Dark Warlords
|
No image available.
|
|
Leader
|
The current vessel of Loptous
|
Size
|
Twelve members, reincarnated using innumerable bodies over the millennia
|
Group type
|
Group of warriors
|
Purpose
|
To serve the Lopt Empire/Lopt Sect
|
Appearance(s)
|
|
|
The Twelve Dark Warlords (十二人の魔将, Juuniri no mashou) are an enigmatic collective of warriors which once served the Lopt Empire, and later served the empire's remnants, the Lopt Sect. Over the millennia, the Warlords have existed multiple times: through an unspecified process, the Warlords are created and recreated by transforming people into them, a process performed by Lopt Empire/Sect agents; this acts as a form of reincarnation.
During the conflicts in the Thracia peninsula in the year 776, six of the Warlords were reincarnated by the Lopt Sect: Veld created Eins using the late Leidrick, while Manfroy created Zwei, Drei, Funf, Elf and Zwölf. The six incarnations were defeated by Leaf's liberation army, as was Veld. Shortly afterward, all twelve were reincarnated and set up in the defense of Yurius, the current vessel of Loptous, in their last stand against Celice's liberation army; the individuals used to create Sechs and Sieben appear to have been relatives of the Freege and Velthomer families as they possessed the respective Holy Blood. Again, they all fell.
Millennia later, the Warlords were reincarnated by Fauder and Inverse of the Gimle Cult, and some of their number were equpped with the holy weapons of the Twelve Crusaders. They were deployed under Inverse's command in order to defeat Chrom, but again failed and were slain.
Members
Gallery
Trivia
- The Warlords are named for the German words for the numbers 1-12.
- In Thracia 776, if the player kills or fails to recruit certain units, they will be the ones remade into the Warlords present there:
Etymology and other languages
Names, etymology, and in other regions
|
Language
|
Name
|
Definition, etymology, and notes
|
English (unofficial)
|
Dark Warlords
|
From the Seisen no Keifu fan translation patch.
|
|
References