2007), marking an instance of homebrew fanon becoming canon lore.

Notes[]

  1. This history of the Utter East is pieced together from various sources, including the uncertain continuity of Blood & Magic and accounts from more conventional Forgotten Realms sources. Some events have unknown dates and uncertain correspondences to other events. Therefore, except where specified and dated, much of the following chronology is hypothetical and the links between similar events are speculative.
  2. It's assumed that "Uttermost East" refers to the Utter East and not to Kara-Tur.
  3. Although there is no explicit connection between these events, the implication is clear that Bridget's entourage was somehow transported from the Moonshaes to the shores of the Utter East, and that the Northmen followed. In fact, author Brian R. James borrowed this from an article entitled "Perilous Portals: The Sea Gates" written by Mark "Markustay" Taylor in Candlekeep Compendium Volume IX, a fan-written netbook, making it an example of fanon turned canon. Taylor's story tells of a pirate who tried to attack Bridget's treasure-laden ships, until a Northlander fleet intervened. Both Ffolk and Northlanders pursued the pirate into a sea portal, before all three were wrecked in a storm on the Great Sea. This itself derived from speculation and homebrew lore developed in the "Utter East Campaign + MAP!!!" thread.
  4. By "Ffolk" here, Mar historians may be referring to both Ffolk and Northmen. The Northman kingdom of Konigheim was established in all the novels as being heavily involved in slaving, while Rathgar's warriors fit depictions of Northmen.
  5. The events of Blood & Magic are only dated to "before the Time of Troubles" (1358 DR) in game. It is assumed these are a part of the Bloodforge Wars described in Faces of Deception and dated in The Grand History of the Realms to 648–657 DR. It is possible the novel and sourcebook give alternate versions of the events of the game. Moreover, the above five campaigns are introduced with "A story for your pleasure?" suggesting that even in-universe these are fictionalized versions of historic events or entirely fictional (especially the comedic Nuts and !Bolts.
  6. This leader is of course the player of the Blood & Magic game. As a canon name is unknown and given what happens next, it seems likely they disappeared and their name was forgotten completely.
  7. As noted above, this may have been intended to refer to Kara-Tur, but it is not unlikely that the Utter East practices a different form of magic.

Appearances[]

Novels
Faces of DeceptionDouble Diamond Triangle SagaRealms of Mystery: "Darkly, Through a Glass of Ale"
Referenced only
Lies of LightElminster in HellThe Shifting SandsSpellstorm
Video Games
Blood & Magic

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Thomas M. Costa (1999). “Speaking in Tongues”. In Dave Gross ed. Dragon Annual #4 (TSR, Inc) (4)., pp. 26, 29.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Brian R. James (2008-01-10). Grand History of the Realms: The Moonshaes. Dragon Features. Wizards of the Coast. Archived from the original on 2009-06-02. Retrieved on 2016-04-12.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Brian R. James, Ed Greenwood (September 2007). The Grand History of the Realms. Edited by Kim Mohan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 93. ISBN 978-0-7869-4731-7.
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 Brian R. James, Ed Greenwood (September 2007). The Grand History of the Realms. Edited by Kim Mohan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 95. ISBN 978-0-7869-4731-7.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 Brian R. James, Ed Greenwood (September 2007). The Grand History of the Realms. Edited by Kim Mohan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 94. ISBN 978-0-7869-4731-7.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Karen Wynn Fonstad (August 1990). The Forgotten Realms Atlas. (TSR, Inc), pp. vii, ix, 11. ISBN 978-0880388573.
  7. Tom Prusa (1993). The Shining South. (TSR, Inc), p. 53. ISBN 1-56076-595-X.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Thomas Reid (October 2004). Shining South. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 109. ISBN 0-7869-3492-1.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Karen Wynn Fonstad (August 1990). The Forgotten Realms Atlas. (TSR, Inc), p. 3. ISBN 978-0880388573.
  10. 10.0 10.1 Tom Prusa (1993). The Shining South. (TSR, Inc), p. 73. ISBN 1-56076-595-X.
  11. 11.0 11.1 Thomas Reid (October 2004). Shining South. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 175, 179. ISBN 0-7869-3492-1.
  12. Ed Greenwood (February 1998). The Mercenaries. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 1. ISBN 0-7869-0866-1.
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Peter Archer (June 1998). Realms of Mystery ("Darkly, Through a Glass of Ale"). (TSR, Inc). ISBN 0-7869-1171-9.
  14. Troy Denning (November 1998). Faces of Deception. (Wizards of the Coast), pp. 10, 16, 20. ISBN 0-7869-1183-2.
  15. Tom Prusa (1993). The Shining South. (TSR, Inc), p. 53. ISBN 1-56076-595-X.
  16. Thomas Reid (October 2004). Shining South. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 9. ISBN 0-7869-3492-1.
  17. David Cook (August 1990). “Volume I”. In Steve Winter ed. The Horde (TSR, Inc.), p. 50. ISBN 0-88038-868-4.
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  19. 19.0 19.1 Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  21. Tracy Hickman, Laura Hickman, Philip Meyers, Peter Rice, William John Wheeler (May 1987). Desert of Desolation. (TSR, Inc.), p. 94. ISBN 978-0880383974.
  22. 22.0 22.1  (1996). Blood & Magic Interactive Demo README.TXT , link:[1]. (Interplay).
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  24. Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  25. Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 Tachyon Studios (November 1996). Designed by Brian Fargo. Blood & Magic. Interplay.
  27. Thomas Reid (October 2004). Shining South. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 119. ISBN 0-7869-3492-1.
  28. Brian R. James, Ed Greenwood (September 2007). The Grand History of the Realms. Edited by Kim Mohan, Penny Williams. (Wizards of the Coast), p. 153. ISBN 978-0-7869-4731-7.
  29. Ed Greenwood, Steve Perrin (May 1988). The Magister. Edited by Karen S. Boomgarden. (TSR, Inc.), p. 2. ISBN 0-88038-564-2.
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