Category:Castle Anwyn creatures
This category lists all creatures found in the Castle Anwyn hunting area. The Castle Anwyn hunting area is nearest to the town of Wehnimer's Landing. It is found on the Tsoran map WL-lysierian.
Official Description
Perched on an island just off the shore of Lough Ne'Halin, Castle Anwyn breaks through the mists with an eerie silence. The castle has many battlements, enough to have been a major stronghold in even the greatest wars. Time, however, seems to have been its greatest enemy as the only inhabitants of now abandoned castle are the undead.
Behind The Scenes
Castle Anwyn is a reference to Annwn, the Welsh word for the Celtic Otherworld, which is a root of Arthurian legends regarding the Holy Grail. It is often interpreted to be a fortress on an island. The English word for the same place is the Isle of Avalon. The King of Annwn happens to also be the king of the faeries, which relates to the fairy lore that is implicit in Shadow Valley. In Welsh this is Gwyn ap Nudd of the Tylwyth Teg, son of Nodens, who leads the Wild Hunt with the pagan precursors of hell hounds. In Irish these are the Aos Si, or even earlier, the Tuath(a) dé Danann which was a term conflated by monks with the Israelites. Danann refers to Danu as the mother of the Irish gods, and attempts have been made to equate this with the Hindu Danu, the mother of the serpent demon Vritra. Nodens is the master of the night-gaunts of Lovecraft's Dreamlands, which correspond to the lesser vruul in The Broken Lands. Shakespeare's name for the fairy king, Oberon, descends from the earlier name Alberich.
Alberich is the fairy dwarf who guards the magic ring in the Nibelungliend which is taken by Siegfried. The Prince of Anwyn, Terate Niebelun of the Vvrael quest, is the son of a sorcerous elven queen. This is implied to correspond to Morgan le Fay who healed the mortally wounded Arthur at Avalon after the Battle of Camlann, corresponding to visions of Terate being rejuvenated by dark power on his ivory throne, where Morgan derives from morgens (water spirits) and the goddess Morrigan who was the first bainsidhe (banshee). Bainsidhe and hell hounds were invasion creatures at the end of the "Demon Queen" storyline about his mother, where the castle almost faded out of existence, which appears influenced by stories of Averoigne in medieval France by the Lovecraft circle author Clark Ashton Smith. The mixture of Gothic architecture around a Norman keep over a Roman chamber leading into a Druidic cavern probably comes Lovecraft's "The Rats in the Walls", related to his "The Dreams in the Witch House", where the cavern under Exham Priory has been argued to be based on St. Patrick's Purgatory. The chair alludes to Lia Fail, conflated with the Stone of Scone, and so the Stone of Jacob.
The symbolic features of Castle Anwyn center around Glastonbury Tor, which was the supposed abode of Gwyn ap Nudd and the entrance to Annwn. The monks of Glastonbury Abbey asserted that it is the Isle of Avalon, and etymological arguments have been made that its name alludes to the enchanted tomb of Merlin. The crypt of Castle Anwyn is a very direct reference to the bodies of King Arthur and Guenevere fraudulently found under the chapel at Glastonbury Abbey, which were moved to a marble tomb by Edward I. The chair of bones, bone chapel, and the otherworld where Terate's mother resided correspond to the Siege Perilous, Chapel Perilous, and Vale Perilous respectively. The entrance appears to be based on Caernarfon Castle built by Edward I, which was based on another Welsh story, where the Roman Emperor Maximus has a dream vision sending thirteen messengers to the highest mountain in the world. His daughter allegedly married King Vortigern, providing Roman/Arthurian descent.
Most notably, the castle engages in the same kind of esoteric word play as the "purgatory" section of The Graveyard, regarding words for castle features. Anwyn's keep is a wine cellar instead of a military fortification, playing off "kype" meaning "cask", and its dungeon refers to keeps originally being called "donjons." The casks are large enough for a giantman, possibly alluding to the burial of Arthur by oak trunk or thus even the "holy blood" conspiracy, and might refer to the casks of the "old hag" containing healing balm. The bower plays on other meanings of the word, particularly the private boudoir of the lady of a castle, like the cabinet in The Graveyard. (Titania the fairy queen sleeps in a bower in Midsummer Night's Dream.) Similarly, the tower is strange in that it extends deep into its mound, where the implication is fairy mounds represented by its even older classical depictions of nymphs. Nymphs are often equated with faeries, and an ambient messaging refers to naiads, the fresh water nymphs.
Glastonbury Abbey was founded by Joseph of Arimathea, the first Grail keeper, who wrote the Phoenician Aramaic writing on the wall in Monty Python and the Holy Grail. This is arguably reflected by the mezuzah in the castle barracks, where the knights have been chased away. It was also the final residence of St. Patrick. The broader layout refers to St. Patrick's Purgatory which is a cave under an island in Lough Derg, which the pseudo-historical author Jessie Weston argued is related to the Grail quest and the Chapel Perilous. Weston is most known for her translation of Wolfram von Eschanbach's "Parzifal" where the holy grail is a "wondrous stone" that fell from heaven in the fall of Lucifer. This phrase is used on the loresong of Terate's void blade to describe the first Stone of Virtue, found in Anwyn's cavern, who was also once heard saying "it is like fighting ourselves", which quotes Perceval who is destined to find the grail and become the Grail King (a figure thought to be based on Bran the Blessed.)
Pages in category "Castle Anwyn creatures"
The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.