Glyrgoth was a white dracolich that laired in an abandoned mine somewhere in the Savage Frontier during the late 15th century DR.[1]
Possessions[]
Among the riches in Glyrgoth's hoard was a beautiful porcelain figurine of a boar.[1]
Activities[]
Glyrgoth amassed a hoard of riches, thanks to the efforts of the Pale Claw bandit gang. The bandits took control over the town of Womford for a time,[note 1] offering "protection" in exchange for much of the peoples' hard-earned coin.[1]
Relationships[]
While the mighty dracolich was the true overlord of the Pale Claw bandits, there existed another figurehead of the gang: the so-called Bandit King Grunnald. Grunnald tried to act as intermediary between his fellow townspeople in Womford and the gang, but was relegated to a strawman puppet of Glyrgoth.[1]
History[]

Thieves making away with much of Glyrgoth's treasure.
Sometime in the 1490s DR,[note 2] the adventurers Simon Aumar, Holga Kilgore, Edgin Darvis, and Thelvyn Kip broke into Glyrgoth's lair, and attempted to take back the stolen riches for the people of Womford. The adventurers were partially successful: they managed to remove a significant portion of the riches from Glyrgoth's lair, but were forced to abandon much of it when the great dracolich confronted them face-fo-face. The thieving adventurers managed to escape with their lives, but Glyrgoth swore revenge on them.[1]
Appendix[]
Notes[]
- ↑ The name of the town is not mentioned in the story; however, it was confirmed as Womford by author Jeremy Lambert in his instagram post.
- ↑ The Honor Among Thieves movie and its tie-ins are as yet undated. As discussed here, from the condition of Castle Never and Dagult Neverember's reign, this wiki estimates a date of the late 1490s DR for the main events of the movie. Prequels and flashback scenes are set up to 11 years before this.
Appearances[]
Gallery[]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Jeremy Lambert, Ellen Boener (February 2023). Honor Among Thieves: The Feast of the Moon. Edited by Jonathan Manning, Zac Boone. (IDW Publishing). ISBN 978-1-68405-911-9.