Serpent Isle


 * This article is about the land. For the game, see Ultima VII Part Two: Serpent Isle.

Serpent Isle is a world which was formerly part of archaic Sosaria - known then as the Lands of Danger and Despair. After separating from the other three Sosarian continents following the death of the wizard Mondain, this realm became the seat of the Ophidian civilization - a race of serpent-worshiping men who eventually destroyed themselves in a violent civil war. Eventually, long after this calamity, colonists from the lands which became Britannia rediscovered this lost world, traveling though the Serpent Pillars to settle upon it as they fled what they saw as a tyrannical regime.

Ultimately, this world became the stage on which the events of Ultima VII Part Two: Serpent Isle were set, with the Avatar and companions journeying to the Serpent Isle and facing the impending Imbalance there.

The Lands of Danger and Despair
In its earliest incarnation as the Lands of Danger and Despair, the lands which would someday form the Serpent Isle were jointly ruled over by two kings: the King of the White Dragon and Shamino Salle' Dacil. Shamino, at one point a simple woodsman, quite possibly assumed the mantle of leadership after having courted and won the hand of Princess Beatrix, the King of the White Dragon's daughter.

The Stranger had occasion to visit this realm during their adventures of in Ultima I, needing to obtain a white gem in Shamino's possession that the hero might power the time-traveling device necessary to reach the evil wizard Mondain. This was eventually granted the hero, and Mondain's end was eventually wrought by the Stranger's hand.

With the eventual death of enchanter and the shattering of his Gem of Immortality, however, Sosaria as it was known changed dramatically, and the inhabitants of the Lands of Danger and Despair observed the other three major continents disappear as though they had never been. Shamino, who had been abroad in the Lands of Lord British that he might consult with its ruler, was almost certainly barred from journeying home by this cataclysmic event. Back in his former kingdom, Beatrix mournfully awaited his return, eventually dying of what was deemed heartbreak when he husband to be never arrived.

Burdened by grief over the loss of his child and a burgeoning war with the goblins of the realm, the King of the White Dragon was slowly overtaken with madness, growing paranoid and violent as his insanity progressed. Eventually, he held a grand celebration in honor of the solstice festival, inviting the whole of his subjects into his castle. These unlucky guests were tortured and slaughtered down to the last man, and with his kingdom now "safe" in the realms of death, the King flung himself from one of the towers of the keep.

Ophidian Civilization and the War of Imbalance


After the downfall of the old kings of Sosaria, the island eventually gave rise to the Ophidian people. This culture recognized three cosmic serpents, struggling within the Ethereal Void: the red serpent of chaos, the blue  serpent of order, and the Great Earth Serpent which mediated between the two others and kept the configuration locked in balance. Taking their religious doctrine from these creatures, the Ophidians came to worship the principles embodied within this metaphysical caduceus, giving rise to the nine Ophidian Virtues, and building grand cities and temples to the concepts they saw reflected in the serpents. The spiritual leader of this devout people was the Hierophant of Balance, a devotee of balance who was capable of opening the Wall of Lights] that he or she might commune with the great serpents directly.



Eventually, disaster overtook this proud people, when the hellspawn Exodus, managed to rend the Great Earth Serpent from the Void that it might serve as guardian to his stronghold on the Isle of Fire. With their mediator gone, the celestial forces Chaos and Order fought viciously, and the people of the isle followed suite. Ssithnos, the last Great Hierophant, was assassinated by followers of Order and the bloody War of Imbalance followed as the adherants of Chaos were saddled with the blame. Atrocities were wrought by both sides as the once unified Ophidian people fell into the depravity of total war. Eventually, the Order Serpent and its acolytes emerged victorious, with the followers of Chaos slain and the Chaos Serpent itself destroyed - split into marauding component spirits known as banes.

This victory was ultimately a hollow one. With Chaos destroyed, the world gradually began to drift into a state of Imbalance, as the Order Serpent slowly went insane in the emptiness of the Void. The followers of Order took little solace in the realm now barren of Chaos, and eventually, nearly three-hundred years after their final triumph the Hierophant of Order led their people through the Wall of Lights, hoping to find a world of where Order was perfect and undiminished somewhere within the expanse of the Void.

The New Sosarians


Meanwhile, on Sosaria's shores, the Triad of Evil was at last vanquished, and Lord British attempted to pull the realm into a renaissance of learning, art and virtue, declaring the Quest of the Avatar, in the hopes of inspiring a champion to arise as paragon of his visions for the newly christened Britannia.

Such an ambitious undertaking, however, was not without its dissidents, and many people of Old Sosaria objected to the intermarriage of morality and government. Several warriors of the twin cities of Montor, objected to the relative place of Courage in British's new cosmology, feeling that it outshone all other principles. In Old Fawn, as well, dissent was raised owing to the city's observance of Beauty as it's own virtue, and many magicians within the settlement of Moon felt that Honesty, proposed as being the virtue of mages, was incompatible with the reality of magic as inherently illusionary.

Led by the magician, Erstam, many of these disenfranchised denizens of Old Sosaria left the newly unified Britannia, setting off on a voyage beyond the Serpent Pillars in the hopes of finding a world where they could practice their moralities in peace. Eventually, they landed on the shores of Serpent Isle, not realizing it had once been part of the Sosarian landscape. Initially naming the land "New Sosaria," the settlers founded three city-states, in reflection of their original homelands, giving rise to the settlements of Monitor, Fawn and Moonshade. By curious coincidence, these colonists eventually came to rename the world Serpent Isle, in reference to the many serpentine ruins dotting the landscape. Unwittingly they called it it by the same name the now vanished Ophidians had given it.

The Time of Imbalance
The loss of the Great Earth Serpent and the destruction of the Serpent of Chaos had far lasting repercussions, unknown to the Ophidians who sparked them. Years after the fall of the original Serpent Islanders, a New Sosarian farm wife known as Xenka began to have troubling visions regarding the end of the times and the Stanger from another world who might be able to halt them. Dismissed by those whom she came to with her accounts, Xenka's visions were eventually recorded and kept by a monastic order on Monk Isle, who devoted their lives to deciphering the meaning of her prophecies long after Xenka herself had vanished.

By the time that the Avatar at last landed on Serpent Isles, shores, the collapse of the known multiverse due to the displacement of the serpents was already nearing its apex, with gentle creatures succumbing to plagues of sleeping sickness and the earth beginning to rend itself apart with earthquakes and devilish magical storms. While the hero had initially come to the island in search of the former Fellowship head, Batlin and Iolo FitzOwen's beloved wife, Gwenno, the champion of virtue soon became embroiled in the unfolding drama of an apocalypse.

It was eventually revealed that Batlin had captured the three Banes which once composed the Serpent of Chaos, and sought to use them to open the Wall of Light that he might attain power therein. Due to a grievous miscalculation, however, the sage attempted the ceremony at the wrong temple, causing the three malevolent spirits to be unleashed upon the world through the possessed bodies of Iolo, Shamino, and Dupre. In a wave of violent slaughter, these spirits slew the majority of the world's populace.

Eventually, the Avatar managed to vanquish and recapture the banes, and then was charged to reunite them into their original form. Dupre, guilt-wracked over the suffering he had cause, willingly offered himself up as the sacrificial oblation needed to bind the dissonant spirits together, and the Chaos Serpent was at last resurrected. Ultimately, the hero was able to take on the garments and responsibilities of the Hierophant of Balance, and on Sunrise Isle at last performed the ceremony to return the Great Earth Serpent to the Void.

With the Imbalance halted, the Avatar was snatched from the ethereal planes by the Guardian, and left adrift on the dark world of Pagan. The ultimate fate of Serpent Isle and its few inhabitants who survived the holocaust of the Banes remains unknown.

Castles

 * Castle of the White Dragon
 * Shamino's Castle

Cities

 * Lost Friends (In northwestern mountains)
 * Wheeler (In the northern woods)
 * Gorlab (eventually engulfed by the Gorlab Swamp)
 * The Brother (In the area later known as Monk Isle)
 * Dextron (Fawn appears to be built in its place)
 * Magic (Located in woods and swamp where Moonshade is now located)
 * Turtle (West of modern Monitor)
 * Bulldozer (Where Inn of the Sleeping Bull stands now)

Signposts

 * Grave of the Lost Soul (a Signpost)
 * The Eastern Sign Post (a Signpost)

Dungeons

 * The Dead Cat's Life (near the modern Goblin Village)
 * The Dead Cat's Life II
 * Dead Man's Walk (possibly part of Knight's Test)
 * The Dungeon of Doom
 * Free Death Hole (now probably part of the dungeons of Mountains of Freedom)
 * The Hole to Hades (probably near Furnace)
 * The Morbid Adventure (possibly on the site of Isles of the Mad Mage)
 * The Skull Smasher (later site to Skullcrusher)
 * The Spine Breaker (later site to Spinebreaker)

Cities

 * Skullcrusher
 * Spinebreaker
 * Furnace

Shrines and Temples

 * Shrine of Balance
 * Shrine of Order (inside Spinebreaker)
 * Shrine of Chaos (inside Skullcrusher)
 * Temple of Discipline
 * Temple of Emotion
 * Temple of Enthusiasm
 * Temple of Ethicality
 * Temple of Logic
 * Temple of Tolerance

Cities

 * Fawn
 * Furnace
 * Monitor
 * Moonshade

Settlements

 * Inn of the Sleeping Bull
 * Isles of the Mad Mage
 * Monk Isle

Interesting Areas

 * Claw
 * Gorlab Swamp
 * Gwani Death Temple
 * Isle of Crypts
 * Isle of Frost Dragons
 * Knight's Forest
 * Knight's Test
 * Mountains of Freedom
 * Northern Forest
 * Northern Regions
 * Penguin Island
 * Serpent Isle Guard Towers
 * Sunrise Isle
 * Western Forest

Trivia

 * If the Avatar plants the Silver Seed after the freeing of the banes, Karnax will imply that the existence of the silver tree may make it possible for the victims of the banes attacks to be resurrected.