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Revision as of 23:20, 7 March 2016
The World Eaters, originally known as the War Hounds,[6] were the XII Legion of the original twenty Space Marine Legions. Their Primarch is Angron, sometimes known as the The Lord of the Red Sands[15c] or the Red Angel.[16b] The Legion was amongst the first to turn traitor during the Horus Heresy. Already known for their peerless martial savagery - thanks in part to the effects of the psycho-surgical implants known as the Butcher's Nails that most of their members possessed - the World Eaters would eventually devolve into a legion of blood-crazed maniacs dedicated to the Chaos God Khorne, glorying in violence and slaughter and with no other purpose than spilling blood and taking skulls in the name of their god. After the catastrophic Battle of Skalathrax, they were scattered into disparate warbands, and have rarely fought as a unified Legion since.[14b]
Their warriors are some of the deadliest close combat fighters in the galaxy, amongst whom are counted large numbers of the infamous Khorne Berserkers.
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Homeworld
The World Eaters did not possess a typical homeworld in the manner of many of the other Space Marine Legions. Their Primarch, Angron, was discovered upon the world of Nuceria, but the events surrounding his discovery did not lead to a unifying of the planet and his legion.[16d] The World Eaters instead retained the use of various muster posts, the chief of which was the world of Bodt. Bodt was seized by the legion during their early days, and became a principal fiefdom. A volcanic and arid world with no recorded native inhabitants, it would serve as the training ground of the Legion.[15a]
Bodt was ultimately destroyed during the Horus Heresy; a mixed Imperial strike force led by Autek Mor of the Iron Hands succeeded in crashing Bodt's lone moon into the world, causing a total extermination event that slew all those upon the surface.[20b]
History
The Great Crusade
Formation
The Twelfth Legion was formed on Terra, from no particular geographic recruiting ground. Fragmentary records do suggest however, that during the formation process of the legion, an experimental screening process may have resulted in the initial intakes being formed from the most aggressive and competitive of candidates. While this cannot be confirmed with certainty, early records of the Legion do note that it was considered a highly aggressive, hot-blooded, and savage force.[15b]
The nascent, relatively small Legion was deployed in the Unification Wars, their first recorded engagement being the Sa'afrik Liberation. However, for reasons unknown, after their initial battles they were largely held in the Imperial reserve right through the rest of Terran Unification and even throughout the conquest of the Sol System. While the true reasons for this withdrawal from the front-lines are unknown, one suggested reason was that they were simply kept off the board in case a sudden mishap in the Imperial campaigns resulted in a need for swift, fresh reinforcement. Another, more whispered proposed reason, is that they were deliberately held in check in case any disloyalty among the Emperor's troops emerged, and needed to be quickly ended.[15b]
Nonetheless, the Legion continued to grow and determinedly train for war. This dedication, as well as their savage and tenacious demeanour during the few times they were deployed in combat during this period, reportedly led to the Emperor himself dubbing the XII Legion as his War Hounds. In prideful recognition of this honour, the Twelfth adopted a red hound as their insignia.[15b]
Combat Disposition and Record
Like most Space Marine Legions, the combat disposition of the legion altered upon the discovery of their Primarch. Although, for the Twelfth Legion, this was both a relatively minor and massively damning alteration at one and the same time.
The Early Crusade
The War Hounds were finally unleashed as a legion force partly by circumstance. The Imperial colony on Cerberus rose up in rebellion, and it quickly became apparent that Space Marine forces were needed to quell the insurrection. The Great Crusade having begun, most of the Space Marine Legions had already been assigned to Expedition Fleets and sent out into the wider galaxy. The Emperor was therefore minded to activate the War Hounds, sending them to Cerberus personally, with instructions to carry his wrath to those that defied him. Cerberus was invaded at 0300 hours Terran; the all-clear signal was transmitted by the War Hounds' commander at 0808. When asked how many prisoners were waiting to be processed, the War Hounds' commander replied that he had not been ordered to take any. Attached Imperial Army troops, sent into Cerberus in the aftermath, reported discovering scenes of shocking butchery and indication of massive casualties, on both sides.[15b]
The Bloody 13th
As the Great Crusade progressed, the XIIth Legion was split in a number of independent commands, each many thousands of Space Marines strong. These detachments were notionally used as reserve elements for other Crusade forces, but are in fact recorded as being used as front-line assault troops in many successful campaigns, fighting alongside brother legions such as the First Legion, the Iron Warriors and the Space Wolves. Additionally, War Hounds reserves would be sent in to provide a killing edge to various Imperial Army formations in troublesome war-zones. These deployments created the reputation of the War Hounds; they became known Crusade-wide as vicious shock-troops, whose actions were not without cost. It was said that a War Hounds deployment had only two outcomes; glorious, victorious slaughter...or just slaughter. Additionally, rumours began to circulate that the War Hounds were intemperate with all those who stood in their path, friend and foe alike. Stories of the legion culling human regiments whose performance they found wanting began to spread. The truth of these rumours could not easily be determined; the War Hounds deliberately kept their distance from other Legiones Astartes elements where possible. The only definite fact noted about the legion during this time was that they possessed an unusually harsh code of internal discipline, necessitated apparently by their own fractious nature.[15b]
The principal concentration of War Hounds astartes (around 8,000 Legionaries) had been grouped into the 13th Expeditionary Fleet, alongside dedicated support and naval elements. As the Crusade wore on and the various Legions grew in size to the point where they no longer needed a standing reserve reinforcement force, the scattered units of War Hounds were consolidated into the 13th Fleet, upon the legion muster-world of Bodt. Added to the 13th were many other Imperial forces, especially those who had similarly dark or questionable reputations for violence, particularly Feral World and Abhuman troops. Notable additions to the 13th were the Titans of Legio Audax and the warriors of the Numen Gun Clans, both powerful elements whose conduct had fallen under a pall of suspicion and distrust. It is believed this particular grouping was a deliberate choice by the War Council to corral into one force all the Imperial elements which had shown a tendency to cause massive destruction and loss of enemy life during their campaigns, so that the Imperium had a formation at hand that could be deployed where the total annihilation of the enemy and their works was desired. The war record of all of these various forces led to the 13th Expeditionary Fleet becoming known as "The Bloody 13th" in various Imperial circles.[15c].
The Emperor is assembling a carnival of monsters for his amusement, although I doubt whoever he unleashes them upon will see the jest.
-Reportedly the Primarch Sanguinius, upon reviewing the muster rolls of the 13th Expeditionary Fleet[15c]
The Eaters of Cities
Angron, the primarch of the Twelfth, had been stranded on Nuceria, a technologically advanced planet with a poor and downtrodden population ruled over by an elite class of nobles. The most popular form of entertainment for the masses was gladiatorial duels between cyber-enhanced warriors, and destiny had it that one of the gladiator slavers would find the young Primarch. Angron was badly wounded when he was discovered, in one account surrounded by the corpses of native predators, in another surrounded by the bodies of xenos warriors.[15c], [16d].The young Angron survived his capture, and his first bouts in the gladiator pits. Initially thought of as a folly by his new masters, his unexpected prowess in the pits made them see him in a new light. As was the want on the world where the gladiators were concerned, they attempted to surgically and cybernetically enhance their slave. Angron's primarch nature meant that all of these attempts would fail; all except one. The Nucerian slavers were successful in implanting Angron with psycho-surgical devices known as the Butcher's Nails, devices which would enhance his aggression to truly supra-human levels.[15c]
The discontented Angron plotted his escape for years, before finally leading his fellow gladiators in an armed revolt. A revolt doomed to fail, however, for the forces under the nobles vastly outnumbered the gladiator band. Although aware of this eventual doom, Angron refused to countenance any other course of action. His rebel force was eventually pursued into the mountains by no less than five armies, each outnumbering his own ten times or more. It was then that the Emperor - who had been secretly watching his son's actions with pride for some time - chose to intervene. Coming to Angron, he offered him his birthright; a place by his side. To the Emperor's surprise, Angron rejected the offer, instead choosing to remain and die by the side of his gladiator brethren. The Emperor would not accept this refusal, however, and the night before the final battle he teleported Angron from the field and to safety. Angron's followers - named the Eaters of Cities - were massacred to the last man and woman on the following morning.[15c]
It is said he never forgave his father for the incident, and that the blow to his honour would eventually fester into a soul-deep wound.[15c] After Angron was spirited away by the Emperor, he was transferred to a vessel of the the awaiting War Hounds. Unlike other meetings between primarchs and their legions, Angron's first contact with his genetic sons was one of extreme violence. Lost in an apparently inconsolable rage over what had just happened to him, Angron brutally murdered every legion officer of the War Hounds who attempted to speak to him, starting with their Legion Master, Gheer. As the War Hounds officers largely attempted to speak to him in order of seniority, their senior officer cadre diminished rapidly. Eventually, the 8th Captain - Kharn - was able to both survive his meeting with Angron, and in fact even forge a tenuous bond with him. When Angron emerged, ready and willing to assume command of his legion, Kharn introduced him to his officers with the phrase "Salute the one whose soldiers were named the Eaters of Cities". One of the officers, Captain Dreagher, issued a response that would result in an momentous occurrence.[6]Primarch! General! Your warriors were eaters of cities, lord, but with you to command us the War Hounds will be eaters of worlds!
World Eaters. World Eaters. So shall you be, then, little brothers. Come with me, then, World Eaters.
-Captain Dreagher of the War Hounds legion and Angron, their Primarch[6]
The Eaters of Worlds
After Angron assumed command of his newly-rechristened legion, they once again mustered upon the world of Bodt, where Angron took stock of his forces. Always possessed of the harshest self-inflicted training regimes in the Space Marine Legions, the World Eaters went to new lengths under Angron's direction, adopting fighting pits and gladiatorial combat into their doctrines. Each warrior who passed the new tests wore scars aplenty to show it. Those who failed did not live to try again. Whatever Terran martial traditions that existed in the War Hounds were erased by Angron's new gladiatorial ones, and by the time the Primarch led his World Eaters from Bodt under their new fanged maw symbol, the World Eaters had embraced Angron's own red code of savage competition and the butchery of the weak.[15d]
Soon the World Eaters would become a byword for mass-scale slaughter and violence, their enemies not merely shot down or blasted to oblivion, but killed to a man in their streets and fortresses. Their legend for brutality became so strong that more than once non-compliant worlds would surrender at the threat of the World Eaters being unleashed upon them. Already a breed apart, Angron's legionaries began to be actively shunned by their fellow Space Marine Legions and spoken of in dread by those Imperial citizens who knew of their actions. The planets upon which the World Eaters fell were not merely crushed - they were destroyed utterly. This caused concern even among hardened Imperial Commanders, not least of whom was Primarch Roboute Guilliman of the Ultramarines, who decried the atrocities of Angron during the Cleansing of Ariggata.[15d]
Eventually these complaints built to demands for censure, especially after the legion's secret was revealed; Angron had ordered his Apothecarion to replicate his Butcher's Nails, and implant the resultant creations into the brains of his legionaries. The result of an entire Space Marine Legion 'enhanced' with the aggression engines was seen during what became known as the Ghenna Massacre; an entire planetary population massacred in one night of unparalleled violence.[15d]
Immediately afterword, Leman Russ brought his Space Wolves to confront Angron, bringing word that the Emperor wanted the World Eaters to cease implanting themselves with aggression engines, and to further urge Angron to cease his massacres. What resulted was a brief but bloody confrontation between the World Eaters and Space Wolves, with Angron besting Russ in single combat but allowing himself to become encircled and doomed to be killed by Space Wolves in the process, if they so wished. When it became clear that Angron was a lost cause and did not understand that his own failure to lead resulted in him becoming entrapped, Russ ordered a withdrawal.[16a]
After this event, the Emperor moved to intervene, reprimanding Angron and ordering the prohibition of the Butcher's Nails and similar psycho-surgery. He further ordered the World Eaters out of the main line of the Great Crusade, sending them to the northern fringes of known space to combat xenos instead of human foes. This exile, likely intended as a punishment, instead allowed the World Eaters the freedom to operate without higher Imperial observation; they did not cease from the practices the Emperor had forbidden.[15d]
After some period in this 'exile', the Emperor recalled the World Eaters to the line. Still concerned with their conduct, he turned to his favourite and most trusted son, the Warmaster Horus Lupercal, and assigned him the role of mentoring Angron and overseeing the World Eaters, in an attempt to restrain them and return them to more acceptable Imperial modes of conduct. This would prove to be a grievous mistake.[15d]
The Horus Heresy
As the hour of the Horus Heresy grew near, Horus had little problem with corrupting the bitter and unhappy Angron. The World Eaters were probably the first Legion to join the Sons of Horus in their revolt and would be instrumental in the battles of Isstvan III, Isstvan V, Shadow Crusade, and the Siege of Terra itself. Legion records claim that it was the World Eaters who made the first breach in the walls of the Imperial Palace[19a], and it is said that one of their champions, Khârn, was the first to enter said breach[Needs Citation].
Heresy Heresy Aftermath
Yet they lost the battle, and the remains fled to the Eye of Terror along with the other Traitor Legions. Angron was elevated to daemonhood and the World Eaters would continue to function as a Legion up to the Skalathrax Incident. Originally a fight against the Emperor's Children the battle escalated when Khârn attacked his fellow comrades. Refusing to fall back before the deadly cold of the Skalathrax night Khârn burned their shelters and forced a desperate fight between brother Marines for the few remaining safehouses. This divided the Legion into individual warbands, a formation they have kept ever since[Needs Citation].
Angron was last seen during the First War for Armageddon, where he lead the invasion of a Khornate host upon an Imperial forge world. He was eventually banished to the Warp for a hundred years, at the cost of the lives of a large number of Grey Knights lead by Brother-Captain Aurellian[Needs Citation].
Notable Engagements
The Great Crusade
- The Cleansing of Ariggata - Compliance action. Compliance achieved (theoretically) in concert with the Ultramarines. Roboute Guilliman spoke out against Angron in the aftermath.[5x]
- The Ghenna Massacre
- The Battle of the Eurydice Terminal
- The battle for Rangda
- The Night of the Wolf - Armed conflict breaks out between the World Eaters and the Space Wolves, including single combat between Angron and Leman Russ.
- Alpha Shalish - The 203rd Expeditionary Fleet frees the world from lacrymole occupation.[10a]
- The Cleansing of Ariggata
- The Auretian Technocracy War
- The Battle of Isstvan III - Punitive/Reconquering action. A large World Eaters force is part of the first wave of Imperial troops deployed.
The Horus Heresy
- The Battle of Isstvan III - Angron precipitates a second phase of the battle by leading the rest of his forces present down as a second wave, to wipe out the survivors of the first.
- The Drop Site Massacre
- The Shadow Crusade - Joint World Eaters and Word Bearers grand campaign throughout Ultramar.
- The Battle of Bodt - The World Eaters de facto homeworld of Bodt is destroyed by an Iron Hands-led force
- The Siege of the Emperor's Palace - Took part in the Chaos grand assault; defeated.
Post-Heresy
- The Battle of Skalathrax - Pitched battle against the Emperor's Children. Legion scattered in the aftermath.
- The Battle of Harmony
- The First War for Armageddon - Khorne invasion of the world of Armageddon; defeated.
- The Bloodtorrent War
- The Siege of Vraks
- The Cholercaust
- The Fall of Absolom Reach
- The battles for the Herakon Cluster
- The Defense of Parathen City
- The Solar Rebellion
- The 13th Black Crusade
Organisation
Even before their fall to Chaos the War Hounds were known to favour close assaults, and this doctrine only grew more pronounced under the command of Angron and the transition into the World Eaters. Angron did little to change the higher-level organisation of the legion, with the echelons (a World Eaters formation roughly equivalent to the Chapters of other legions) only undergoing a slight biasing towards line infantry once he took command. The World Eaters as a legion force could best be described as a hybrid of tactical and close assault units, also possessing significant amounts of support elements useful to close assaults, such as Terminators and Land Speeders.[15e]
In terms of combat deployment, the World Eaters were champions of the drop-pod assault, usually choosing to appear in the heart of the enemy's defences, in order to rip it apart from within. When heavy firepower was required to support such a tactic, the World Eaters were not averse to advancing under danger-close orbital bombardment or direct Titan support. While infantry assault was their primary stratagem, the legion did possess respectable amounts of armour and artillery units, and were highly adept in their use. Transports and those vehicles able to closely support infantry were obviously prevalent, and the assault doctrine of the legion was so strongly ingrained that even vehicle crew carried assault weapons as standard issue, and would often find a means to employ them.[15e]
The frequency and method of warfare carried out by the World Eaters was highly attritional not just in manpower, but materiel also. In this regard, the World Eaters had an easy means to offset losses and in fact ensure they had high supplies of arms and ammunition; the Forge World (of a sort) of Sarum considered itself an ally to the legion, and would dedicate a high portion of its output to servicing the legion forges and quartermasters. Amongst the Sarum-pattern equipment issued to the World Eaters and their allies in the 13th Expedition were the weapons known as Ursus Claws, which would appear in some preponderance aboard various vessels and walkers in the legion's employ.[15f]
The World Eaters did not employ large amounts of elite troops, but did have some special units. Notionally, the most elite formation in the legion was the Devourers, the twelve-strong bodyguard group to Angron himself. A position in the Devourers could only be achieved by the slaying of one in ritualised combat, or - if one died in battle - by an organised competition open to any in the legion.[15f] However vaunted the idea of the Devourers was (and they did have access to the best arms and armour of the legion), the reality did not exactly match the idea on paper. For a bodyguard unit to a personage such as Angron was essentially absurd, especially a bodyguard unit made up of the most dedicated killers in a legion like the World Eaters. A being as powerful as Angron barely needed a bodyguard, and even if he did, when the Nails bit, the Devourers could hardly be trusted to remain near their primarch, or he near them.[16a]
The total strength of the World Eaters was never known. Due to their high casualties in battle and rapid recruitment rates, their numbers were constantly fluctuating. A 'best guess' made by one Imperial record puts their numbers immediately before the outbreak of the Horus Heresy at around 150,000, which places the World Eaters at about a 'higher-mid' level of manpower when compared to the other legions. About 112,000 are reckoned to have been with Angron when he joined the Warmaster's fleet at Istvaan III, and of these, possibly as many as 37,000 were committed to the first wave and subsequently betrayed unto their deaths.[15f]
In the aftermath of the Heresy and the Battle of Skalathrax, the World Eaters have shattered as a united Legion and now operate as disparate warbands controlled by Chaos Lords.[5x]
Geneseed
Many scholars believe the World Eater's geneseed was corrupted from the beginning, and the legion was intrinsically damned. Others believe that there was nothing inherently wrong with the genetic make-up of the legion, and point solely to Angron and his introduction of the Butcher's Nails as the reason behind the downfall of the Twelfth Legion. While no clear truth can be discerned, it is believed that the geneseed of Angron resulted in his marines developing an almost physical need to engage in combat, and a propensity to descend into bouts of bloodthirsty madness, separate from the effects of the Nails. Regardless, after millennia in the Eye of Terror, the currently existing geneseed of the legion warriors has been corrupted beyond all possible measure.[5a]
Culture
Even as the War Hounds, the legion had an intemperate demeanour, requiring an especially harsh discipline code in order to retain effectiveness. The enforcement of punishment was carried out by the officer of those deemed guilty, but that officer needed to have the physical capability to carry it out, as well as the respect of the others under his command. War Hounds (and World Eaters) officers were not promoted on seniority, or on merit not earned in direct combat. They earned their rank by battlefield prowess and displays of personal leadership and charisma in the teeth of battle. All ranks were expected to be effective in close-range combat, even specialists. Failure in battle was not tolerated, surrender was literally never considered, and mercy to the enemy was a quick death to a worthy foe. Enemies who had proven unworthy - cowards - were to be butchered. Trial by combat was the preferred way to settle disagreements, with all parties concerned seeing both the undertaking and the result as honourable. One way an officer could achieve promotion was to challenge a senior to such a combat, with the winner taking (or keeping) the higher rank of the two. The loser...well, they would be dead.[15f]
As determined masters of close-combat, the World Eaters were skilled in the employ of practically all hand-to-hand weapons. One in particular grew synonymous with the legion however; the chain-axe. The legion favoured a broad-bladed pattern that dated back to the techno-barbarian tribes of Old Terra, and their habit of using this type of weapon grew into almost an obsession after their Primarch was revealed to be a master with the weapon type. Angron refined the chain-axe and it's use in his legion, as well as teaching his warriors new ways to kill with it, inspiring a cult of personal combat concentrated around using the weapon. The reputation of the chain-axe as a weapon grew in the Imperium thanks to the World Eaters, and its use spread to other legions as a result. At least one record opines that the chain-axe was the perfect metaphor for the World Eaters themselves; a brutal, remorseless machine with no purpose other than to kill.[15e]
The huge emphasis on personal combat was present inside the legion as well as on the battlefield. Training was with live rounds and whetted blades, often against other legionaries. Indeed, past a certain point in training, gladiatorial fights could be sanctioned up to the death. Pit-fights were not just employed as part of training; aware that his men needed to release their aggression even when not in combat, Angron allowed single combat between his legionaries to become almost ritualised inside the legion, with various rules and challenges particular to the World Eaters forming around the combats. [15e]
After a certain point, almost every legionary would undergo the voluntary implantation of the Butcher's Nails, the psycho-surgical implants that heightened aggression and pain tolerance to extreme levels. A side-effect of these devices would soon become apparent; they robbed the wearer of peace, satisfaction or joy except when stimulated in battle. While the effect of the Nails was not identical from person to person, the shared burden of bearing them would unite all World Eaters (and even their sire, Angron) in a bond of tortured familiarity. The World Eaters volunteered for the Nails, not just to receive the combat benefits, but because they wished to become closer to their primarch, and perhaps even understand him. In some sense, their embrace of the destructive brain surgery could be said to have been spiritual.[15e, 14f]
After their fall to Chaos, the legion's blood-rites and traditions swiftly became ritualised and transformed into a worship of Khorne. It is not unknown for World Eaters officers to have given themselves over to daemonic possession, and the presence of such possessed marines in legion formations is often seen as a sign of Khorne's esteem. The effect of the Butcher's Nails is also said to reinforce the World Eater's devotions to their patron, as slaying in his name is said to grant them an experience of unholy joy.[19a]
Recruitment
The standard tactics of the War Hounds, and especially the World Eaters, typically resulted in high casualty levels for the legion. In order to keep up their strength, the World Eaters were involved in continual recruitment, with Angron choosing to personally streamline and cut out elements of the standard process, in order to accelerate the viability of recruits. He was also noted to have regularly donated his own genetic material direct to his Apothecaries, in order to speed up the organ culture and implantation process, as well as ensure the stability of the grafting. These recruits were taken from various Feral Worlds and Feudal Worlds that the legion came across. [15e] Recruits were most commonly trained on the Legion's world Bodt.[20a]
In the aftermath of the Drop Site Massacre, senior World Eaters Apothecaries in cooperation with the Word Bearers arrived on Bodt, where they established bio-vats to create new warriors at a rapid pace. What resulted were rage-filled monsters of pure aggression. Initiates who survived the process awoke thinking they were a veteran of countless wars.[20a]
Noted Elements of the World Eaters
Armoury
Artifacts
Vessels
- Conqueror - Glorianna Class Battleship; Legion Flagship (pre-Heresy).[1a]
- Blood Shrike - Strike Cruiser (pre-Heresy).[1b]
- Silent Fury - Strike Cruiser (pre-Heresy).[1b]
- Gladiator - Capital Ship (pre-Heresy}.[21]
- Aggression - Cruiser (post-Heresy).[17]
Notable Members
Heresy Era
- Angron, Primarch.[5x]
- Dreagher, 9th Captain, inspired the legion name 'World Eaters'[6]
- Ehrlen, Brother-Captain, commanded the loyalist World Eaters strike force at the Battle of Isstvan III[Needs Citation]
- Gheer, Legion Master of the War Hounds, killed by Angron[6]
- Khârn, originally Captain of the 8th Company[6]
- Kunnar, 1st Company Champion, killed by Angron[6]
- Lhorke, Legion Master of the War Hounds, interred in a Contemptor Pattern Dreadnought ca. thirty years before Angron's discovery[16c]
- Macer Varren, Captain, escaped the Isstvan system and recruited by Nathaniel Garro for Malcador
- Vostigar Catacult Eres Captain
- Shabran Darr - Centurion
- Shinnargen, Captain of the 2nd Company, killed by Angron[6]
- Delvarus - Centurion
- Vorias - Librarian
- Skane - Sergeant
- Jeddek - Standard Bearer
- Kargos - Apothecary
- Gahlan Surlak - Apothecary
- Esca - Codicier
- Endryd Haar - Blackshield
- Wrathe
Post Heresy
- Angron - Daemon Prince.[5x]
- Bazrak the Frothing - Warband Leader[12][13]
- Crull - Lord of the Blood Legion of Khorne warband.[3]
- Hans Kho'ren - Warband Leader[14a]
- Headsman of Cellebos - Warband leader[11]
- Khârn – Champion of Khorne, called "The Betrayer" after his actions at Skalathrax
- Kosolax the Foresworn, supported the 13th Black Crusade[2]
- Lheorvine Ukris - Known as Firefist, commander of the Fifteen Fangs warband[18]
- Roghax Bloodhand - Warband Leader
- Skchalick - Warband Leader[14a]
- Umbragg - Warband leader
- Varlag the Butcher - Warband Leader
- Zhufor - Lord of the Skulltakers warband.[22]
Notable Known Warbands
Since the Battle of Skallathrax, many World Eaters warbands and fragments have been encountered. These include:
- Angron's Chosen
- Berserkers of Skallathrax[4]
- Blood Legion of Khorne
- Gladiator Group 138[10b]
- Lord Skchalick's Elite
- The Ravagers[9]
- Skulltakers[4]
- Skull Takers of Hans Kho'ren
- The Foresworn
- The Sanctified[4]
- Fifteen Fangs
Unique Troops
- Devourers (Heresy-Era)
- Rampagers (Heresy-Era, became Khorne Berzerkers)
- Red Butchers (Heresy-Era)
Additional Information
Related Articles
Trivia and Notes
- Angron's origin as a gladiator-turned-leader of a rebel army, and his eventual 'disappearance' from their final battlefield, draws inspiration from the historical figure Spartacus.
- Nuceria is likely a reference to a city in classical Italy, whose changing allegiances throughout the period resulted in it being sacked several times, notably by both Rome and the forces of Spartacus.
Galleries
The original colouration of the World Eaters being white and blue dates back as far as Slaves to Darkness[19a], though it was not seen in artwork or models until more recent times. In first edition, the corrupted legion was noted and pictured as wearing the "colours of Khorne"; black, red and brass.[19b] The black element of the design, not even universal in first edition depictions, would swiftly vanish. As specific Chaos Legion models largely did not exist during first edition, showcased miniatures were made from combinations of Chaos Renegade, Chaos Warriors and plastic Space Marine components. The unique visual design elements of the Legion would not come into existence until later editions.
First Edition
- StD WE heraldry.jpg
Original heraldry concepts
- StD WE.jpg
World Eater wearing the "colours of Khorne"
Third Edition
- WE 3rdEd.jpg
Miniature, Eye of Terror campaign
Loyalist | I - Dark Angels · V - White Scars · VI- Space Wolves · VII- Imperial Fists · IX- Blood Angels X- Iron Hands · XIII- Ultramarines · XVIII- Salamanders · XIX- Raven Guard |
---|---|
Traitor | III- Emperor's Children · IV- Iron Warriors · VIII- Night Lords · XII- World Eaters · XIV- Death Guard XV- Thousand Sons · XVI- Luna Wolves/Sons of Horus · XVII- Word Bearers · XX- Alpha Legion |
Sources
- 1: Collected Visions by Alan Merrett
- 2: Codex: Eye of Terror (3rd Edition), p. 16
- 3: Dawn of War: Winter Assault
- 4: Imperial Armour Volume Six - The Siege of Vraks - Part Two, p. 26
- 5: Index Astartes III
- 5a: pg. 18
- 5x: [Needs Citation]
- 6: After Desh'ea (Short Story) by Matthew Farrer
- 7: The Sabbat Worlds Crusade (Background Book) by Dan Abnett, pg. 65
- 8: Eye of Terror Newsletter 7
- 9: The Traitor's Hand (Novel) by Sandy Mitchell, Chapter One
- 10: Warhammer 40,000 6th Edition Rulebook
- 11: Deathwatch: First Founding, pg. 83
- 12: Apocalypse pg.171
- 13: White Dwarf 279 (UK), p.113
- 14: Codex: Chaos Space Marines (6th Edition)
- 15: The Horus Heresy Book One - Betrayal
- 16: Betrayer (Novel) by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
- 17: Dark Millennium (game system): Damnation's Gate - Aggression, card description
- 18: Talon of Horus (Novel) - Dramatis Personae
- 19: Realm of Chaos: Slaves to Darkness
- 20: The Horus Heresy Book Six
- 21: Horus Heresy (game system): Core Set - Gladiator, card description
- 22: Imperial Armour Volume Seven - The Siege of Vraks - Part Three, p. 17