Sentri

Sentri [sahn-tray], also known as Santre, is a recurring character. He first appears in Ultima II and is a frequent comrade in arms to the Avatar. It is likely that he is native of Earth.

Age of Darkness
During the alternate Earth timeline created by Minax's interventions in Ultima II, the Stranger encountered Sentri in the prisons of twentieth century New San Antonio, where he had been imprisoned for reasons unknown. Upon battling through the gaol's guards and unlocking the door to the swashbuckler's cell, Sentri would volunteer a warning of his  quick blade, Enilno - and for a sum of five-hundred  gold coins, would sell the legendary artifact to the adventurer, giving the hero the one weapon which could slay the enchantress.

It is not known what became of Sentri following the eventual realignment of time which was precipitated by Minax's death, although in centuries to come, the warrior would recall vaguely that he had met the hero who would become the Avatar during this tumultuous era, implying that this fated meeting was not entirely rendered ahistorical when the conventional time stream reasserted itself.

Whatever the reality Sentri existed within upon Earth, the swordsman eventually could be found in records of archaic Sosaria - and was listed as a participant in Lord British's "Great Work" - a log which chronicled the outcomes of several exploratory travels commissioned to provide detailed maps of the young king's domains. In this tome, Sentri (then known by the title of "the Seeker") recounts his ultimately failed quest to find the mysterious lost continent of Ambrosia. Although the young adventurer never made landfall on this mysterious realm, he nevertheless compiled several of the legends he had heard regarding it, relating tales of the mystic Ambrosian race and their powers of physical transcendence. Later, during the Stranger's own quest against Exodus, Sentri could be encountered briefly at the Ambrosian Delight Tavern in Montor West, enjoying a drink of grog in the company of Shamino.

Age of Enlightenment
In the years of cultural and political revitalization that followed Lord British's christening of Britannia, Sentri rose to become the baron of the newly founded Serpent's Hold, where he became guardian of a portion of the tripartite word of passage needed to open the Great Stygian Abyss. During their quest in Ultima IV, the aspirant Stranger sought Sentri for knowledge of this word - likely after having been instructed to seek him out by Brother Zair of Cove. Assisting the hero in their pursuit of enlightenment, Sentri imparted his knowledge of one of the word's three syllables: "Cor."

Eventually, Sentri ceded his rulership of the Keep of Courage - presumably to the famed Sir Percy, who was granted the fief by Lord British in honor of his deeds combating the dragons of the realm. Despite no longer being a landed noble and having had but passing association in Britannia with the Avatar of legend, Sentri eventually became a target of persecution during the oppressive reign of Lord Blackthorn, and by the time of the hero's return in Ultima V, he had fled to the citadel of Bordermarch along with Dupre. Wishing to take an active hand in combating the dictatorial regime which had driven him into hiding, Sentri offered to join with the Avatar should the champion have need of his skills.

After the eventual defeat of the tyrant and the geological collapse of the Underworld, a series of earthquakes wracked the Britannian landscape, resulting in the complete destruction of Bordermarch when the island which housed it sank into the sea. Sentri, along with the lord and  lady of the doomed keep, eventually came to resettle in Serpent's Hold, where the warrior assisted in the war effort against the gargoyles, awaiting the day when the Avatar would again return. Come the days of Ultima VI, when the hero did, in fact, sojourn to Britannia once more, Sentri again proved eager to fight at their side.

Age of Armageddon
Over the next two centuries, Sentri came to settle in Britain, earning his living by training others in the art of swordsmanship. While the ills that eventually came to haunt the realm grew into being slowly, Sentri seemed to have an inkling that all was not well in his sovereign's domain - and would comment as to the growing class inequality and Lord British's seeming ignorance of it is asked about it in Ultima VII. In this age of uncertainty, the fighting man would once more join the hero's party if asked, and would even waive his normal fees for training when traveling with the group.

It is not known what befell Sentri following the destruction of the Black Gate, as he was not among those companions destined to accompany the Avatar to the strange Serpent Isle, and he later proved absent in the dark Britannia the hero returned to in Ultima IX - having either left the world for another or succumbed at last to death. No records exist to give exposition to Sentri's ultimate fate, although an artifact bearing his name could be found during the Avatar's last travels in the realm - a pair of magical leggings, which appeared to gift their wearer with some of the legendary swordsman's alacrity, allowing them to perform longer and higher jumps.

Services
If not a member of the party in Ultima VII, Sentri will offere his training services for 30 gold coins.

Trivia

 * A "Dominic Sentre" (sometimes listed elsewhere as Santre or Sentri) appears in the rosters for the Society for Creative Anarchonism's barony of Bryn Gwlad - where Richard Garriott has been known to participate in the persona of Shamino Salle' Dacil. It may be that the Ultima VI character was based upon this person, given Garriott's penchant for giving his friends in the SCA in-game cameos.
 * In Ultima IX, Sentri did not appear as a character but was referenced briefly. A pair of unique magical leggings, called the Leggings of Sentri, allowed the Avatar to perform higher and longer jumps, when equipped.
 * In a fan-patch which alters the dialogue for Ultima IX: Ascension, the voice of Shamino informs the Avatar that Sentri has died in the war with the Guardian.