Lore:Night of Tears
This article is about the event. For the book, see Night of Tears (book).
The Night of Tears (also known as the Crying Night[1]) is the night an Elven force attacked and burned the first human city of Skyrim, Saarthal, built by the first Nordic inhabitants.[2] In retaliation, Ysgramor, the leader of the human colonization effort and the founder of the Companions, drove the elves out of Solstheim and Skyrim.[2][3][4]
The reason for the Night of Tears has been lost to time, but it is speculated that it was spurred by a discovery of something beneath the city of Saarthal, which prompted the elves to destroy the city to claim the power for themselves.[2] While it is impossible to know if this was the true cause for the Night of Tears, it was later discovered by the College of Winterhold that a powerful artifact was hidden within the ruins of Saarthal, which they dubbed "The Eye of Magnus".[5] Another theory, proposed by Imperial scholars, is that the elves feared that the humans' culture would surpass their own and so sought to drive the humans from their lands.[6]
Notes[edit]
- Reynir the Destroyer, also known as Reynir of Saarthal, claimed to have survived the Night of Tears, and sailed to Mereth with the Five Hundred Companions on the ship commanded by Ylgar, son of Ysgramor. His body was buried in the crypts beneath Windhelm.[7]
References[edit]
- ^ Monsters of Northern Folklore — Minerva Calo, Imperial Chronicler
- ^ a b c Night of Tears — Dranor Seleth
- ^ Before the Ages of Man — Aicantar of Shimerene
- ^ Fall of the Snow Prince — Lokheim
- ^ Events of Skyrim.
- ^ Pocket Guide to the Empire, 1st Edition: Skyrim — Imperial Geographical Society, 2E 864
- ^ Reynir the Destroyer