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"With the coming of doom shall march a lowly boy. Anger shall be his nourishment,
and blood his wine."
Contents
1 History
o 1.1 The Saga of the Blooded
o 1.2 The Slaughterers of Haargroth
o 1.3 In the Service of Archaon
o 1.4 Sokh
2 Trivia
3 Miniature
4 Sources
History
The Saga of the Blooded
The warrior who would one day rise to occupy the highest echelons of the Blood
God's favour was once no more than a lowly orphan goatherd. A child without a
father is at great risk in Norsca, for without anyone to teach him the ways of axe
and sword, Haargroth was deemed unfit to join the men on the summer raids,
doomed to a life of ridicule, without favour in the eyes of the dread deities of
Norsca. However, this changed one fateful day.
While the chieftain was off raiding with his bondsmen, Haargroth tended to the
goats as was his charge. One of the animals was found missing, however, having
wandered off into the woods. Within the forest, he came across the bloody remains
of the animal, having been feasted upon by a Beastman warlord, his snout still
dripping with the creature's blood. He saw the beast's axe resting at one side away
from his grasp, and he felt a voice urge him to take revenge. Rage smouldering in
his heart, the young Norsemen took up the battleaxe and struck the Beastlord with
such fury that he had almost hacked him in two from shoulder to belly. Again did
Haargroth strike the monster, and again and again until he had reduced the mighty
beast into a bloody stain on the ground. With this single act of anger, Haargroth
took the first steps towards glory and power.
The axe, as it transpired, was a Daemon Weapon of Khorne, bound with the
essence of one of his foul Bloodthirsters. As Haargroth rose up from the carnage
he had wrought, he was astonished to see the blood upon the axe-blades vanish,
as if absorbed by the weapon itself. He saw the axe's rough, wooden handle
morph into flawless, shining stone and the weapon become encrusted with harsh
runes. At once, Haargroth realized which amongst the Gods of Norsca had picked
him out for greatness. Skinning the corpse of the Beastman and wearing its bloody
fur about him as a cloak, Haargroth emerged from the woods a changed man.
Haargroth, his manner changed beyond all recognition and strengthened by the
favour of Khorne, strode boldly into the Hall of the Graeling tribes. Seeing as how
he was drenched from head to toe in blood and was swathed in the skin of a
beastman, few men dared to challenge the goatherd turned warrior. Taking the
chieftain's seat in the meadhall, Haargroth established his dominance over the
hunters, elders and other non-warriors left in the tribe.
As the summer ended, the chieftain returned from the raids, his longships rich with
plunder. His warriors bellowed the songs of their valour as they entered the hall. As
was tradition, the chieftain was to enter last. When he crossed the threshold, he
was not met by Marauders roaring his name, but only stunned silence and a
hulking warrior in red-plate seated upon his throne. The chieftain, a champion of
Chaos in his own right, roared and charged Haargroth, his own axe readied for a
murderous strike. All assembled in the meadhall watched in astonishment as
Haargroth caught the chieftain's axe and deflected it, lodging it in the wood of the
hall. Before he could wrench it out, the chieftain was struck down by Haargroth's
daemon-axe. With that, the Graelings bellowed Haargroth's name and accepted
him as their new leader.
When the enemy tribe charged the Graelings, it was Haargroth who stood
unmoving at the helm, his battle-axe at the ready. In the fighting that transpired,
Haargroth's axe rose and fell with such blinding speed and crushing power that
soon mounds of decapitated heads and hacked-off limbs accumulated around him.
Inspired by his bravery, Haargroth's fellow Graelings willed themselves into a
battle-frenzy and roared out the name of Khorne as they slaughtered the warriors
of the other tribe. Soon, the raiders were butchered to a man, with none of the
Graelings having fallen. The victorious Graelings then carried Haargroth the
Blooded, as he was now known, back to the hall of their tribe in triumph.
Strengthened by the bloodshed Haargroth had wrought, his axe had twisted into a
weapon of terrifying ornamentation - its full power now fully realized. This was not
the only change, for the many victories he had gained in battle had earned
Haargroth the favour of Khorne, who bestowed upon the warrior such strength and
power that he resembled more a beast than a man. Throughout the winter, he led
his warriors to victory in many bloody battles against the neighbouring tribes of
Norsca, filling the cold valleys with blood. Soon, Haargroth's savagery was
infamous even amongst barbarians, the brutality of his warriors such that the other
tribes named them the Slaughterers of Haargroth. The name soon stuck.
Over the course of the next years, Haargroth led the Graelings on daring longship
raids. Pillaging the lands of Naggaroth to the west, as well as the soft lands of
the Empire and Bretonnia, and even as far south as the shores of Lustria. With
each victory, he made certain to solidify the loyalty of his warriors, offering the best
among them their pick of the plunder and gifting them with magnificent armour and
weapons blessed by the Dark Gods. And to remind them of his prowess, he stood
first in the battle-line, facing the lion's share of the peril of combat and tearing
bloody swathes through the enemy lines.
In time, the Norsemen returned to their unholy homeland and restarted raids
against their neighbours. Constantly looking for fresh foes to feed his blade,
Haargroth came to realize that the strength of his warband was such that there
were none amongst the tribes of Norsca and Kurgan that could offer him a
challenge. Thus, he resolved to lead his tribesmen to the depths of the Chaos
Wastes itself in search of a worthy adversary.
In the Service of Archaon
North did Haargroth and his men travel, and faced off against the monstrous
abominations that dwelt near the great rift. Though his enemies still fell against his
bloodlusting fury, Haargroth was pleased to test himself against the beasts of the
True North. Though foulness of the Chaos Wastes strengthened the euphoria of
his savagery, it soon became clear to Haargroth that no foe could stand long
against him, and that he would not soon again know the true joy of battle. Raging,
the Norseman howled out a barbarous prayer to his god, and asked of Khorne to
send him a worthy foe to kill.
Suddenly, a storm broke the bleeding skies of the Wastes. Hulking daemons
wielding brutal axes fell upon the Norsemen as the many-coloured mist of the
Wastes enveloped them. In the confusion, Haargroth was separated from his
horde. Lost in the fog, the Norscan heard the thunder of iron-shod hooves and the
heavy breathing of a beast. Before him stood a mighty daemonsteed, and atop it
was a towering knight in black plate wielding a flaming sword. Upon the blackened
steel of the breastplate, Haargroth saw the sacred runes of the gods emblazoned
upon the black knight, including that of Khorne.
Realising the gods had answered his call, Haargroth let out a bloodcurdling roar as
he charged the unknown warrior, his axe raised above his head for a devastating
strike. He brought down his axe in mighty blow that would have destroyed any
lesser foe many times over, but to his shock, he found his attack easily blocked by
the knight's massive kite shield. Having weathered the berserker's assault, the
Lord of the End Times readied his own offensive. His blade came alive with
blackened flames and arced down upon Haargroth, tearing through his armour and
setting his wound alight with daemonic fire. Struck down to the ground, Haargroth
awaited the killer blow and the chance to drink at the Blood God's right hand. Yet,
to his surprise, the warrior did not slay him. He declared his name; Archaon
Everchosen, Anointed of Chaos, and presented Haargroth and his Northmen with a
choice; either continue resisting him and die, or swear eternal fealty to him and be
given command of one of his armies. Having finally crossed paths with a warrior
even stronger than himself, Haargroth accepted the offer, and joined his horde of
berserking Norsemen and slavering Bloodbeasts to the apocalyptic armies of the
Dark Redeemer.
Sokh
After Archaon's defeat at Middenheim, Haargroth and his legion of blood-hungry
warriors rejoined him as he fled to the settlement of Sokh. The first men into the
town were the Teutogen Guard, led by the Ar-Ulric himself, Emil Valgeir. The
midday sun flashed bright on their armour, a spear of white that plunged into the
crimson-armoured warriors of Haargoth, the Bloodied One. The Ar-Ulric roared a
challenge, and Haargoth ploughed through the flank of Teutogens towards him,
trailing dismembered bodies and severed heads. He killed at least three dozen
victims to reveal the Ar-Ulric, whose enscorcelled hammer smashed into
Haargoth's helm with such force, that it drove the Chaos general's head into his
chest.[3]
Trivia
Haargroth never received an official miniature in the tabletop. Rather, players were
encouraged to create a conversion for him out of different kits. An official conversion
for Haargroth did exist, courtesy of Games Workshop, and was comprised of an Orc
Warboss's axe, a Bloodletter's body, and the head of the classic Archaon miniature.
Haargroth is the only one of Archaon's lieutenants to have received an original look
distinct from the standard Exalted Champion tabletop models, unlike his fellows.
Haargroth was the first of Archaon's lieutenants to receive a background article in
the White Dwarf magazine.
His name is most likely derived from that of the semi-mythological Danish king
Hrothgar; who is also a character in the Anglo-Saxon epic poem Beowulf.
A character very similar to Haargroth the Blooded, Thorgar the Blooded One, was
the protagonist of the Chaos campaign of the Warhammer: Mark of Chaos PC game.
Like Haargroth, Thorgar was also a Norscan and was dedicated to Khorne.