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Lore:Nede

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Cadwell, a Nedic knight of the Merethic Era
"...human settlers occupied nearly every corner of Tamriel before Skyrim was even founded. These so-called "Nedic peoples" include the proto-Cyrodilians, the ancestors of the Bretons, the aboriginals of Hammerfell, and perhaps a now-vanished Human population of Morrowind. "Frontier, Conquest

The Nedes (also known as the Nedic peoples or rarely Nedelings)[1][2][3] were a human race (or a group of races) of unknown extraction, who inhabited much of Tamriel during the Merethic and First Eras. The Duraki society of the Nedes who lived in Hammerfell (then called the "Deathlands")[4][5] largely followed the Cult of the Stars which revolved around the worship and study of the constellations, and beings known as the Celestials. Nedic culture experienced a sharp decline over several centuries as they began to assimilate into other cultures, before being completely exterminated by the Yokudan invasion of Hammerfell.[6][7][8][9]

HistoryEdit

OriginsEdit

The origin of the Nedic people is hotly debated. There are two major theories: one claiming the Nedes are native to Tamriel, and another claiming they migrated to Tamriel from Atmora:

Native to Tamriel "Out of Atmora"[UOL 1]
According to Nordic myth, men were first formed on Throat of the World when the sky breathed onto the land, hence why the Songs of the Return partially refer to the Nords' return to what they believe was their original homeland.[10][11] Supporters of this theory argue that all mortal life started on Tamriel, and that the Septim Empire sought to historically link themselves to the Nords to gain their support by leaving out any mention of the existence of humans in Tamriel before the coming of Ysgramor.[UOL 1][UOL 2]

An argument made partially in favor for the nativity theory is Gwylim Press' own "Frontier, Conquest, and Accomodation",[UOL 2][UOL 3] which acknowledges Atmoran settlers in Tamriel before Ysgramor, but establishes one particular Nedic group as aboriginal to Tamriel. Those Nedes were a minority in elven lands and as such had to accommodate themselves with them.[12] Likewise, the Altmeri variation of "The Monomyth" states Men were present on Tamriel after Convention to carry away Lorkhan's Body.[13]

This theory is supported by various traces of Nedic cultures on Tamriel which can be dated to before Ysgramor arrived in the late Merethic Era. Some Kothringi artifacts can be traced back to the early Merethic Era or possibly even the Dawn Era[14][15] - over a millennium before the arrival of Ysgramor.

According to the Reachfolk, human tribes dwelled within the caves of the Druadach Mountains long before the conquests of Mer and Nords in the Karth region,[16] where their ancestors fled to shortly after Lorkhan's sundering.[17]

The Out of Atmora theory states that pre-Ysgramor Atmorans emigrated from different parts of Atmora in many waves and at different times,[18] and after arriving in what is now Skyrim they soon began to spread throughout much of northern Tamriel - resulting in what are now referred to as the Nedic peoples,[19] having occupied nearly every corner of the continent before Skyrim was even founded. While their beginnings are murky, the Nedes are broadly considered to have come to Tamriel from elsewhere,[UOL 4] and the earliest known traces of human presence in Tamriel have been dated to the mid-Merethic Era between circa ME 1000 and ME 800.[12]

The term 'Nedic Tribes' actually covers a wide panoply of different human cultures from different parts of Atmora, with a variety of traditions and practices. For the Nedes, Tamriel became a great mixing cauldron—some Atmoran practices were retained, but many were lost.[20]

Critics of this theory claim that it is based on Imperial propaganda of a shared "Nordic Fatherland". Some suspect the theory was pushed by the Septim Empire's revisionism to legitimize the General of Atmoran descent, by claiming a traditionally Nedic throne by retrofitting Skyrim's early history.[UOL 5] Nevertheless, scrying into the past has yielded evidence that Atmorans and Nedes were considered one and the same in their time,[12] lending Dunmeri support to the idea of an Atmoran origin for both.[21]

The Deathlands of Volenfell and the BeastfolkEdit

 
A Nedic tapestry depicting the Celestials
"To the heavens above, we raise our eyes, our hands, and our hearts."
—Sample from a Nedic prayer[6]

While Nedes inhabited several of the modern provinces, it was in the sun-baked wastelands of Hammerfell which they knew as the Deathlands that Nedic civilization truly thrived. The Duraki Nedes faced numerous foreign invasions, including both the Ayleids and the Dwemer, who dismissed the Duraki as backward savages to justify subjugating them. These Nedes also frequently clashed with their neighbors, the primitive stone-worshipping Iron Orcs,[7][22] although there is evidence of harmonic periods between the two peoples.[23] Nedic texts often reference an event called the "Autumn of Snakes", where according to the histories hundreds of mammoth-sized snakes emerged from the ground and devoured whole towns before finally being subdued by the Nede spear-maiden, Ranev the Coal-Eyed Wanderer. Nedic scholars describe the Autumn in meticulous and near-identical detail, though that the event is now known as completely apocryphal.[24]

Despite these frequent conflicts, Duraki culture prospered for centuries in the Deathlands. The Nedes were known to be skilled in masonry, with their bustling cities constructed largely from stone. However, little of this stonework remains, as what wasn't completely destroyed by the invading Ra Gada was often appropriated and modified beyond recognition.[25] While the Duraki were known to be devout star worshippers, during the Yokudan invasion their prayers went unanswered, and many looked to other sources for salvation. This did them little good and the Nedes quickly fell to the Yokudan horde, vanishing from the Deathlands forever.[7]

Nedic settlement within provinces inhabited by Beast races is known to have occurred but is not well-documented. During the Merethic Era, a Nedic fort was known to have been only a short distance from a Dune adeptorium in the province of Elsweyr.[26] Many early human tribes are known to have once inhabited Black Marsh, among them being the Horwalli, Kothringi, Orma, and Yespest,[27] though they are never referred to as Nedes and survived well into at least the Second Era. The Kothringi are said to be descended from the Nedic humans, and lived in Black Marsh as far back as records go.[28]

Under the ElvesEdit

 
One of the ruined Nedic towers of Skyreach
 
Alessia, leader of the Slave Rebellion

In many lands the Nedes existed as a minority, and had no choice but to co-exist relatively peacefully alongside elves, oftentimes in a subordinate position. There are records of self-serving Nedic knights going as far back as the Merethic Era, such as Sir Cadwell, the hero of Cyrod and champion of the Third Nedic Massacre who was once a member of Khunzar-ri's Kra'jun.[29]

The proto-Bretons[UOL 6][30] were the Nedes who settled in High Rock. They are known by the retroactive nomenclature, the Druids of Galen,[31][32] a moniker later adopted by their Breton descendants.[33] Guided by a line of druidic kings, these Nedes survived in ancient High Rock by tapping into, nurturing, and terraforming nature.[34][35] If Man or Mer came to High Rock first is debated in scholarly circles. Some believe that Nedic civilization and their Druid King were already established in the province when the Aldmer arrived,[31] while others claim that the Nedes arrived in High Rock afterwards, and encountered the elves gradually with a variety of reactions and outcomes.[12][36][UOL 4] The Direnni established a feudal hierarchy where the Nedes lived at the bottom, while the elven nobles positioned on top. The Nedes of High Rock may have also clashed with the orcs in that region.[23] The Direnni enjoyed many privileges over their human subjects including the 'Perquisite of Coition', the right to engage in recreational intercourse with any Nede of their choice.[37]

Many Direnni took advantage of this and took on Nedic concubines, which often resulted in the birth of mixed-race "manmer" offspring who would become the Bretons. While the Bretons were not officially recognized as members of the noble houses they descended from, they often occupied social positions above those of the Nedic peasantry. Eventually this arrangement was formalized with the creation of a new caste between the Elves and the Nedes, in which the Bretons enjoyed a comfortable position in society, but were forbidden from marrying Elves in an attempt to preserve the Elven race. Eventually after generations of interbreeding with their Nedic underlings the Bretons were completely assimilated, birthing a new culture with those of the most elven blood on top. Even during the Direnni Hegemony, they ruled largely through human clients, who later became the Breton nobility.[UOL 4]

 
An Alessian knight rebels against his Ayleid oppressor

While relations between the Nedes and the Direnni were cordial if rather unbalanced, the Nedes suffered greatly under the tyranny of the Daedra-worshipping Ayleids. The Ayleids would commonly stage raids on Nedic lands, enslaving those whom they captured.[7] Once in Ayleid lands the Nedes were held in bondage alongside members of various other human races, forced to work in a variety of menial jobs, such as agriculture and maintaining infrastructure. In Ayleid kingdoms under the grip of more malevolent Daedric princes, human slaves were subjected to horrific cruelties.[38][1][39]

In the Middle Merethic Era, the Nedes, subjugated by the Ayleids, began to resist with help from a mysterious figure, Shezarr. Nedic folklore often depicts Shezarr as a teacher and unifier rather than a warrior. Duraki legend credits him with teaching stoneworking and command over nirncrux while the Perena claim he introduced soul magic. In Cyrod, Shezarr supposedly revealed Ayleid battle-magic secrets to humans. A stone tablet from Sedor depicts him as "the Shezzarine, Shor-Who-Lives, Teacher of Men." These tales speak of Shezarr as a source of inspiration to the Nedic resistance against Ayleid oppression, sustaining their spirit until Saint Alessia's rebellion.[40]

In the year 1E 242, the Slave Queen Alessia led a rebellion against the Ayleid slave masters, resulting in the emancipation of all slaves within the Ayleidic empire. While the slaves were freed, centuries of Ayleidic suppression and intermingling with other enslaved groups had taken their toll on Nedic culture in Cyrodiil and all that remained were their mixed race descendants, the Imperials.[38][1][39]

Nedic presence within Valenwood is unknown, though the Bosmer have been recorded in early history as "soiling Time's line" by taking Mannish wives.[13]

The Nedes also maintained a presence in Skyrim, but little is known of their relations with the native Falmer or the Atmorans who replaced them. The Nedes of Skyrim were believed to be a more primitive people than their cousins in other lands, however their skill in metallurgy was known to be quite advanced.[41] They were generally nomads but still had some form of a religious congregation (worshipping Arkay instead of the Atmoran Orkey).[42] The Nedic peoples of the late Merethic era hunted the lion population of a western valley in The Rift for its furs.[43]

The Nedes spread across northern Tamriel, and once had a presence in Morrowind during the Merethic,[12][44] with tribes that marched and plundered across the land.[45] It is recorded in Dunmeri texts that these Nedes waged at least one bloody war against the ancient Chimer in the early First Era, the Rontha being the largest of the tribes to invade Stonefalls. causing mass death and destruction and refusing diplomatic resolutions with the Chimer. After a few short years they controlled most of the modern-day Stonefalls and cut off reinforcements from the north, before being stopped by the so-called Brothers of Strife, but at a terrible cost for the Chimer.[46][45] These Nedes were accomplished leatherworkers, attributed to their nomadic nature.[47]

Disappearance and LegacyEdit

"If we will die, we will die together."
—Fragment from a Nede's journal[48]
 
A Nedic general makes a desperate pact with a nereid to defend Shada's Tear, one of the last standing Nedic cities, from the Yokudans

Over the centuries, various events contributed to the dwindling of Tamriel's Nedic population. They had suffered a history of defeat and enslavement at the hands of various peoples including Dwemer, Ayleids, Yokudans, and Direnni. Cyro-Nords captured Nedic ports along the Strident Coast (a somewhat unknown region presumably around the Gold Coast of Cyrodiil and the southern coastline of Hammerfell).[49] In the west, The Nedes who inhabited the isle of Herne had long struggled against the elves prior to the Ra Gada, and though they fought a courageous battle under their Warchief Haakon, they fell before the Yokudan onslaught.[50] Everywhere, Indigenous populations were left broken and scattered, absorbing the cultures of conquering people, or migrating to be subsumed in new lands.[7] By the ninth century of the First Era, Nedic culture was confined to the deserts of Volenfell.

In Cyrod, early Imperial culture had formed during the time of the Alessian Empire, reflected in relics containing a mix of Ayleid and early Imperial influences.[51] Inhabitants of Colovia had begun using present-day Imperial names, even while Nedes in nearby Hammerfell maintained their strong cultural presence.[52] In the year 1E 808[53] the "warrior wave" of the Yokudans, the Ra Gada, made landfall in Tamriel. They quickly swarmed the province, killing or enslaving all that they crossed. Soon they had displaced the Nedes everywhere but in the remote region of Craglorn. There, Nedes embittered by the decline of their culture began to turn to sources of spiritual guidance other than the stars.[6][48] This did them little good when the Anka-Ra, one particularly brutal and conquest-hungry band of Ra Gada led by the sadistic Emperor Tarish-Zi, reached Craglorn and dispatched the Nedes as quickly as they had elsewhere. After years of struggle and decline, Nedic culture had finally met its end.

Though the Nedes no longer exist as a distinct people, much of their culture survives in the societies of their descendants. Even in Hammerfell much of the Nedic religion, custom, and language was adopted by their annihilators, the Redguards.[54] In Nibenay the great old Nedic traditions were maintained, remaining as one of the people true to the original Nedic culture. The Nibenese people are said to be the closest thing to a pure-bred Nede still remaining on Tamriel.[20] Ownership of Nedic possessions (particularly those with inscriptions) came with great prestige.[55]

TribesEdit

 
High King Durac, who presided over the council of Nedic kings from other tribes

The Nedic tribes were far from homogeneous. Each tribe came with its own culture, and their cultures were further mixed and admixed after arrival in Tamriel. Some were as different from each other as Reachman and Redguard.[18][20] Though they are said to have come from Atmora, Nords are sometimes considered Nede as well.[12]

The catch-all term "Nede" is applied so broadly to Merethic-Era humans as to be almost worthless.[18] The term "Nedic Tribes" actually covers a wide panoply of different human cultures of disputed origin, with a variety of traditions and practices.[20] Tribes were led by kings and warchiefs, ruling different parts of the Nedic realm, and were known to meet in councils with other Nedic rulers.[56] They were markedly divergent in appearance, such as those in High Rock mixing with elves to the point of resembling them and the Kothringi of Black Marsh developing silver-colored skin. The known names given to groups of Merethic Era humans are as follows, with their status as solely being Nedes considered to be very general:

  • In Black Marsh:
    • The Kothringi are said to be descended from the Nedic humans, and lived in Black Marsh as far back as records go.[28] The Empire speculated that they may have been sent there as refugees or prisoners, or settled along the coastal waterways and adapted to the environment.[27] As tribes of Men such as Kothringi, Horwalli, Orma, and Yespest survived well into the modern age, they are not considered Nedes, and are likely descendants of Nedes in the same way Imperials are.[27][57]
  • In Cyrodiil:
    • The Al-Gemha, Al-Hared, Men-of-ket, and Kothri were among the men herded as slaves by the Ayleids from across all the Niben in Cyrod.[38]
    • The Men-of-ge were among the men herded as slaves from across the Niben by the Ayleids, who were eventually "destroyed" when the Flower King Nilichi made great sacrifice to a long-forgotten insect god.[38]
    • The Perena were a Nedic tribe found in Cyrodiil[18][58] and Hammerfell.[59] They practiced the observation of the stars in the night sky, according to ancient texts such as the Perenaal Fragment.[56] Three members of the Perena sect called the Eternal Watchers were responsible for locking away Virmaril the Betrayer.[59]
    • The Thousand-Strong of Sedor were an ancient tribe of men of Sedor. They were enslaved by Ayleids and later liberated by Pelinal Whitestrake.[1]
  • In Hammerfell:
    • The Duraki were a tribe that resided in Craglorn and had their seat of power at Skyreach.[56][58][60] Their warriors followed the ancient Nedic High King Durac against the invading Anka-Ra, but met their downfall after Virmaril the Betrayer slew the council of nedic kings and the tribe fell to the Yokudan onslaught.[61][62]
    • The Keptu or Ket Keptu were a tribe who settled in central Hammerfell[63] and the Jerall Mountains bordering Cyrodiil.[18][64] They are inconsistently described as being Nedes[58] and separate from Nedes,[1] likely a repercussion of the usage of "Nede" as a catch-all term and oversight of their differences from the Perena.[18][38] The Reachman Dreadhorn Clan are descendants of the Keptu.[65]
  • In Northern Tamriel (High Rock, Morrowind, Skyrim):
    • The proto-Bretons, the Nedic ancestors of the modern Bretons, inhabited High Rock.[31][33][32][66]
    • The Men-of-kreath were imported from the north (presumably Falkreath) by the Ayleids as slave labor.[38] King Kestic, who ruled a Nedic tribe from a forested region near Skyreach,[60][61] may have been a king of the Men-of-kreath.
    • The Rontha were a nomadic, particularly vicious clan among those who invaded the Stonefalls region of Morrowind. They were known for branding both people and items captured in battle.[47]

Notable NedesEdit

 
Kestic, The Forest King, ruler of the Men-of-kreath

NotesEdit

  • The Song of Pelinal mentions "Zuathas the Clever-Cutting Man", a Nedic healer with a keptu name who treated Morihaus when he was wounded.

GalleryEdit

See AlsoEdit

BooksEdit

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ a b c d e The Song of Pelinal
  2. ^ Aurbic Enigma 4: The Elden TreeBeredalmo the Signifier
  3. ^ The Unveiled Azadiyeh Answers Your QuestionsThe Unveiled Azadiyeh
  4. ^ Waterlogged Journal
  5. ^ Blasius' Unfinished ManuscriptBlasius
  6. ^ a b c Defaced Nedic Prayer Book
  7. ^ a b c d e Nedes of the DeathlandsArgus Mender
  8. ^ Fragments from a Nedic poem, title unknown
  9. ^ Mysteries of the Mundus StonesLady Cinnabar of Taneth
  10. ^ Children of the Sky
  11. ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 1st Edition: SkyrimImperial Geographical Society, 2E 864
  12. ^ a b c d e f Frontier, ConquestUniversity of Gwylim Press, 3E 344
  13. ^ a b The Monomyth
  14. ^ Silver Wish Medallion antiquity codex entries by Verita Numida and Gabrielle Benele in ESO
  15. ^ Nest of Shadows antiquity codex entry by Ugron gro-Thumog in ESO
  16. ^ Lost Valley Redoubt's loading screen in ESO
  17. ^ Nchuand-Zel's loading screen in ESO
  18. ^ a b c d e f Lady Clarisse Laurent Answers Your QuestionsLady Clarisse Laurent and Stibbons
  19. ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 3rd Edition: All the Eras of Man, A Comprehensive History of our HistoryImperial Geographical Society, 3E 432
  20. ^ a b c d Chancellor Abnur Tharn Answers Your QuestionsChancellor Abnur Tharn
  21. ^ Sorcerer Vunal in Window on the Past
  22. ^ Orcs of Tamriel, Volume 3Grassius Vilco
  23. ^ a b Nedic Hex Totem antiquity codex entry by Verita Numida and Ugron gro-Thumog in ESO
  24. ^ The Ubiquitous Sinking IsleLailfin, Steward of Histories at the Illumination Academy
  25. ^ Castles and Coffers Volume III: Hel Ra Citadel
  26. ^ Khunzar-ri: Tales, OneAneshi, Keeper of Legends for the 16 Kingdoms
  27. ^ a b c Pocket Guide to the Empire, 3rd Edition: The War with the Trees: Argonia and the Black MarshImperial Geographical Society, 3E 432
  28. ^ a b Lodyna Arethi's dialogue during King of Dust in ESO
  29. ^ Cadwell the Betrayer's dialogue in ESO
  30. ^ Loremaster's Archive - The Druid Circles of GalenLaurel of the Stonelore
  31. ^ a b c Modern Day Bretons: Man or Mer? — Vastyr Historian Filibert Beauchamp
  32. ^ a b Race Description of Breton in TES:Arena
  33. ^ a b Loremaster's Archive - Tamriel's DungeonsDhulef
  34. ^ Wyrd and Druid — Archdruid Barnabe's Discourse with Mainlanders, 2E 553
  35. ^ Loremaster's Archive - Bretons & High IsleLady Arabelle
  36. ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 3rd Edition: The Sons and Daughter of the Direnni West: High RockImperial Geographical Society, 3E 432
  37. ^ The Bretons: Mongrels or Paragons?Phrastus of Elinhir
  38. ^ a b c d e f The Adabal-aMorihaus
  39. ^ a b Pocket Guide to the Empire, 3rd Edition: The Seat of Sundered Kings: CyrodiilImperial Geographical Society, 3E 432
  40. ^ The Footsteps of ShezarrSister Priscia Stolvo
  41. ^ Nedic Dueling SwordsMerethic Society
  42. ^ Lamae Bal's dialogue and flashbacks in Scion of the Blood Matron
  43. ^ Into the Lion's Den
  44. ^ Window on the Past quest
  45. ^ a b Dialogue with Sorcerer Vunal
  46. ^ The Brothers of StrifeNili Omavel
  47. ^ a b Nedic Wineskin in ESO
  48. ^ a b Waterlogged Journal
  49. ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 1st Edition: CyrodiilImperial Geographical Society, 2E 864
  50. ^ Dialogue with Throne Keeper Farvad
  51. ^ First Era Cross-Cultural Relic description
  52. ^ Titus Valerius' dialogue in ESO
  53. ^ Holidays of the Iliac BayTheth-i
  54. ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 1st Edition: HammerfellImperial Geographical Society, 2E 864
  55. ^ Letter to Skull-Brother Xandier — Emutaril
  56. ^ a b c Skyreach ExplorerReginus Buca, Historian, University of Gwylim
  57. ^ 2920, The Last Year of the First EraCarlovac Townway
  58. ^ a b c Nedic Duraki, Keptu, and Perena Armor costume and showcase descriptions
  59. ^ a b Watcher's Ritual Stole antiquity codex entry by Verita Numida in ESO
  60. ^ a b Saradin's DiarySaradin
  61. ^ a b Virmaril's JournalVirmaril, Advisor to High King Durac
  62. ^ Watcher Shavmar's JournalWatcher Shavmar
  63. ^ Crafting Motif 12: Barbaric StyleSeif-ij Hidja
  64. ^ Nicolard's Notes on Ruin OriginsNicolard Lia
  65. ^ Meet the Character - Domihaus the Bloody-HornedGherig Bullblood
  66. ^ Wyrd and Druid — Archdruid Barnabe's Discourse with Mainlanders, 2E 553
  67. ^ Opusculus Lamae Bal ta MezzamortieMabei Aywenil, Scribe
  68. ^ Daughter of the NibenSathyr Longleat

Note: The following references are considered to be unofficial sources. They are included to round off this article and may not be authoritative or conclusive.