McAnally's (The Community Pub) > Author Craft

I need a "Rogue's Gallery"

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AverageGuy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_occultists


I don't know how great this list is.  Some of them, like Vergil, I would never put under the legendary magician category.  A lot of them are European characters, too, and it looks like you haven't chosen European characters for your other two identities, so I don't know how much good it'll be.  But Simon Magus is there, and he's one of your examples.  It may help.

belial.1980:
Cool. Thanks for the input!

Right now I've worked out that Simon Magus is the first in the bloodline. I've got a pretty detailed bit of background for him that I think fits pretty nicely into his legend.

The 7th and latest incarnation will be an average 17 year old living in modern times.

That leaves five in between them, spaced out about 300 some odd years. Since the modern incarnation is caucasian, I'd like to not use anybody else who is. I've got two other incarnations that I definitely plan to use:

Koschei the Deathless. In my version, he's a Ket shaman with a suit of armor that looks like its made of fused human bones. (One of Koschei's nicknames was "Old Bones" because legends characterize him with a gaunt or skeletal appearance.) In the legends, Koschei got a bad rap for terrorizing virgins and maidens. In my version, they're actually demons in human form. Another possibility is that a scourge of incorporeal demons possessed young women throughout the countryside, as a means to prey on human males, and the only way he could save these girls' souls was to kill them, thereby exorcising the demons within. Obviously this didn't win him any popularity contests, but he decided it was better to save their souls and mourn their deaths.

The other incarnation I had in mind was Fafnir, the dragon. This Norse legend probably has an oral tradition dating back for many centuries, but since it wasn't published till around 700 AD, I have a little leeway to "fudge" and make the actual occurance take place sometime a few centuries before that.

In breif, Fafnir was a revered dwarf who changed himself into a dragon, collected a massive horde of stolen, cursed gold and was slain by the hero Sigurd.

In my version, the "dragon" is actually Fafnir's demon familiar, and she's not a dragon per se, but something big and awful, and able to control fire, so what else would they call her but a dragon? I'm toying with the idea of making Fafnir a human being of different ethnicity than the Norse folk, who has somehow ended up far, far from home. (Orphaned son of an Arab explorer who predated Ahmad ibn Fadlān by a few hundred years?) His dark skin and shorter stature elicit some xenophobic prejudices. This, coupled with some elaboration on the part of story tellers all work to make him the dwarf of legend.

Sigurd won't slay Fafnir or his familiar, but rather they'll work together to face some common foe. However, Sigurd ends up being a braggart who takes all the credit, and adds the bit about slaying Fafnir to boost his own reputation.

Details are still sparse, as this is very early in the developmental stage, but that's the sort of thing I'm leaning towards.







Quantus:
There was a decent indy flick called the The Ring Of The Nibelungs about that legend.  Benno Fürmann plays Sigfried (another name for Sigurd) while Kristanna Loken plays Brunnhild.  It was quite entertaining, much more so than Beowulf

Agravaine:
Julian the Apostate

Shecky:
Pretty much any traitor whose treachery galvanized/motivated people to fix something (cf. Benedict Arnold). There's even religious theory that holds Judas' act was a holy one because it eventually created the martyr reborn for expiation, etc.

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