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The '''Harlequins''', or '''Rillietann''', are a unique subset of the [[Eldar]] race, who split their time between being talented battlefield fighters and theatrical performers. They exist outside of normal Eldar society and hold no allegiance to any [[Craftworld]], [[Kabal]], or other form of authority other than to their own belief in the Eldar deity [[Cegorach]], the Laughing God.{{Fn|1a}}
 
The '''Harlequins''', or '''Rillietann''', are a unique subset of the [[Eldar]] race, who split their time between being talented battlefield fighters and theatrical performers. They exist outside of normal Eldar society and hold no allegiance to any [[Craftworld]], [[Kabal]], or other form of authority other than to their own belief in the Eldar deity [[Cegorach]], the Laughing God.{{Fn|1a}}
  
==The Harlequins' Role==
+
==History==
 
[[Image:HarlequinsArt.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Harlequins battle [[Daemon]]s ]]
 
[[Image:HarlequinsArt.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Harlequins battle [[Daemon]]s ]]
Harlequins carry out several self-appointed duties since their first reappearance after the [[Fall of the Eldar|Fall]] in 641.[[M33]], the most central of which is putting on theatrical performances of [[Eldar History]]. Most notable among their performances is the epic [[Fall of the Eldar]]. Their belief system is intertwined with the Fall, as Cegorach is one of the few Eldar deities reckoned to have survived it in some way. The Harlequins believe that his intrinsic light-hearted personality ensured he kept his distance from the depravity and corruption that became [[Slaanesh]] and that he survives to this day, often taking the form of a Harlequin himself - with those that meet him in this guise only becoming aware of his presence after he has left.{{Fn|1a}}
+
Harlequins carry out several self-appointed duties since their first reappearance after the [[Fall of the Eldar|Fall]], the most central of which is putting on theatrical performances of [[Eldar History]]. Most notable among their performances is the epic [[Fall of the Eldar]]. Their belief system is intertwined with the Fall, as Cegorach is one of the few Eldar deities reckoned to have survived it in some way. The Harlequins believe that his intrinsic light-hearted personality ensured he kept his distance from the depravity and corruption that became [[Slaanesh]] and that he survives to this day, often taking the form of a Harlequin himself - with those that meet him in this guise only becoming aware of his presence after he has left.{{Fn|1a}}
  
 
As the Eldar are a scattered race, Harlequins constantly tour the domains of their species (as well as other places; Harlequins believe other species should be told the stories of the Eldar as well) in their duty to perform. The dual-aspect of their nature serves them well when abroad in the [[galaxy]], as Harlequins are reckoned to be the deadliest combatants of all the Eldar. Their acrobatic and deceptive skills, as well as their unique weapons and equipment, render them such mystifying and terrifying enemies that some of the less-developed races of the galaxy have incorporated them into their mythology as magical spirits or eldritch monsters.{{Fn|1a}}
 
As the Eldar are a scattered race, Harlequins constantly tour the domains of their species (as well as other places; Harlequins believe other species should be told the stories of the Eldar as well) in their duty to perform. The dual-aspect of their nature serves them well when abroad in the [[galaxy]], as Harlequins are reckoned to be the deadliest combatants of all the Eldar. Their acrobatic and deceptive skills, as well as their unique weapons and equipment, render them such mystifying and terrifying enemies that some of the less-developed races of the galaxy have incorporated them into their mythology as magical spirits or eldritch monsters.{{Fn|1a}}
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Since the [[Fall of the Eldar]], a crystal tome bounded with chains of light has rested upon an obsidian plinth at the heart of the [[Black Library]]. As fabled events came to pass, so those chains faded one by one until the tome opened shortly before the opening of the [[Great Rift]]. Revealed within were writings said to have been written by [[Cegorach]] itself, telling of a final act that changed utterly the tale of the Fall. Instead of the ultimate victory of Chaos in the [[Rhana Dandra]], the final act tells of Cegorach's ultimate jest that would trick Slaanesh into expending all of her energies to save the Eldar instead of destroying them. How such an event could come to pass remains unclear.{{Fn|14}}
 
Since the [[Fall of the Eldar]], a crystal tome bounded with chains of light has rested upon an obsidian plinth at the heart of the [[Black Library]]. As fabled events came to pass, so those chains faded one by one until the tome opened shortly before the opening of the [[Great Rift]]. Revealed within were writings said to have been written by [[Cegorach]] itself, telling of a final act that changed utterly the tale of the Fall. Instead of the ultimate victory of Chaos in the [[Rhana Dandra]], the final act tells of Cegorach's ultimate jest that would trick Slaanesh into expending all of her energies to save the Eldar instead of destroying them. How such an event could come to pass remains unclear.{{Fn|14}}
  
==The Company ==
+
===The Dance Without End===
The overall leaders of the Harlequins are known as the [[Great Harlequin]]s.{{Fn|2a}} Harlequins organise themselves into two standard units, the '''troupe''' and the '''masque'''. A troupe is a number of 'ordinary' Harlequins (referred to as ''troupers'') led by a Harlequin Avatar. A masque is simply one or more troupes that are accompanied by specialist performers.{{Fn|1a}}
+
''"The Dance"'' is the greatest of the Harlequins' works, telling of the [[Fall of the Eldar]]. It is performed only rarely as only a [[Solitaire]] (who often stay distant from even the rest of the Harlequins) is capable of playing the role of Slaanesh. Nine troupers dance the part of the old race, while three Avatars dance the part of the Fallen gods. As the dance reaches the climax of the Fall, the Solitaire leaps into view, appearing as Slaanesh. One by one, seven figures appear behind Slaanesh to mingle with the old race. First, four Mimes, appearing as daemons who pass their sensual and disturbing movements to the rest of the dancers. Secondly comes three dark figures, the Death Jesters, their suits displaying skeletons as they leap and slay among the fallen gods, bringing their inert forms to the feet of Slaanesh. As the last god falls, the Warlocks emanate a psychic scream that echoes through the minds of the audience. The scream becomes a laugh of madness and depravity. As the High Avatar enters, there is within the laugh, another, ironic laugh. As the Laughing God, he strolls casually onstage, laughing at the cosmic folly of the fallen. For a moment he is lost among Slaanesh's servants, but leaps clear of their tumbling to face them. One of the dancers he drags free of Slaanesh, the writhing figures on the dancer's suit dissolving and taking on the lozenge pattern of the Laughing God. The rest of Slaanesh's servants fall or flee, at which point Slaanesh confronts the Laughing God. The battle, which seems to go on forever, ends suddenly, unresolved.{{Fn|1d}}
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==Organization==
 +
The overall leaders of the Harlequins are known as the [[Great Harlequin]]s.{{Fn|2a}} Harlequins organise themselves into two standard units, the '''troupe''' and the '''masque'''. A troupe is a number of 'ordinary' Harlequins (referred to as ''troupers'') led by a [[Harlequin Avatar]]. A masque is simply one or more troupes that are accompanied by specialist performers.{{Fn|1a}} In each Masque each Harlequin belongs to one of three '''Troupe Divisions''', the Light (headstrong, aggressive, and heroic), the Dark (vindictive and flamboyant), and the Twilight (obsessively precise and detailed).{{Fn|11a}} Harlequin masques with brutal efficiency, able to operate with extreme cohesion and coordination despite lacking a formal military chain of command and having little direction upon the battlefield.{{Fn|14}}
  
Each Harlequin player belongs to one of three '''Troupe Divisions''', the Light (headstrong, aggressive, and heroic), the Dark (vindictive and flamboyant), and the Twilight (obsessively precise and detailed).{{Fn|11a}}
+
Each of the Masque's mythic plays has a battlefield counterpart, known as the '''Saedath'''. Essentially a strategic battle plan with an allegorical aspect, these inform target priority, overall strategy, and which troupe division the conflict will be led by. The appropriate Saedeath is chosen based upon mythic cycles, ritual significance, or even the time of day. The most famous Saedath is ''Cegorach's Revenge'', the military counterpart of the [[Fall of the Eldar]] which values high-speed sorrow-driven slaughter over subtlety or cunning. Other Saedath's are the ''Serpent's Blood'' (which is performed entirely by airborne Masques), the ''Hundred Swords of [[Vaul]]'', the ''Torments of the Fiery Pit'', ''Heroes Path'' (which sees a [[Death Jester]] and [[Shadowseer]] play the roles of [[Ulthanash]] and [[Eldanesh]] and a [[Solitaire]] embodying their pride), ''Faolchu's Blade'' (which sees a formation of [[Skyweaver]]s and [[Voidweaver]]s scream down upon the enemy to embody the Great Hawk's consort as she bore the sword of [[Anaris]] to [[Eldanesh]]'s hand), ''Cegorach's Jest'' (which sees Voidreakers and Skyweavers blasting a path to a "prize" to evoke the Laughing God's efforts to humble [[Kurnous]]), and ''[[Isha]]'s Weeping''.{{Fn|14}}
  
 
===The Troupe===
 
===The Troupe===
Line 46: Line 50:
 
*[[Solitaire]] ('''Arebennian''')
 
*[[Solitaire]] ('''Arebennian''')
  
==The Dance Without End==
+
===Notable Harlequin Masques===
''"The Dance"'' is the greatest of the Harlequins' works, telling of the [[Fall of the Eldar]]. It is performed only rarely as only a [[Solitaire]] (who often stay distant from even the rest of the Harlequins) is capable of playing the role of Slaanesh. Nine troupers dance the part of the old race, while three Avatars dance the part of the Fallen gods. As the dance reaches the climax of the Fall, the Solitaire leaps into view, appearing as Slaanesh. One by one, seven figures appear behind Slaanesh to mingle with the old race. First, four Mimes, appearing as daemons who pass their sensual and disturbing movements to the rest of the dancers. Secondly comes three dark figures, the Death Jesters, their suits displaying skeletons as they leap and slay among the fallen gods, bringing their inert forms to the feet of Slaanesh. As the last god falls, the Warlocks emanate a psychic scream that echoes through the minds of the audience. The scream becomes a laugh of madness and depravity. As the High Avatar enters, there is within the laugh, another, ironic laugh. As the Laughing God, he strolls casually onstage, laughing at the cosmic folly of the fallen. For a moment he is lost among Slaanesh's servants, but leaps clear of their tumbling to face them. One of the dancers he drags free of Slaanesh, the writhing figures on the dancer's suit dissolving and taking on the lozenge pattern of the Laughing God. The rest of Slaanesh's servants fall or flee, at which point Slaanesh confronts the Laughing God. The battle, which seems to go on forever, ends suddenly, unresolved.{{Fn|1d}}
 
 
 
==Equipment==
 
*{{Main|Harlequin Armoury}}
 
Harlequins posses several distinctive pieces of costuming/equipment, most notably their '''Agaith'''; false-faces. These masks come with various Eldar forms of [[auto-senses]] and [[respirator]]s, and, with the exception of the blank Warlock masks, are highly ornamented. Avatars typically possess a more advanced version equipped with holo-generators that allows it to not only adopt numerous styles, but record and replay whatever the Harlequin has seen. This is normally used to replay the death-agonies of enemies... to other enemies. These morale-breaking devices are called '''marathags''' ("Face of Death").{{Fn|1e}}
 
 
 
Even compared to other Eldar, Harlequins are graceful and lithe; they augment this natural prowess with so-called 'flip-belts' that generate a small anti-gravitic field around them and allow them to leap unnaturally high.{{Fn|1a}} They also wear [[holo-suit]]s; sophisticated substitutes for armour that also aid theatrical performance. When set to battle-conditions, whenever the Harlequin moves, their image is shattered into a cloud of crystal shards that dance and swirl around with vigour proportional to the speed the Harlequin is moving.{{Fn|1e}}
 
 
 
Harlequins are also noted for their exotic and deadly combat weapons. The most gruesome of these is the [[Harlequin's Kiss]], which resembles a sharpened tube, tapering to a wicked point, fixed to a warrior's forearm. The tube is actually filled with monofilament wires. When the Kiss is punched into a victim, the wires uncoil and flail around, slicing the victim apart from the inside.{{Fn|1e}}
 
 
 
==Notable Harlequin Companies==
 
 
[[Image:MasqueOrg.jpg|thumb|right|Organization of a Harlequin Masque]]
 
[[Image:MasqueOrg.jpg|thumb|right|Organization of a Harlequin Masque]]
 
*[[Masque of the Dance Without End]]{{Fn|6}}{{Fn|7b}}
 
*[[Masque of the Dance Without End]]{{Fn|6}}{{Fn|7b}}
Line 79: Line 72:
 
*[[Masque of the Weeping Dawn]]{{Fn|7b}}
 
*[[Masque of the Weeping Dawn]]{{Fn|7b}}
 
*[[Masque of the Winter Sun]]{{Fn|9c}}
 
*[[Masque of the Winter Sun]]{{Fn|9c}}
 +
 +
 +
==Equipment==
 +
*{{Main|Harlequin Armoury}}
 +
Harlequins posses several distinctive pieces of costuming/equipment, most notably their '''Agaith'''; false-faces. These masks come with various Eldar forms of [[auto-senses]] and [[respirator]]s, and, with the exception of the blank Warlock masks, are highly ornamented. Avatars typically possess a more advanced version equipped with holo-generators that allows it to not only adopt numerous styles, but record and replay whatever the Harlequin has seen. This is normally used to replay the death-agonies of enemies... to other enemies. These morale-breaking devices are called '''marathags''' ("Face of Death").{{Fn|1e}}
 +
 +
Even compared to other Eldar, Harlequins are graceful and lithe; they augment this natural prowess with so-called 'flip-belts' that generate a small anti-gravitic field around them and allow them to leap unnaturally high.{{Fn|1a}} They also wear [[holo-suit]]s; sophisticated substitutes for armour that also aid theatrical performance. When set to battle-conditions, whenever the Harlequin moves, their image is shattered into a cloud of crystal shards that dance and swirl around with vigour proportional to the speed the Harlequin is moving.{{Fn|1e}}
 +
 +
Harlequins are also noted for their exotic and deadly combat weapons. The most gruesome of these is the [[Harlequin's Kiss]], which resembles a sharpened tube, tapering to a wicked point, fixed to a warrior's forearm. The tube is actually filled with monofilament wires. When the Kiss is punched into a victim, the wires uncoil and flail around, slicing the victim apart from the inside.{{Fn|1e}}
  
 
==Notable Harlequins==
 
==Notable Harlequins==

Revision as of 19:36, 30 May 2018

The Harlequins, as you may or may not know, are a faction of the eldar race to whom the responsibility of remembrance falls. They travel from craftworld to craftworld, keeping the legends and ancient history of the eldar race alive through their dance, drama and martial performance. The Harlequins are both servants of the Laughing God - the only deity of their race to survive the mighty Fall - and custodians of the hallowed Black Library of Chaos.

For the Harlequins there is no distinction between art and war; they are the archetypal warrior poets, traveling the labyrinthine expanses of the webway, bringing enlightenment to their audiences and certain death to the servants of darkness.
High Inquisitor Bronislaw Czevak, Letters to the Casophilians.[12]


Eldar Harlequin[4]

The Harlequins, or Rillietann, are a unique subset of the Eldar race, who split their time between being talented battlefield fighters and theatrical performers. They exist outside of normal Eldar society and hold no allegiance to any Craftworld, Kabal, or other form of authority other than to their own belief in the Eldar deity Cegorach, the Laughing God.[1a]

History

Harlequins battle Daemons

Harlequins carry out several self-appointed duties since their first reappearance after the Fall, the most central of which is putting on theatrical performances of Eldar History. Most notable among their performances is the epic Fall of the Eldar. Their belief system is intertwined with the Fall, as Cegorach is one of the few Eldar deities reckoned to have survived it in some way. The Harlequins believe that his intrinsic light-hearted personality ensured he kept his distance from the depravity and corruption that became Slaanesh and that he survives to this day, often taking the form of a Harlequin himself - with those that meet him in this guise only becoming aware of his presence after he has left.[1a]

As the Eldar are a scattered race, Harlequins constantly tour the domains of their species (as well as other places; Harlequins believe other species should be told the stories of the Eldar as well) in their duty to perform. The dual-aspect of their nature serves them well when abroad in the galaxy, as Harlequins are reckoned to be the deadliest combatants of all the Eldar. Their acrobatic and deceptive skills, as well as their unique weapons and equipment, render them such mystifying and terrifying enemies that some of the less-developed races of the galaxy have incorporated them into their mythology as magical spirits or eldritch monsters.[1a]

The Harlequins are rumored to be among the few who know the location of the legendary Black Library and help protect it against unwanted intruders.[3] As the 41st Millennium comes to a close, more and more Eldar vanish into the Webway, forsaking their past lives and taking up a Harlequin mask.[11b]

Since the Fall of the Eldar, a crystal tome bounded with chains of light has rested upon an obsidian plinth at the heart of the Black Library. As fabled events came to pass, so those chains faded one by one until the tome opened shortly before the opening of the Great Rift. Revealed within were writings said to have been written by Cegorach itself, telling of a final act that changed utterly the tale of the Fall. Instead of the ultimate victory of Chaos in the Rhana Dandra, the final act tells of Cegorach's ultimate jest that would trick Slaanesh into expending all of her energies to save the Eldar instead of destroying them. How such an event could come to pass remains unclear.[14]

The Dance Without End

"The Dance" is the greatest of the Harlequins' works, telling of the Fall of the Eldar. It is performed only rarely as only a Solitaire (who often stay distant from even the rest of the Harlequins) is capable of playing the role of Slaanesh. Nine troupers dance the part of the old race, while three Avatars dance the part of the Fallen gods. As the dance reaches the climax of the Fall, the Solitaire leaps into view, appearing as Slaanesh. One by one, seven figures appear behind Slaanesh to mingle with the old race. First, four Mimes, appearing as daemons who pass their sensual and disturbing movements to the rest of the dancers. Secondly comes three dark figures, the Death Jesters, their suits displaying skeletons as they leap and slay among the fallen gods, bringing their inert forms to the feet of Slaanesh. As the last god falls, the Warlocks emanate a psychic scream that echoes through the minds of the audience. The scream becomes a laugh of madness and depravity. As the High Avatar enters, there is within the laugh, another, ironic laugh. As the Laughing God, he strolls casually onstage, laughing at the cosmic folly of the fallen. For a moment he is lost among Slaanesh's servants, but leaps clear of their tumbling to face them. One of the dancers he drags free of Slaanesh, the writhing figures on the dancer's suit dissolving and taking on the lozenge pattern of the Laughing God. The rest of Slaanesh's servants fall or flee, at which point Slaanesh confronts the Laughing God. The battle, which seems to go on forever, ends suddenly, unresolved.[1d]


Organization

The overall leaders of the Harlequins are known as the Great Harlequins.[2a] Harlequins organise themselves into two standard units, the troupe and the masque. A troupe is a number of 'ordinary' Harlequins (referred to as troupers) led by a Harlequin Avatar. A masque is simply one or more troupes that are accompanied by specialist performers.[1a] In each Masque each Harlequin belongs to one of three Troupe Divisions, the Light (headstrong, aggressive, and heroic), the Dark (vindictive and flamboyant), and the Twilight (obsessively precise and detailed).[11a] Harlequin masques with brutal efficiency, able to operate with extreme cohesion and coordination despite lacking a formal military chain of command and having little direction upon the battlefield.[14]

Each of the Masque's mythic plays has a battlefield counterpart, known as the Saedath. Essentially a strategic battle plan with an allegorical aspect, these inform target priority, overall strategy, and which troupe division the conflict will be led by. The appropriate Saedeath is chosen based upon mythic cycles, ritual significance, or even the time of day. The most famous Saedath is Cegorach's Revenge, the military counterpart of the Fall of the Eldar which values high-speed sorrow-driven slaughter over subtlety or cunning. Other Saedath's are the Serpent's Blood (which is performed entirely by airborne Masques), the Hundred Swords of Vaul, the Torments of the Fiery Pit, Heroes Path (which sees a Death Jester and Shadowseer play the roles of Ulthanash and Eldanesh and a Solitaire embodying their pride), Faolchu's Blade (which sees a formation of Skyweavers and Voidweavers scream down upon the enemy to embody the Great Hawk's consort as she bore the sword of Anaris to Eldanesh's hand), Cegorach's Jest (which sees Voidreakers and Skyweavers blasting a path to a "prize" to evoke the Laughing God's efforts to humble Kurnous), and Isha's Weeping.[14]

The Troupe

The Masque

File:CompendiumHarlequinOrganisation.jpg
Hierarchy of the Harlequins.

The Soloists

Notable Harlequin Masques

Organization of a Harlequin Masque


Equipment

Harlequins posses several distinctive pieces of costuming/equipment, most notably their Agaith; false-faces. These masks come with various Eldar forms of auto-senses and respirators, and, with the exception of the blank Warlock masks, are highly ornamented. Avatars typically possess a more advanced version equipped with holo-generators that allows it to not only adopt numerous styles, but record and replay whatever the Harlequin has seen. This is normally used to replay the death-agonies of enemies... to other enemies. These morale-breaking devices are called marathags ("Face of Death").[1e]

Even compared to other Eldar, Harlequins are graceful and lithe; they augment this natural prowess with so-called 'flip-belts' that generate a small anti-gravitic field around them and allow them to leap unnaturally high.[1a] They also wear holo-suits; sophisticated substitutes for armour that also aid theatrical performance. When set to battle-conditions, whenever the Harlequin moves, their image is shattered into a cloud of crystal shards that dance and swirl around with vigour proportional to the speed the Harlequin is moving.[1e]

Harlequins are also noted for their exotic and deadly combat weapons. The most gruesome of these is the Harlequin's Kiss, which resembles a sharpened tube, tapering to a wicked point, fixed to a warrior's forearm. The tube is actually filled with monofilament wires. When the Kiss is punched into a victim, the wires uncoil and flail around, slicing the victim apart from the inside.[1e]

Notable Harlequins

Images

Harlequin (1st Edition)
Harlequin Troupe
Harlequin Solitaire[5]
Harlequin Shadowseer
Harlequin Death Jester
Harlequin Troupe Master
Harlequin Trouper

See also

Sources

Uncited


Craftworld Eldar Troops
Command Avatar of KhaineAutarchsFarseersSpiritseersWarlocksExarchs
Aspect Warriors Dire AvengersFire DragonsHowling BansheesStriking ScorpionsSwooping Hawks
Dark ReapersWarp SpidersShining SpearsShadow Spectres
Troops Guardians (Storm GuardiansBlack Guardians) • Windrider SquadronsRangers (PathfindersShroud Runners) • WraithguardWraithbladesGrav PlatformSupport Battery
Phoenix Lords AsurmenBaharrothFueganIrillythJain ZarKarandrasMaugan Ra


Dark Eldar Forces
Command ArchonHaemonculusHaemonculus AncientSuccubusDraconSybarite

Court of the Archon: LhamaeanMedusaeSslythUr-Ghul

Elites GrotesquesHekatrix BloodbridesIncubiKabalite TruebornMandrakesWracks
Troops Kabalite WarriorsWyches • (Wracks)
Fast Attack BeastmastersHellionsReaversScourge

Beasts: Clawed FiendKhymeraRazorwing

Heavy Support Cronos Parasite EngineRavagerRazorwing JetfighterTalos Pain EngineVoidraven Bomber
Transports RaiderVenom
Special Characters Asdrubael VectDrazhar, Master of BladesKheradruakh, the DecapitatorLelith HesperaxLady MalysBaron SathonyxUrien RakarthDuke Sliscus