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A Brief History of Ustalav

It can be said that the earliest inhabitants that we know of were the ancient Kellids. They were a
superstitious lot who worshiped things far older than our present pantheon. For untold years, they lay
claim to these lands, still evidenced by their ancient runes and standing stones. All things change
though, and the Kellid tribes' dominion over the area was no different.
Over 7 millenia ago, the legendary hero Soivida Ustav drove the Kellid tribes from the region. Though
possessed of strange powers bestowed by their inhuman deities, the Kellids stood no chance against
the forged steel and formulated spell-power of Ustav's company. Victorious, he claimed and divided
the country amongst his allies and lieutenants, who passed their holdings onto their descendents in
turn. This created the foundations of the country of Ustalav, a loosely knit union of supporters who
eventually forgot the reason for their purpose of unity. 500 years of tentative peace passed, but as
more Varisians became integrated amongst the people of the country, the more disputes over familial
rights came into play. Some of these conflicts, particularly ones centering around land holdings,
escalated into of open conflicts. Rather than face civil war, the then-appointed King Kaldemov divided
the country into sixteen regions, each controlled by the most influential families. This created a lasting
peace, one that would endure for nearly 3,000 years. Again, all thing change, and the glory days of
Ustalav were no different.
Tar Baphon, known today as The Whispering Tyrant, was once a mortal wizard, born some 6,000 years
ago. It is said that in life he was born of greatness, possessed of an incredibly gifted mind that also
bore the cruelty of detachment. It is perhaps this cold, calculating mindset that led him to the arcane
arts and more specifically, Necromancy. Dozens of conflicting tales are remembered about his rise to
power, that he murdered his professors at his arcane academy and then brought back them back as
undead so they might continue to teach him; that he turned an entire city into a town of zombies
overnight, that his undead could not be harmed by all but the most powerful clerics, that he could
alter reality on a whim. His power began to rise, for with each horror he committed, his dead foes
would rise up to join his ranks. Eventually, he began to amass a small army that in turn began to swell
into a legion. As the numbers grew, so did his necromantic prowess, for each victory afforded him new
test material. Furthermore, as word of his atrocities traveled, dark souls sought him out to learn from
him and in turn teach him new secrets. However, as his power and might grew, so did his hubris. In an
act of supreme arrogance, Tar Baphon attempted to utilize his great magic to lure the god of Humanity
down to fight him, whether to simply destroy him or to supplant him is not known. The histories speak
of a great battle fought on The Isle of Terror, many leagues south of here, a battle where the
combined might of the-then-great nation of Taldor and a manifestation of Aroden himself came forth
to battle Tar Baphon. Aroden is recorded to have mortally wounded him, but it is believed that the
wizard king somehow used his necromancy to survive and to retreat to the depths of The Isle of
Terror. Some say, particularly The Whispering Way, that Tar Baphon succeeded in the end, and it
simply took him a few millenia to accomplish his goal. Nonetheless, all trace of Tar Baphon vanished
for nearly 2,000 years. When he returned, he had at some point made the transition between life and
death, reappearing as the most powerful Lich Golarion has ever known. Again, all things change, and
Tar Baphon was no different.
In the year 3203, Tar Baphon reappeared as the leader of the orcs in The Hold of Belkzen. Having
somehow united all of the constantly warring orc tribes into one force, Tar Baphon, whose name soon
became known as The Whispering Tyrant, began to raise a force that no country was prepared to

withstand. Some say that after his defeat and during his long absence, it was The Whispering Way
that taught him the deepest secrets of necromancy and how to pass between the threshold of life and
death. Whatever the case, his power was greater than any spellcaster the world has seen, as he
summoned forth legions of ancient dead to join with the already swelling orc horde. Leading his
armies were the most powerful undead known to exist, the Nightshades. These creatures of unliving
darkness exist only to see the world consumed of life, and few could stand before the apocalyptic
onslaught that these terrors wrought. Ustalav was the first country to face The Whispering Tyrant's
wrath, as he began his assault with the siege of the Grodlych, a n Ustalavic county now part of the
nation of Lastwall. He then spread eastward towards the capital, quickly taking the land of Virlych
from its former owner, a count whose name is stricken from all records. It is believed that the
nameless count sold the Whispering Tyrant the lives of his people and his city in exchange for wealth
and freedom. Whatever the case, Adorak became The Tyrant's new capital and the staging point for
the rest of his conquest. From there, dozens of great heroes perished as they tried to wrest the Lich's
control of the land from him. This culiminated with the loss of the heir to the throne, Prince Ardurras
Virholt II, as he rode forth to confront the Lich Lord with his undead-destroying blade, Corpselight,
only to be felled by the Lich's powerful magic and reanimated as an undead blasphemy. The entire
nation, at the backing of the church of Pharasma, led a crusade to destroy the Lich King. This crusade,
comprised of holy warriors and crusaders, were lead by Pharasma's High Arch-Bishop at-the-time,
Prince Adamondais Virholt, who wielded the holy artifact Raven's Head.Even with this divine relic and
their strength of purpose, the crusade was slaughtered to the man when they attempted to march
upon Gallowspire, the Tyrant's seat of power. Further betrayal occurred within the very heartland of
Ustalav itself, when the powerful wizard known as Socorro, a well respected scholar and leader in the
town of Carrion Hill, lead an uprising that butchered thousands of citizens in the name of the Tyrant.
Beset from within and from without, the fractured counties of Ustalav crumbled to the assaults of the
monstrous hordes. By 3206, The Whispering Tyrant had secured all of Ustalav. A final stand was made
at The Battle of Dawnmarsh by the last King of Ustalav, King Ardruras Virholt, a massacre where he
and his company were slain to the last . The fallen king, reanimated as the grim jongleur called the
Shrieking Sovreign, preceded the Tyrant's legions into the capital city of Ardis where he crushed all
hope by hanging himself from the Palace Tower. With the destruction of the noble line, the annihilation
of the armies, and the eradication of the church from the land, The Whispering Tyrant made Ustalav
his seat of power, spreading from there like a cancer across Golarion. For 6 centuries he ruled the land
in fear, uncontested. However, all things change, and even the mightiest wizards can fall when they
have enough enemies.
Two elements contested the Tyrant's rule from within the country's borders, two supernatural elements
that had long resided within the nation, Ustalav's vampires and werewolves. The nation's vampires,
having long established themselves within its cities, found themselves at odds with the purposes of
The Whispering Way and its most powerful member, for a world devoid of life was a world devoid of
blood. This split the vampires into two factions, those that supported The Tyrant and those that did
not. Powerful enough to not be beneath the Lich's notice, a purge of the vampires not loyal to The
Tyrant was lead by the vampire lord, Malyas. This further schismed the vampires into warring factions,
and a number of them escaped to other countries where they spent centuries rousing forces against
the Lich King. How much of the vampires' influence might be responsible for the campaign launched
against him centuries later is unknown, but the absence of vampires amongst his forces during the
final years of his rule suggests that the vampires eventually withdrew their support from the Tyrant's
forces. All things change, and loyalty from something centuries or millenia old is always a questionable
gamble.

The nation's Werewolves are believed to be the descendents of Kellid tribes who were never fully
driven from the region, people who hid amongst the unassailable Shudderwood and over the years
integrated themselves and their customs amongst the Ustalav populace. Some of these customs and
religions are very old and blur the line between man and beast. For those of their ancient line, the
curse of Lycanthropy is seen as a hereditary blessing, one passed on by the blood of their ancestors.
Indeed, what few accounts of the werewolves of the Shudderwood exist depict re-enactment of old
Kellid rituals and gatherings around their old standing stones. Despite their old bloodlines, a number of
them had relatives and friends who were citizens of the country, if not lords. When the Tyrant invaded
Ustalav and killed the two sons of King Ardurras Virholt, his bastard Prince Andriadus Virholt was
selected to be the next heir of the crown. Rather than accepting the crown's responsibility of leading
what little forces were left on a suicide mission against The Tyrant, the Bastard Prince retreated to the
Shudderwood, where he went about a campaign of rousing the forests's Lycanthropes against The
Tyrant, recruiting the lycanthropic Sczarni in a shadow war against the Lich. Even years after the
Lich's complete control of Ustalav, the Shudderwood can never truly be considered to be within his
grasp. Even to this day, few tread into the deeper parts of the forest for fear of what ancient things lay
undisturbed. As for the Prince, it is said this his blood mingled with that of the ancient shapeshifters,
and that even now, some Lycanthropes can trace their blood back to the first king of the realm. The
werewolves were thus the staunchest enemies of the Whispering Tyrant and his forces until something
changed, the completion of The Shining Crusade.
At last, after years of horror piled upon atrocities, the people of Avistan began to resist. Spurred on by
righteous indignation at the blasphemies within Tar Baphon's kingdom, the nation of Taldor began
what is known as The Shining Crusade. Besides Taldor, the crusade was comprised of dwarves from
the kingdom of Kraggodan and the Knights of Ozem, a dedicated order of Iomedaen paladins, clerics,
and other holy warriors. For 26 years the crusade fought a long and bloody path to the heart of
Ustalav, where lead by Taldan General Arnisant, they emerged at the gates of Adorak, the Lich's
capital city. Many legendary battles were fought in the campaign to reclaim the land from darkness,
and in the end, the crusaders succeeded. There before the Lich's stronghold of Gallowspire, General
Arnisant sacrificed his very life to finally defeat the Lich, destroying The Tyrant and himself in a final,
epic battle. Yet despite his destruction, Tar Baphon's spirit remained intact. Given enough time, the
Lich would rebuild his body and begin his conquest of terror anew. Rather than face their foe again
with a less certain outcome, the remaining crusaders and holy warriors utilized their most powerful
magics to create a prison for Tar Baphon, an oubliette to hold their enemy for all time. Even to this
day, almost 4,000 years later, the prison still supposedly contains Tar Baphon within it, left to plot his
revenge against the world of the living...

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