Caledor the Conqueror
(Status: Dead)
Caledor the Conqueror, or the King of Drakes was a High elven man. Born in (18000PS) as Prince of Yvresse he grew to be pheonix king, had a child named Imrik who eventually became king of Caledor, and a daughter Alarielle who succeded him as Queen of Yvresse after he went missing, before gathering the largest army of Elven knights Ileth had ever seen.
Caledor was an angry and fierce man, enough to match the dragons he tamed and rode. The first of the Dragon Princes, little was known of his character, only his skill in battle and red, fiery temper. He led his armies to liberate most of western Ileth from the Sylvan Empire and met The Emperor at the siege of Drukhari. There they laid siege until they broke through the walls, killed Annatar, and pushed the filth into the underdark. In the end it was Caledor that persuaded The Emperor not to exterminate the Sylvan Elves
Caledor always had a strangely strong attraction to, and control over dragons: He felt bound to them by a kinship of kind, to his end.
After this event Caledor went missing. With not a word said to his commanding officers or his close family. Due to this, his armies that had converged on Drukhari occupied the city, founding the "Knights of Caledor" or just the "Princedom of Caledor" as it is unknown if Caledor is truly dead.
Some thought he had found a path to the Undying lands, others thought he went mad and died. In Truth, he caught word of the Divine Dragon on a small island in the Belearic Sea. There he flew, and there he guarded the immortality of the Divine Dragon for six thousand years. A tall tale known well by lore keepers in Aomori, but unfortunately, with Caledor dead the Divine Dragon lies unprotected.
All those years ago, In secret, Caledor shared the blood of his dragon: Indaugnir, a blood red dragon with a family. Indigenous to Aomori. He told them: "As Lord of Drakes it is my duty to protect the Divine Dragon, from the prying eyes of those lusting for immortality. But I am not so naïve as to think I myself will live forever. So your family will enter my service: upon my death, this blood will awaken in one of your descendants: Then it will be their duty to protect the Divine Dragon's blood."
Caledor was an angry and fierce man, enough to match the dragons he tamed and rode. The first of the Dragon Princes, little was known of his character, only his skill in battle and red, fiery temper. He led his armies to liberate most of western Ileth from the Sylvan Empire and met The Emperor at the siege of Drukhari. There they laid siege until they broke through the walls, killed Annatar, and pushed the filth into the underdark. In the end it was Caledor that persuaded The Emperor not to exterminate the Sylvan Elves
Caledor always had a strangely strong attraction to, and control over dragons: He felt bound to them by a kinship of kind, to his end.
After this event Caledor went missing. With not a word said to his commanding officers or his close family. Due to this, his armies that had converged on Drukhari occupied the city, founding the "Knights of Caledor" or just the "Princedom of Caledor" as it is unknown if Caledor is truly dead.
Some thought he had found a path to the Undying lands, others thought he went mad and died. In Truth, he caught word of the Divine Dragon on a small island in the Belearic Sea. There he flew, and there he guarded the immortality of the Divine Dragon for six thousand years. A tall tale known well by lore keepers in Aomori, but unfortunately, with Caledor dead the Divine Dragon lies unprotected.
All those years ago, In secret, Caledor shared the blood of his dragon: Indaugnir, a blood red dragon with a family. Indigenous to Aomori. He told them: "As Lord of Drakes it is my duty to protect the Divine Dragon, from the prying eyes of those lusting for immortality. But I am not so naïve as to think I myself will live forever. So your family will enter my service: upon my death, this blood will awaken in one of your descendants: Then it will be their duty to protect the Divine Dragon's blood."
Children
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