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* MedievalStasis: Although some names and stories have gone through changes between this period and ''Priory'' (such as the spelling of Ascalun/Ascalon), the technology of fighting, travel, etc seems largely unchanged 500 years ago.



* RightForTheWrongReasons: The haithwood worshippers, like the Priory sisters, refer to Galian as a deceiver and doubt the Berethnets' claim to divinity. On the other hand, their worship of the figure readers know as Kalyba isn't well-directed either.

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* RightForTheWrongReasons: The haithwood worshippers, like the Priory sisters, refer to Galian as a deceiver and doubt the Berethnets' claim to divinity. On the other hand, their worship rites to bring back the Lady of the figure readers know as Wood don't have any real mechanism of action because Kalyba is a physical being rather than a goddess, isn't well-directed even aware that she's being worshiped, and she doesn't exactly have the world's best interests at heart either.

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* DividedWeFall: One of the major problems in the second half of the book is people trying to hold on to their petty political squabbles when everywhere in the world is under a sustained siege by hostile, firebreathing dragons. This is particularly true in Seiiki, where the River Lord is more concerned with outmaneuvering the royal family than the actual plague.



* WeAreStrugglingTogether: One of the major problems in the second half of the book is people trying to hold on to their petty political squabbles when everywhere in the world is under a sustained siege by hostile, firebreathing dragons.

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* TheNightThatNeverEnds: The eruption of the Dreadmount causes a volcanic winter, leaving the sun "darkened" for the next twelve months and causing major disruption in the growing and harvest seasons (as volcanic winters in real history have done).

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* TheNightThatNeverEnds: The eruption of the Dreadmount causes a volcanic winter, leaving the sun "darkened" for the next twelve months two years and causing major disruption in the growing and harvest seasons (as volcanic winters in real history have done).



** The first third of the book concerns the various political problems and entanglements occurring worldwide, from the South's failing belief in the Priory to the struggle over Seiiki's throne in the East. And then wyrms come and torch a whole bunch of the entanglements into ashes.



** Sabran and Bardholt tried for one in spite of the family history because Sabran was anxious about the insecurity of having only one successor.

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** Sabran and Bardholt tried for one in spite of the family history because Sabran was anxious about the insecurity of inherent in having only one successor.


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* WeAreStrugglingTogether: One of the major problems in the second half of the book is people trying to hold on to their petty political squabbles when everywhere in the world is under a sustained siege by hostile, firebreathing dragons.

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The book serves as a prequel to ''Literature/ThePrioryOfTheOrangeTree'', covering the period in which the legendary Inysh queen Glorian Shieldheart earned her sobriquet. It begins some decades before the Dreadmount's eruption, covering the political situations in Inys, the East, and the South that influenced how each region dealt with the catastrophe. At the start of Glorian's story, she is a fifteen-year-old burdened by the shadow both of her admirable parents and the ignoble queens who preceded her. Beside her is Wulfert Glenn, a retainer of her father's who is burdened by his mysterious origins in the ancient haithwood. In the South, a fifty-year-old sister of the Priory named Tunuva struggles with private doubts while trying to keep others from theirs--five hundred years with no wyrms in sight have lead those within and outside the Priory to question its purpose. In the East, the royal family of Seiiki struggles to throw off the influence of the manipulative Clan Kuposa--as Dumai realizes when she is informed that she is not a cleric on a mountain but the Emperor's long-lost daughter.

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The book serves as a prequel to ''Literature/ThePrioryOfTheOrangeTree'', covering this dark time in the period in which world's history and revealing exactly how the legendary Inysh queen Glorian Shieldheart earned her sobriquet. It sobriquet--as well as how the other regions of the known world struggled to survive. The novel begins some decades before the Dreadmount's eruption, covering the political situations in Inys, Virtudom, the East, and the South that influenced how each region dealt with the catastrophe. South.

At the start beginning of Glorian's story, she is a fifteen-year-old shows little sign of becoming the legend she will be remembered as, burdened by the shadow both of her admirable mighty parents and the ignoble queens who preceded her. tyrannical grandmothers. Beside her is Wulfert Glenn, a retainer of her father's who is burdened haunted by his mysterious origins in the ancient haithwood. In the South, a fifty-year-old sister of the Priory named Tunuva struggles with private doubts while trying to keep others from theirs--five hundred years with no wyrms in sight have lead those within and outside the Priory to question its purpose. In the East, the royal family of Seiiki struggles to throw off the influence of the manipulative Clan Kuposa--as Dumai realizes when she is informed that she is not a cleric on a mountain but the Emperor's long-lost daughter.



* AlwaysChaoticEvil: Discussed. The alchemist Kiprun posits that the fire-breathing wyrms of underground origin aren't ''evil'', but that they (like the celestial dragons of the East) are an impersonal force of nature that happens to be sentient. Just as the celestial dragons are compared to weather or the ocean (forces that can be useful but are still far from tame), he posits that wyrms aren't ''evil'' the way a human being is--they're more like a sentient wildfire.



* HonorBeforeReason: When Fýredel's war against Virtudom begins in earnest, the Hróthi choose to face the wyrms head-on in battle. Glorian and the Inysh groan at this as they take a more defensive posture using Inys' network of caves and ancient fortresses.



* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Glorian plans to have a child with her friend Wulf so that she doesn't have to sleep with her seventy-year-old husband. Her husband is fully on board with this.

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* InsufferableGenius: Kiprun the alchemist. He can get away with being insolent to royalty because his innovations are so highly prized and he takes full advantage of it. He knows just how smart he is, and he's also irritated that he keeps getting hired by people who want him to work on things he isn't presently interested in.
-->"Most things I say turn out to be true."
* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Glorian plans to have a child with her friend Wulf so that she doesn't have to sleep with her seventy-year-old husband. She knows it won't matter because Berethnets never resemble their fathers. Her husband is fully on board with this.



* PosthumousCharacter: Galian Berethnet's life and choices are given more detail. As in the first book, he's used as a way to question the moral of [[Myth/SaintGeorge Saint George and the Dragon]]. Even Glorian, who believes wholeheartedly in his divinity, questions why he put such a heavy shackle on his descendants in exchange for keeping the Nameless One sealed.

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* PosthumousCharacter: Galian Berethnet's life and choices are given more detail. As in the first book, he's used as a way to question the moral of the story in [[Myth/SaintGeorge Saint George and the Dragon]]. Even Glorian, who believes wholeheartedly in his divinity, questions why he put such a heavy shackle on his descendants in exchange for keeping the Nameless One sealed.
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* GaiasVengeance: Some scholars in this book suggest that the AlwaysChaoticEvil western dragons are a form of this.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Sabran V, the Malkin Queen, Glorian's great-great-grandmother, was a horrific tyrant who terrorized her family as well as her country. Sabran VI is motivated by trying to undo the damage they did, a period known as the Century of Discontent.

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* GaiasVengeance: Some scholars in this book suggest Kiprun suggests that the AlwaysChaoticEvil western dragons wyrms, being an opposite force to the celestial dragons, are a form born from the core of this.
the earth becoming too hot before the Long-Haired Star can return with its moderating influence. The haithwood worshippers go a step farther and blame the current Age of Fire on Galian having chopped down the Lady of the Woods' hawthorn, suggesting that the siden trees act as a release valve.[[note]]It's unclear how true their belief is, since they don't have complete information about the siden trees--such as the existence of a second dead one (the mulberry) or a third, living one (the orange tree).[[/note]]
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Sabran V, the Malkin Queen, Glorian's great-great-grandmother, was a horrific tyrant who terrorized her family as well as her country. country under the justification that she was the fruit of the Saint and could do anything she liked. When her daughter Jillian took the throne, Inys' people weren't any happier because Sabran's abuse had made her angry and bitter. And ''her'' daughter Marian was bad for a different reason: growing up under two such terrible mothers left her scared of her own shadow. Sabran VI is motivated by trying has had to undo dedicate most of her life to undoing all the damage they did, a period known as the Century three of Discontent.them did.



* MysticalPlague: The draconic plague first appears in Hróth. King Bardholt initially tries to keep it secret and burn out afflicted villages. But when Wulf observes how poor sanitation is just through a few minutes of watching how people behave on an ordinary city street, it's clear why and how it spreads so quickly--the standards of sanitation to prevent spread simply do not ''exist.''

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* MysticalPlague: The draconic plague first appears in Hróth. King Bardholt initially tries to keep it secret and burn out afflicted villages. But when Wulf observes how poor sanitation is just through a few minutes of watching how people behave on an ordinary city street, it's clear why and how it spreads so quickly--the standards of sanitation cleanliness required to prevent spread simply do not ''exist.'''' [[spoiler:Research at the Priory indicates that it's caused by being exposed to too much siden externally rather than internally--it works its way ''into'' the body, causing horrific pain. Since mages and their children already have siden incorporated into their bodies through ingesting a fruit, they're immune. They rediscover a cure made by steeping blossoms from the Tree.]]

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* EvilChancellor: The Kaposa River Lord of Seiiki. His family has controlled the royal family for generations and works tirelessly to undermine Dumai and Jorodu.

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* EvilChancellor: The Kaposa Kuposa River Lord of Seiiki. His family has controlled the royal family for generations and he works tirelessly to undermine Dumai and Jorodu.Jorodu as they try to wrest power back into their own hands.



* MusclesAreMeaningful: After moving to court, Dumai frequently laments that the lack of exercise has reduced her strength and stamina (both of which were very high due to her mountain-climbing).

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* MusclesAreMeaningful: After moving to court, Dumai frequently laments that the lack of exercise has reduced her strength and stamina (both of which were very high due to her continual mountain-climbing).


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** In the East, the haze over the sun is mysterious and confusing to the people there until Dumai wakes the dragons and they inform her that it's due to the eruption of a massive volcano (the Dreadmount) on the other side of the world.


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* SupernaturalSensitivity: Anyone born to a mother who has imbibed a source of siden or sterren (or both) will carry a trace of that power and pass it on to their own children, which attunes their descendants to magical events. Glorian is able to perceive the eruption of the Dreadmount, [[spoiler:Wulfert Glenn]] has resistance to plague, heat, and cold, and Dumai can speak telepathically with dragons because of the tear her mother drank. Glorian and Sabran are also able to communicate with a "higher self" through lucid dreams, which they take to be the part of themselves that is Saint-touched [[spoiler:but it's strongly implied to be their living ancestor Kalyba]].

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* TheNightThatNeverEnds: The eruption of the Dreadmount causes a volcanic winter, leaving the sun "darkened" for the next twelve months and causing major disruption in the growing and harvest seasons (as volcanic winters in real history have done).



* RightForTheWrongReasons: The haithwood worshippers, like the Priory sisters, refer to Galian as a deceiver and doubt the Berethnet's claim to divinity. On the other hand, their worship of the figure readers know as Kalyba isn't well-directed either.

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* RightForTheWrongReasons: The haithwood worshippers, like the Priory sisters, refer to Galian as a deceiver and doubt the Berethnet's Berethnets' claim to divinity. On the other hand, their worship of the figure readers know as Kalyba isn't well-directed either.

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* BadVibrations: The second eruption of the Dreadmount is heralded a period before that when every hot spring and mudpot in the world ''boils''. This causes severe injury or death to anyone who is unfortunate enough to be bathing in a pool that had been thought to be safe.

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* BadVibrations: The second eruption of the Dreadmount is heralded a period before that presaged when every hot spring and mudpot in the world ''boils''. This causes severe injury or death to anyone who is unfortunate enough to be bathing in a pool that had been thought to be safe.



** Glorian becomes Glorian Shieldheart, the legendary queen venerated by the Inysh during ''The Priory of the Orange Queen''. [[spoiler:The losses and sacrifices she made to get there will weigh on her for the rest of her days and her faith in Galian--his strictures if not his divinity--is shaken, with her privately thinking that Carmentum had it right after all]].

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** Glorian becomes Glorian Shieldheart, the legendary queen venerated by the Inysh who saved Inys during ''The Priory of the Orange Queen''.Grief of Ages. [[spoiler:The losses and sacrifices she made to get there will weigh on her for the rest of her days and her faith in Galian--his strictures if not his divinity--is shaken, with her privately thinking that Carmentum had it right after all]].



* ChildrenAreInnocent: Dumai's rival for the throne is Suzumai, a kind eight-year-old who loves playing with her dollhouse and is happy to have a big sister for the first time. Dumai is torn between recognizing that Suzu is a tool of the River-lord and a genuine affection for her.
* DecadentCourt: The Imperial court of Seiiki is not ruled by the royal family but the Kuroposa clan, and they are ruthless towards anyone who tries to infringe on their power.

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* ChekhovsVolcano: This book covers the Grief of Ages, which the first book describes as beginning with the eruption of the Dreadmount--the ancient volcano where the Nameless One emerged for the first time. Its second eruption occurs while Tunuva and Esbar are riding through past it with the repentant runaway Yelini, and they barely escape.
* ChildrenAreInnocent: Dumai's rival for the throne is Suzumai, a kind eight-year-old who loves playing with her dollhouse and is happy to have a big sister for the first time. Dumai is torn between recognizing that Suzu is a tool of the River-lord River Lord and a genuine affection for her.
* DecadentCourt: The Imperial court of Seiiki is not ruled by the royal family but the Kuroposa Kuposa clan, and they are ruthless towards anyone who tries to infringe on their power.



* HiddenElfVillage: The Priory of the Orange Tree, as in the first book. They are much harsher in their efforts to remain a secret--in order to prevent Siyu's lover from potentially letting word out, they poison him. [[spoiler:Although Canthe manipulated that particular killing, it's stated that this is the standard procedure.]]

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* HiddenElfVillage: The Priory of the Orange Tree, as in the first book. They are much harsher in To preserve the orange tree from being used as a resource by power-hungry rulers, their efforts methods of secrecy are lethal--they're supposed to remain a secret--in order to prevent Siyu's lover kill anyone who sees or finds them by mistake.[[note]]Aside from potentially letting word out, they poison him. the royal family of Lasia, who are allowed to know of them because of their connection to Cleolind[[/note]] [[spoiler:Although Canthe manipulated that particular killing, the killing of Ansyo, it's stated that this is the standard procedure.]]



** The Kuposa clan are in a constant maneuvering war with Jorodu and the Noizokens but can't resort to open violence due to the line's claim of divinity. [[spoiler:Until the River-lord decides to ally with Taugran to become a Flesh King.]]

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** The Kuposa clan are in a constant maneuvering war with Jorodu and the Noizokens but can't resort to open violence due to the line's claim of divinity. [[spoiler:Until the River-lord River Lord decides to ally with Taugran to become a Flesh King.]]



* OutsideContextProblem: Readers who started with ''Priory'' will read Canthe's story and recognize her immediately as Kalyba. Unfortunately, the sisters of the Priory have no idea who she is and don't understand the danger she poses.

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* OutsideContextProblem: OutsideContextProblem:
** The draconic plague, which everyone knows happened during the Nameless One's reign of terror but not exactly what it involved. It first appears in the home of Bardholt's Íssyn, an elder cleric who helped him convert the country. Bardholt sends his housecarls to investigate reports of an affliction. They "rescue" the Íssyn from the plague-stricken village, not realizing she has already been infected and is merely asymptomatic--until she goes into an agonized frenzy upon reaching the "burning" stage.
**
Readers who started with ''Priory'' will read Canthe's story and recognize her immediately as Kalyba. Unfortunately, the sisters of the Priory have no idea who she is and don't understand the danger she poses.
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!These tropes have emerged from the Dreadmount:

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* PerfectlyArrangedMarriage: Sabran VI, as princess, offered her hand to Bardholt when she knew nothing more than that it would neutralize any Hróthi hostility towards Inys and that he kept looking at her during his audience with then-Queen Marian. They prove to be a loving and compatible pair, even though being rulers of different kingdoms usually keeps them apart. [[spoiler:After Fýredel burns their ship, Wulf reports that in their last moments they were holding each other.]]



* PuppetKing: Emperor Jorodu of Seiiki, which he knows full well. He spends most of the plotline in the East trying to outmaneuver the River-lord through Dumai.

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* PuppetKing: Emperor Jorodu of Seiiki, which he knows full well. He spends most of the plotline in the East trying to outmaneuver the River-lord River Lord through Dumai.
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* BadVibrations: The second eruption of the Dreadmount is heralded a period before that when every hot spring and mudpot in the world ''boils''. This causes severe injury or death to anyone who is unfortunate enough to be bathing in a pool that had been thought to be safe.

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** In the East, [[spoiler:the River-lord is defeated and Taugran the wyrm is killed. But defeating him costs the lives of seven dragons, including Furtia, the Noiziken dynasty is ended, and although Dumai may have survived, she and Nikeya cannot live together]].

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** In the East, [[spoiler:the River-lord River Lord is defeated and Taugran the wyrm is killed. But defeating him costs the lives of seven dragons, including Furtia, the Noiziken dynasty is ended, Suzumai dies, and although Dumai may have survived, she and Nikeya cannot live together]].



* EvilChancellor: The Kaposa River-lord of Seiiki. His family has controlled the royal family for generations and works tirelessly to undermine Dumai and Jorondu.

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* EvilChancellor: The Kaposa River-lord River Lord of Seiiki. His family has controlled the royal family for generations and works tirelessly to undermine Dumai and Jorondu.Jorodu.



** The Kuposa clan are in a constant maneuvering war with Jorondu and the Noizokens but can't resort to open violence due to the line's claim of divinity. [[spoiler:Until the River-lord decides to ally with Taugran to become a Flesh King.]]

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** The Kuposa clan are in a constant maneuvering war with Jorondu Jorodu and the Noizokens but can't resort to open violence due to the line's claim of divinity. [[spoiler:Until the River-lord decides to ally with Taugran to become a Flesh King.]]



* MenOfSherwood: Dumai's "court" after leaving the capital is made up of outlaws, foresters, and other common folk who have been either rejected or neglected by the River Lord's rule.



* MysticalPlague: The draconic plague first appears in Hróth. King Bardholt initially tries to keep it secret and burn out afflicted villages, but it soon spreads.

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* MysticalPlague: The draconic plague first appears in Hróth. King Bardholt initially tries to keep it secret and burn out afflicted villages, but villages. But when Wulf observes how poor sanitation is just through a few minutes of watching how people behave on an ordinary city street, it's clear why and how it soon spreads.spreads so quickly--the standards of sanitation to prevent spread simply do not ''exist.''



* PuppetKing: Emperor Jorondu of Seiiki, which he knows full well. He spends most of the plotline in the East trying to outmaneuver the River-lord through Dumai.

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* PuppetKing: Emperor Jorondu Jorodu of Seiiki, which he knows full well. He spends most of the plotline in the East trying to outmaneuver the River-lord through Dumai.



** Dumai soon learns that she is Emperor Jorondu's illegitimate elder daughter and has to become his heir to try and break the River-lord's control over Seiiki.

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** Dumai soon learns that she is Emperor Jorondu's Jorodu's illegitimate elder daughter and has to become his heir to try and break the River-lord's River Lord's control over Seiiki.
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* WarIsHell: After almost half a century of enjoyment in combat training, Tunuva is shocked at how grueling and awful real warfare is.

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* WarIsHell: After almost half a century of enjoyment in combat training, Tunuva is shocked at how grueling and awful real warfare is.is.
----
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finished the book, starting this page—it's still nowhere near complete & needs a character page

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Five hundred years after the defeat of the Nameless One by Cleolind of Lasia, the Dreadmount erupted and unleashed an army of wyrms across the world, scorching the lands all over the world with fire and plague in a period that became known as "the Grief of Ages."

The book serves as a prequel to ''Literature/ThePrioryOfTheOrangeTree'', covering the period in which the legendary Inysh queen Glorian Shieldheart earned her sobriquet. It begins some decades before the Dreadmount's eruption, covering the political situations in Inys, the East, and the South that influenced how each region dealt with the catastrophe. At the start of Glorian's story, she is a fifteen-year-old burdened by the shadow both of her admirable parents and the ignoble queens who preceded her. Beside her is Wulfert Glenn, a retainer of her father's who is burdened by his mysterious origins in the ancient haithwood. In the South, a fifty-year-old sister of the Priory named Tunuva struggles with private doubts while trying to keep others from theirs--five hundred years with no wyrms in sight have lead those within and outside the Priory to question its purpose. In the East, the royal family of Seiiki struggles to throw off the influence of the manipulative Clan Kuposa--as Dumai realizes when she is informed that she is not a cleric on a mountain but the Emperor's long-lost daughter.

Unbeknownst to all of them, the balance of forces in the world is tipping back towards fire, and it will spell disaster for all.

'''Because this book is a prequel to ''Literature/ThePrioryOfTheOrangeTree'', all spoilers for that book will be unmarked.'''
----
* AntiVillain: [[spoiler:Lord Robart Heller]] follows the ancient religion of Old Inysca, but the hawthorn worshippers know the same thing that heroic characters of both books do: Galian was a liar. He also laments the fate that Galian's descendents face and shows genuine sympathy for Glorian's lack of choice. Rather than open conflict, he and his compatriot planned to genuinely convert either Glorian or her daughter back to the old ways.
* BarrierMaiden: The Inysh only put up with the tyranny of the Malkin Queen because her blood kept the Nameless One at bay, but the falseness of this belief is discussed much more openly by everyone who doesn't follow the Six Virtues.
* BittersweetEnding:
** Wulf finds a peace in himself but [[spoiler:after losing all but one of his lith, knowing that he can only have minimal contact with his biological daughter, and he must spend the rest of his days feigning belief in the faith that he lost]].
** In the East, [[spoiler:the River-lord is defeated and Taugran the wyrm is killed. But defeating him costs the lives of seven dragons, including Furtia, the Noiziken dynasty is ended, and although Dumai may have survived, she and Nikeya cannot live together]].
** Tunuva's relationship with Esbar and Siyu survives. [[spoiler:She learns her son is alive after all. But her magic has been crippled by Canthe and countless Sisters died in the struggle]].
** Glorian becomes Glorian Shieldheart, the legendary queen venerated by the Inysh during ''The Priory of the Orange Queen''. [[spoiler:The losses and sacrifices she made to get there will weigh on her for the rest of her days and her faith in Galian--his strictures if not his divinity--is shaken, with her privately thinking that Carmentum had it right after all]].
* CallForward: The rank of Red Damsel is created during the story when Esbar declares that any initiate who slays a wyrm or wyrmspawn has leave to dye her cloak with its blood, mocking the Inysh identification of Cleolind as "the Damsel."
* ChildrenAreInnocent: Dumai's rival for the throne is Suzumai, a kind eight-year-old who loves playing with her dollhouse and is happy to have a big sister for the first time. Dumai is torn between recognizing that Suzu is a tool of the River-lord and a genuine affection for her.
* DecadentCourt: The Imperial court of Seiiki is not ruled by the royal family but the Kuroposa clan, and they are ruthless towards anyone who tries to infringe on their power.
* TheDiseaseThatShallNotBeNamed:
** The melancholy suffered by Berethnet queens crops up again when Glorian worries that she doesn't have time for the post-birth version (a.k.a. post-partum depression).
** Saghul dies of what sounds a lot like stomach cancer--a malignant growth that went unknown for years until it began to cause symptoms and then quickly killed her.
* DoomedByCanon:
** We know from ''Priory'' that Glorian will be forced to take the throne at sixteen. [[spoiler:Her parents are torched by Fýredel about halfway through the book.]]
** There are a few countries on the map in the front of the book that do ''not'' appear in ''The Priory of the Orange Tree.'' [[spoiler:The Republic of Carmentum is reduced to ashes by wyrms.]]
* {{Doorstopper}}: Like the original book, this one weighs in at around eight hundred pages.
* TheDragonsComeBack:
** The Eastern dragons have slept for generations. Although they can wake to the call of a temple bell, this is forbidden to any but the royal family due to the dragons' veneration as gods. Dumai sparks controversy in Seiiki when she rings the bell that will wake them ''all.''
** The Western dragons come back and rain fire, disease, and terror upon the landscape.
* EvilChancellor: The Kaposa River-lord of Seiiki. His family has controlled the royal family for generations and works tirelessly to undermine Dumai and Jorondu.
* FantasticRacism: Karlsten, one of Wulf's ''lith'', despises Wulf for having been discovered in the witchy haithwood. Wulf's immunity to the plague doesn't help.
* FantasyCounterpartCulture:
** In addition to those introduced in ''Priory'', there is an analogue for the Huns in the Horün. Their ruler conquered a city following a prophecy of great danger that would necessitate their people hunkering down for the long haul, but it's mentioned that some have chosen to continue their nomadic life. Hróth's similarity to Scandinavian cultures is further emphasized with Bardholdt and Wulf.
** There is some fantasy-counterpart-geography when Dumai, Nikeya, and Furtia cross an ocean strait in the far north that was once a land bridge connecting the eastern and western continents, i.e. the Bering Strait or Beringia.
* GaiasVengeance: Some scholars in this book suggest that the AlwaysChaoticEvil western dragons are a form of this.
* GodSaveUsFromTheQueen: Sabran V, the Malkin Queen, Glorian's great-great-grandmother, was a horrific tyrant who terrorized her family as well as her country. Sabran VI is motivated by trying to undo the damage they did, a period known as the Century of Discontent.
* GrimUpNorth: Hróth, a land of ice, snow, and endless clan warfare until Bardholt unified it under the first kingship. It's also where the draconic plague first appears.
* HiddenElfVillage: The Priory of the Orange Tree, as in the first book. They are much harsher in their efforts to remain a secret--in order to prevent Siyu's lover from potentially letting word out, they poison him. [[spoiler:Although Canthe manipulated that particular killing, it's stated that this is the standard procedure.]]
* HumanSacrifice: The old story of Lasia's king sacrificing his people to the Nameless One is repeated and discussed. [[spoiler:The River-lord learns it from the wyrm and sacrifices his own grandniece.]]
* ImperiledInPregnancy: Glorian has no choice ''but'' to be imperiled in pregnancy because if she dies without issue, Inys will crumble. She gets pregnant as soon as it's legal and spends the whole nine months on the run from dragons.
* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Glorian plans to have a child with her friend Wulf so that she doesn't have to sleep with her seventy-year-old husband. Her husband is fully on board with this.
* MandatoryMotherhood: Discussed. Unlike Sabran IX, who fears that motherhood will make her irrelevant, Glorian can't wait to have a child so that she will be freer to act how she sees fit without everyone worrying over the succession.
* ManipulativeBastard:
** Kalyba, as Canthe, works her way into Tunuva's trust by playing on her grief and sympathy. [[spoiler:She also sends dreams to try and sow doubt between Tunuva and Esbar, then tricks a sister into killing Anyso to drive Siyu away to widen the rift. In the end she has to resort to brute-force mind control to get what she wants fron Tunuva, however.]]
** The Kuposa clan are in a constant maneuvering war with Jorondu and the Noizokens but can't resort to open violence due to the line's claim of divinity. [[spoiler:Until the River-lord decides to ally with Taugran to become a Flesh King.]]
* TheMagnificent:
** Sabran VI, or "Sabran the Ambitious," a rare instance where ambition is a positive quality.
** Inverted with her mother Marian III, who is called "Marian the Less" for her weak-willed style of ruling.
* MusclesAreMeaningful: After moving to court, Dumai frequently laments that the lack of exercise has reduced her strength and stamina (both of which were very high due to her mountain-climbing).
* MysticalPlague: The draconic plague first appears in Hróth. King Bardholt initially tries to keep it secret and burn out afflicted villages, but it soon spreads.
* NatureIsNotNice: Unora frequently reminds her daughter "do not goad the mountain." It is an implacable force that doesn't care who is on it when cold and wind strikes.
* NeverMessWithGranny: Despite being known as timid and weak-willed during her reign, an older Marian returns late in the book with a much stronger sense of self.
* OutsideContextProblem: Readers who started with ''Priory'' will read Canthe's story and recognize her immediately as Kalyba. Unfortunately, the sisters of the Priory have no idea who she is and don't understand the danger she poses.
* PsychicDreamsForEveryone: Sabran V and Glorian both see a figure in their dreams whom they speak to for advice and solace. Sabran believes it is the Saint. [[spoiler:They actually share a link with the royal family of Seiiki, who carry a trace of sterren magic.]]
* ParentalFavoritism: Inverted with Esbar, who holds her daughter Siyu at the distance expected in the Priory. It's her aunt Tunuva who treats Siyu as a daughter figure.
* ParentsAsPeople: Sabran VI loves Glorian but deliberately refuses to be affectionate because she wants Glorian to be strong and self-reliant.
* PosthumousCharacter: Galian Berethnet's life and choices are given more detail. As in the first book, he's used as a way to question the moral of [[Myth/SaintGeorge Saint George and the Dragon]]. Even Glorian, who believes wholeheartedly in his divinity, questions why he put such a heavy shackle on his descendants in exchange for keeping the Nameless One sealed.
* PuppetKing: Emperor Jorondu of Seiiki, which he knows full well. He spends most of the plotline in the East trying to outmaneuver the River-lord through Dumai.
* RightForTheWrongReasons: The haithwood worshippers, like the Priory sisters, refer to Galian as a deceiver and doubt the Berethnet's claim to divinity. On the other hand, their worship of the figure readers know as Kalyba isn't well-directed either.
* RoyallyScrewedUp: The heavy burden laid on Galian's descendants is explored in more detail. Their advisers and subjects tend to reduce them to a walking womb, and they face very little choice in their own lives. Marian suggests that Sabran V's cruelty stemmed from this.
* SpannerInTheWorks: Whatever plans young Bardholt or the other Hróthi might have had in regards to Inys, Sabran VI interrupted with her own plan to marry him.
* SpareToTheThrone:
** Dumai soon learns that she is Emperor Jorondu's illegitimate elder daughter and has to become his heir to try and break the River-lord's control over Seiiki.
** Sabran and Bardholt tried for one in spite of the family history because Sabran was anxious about the insecurity of having only one successor.
* TragicVillain: Kalyba, who goes through this book under the name of Canthe. She [[spoiler:stole Tunuva's child and killed his father, sent deceptive dreams to several characters, and tries to steal the jewels]]. Yet all the same, she helps Tunuva and shows genuine remorse for some of the things she's done. Though she doesn't forgive her, Tunuva recognizes that Kalyba is probably the loneliest person in the world.
* UnfitForGreatness: Because the Malkin Queen emotionally abused her daughter Jillian and granddaughter Marian, neither were suited for the throne. Jillian was bitter and angry (not that she got the chance to rule), and Marian was so timid that she made a dangerously weak monarch. Sabran VI worries that Glorian might turn out badly as well and forbids contact between Glorian and Marian because of it.
* WarIsHell: After almost half a century of enjoyment in combat training, Tunuva is shocked at how grueling and awful real warfare is.

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