Annunaku

(Elder): “Here I rule. Here I shall stay. And, you, dear guest, here you too shall stay, for a very long time.” (Neonate): “My turf. My rules.”

Vampire the Requiem - Covenant - The Invictus
The Annunaku bloodline’s origin vanishes into the mists of ancient history. The Annunaku have no legend about their founder — they say they always existed as rulers of the land. The bloodline takes its name from Mesopotamian gods of the Underworld — or maybe it’s the other way around. The Annunaku point to ancient legends about the patron gods of cities, tombguardians and sacred caves inhabited by oracular spirits. “That’s us,” they say.
When the Roman Empire invaded Greece, Anatolia and Mesopotamia, the Annunaku followed the legions home. By the empire’s fall, the Annunaku had spread throughout Europe. Instead of inhabiting caves and tombs, they moved into manor houses to rule over remote villages. Generation after generation, the peasants lived in fear of the undead lord who drank their blood, but they dared not leave. He would know if they tried, and become angry.
As civilization and the Renaissance spread throughout Europe, the Annunaku moved into the growing cities. Some Annunaku found their villages burgeoning into towns. Other Annunaku sent childer to seek their fortunes and restore the bloodline’s ancient traditions as lords of the cities. A few took the wrenching step of abandoning their rural Demesnes, when their supernatural powers could not defend them from cannon fire. More Annunaku chose to finally die as their ancient manses toppled and burned. Others sank into the ground to sleep away the centuries until they could start anew on kingdoms of animal blood.
Modern cities gave the Annunaku new forms of territory, with new tenants to rule. The Annunaku learned about business and universities, churches and the civil service. They encountered other vampires, and taught them to respect the borders the Annunaku set. Where the Annunaku ruled, they ruled supreme. The land itself bent to their will, revealing intruders and defending its lord, through a Discipline called Tenure.
Territory obsesses these Kindred. A “Landlord” dislikes leaving his Demesne, though friendly company can mitigate the instinctive terror the Landlords feel on unfamiliar ground. These Kindred regard every mortal who lives in their Demesnes as their property. On the other hand, the Annunaku take great care of their fiefdoms. Annunaku may rule their mortal tenants with utter cruelty, but the Landlords also protect them from any outside threat.
The bloodline’s pride in ownership also expresses itself in a code of hospitality. Although Annunaku hate trespassers, many Annunaku adore guests. A guest gives a Landlord a chance to display aristocratic virtues of generosity and etiquette and to show off his Demesne. An honor-besotted Landlord might treat a guest to blood feasts every night and risk his unlife to protect her. A fine line, however, separates the revered guest from the boorish intruder. Any insult might switch a visitor from one category to the other — and each Annunaku can have his own arcane standards of acceptable behavior.
Some Annunaku still dwell in isolated rural fiefdoms, lording over terrified mortal tenants. Other Annunaku dwell apart from mortals, losing themselves in their roles as spirits of the land. Most Annunaku, however, now dwell in cities like other Kindred. These Annunaku, many of them comparatively young, necessarily abandon the roles of feudal lords. Younger Annunaku feel the same drive to possess and master a territory, however, even if their Demesne is just a block of apartments or small businesses that they own.

Culture

Culture and cultural heritage

Annunaku rarely sire childer, for they do not like to share their domains with any other Kindred for long. Any Landlord’s choice for a childe, therefore, is likely to be idiosyncratic: anyone from a mortal descendant to a stranger the Landlord fancies has a “noble spirit.” Sometimes a Landlord wants a childe to serve as his assistant and caretaker during Torpor, perhaps leading to a cyclical dynasty; sometimes a Landlord might seek an eternal consort. Now and then, an Annunaku Embraces someone who lives near, or cares for, some great monument or natural wonder because the Landlord thinks the place needs a Guardian. Prospective childer often serve as Ghouls before their Embrace, as the sires test their abilities and train them for their new duties.

Common Dress code

Appearance: Annunaku take childer from both genders and any race, so the physical appearance of the Annunaku is quite diverse. Clothing also varies widely, and often depends on the way a Landlord establishes himself as master of a neighborhood. A merchant who owns several businesses in a neighborhood might dress in a sober three-piece suit, while a gang leader who holds a slum in terrified subjection might choose a black leather jacket, T-shirt, ripped jeans and brightly hued bandanna. When conducting the bloodline’s archaic rituals, however, any Landlord might dress in a Babylonian kilt, the sleeveless robe of an Egyptian priest, a medieval noble’s garb or nothing at all. Some Annunaku believe that when they act as spirits of the land, they should discard all signs of their mortal origin, including clothing.

Art & Architecture

Haven: Landlords are similarly diverse in their choice of havens. Most prefer large, handsomely furnished and comfortable havens, though the details vary with the particulars of a Landlord’s chosen role. Whenever possible, though, a Landlord chooses a Haven with a plot of earth: a lawn or garden, or at least a cellar with a dirt floor. Even those Annunaku who lack the power to merge with the soil feel uncomfortable sleeping too far removed from the land they rule. Many of them actually like to sleep on the soil they claim as theirs.

Major organizations

Within the bloodline, Annunaku acknowledge no organization beyond the sire and childe. Landlords routinely subject their childer to Vincula, and a childe may remain with his sire for centuries. By tradition, only after tending his sire’s domain through a Torpor may a childe depart to seek a domain of his own. Concubines remain bound to their sires forever, or at least until they can muster the will to defy the Vincula and escape. Cyclical Dynasties are common among this bloodline, but many Annunaku do not want to be parttime Landlords.
The Annunaku retain many rituals and titles of great antiquity. Forging the mystical bond to the land that’s so important to Tenure requires rituals to honor the spirits of the land or gods of the city, so that they accept the vampire as one of their own. The climactic ritual involves a sacrifice of Vitae to bare earth and running water. Annunaku oaths often involve rituals to invoke earth or water, such as participants mixing soil from their territories and then sprinkling it in a ceremonial pool called an Abzu. “By the earth of my Haven!” is a common pledge or exclamation for older Annunaku.
The most exalted title within the bloodline is LugalIrra, or “Great Lord.” It is reserved for Annunaku who become Prince or Regent of an extended domain. Landlords do not scorn other Kindred offices, but they don’t assign special names to them.
Annunaku who guard tombs, temples or other sacred places are called Galla-Ki, “Daemon of the Earth,” or Abgal-Ki, “Priest of the Earth.” Modern cities don’t have many temples to Marduk or sacred groves, but modern Landlords extend the concept to monuments of civic and national pride such as war memorials and historic landmarks. Even in the New World, some Annunaku dare to dwell outside cities as the guardians of a grotto, patch of forest, mountain or other natural location that seems especially sublime or historic. Of course, rural Landlords need sufficient Protean they can merge with the land they protect. The bloodline’s legends say the Old World has Galla-Ki millennia old, who transcended undeath to become true spirits of the land.
Landlords also award titles based on mastering particular Disciplines. For instance, a vampire who fully masters Animalism is addressed as Shakkan or Sumaqan, from Mesopotamian gods who protected wild animals.
Covenant: Most Landlords join The Invictus, considering it the covenant that most fully appreciates the bond between master, territory and tenant. A few Annunaku — mostly recent scions of the old village Landlords — join The Circle of the Crone, seeing connections between its pagan mysticism and their own mystical connection to the land. Even fewer join the Carthians or Lancea Sanctum, though an occasional Landlord feels the utopian lure of planned communities or sees the church and parish as the contemporary version of the city and its patron god. Quite a number of Annunaku are unaligned, however, because they see joining a covenant as compromising their claims of absolute authority over their Demesnes.
Nickname: Landlords
Parent ethnicities
Character Creation: Unlike many Gangrel, most Annunaku are strong in Social Attributes and Skills such as Intimidation, Persuasion or Socialize. Mental Attributes may be high, but Mental Skills tend to be few and specialized. Practical knowledge such as Investigation or Politics is most common, with Occult for the bloodline’s mystical heritage, but Annunaku can surprise other Kindred with their mastery of unexpected fields such as ancient history (Academics) or hobby electronics (Crafts and Science). Few Annunaku skimp on their Physical Skills, though; the Annunaku tend to be well-rounded Kindred — perhaps with odd specialties.
Bloodline Disciplines: Animalism, Protean, Resilience, Tenure
Weakness: Annunaku retain the animalistic minds of other Gangrel. The 10-again rule does not apply to dice pools involving Intelligence or Wits, and any 1’s rolled are subtracted from the number of successes. This weakness does not apply to dice pools involving Perception or Reaction to Surprise, and subtracted successes do not turn a normal failure into a dramatic failure.
The Landlords’ powerful connection to their Demesnes also renders them uncomfortable when they leave. Outside of her chosen Demesne, a Landlord suffers a –2 penalty to all dice pools (including reflexive rolls to resist Disciplines and the rolls of the special Annunaku Discipline, Tenure) because of her anxious yearning for her home turf or her uneasy awareness of being out of her element. This penalty drops to –1 on familiar ground where the character is accepted, such as Elysium. The company of familiar and allied vampires — such as the character’s coterie — also reduces the penalty to –1. For another Kindred to qualify as a “familiar vampire,” the Annunaku must drink from her at least once and spend one Willpower point. An Annunaku can only “familiarize” herself with a number of other Kindred equal to her Composure. Attempts to exceed that number result in strained relationships as the Annunaku subtly sabotages her own trusts, growing suspicious and doubtful over several weeks until, finally, she no longer feels the blood-settling comfort of camaraderie with one of her Allies.
Kindred who share Status with an Annunaku — such as other Invictus vampires — do not grant the vampire any special comfort. The bonus to Social dice pools afforded by Status does counterbalance the penalties for the Annunaku’s unease, but the unease itself is not alleviated by such delicate allegiances.
Concepts: Feudal Relic, tenured professor, odd-shoppe proprietor, community activist, feared gang leader, realestate tycoon, flophouse night manager, apartment superintendent, phantom of the [fill in the blank], Guardian of the graveyard, historic site’s caretaker, Oracle of the cave
Other Annunaku?
Some legends suggest that in ancient Mesopotamia, the Annunaku were a covenant rather than a bloodline. The members of this early covenant supposedly all acted as minor gods of their cities and learned Tenure to enforce their rule.
The legend is not entirely implausible. Not only have Invictus of other clans apparently learned Tenure in ages past, some Invictus members teach it to their childer as well. A few Ventrue lineages have taught Tenure for generations, and also call themselves “Annunaku.” Perhaps they have become a parallel bloodline. Without mystical tests, it may be hard to tell the difference between a member of one bloodline and a member of a similar — possibly sibling — bloodline.