Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Overview of Blackmoor - Greyhawk Version

[Written in 2006 for a "Blackmoor in Greyhawk" campaign]
Tucked away in a little corner of the Flanaess, between the Land of Black Ice to the north, the Icy Sea to the west, the Cold Marshes to the south, and the Burneal Forest to the west, is the land of Blackmoor. Although isolated from most of the doings of the Flanaess, Blackmoor is an active place with its own dramatic history.

Though hilly, even mountainous, to the southeast and west, half of Blackmoor is below sea level. Peat, or "sinking land," is the most common soil. The forests are half-coniferous and half-deciduous. The most prominent geographic features are Lake Blackmoor, which flows into the Icy Sea; the Island of Coot in Lake Blackmoor; the
sylvan Redwood Forest to the east, between the City of Maus and the Dragon Hills; "Lake" Gloomen, an island-filled swamp to the southwest; and the Skandaharian Strait that feeds Lake Blackmoor with run-off from the Black Ice.

The indigenous humans of Blackmoor were the caramel-skinned Flanae-Skandaharians (the Skandaharians being a fierce Viking people that live in the Land of the Black Ice). In the ancient past, Baklunish and Oerdian immigrants came to the region. The Baklunish were small in number, remnants flung from their fallen empire to the far west. They brought some of their exotic culture to Blackmoor, but remained
largely aloof from the indigenous people. Some half-Baklunish people remain in Blackmoor today. The Oerdians, an expansionist people, brought Blackmoor a sense of connection with the rest of the Flanaess. This last migration was 500 years ago, when Blackmoor was still a little kingdom.

Although he lived almost 500 years ago, everyone in Blackmoor knows the name of Uther, last king of Blackmoor. Uther was fascinated with Oerdian tales of the "great kingdom" of Ferrond to the south. He journeyed there, through the orc-infested Cold Marshes and the nomad lands beyond and finally pledged his fealty to the Ferrondian
King. Uther became Marquis to the March of Blackmoor, farthest province of Ferrond.

Over time, Ferrond grew unstable and broke apart. Contact with Ferrond, or Furyondy as it would become, grew faint. And Blackmoor became busy with new matters outside its borders. To the far west, the Witch-Queen Iggwilv was trying to whip the Tiger Nomads into an army. Some nomads fled north through the Burneal Forest and came
into conflict with the forest's goblins and kobolds. The goblins in particular were pushed east and spilled into Blackmoor. Worse, when the nomads emerged from the north side of the forest, they settled down and became a rival and threat to Blackmoor. Their leaders were the Wolf Dukes. The then-Marquis of Blackmoor answered their threat by changing his own title to Arch-Duke, which his descendents have
kept since. Meanwhile, the goblins were harried north, where they were absorbed into the Barony of Coot, where evil men were gathering. All there were under the spell of a monstrous being called the Egg of Coot. Intent on conquest, the Coot Invasion of
the southern baronies began 400 years ago and took the combined effort of man and the fairy races, who had previously remained neutral in Blackmoor's affairs, to repel.

5 comments:

Havard: said...

Late arrival to this post, but this is a subject I am very much interested in! I posted some more comments on it over here: http://blackmoor.mystara.us/forums/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=1118&p=15254#p15254

-Havard

Scott said...

Hey, no fair, I have to register to read your comments now. Unless you'd be willing to e-mail them to me, or even re-post them here?

Havard: said...

Sorry, I forgot about that for a second! Here's a short summary:

I find it interesting that you place Uther's Reign 500 "years ago" in the Greyhawk Timeline. Most other takes on Greyhawk Blackmoor have really ignored Uther completely and simply seem to have frozen things to around the FFC era, often with King Funk remaining in power of the Town of Blackmoor.

I was also surprised that there was no mention of a connection betweeen the Skandaharians hand the Frost and Snow Barbarians of the Thorillian (Spl?) Peninsula. It does make sense to have the Classic Blackmoor Era connected to Greyhawk's past though when the Great Kingdom was still united, as was Arneson's assumption of those lands.

All, in all a very interesting read! :)

-Havard

Scott said...

Ah, thanks, Havard! Compliments from one of the Internet's leading scholars on Blackmoor certainly carry extra weight. My Blackmoor campaign crashed quite some time ago, but I recall that I studied Arneson's version quite a bit first and wanted my Greyhawk version to fit his version as much as possible (and, I believe, found some compromises closer to Arneson's version that the seminal Oerth Journal article did). I also did not link the Skandaharians to the Thillonrian Peninsula because I wanted them to come from the closer continent of Fireland to the north.

Havard: said...

Thank you Scott! You are too kind :)
And while I may be fairly obsessed about Blackmoor, I am pretty much a n00b when it comes to Greyhawk. Your article has certainly helped. Thanks for explaining some of your reasoning behind it. What you are saying makes sense to me. :)