Tamriel Data:History of the Dragon Cult III
Book Information History of the Dragon Cult III |
|||
---|---|---|---|
Added by | Tamriel Data | ||
ID | T_Bk_HistoryDragonCultSHOTN_V3 | ||
Up | History of the Dragon Cult | ||
Prev. | Volume II | Next | Volume IV |
150 | 4 | ||
Locations | |||
Found in the following locations:
|
Harald's War and the end of the Dragon Cult
At the same time as the Dragon Cult's apocalyptic preachings were taking hold amongst the lower classes, the brutal wars of the Nordic kingdoms - both against the Falmer and amongst each other - were reaching their own height. A cunning Nordic king and descendent [sic] of Ysgramor named Harald Hand-Free was uniting the fractured holds under his banner, through both conquest and iron-willed diplomacy, until he was able to properly take the war against Falmer and begin pushing them out of Skyrim. However, as his campaign gained momentum, a series of Cult-inspired rebellions broke out and he was forced to return home and put them down.
From this point on, Harald was always fighting a war on two fronts: one against the remaining Falmer tribes, and one against his own people. The fighting devastated the still-incipient Nordic kingdoms, but the king was able to cling to power and with great brutality reclaimed Skyrim inch by bloody inch. A very plausible legend states that holdouts in a great temple of the Dragon Cult were the last resistance Harald faced, and it was upon their bloodied altar that he declared the first Empire of the Nords (before tearing the entire structure down, brick by brick).
Although their original apocalyptic beliefs have experienced occasional resurgences through the millenia [sic] (most notably during the ominous portents of the Year of Winter in Summer in 1E668), the Dragon Cult were thoroughly crushed and reformed by King Harald. He recognised the important role the Cult played in the daily life of common Nords, and rather than ban it outright he brought the veneration of Alduin within the (admittedly loose) religious framework of Nordic kingdoms.