Uratha

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The Uratha are werewolves, shapeshifting supernatural beings with a deep connection the spirit world. They are apex predators with

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History

Werewolves have an oral history, passing stories and legends through packs, protectorates, and tribes. While that’s a wonderful tool for keeping their culture alive, it does mean that when fact and narrative conflict, fact falls by the wayside.

Even so, almost every werewolf hears at least one tale of the time before, and how the Forsaken lost paradise. Just as many cultures and religions have a myth of the flood or the myth of how humans gained forbidden knowledge, werewolf history has a common theme. The worlds of Flesh and Spirit used to be so close that one could touch the other, then the werewolves came and brought ruin upon it. Among the Forsaken, this typically bears a lesson along the lines of “they fucked up so now we have to do better.”

The common elements of these stories come together to tell of the Sundering, the story of the creation of the Uratha and of their fall from grace.

The Sundering

This story is true. In ages past, the worlds of flesh and spirit freely mingled in Pangaea. Humans could cross the Border Marches into the Shadow, while spirits could enter the world of Flesh to gather Essence. The great wolf, Urfarah kept the balance of the worlds through predation, hunting spirits that grew too bold, thinning the herd of humanity when they grew too numerous, and warring with other great spirits who would exploit the border for themselves.

The Sundering - the end of Pangaea, and the great crime of the People - began with love. Luna, Amahan Iduth, the Warding Moon who protects the Shadow from the void beyond, saw in the Wolf a kindred spirit and the two greatest guardians of the Shadow fell in love. From the Moon's ever-changing protean nature and the Wolf's guardianship and predatory instinct came the People. Bound to the earth and unable to join their mother in the skies, the first werewolves joined Wolf's pack and recieved the Moon's Gifts from the Lunes.

Yet this act of creation weakened Wolf and he grew slow and weak, and both worlds suffered for it. Spirits set themselves up as deities among human tribes, Essence and resonances surged uncontrolled as humanity spread unchecked, and the great spirits escaped Wolf's slowing jaws by shattering themselves into uncountable shards that infested the worlds. The Uratha and their wolf spirit cousins knew that strong young hunters must replace a weak elder, and Wolf's ban forbade him from surrender. Only in death could another take his place. So the Uratha and the greatest wolf spirits fought their father and killed him.

Urfarah's death howl shattered the Border Marches, raising a Gauntlet between worlds and forever dividing Flesh and Spirit. Luna saw what Wolf's children had done and, stricken with grief, cursed the People with madness and to burn at the touch of silver. Pangaea was lost and the world grew into that which we see today.

The Sundering still divides the People. Some, led by the Firstborn wolf-spirits who joined the battle against Urfarah, took up Father Wolf's role and pledged themselves to Luna to carry out his duty to guard the divide between Flesh and Spirit. They recieved Luna's forgiveness and call themselves the Tribes of the Moon, or Urdaga, or simply the Forsaken in memory of their patricide. Others believed that killing Urfarah was a mistake and follow the Firstborn who did not join take part in the murder. They call themselves the Pure Tribes, or Anshega, and hate both Luna and their brethren who swore themselves to her.

Society

Werewolves in Blackmouth