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'''Sortiarius''' (roughly the Latin word for "Sorcerer"), also called the '''Planet of the Sorcerers''', is the [[Daemon World]] that serves as home and headquarters of the [[Thousand Sons]] Legion after the Burning of Prospero, which, evidenced by that battle's name, left their old home of [[Prospero]] destroyed by the [[Space Wolves]]. Sortiarius was a [[Daemon World]] in the [[Eye of Terror]], and Tzeentch had put the "Reserved" sign down on it when he first got his hands/feathers/tentacles on it.
[[File:Sortiarius.jpg|400px|right|thumb|Welcome to Sortiarius! Expect free mutations and warp fuckery with none of the safety precautions!]]


The arrival of the Thousand Sons was more or less by accident ([[Tzeentch|but not really]]), caused by being chased from their old home by Loyalist allies after they faithfully did their duty to the Emperor ([http://wh40k.lexicanum.com/wiki/Council_of_Nikaea but not really]). When driven from their home, Magnus had his surviving sons and what remaining humans they could take with them into the central pyramid, then he said the magic word, and the whole damn building and the surrounding districts were thrown through the warp and ended up on a strange new world. Once they set foot on the planet, the Thousand Sons found that their powers had expanded, increasing their psychic potential and finding that they now had access to powers outside of the domain their specialized cult. It also meant that mutation was a major problem - until Ahriman took charge of the situation, but that's a different story.
'''Sortiarius''' (roughly the Latin word for "Sorcerer", also called the '''Planet of the Sorcerers''') is the [[Daemon World]] that serves as home and headquarters of the [[Thousand Sons]] Legion after the Burning of Prospero, after leaving their old home of [[Prospero]] was, evidenced by that battle's name, destroyed by the [[Space Wolves]]. Sortiarius was originally an unnamed and unpopulated [[Daemon World]] in the [[Eye of Terror]], and Tzeentch had put the "Reserved" sign down on it when he first got his hands/feathers/tentacles on it.


When the Thousand Sons arrived, Sortiarius was uninhabited, but they eventually built it up with materials and slaves taken in raids across realspace, now settled with a twisted mockery of their old home city of Tizca. Every Thousand Son who could be bothered (i.e. only the Sorcerers) now has his own Wizard's Tower. The main population is comprised of humans, the descendants of the original Prosperine humans, who still serve as the Sons's servants and occasionally in the Spire Guard auxiliaries, and the slaves that have been taken through raids into real space over the years (though calling any group but for the freshest of captives "human" is probably inaccurate). Most of the humans that live on Sortiarius have mutated into [[Beastmen]] ([[Beastmen (40k)|IN SPACE]]), though for the most part they are a lot more civilized and smarter than the Beastmen of WFB. Most of the Tzaangor (beastmen of Tzeentch) are "wild", living and preying on the blasted planes of Sortiarius, but Sons do occasionally recruit/press gang/enslave some to serve as enforcers and crew on their ships. Tzaangor are actually quite good at it by virtue of being much more intelligent and disciplined than most other beastmen - Abaddon himself recognized Sortiarius Tzaangors as some of the best shipwrights of the Eye. Assuming their social structure is anything like Prospero's, aside from the mutations, life is probably better for the humans, mutants, and beastmen on Sortiarius than on just about any planet in the Imperium.
==History and Overview==
[[File:Prospero_Map.JPG|400px|left|thumb|Location of Prospero/Sortiarius.]]
The arrival of the Thousand Sons was more or less by accident ([[Tzeentch|but not really]]), caused by being chased from their old home by Loyalist allies. Tragically, this was after the Thousand Sons only faithfully did their duty to the Emperor ([[Council of Nikaea|but not really]]). At the end of the battle, Magnus ordered his surviving sons and what remaining humans they could take with them to go into the central pyramid, then he said the magic word, and the whole damn building and the surrounding districts were thrown through the Warp and ended up on a strange new world. Once they set foot on the planet, the Thousand Sons found that their powers had expanded, increasing their psychic potential and finding that they now had access to powers beyond the domain of their specialized cult. It also meant that mutation was a major problem - until Ahriman [[Rubric Marines|took charge of the situation]], but that's another story.


The world is ruled by [[Magnus]], who has the [[Cards Against Humanity|biggest, blackest tower]], and it has a giant eye hovering above it. We would wonder if the writers were even trying, but this was written before the LotR movies, leaving only the more credentialed neckbeards to wonder if the writers were even trying. Back on topic, Magnus is like most of the other traitor Primarchs, who are the daemonic equivalent of the guy who rarely ever gets off of his couch except for when he really needs [[/tg/ gets shit done|to get shit done]]. He spends most of his time playing the Great Game, leaving him to plan and scheme and occasionally yell orders to the Thousand Sons who've stayed on Sortiarius.
[[File:ProsperoSystem.jpg|400px|left|thumb|Star chart of the Prospero System.]]


Sortiarius also likely holds quite a few treasure troves of knowledge, arcane artifacts, strange valuables, and lots of otherwise weird shit. They also do low key recruiting there, training any young, prospective psykers and weeding out all but the physically and mentally most capable, and elevating them into Sorcerers. It's also hypothesized that they resurrect fallen [[Rubric Marines]], [[Grimdark|keeping their dead from resting and shackled to the will of their former brothers]], but then there's always been as many Rubric Marines as needed, as long as the writers had Thousand Sons Sorcerers who needed minions, so take that for what it's worth.
When the Thousand Sons arrived, Sortiarius was inhabited by wyrms which the legion slew when they first entered the planet's surface though if any of those wyrms still exist is unknown, it was undeveloped but they eventually built it up with materials and slaves taken in raids across realspace. Tizca, now more or less relocated, is now rebuilt into a twisted mockery of its old self. Every Thousand Son who could be bothered (i.e. only the Sorcerers) now has his own Wizard's Tower. The main population is comprised of humans, originally the descendants of the original Prosperine humans who still serve as the Sons' servants and occasionally in the Spire Guard auxiliaries, as well as the slaves that have been taken through raids into real space over the years. (Though calling any group but for the freshest of captives "human" is probably inaccurate.) Most of the humans that live on Sortiarius have mutated into [[Beastmen (40k)#Tzaangors|Beastmen]] (IN SPACE), though for the most part they are a lot more civilized and smarter than the Beastmen of WFB. Many of the Tzaangors (beastmen of Tzeentch) are "wild", living and preying on the blasted planes of Sortiarius, but the Sons do occasionally recruit or enslave some to serve as enforcers and crew on their ships. Tzaangors are actually quite good at it by virtue of being much more intelligent and disciplined than most other beastmen, also notable for being very capable when it comes to formulating complex battle plans - Abaddon himself recognized Sortiarius Tzaangors as some of the best shipwrights of the Eye. Assuming their social structure is anything like Prospero's, life is probably better for the humans, mutants, and beastmen on Sortiarius than on many planets in the Imperium if they manage to stave off death or insanity from living in an actively hostile hellscape.


Not much is known about Sortiarius beyond that, but there are some known details. Want Wizard's Towers? They got those. Want mutants? They got those. Want a sky made of fire the color of a kaleidoscope on crack? Want ambiance made of the screams of the damned? No? They got that anyway. The planet even has a ring made of souls who died by deceit. Yeah. It's a pretty fucked up place. And there's plenty more weird shit to go around.
The world is ruled by [[Magnus]], who has the [[Cards Against Humanity|biggest, blackest tower]], and it has a giant eye hovering above it. We would wonder if the writers were even trying, but this was written before the LotR movies, leaving only the more credentialed neckbeards to wonder if the writers were even trying. Back on topic, Magnus is like most of the other traitor Primarchs, who are the daemonic equivalent of the guy who rarely ever gets off of his couch except for when he really needs [[/tg/ gets shit done|to get shit done]]. He spends most of his time doing his part in the Great Game, leaving him to plan and scheme and occasionally yell orders to the Thousand Sons who've stayed on Sortiarius. While he rarely leaves Sortiarius, Magnus has occasionally lead his sons on incursions into realspace, particularly two notable invasions of Fenris. One of those lead to Sortiarius being brought into realspace, which was the opening event of the Great Game breaking out into realspace, a theme that's becoming more prominent with the [[Great Rift]] opening up. This has lead Magnus to becoming more proactive in the Long War, even if his focus is still more or less on securing dominance for Tzeentch.


Most of this is mentioned in passing by figures like [[Iskandar Khayon]] and [[Ahzek Ahriman]], or from a Thousand Sons short story: there've always been few references and only oblique descriptions of Sortiarius. Oh, and it was only called "The Planet of the Sorcerers" until [[Aaron Dembski-Bowden|Aaron]] gave it a proper name in 2014. Graham McNeil, however, doesn't use it, even stating that to the Thousand Sons no name for the world sticks for very long.
Sortiarius also likely holds quite a few treasure troves of knowledge, arcane artefacts, strange valuables, and lots of otherwise weird shit. They also do low key recruiting there, training any young, prospective psykers and weeding out all but the most physically and mentally capable and elevating them into Sorcerers. It's also hypothesized that they resurrect fallen [[Rubric Marines]], [[Grimdark|keeping their dead from resting and shackled to the will of their former brothers]], but then there's always been as many Rubric Marines as needed by writers who had Thousand Sons Sorcerers who needed minions, so take that for what it's worth.


We get a brief glimpse of Sortiarius in the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUuyyVaCOzw Wrath of Magnus trailer] (though sadly, everything is rendered black and white).  
Not much is known about Sortiarius beyond that, but there are some known details. Want Wizard's Towers? They got those. Want mutants? They got those. Want a sky made of fire the colour of a kaleidoscope on crack? Want rains of blood so hard they'll take the paint off your ceramite? Want ambience made of the screams of the damned? No? They got that anyway. The planet even has a planetary ring, made of souls who died by deceit. Yeah. It's a pretty fucked up place. And there's plenty more weird shit to go around.


As of Wrath of Magnus, it is now in realspace around Prospero, bringing with it all the warp shit you'd imagine and making the galaxy flooded enough to keep certain [[Primarch|Daemonic entities]] stable.  
Most of this is mentioned in passing by figures like [[Iskandar Khayon]] and [[Ahzek Ahriman]], or from a Thousand Sons short story: there have always been few references and only oblique descriptions of Sortiarius. Oh, and it was only called "The Planet of the Sorcerers" until [[Aaron Dembski-Bowden|Aaron]] gave it a proper name in 2014. Graham McNeil, however, doesn't use it, even stating that to the Thousand Sons no name for the world sticks for very long. Because Change, geddit?
 
We get a brief glimpse of Sortiarius in the [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6adES3Z0Qag Wrath of Magnus trailer] with a full colouration being present in Gathering Storm III.
 
As of Wrath of Magnus, it is now in realspace around Prospero, bringing with it all the warp shit you'd imagine and making the galaxy flooded enough to keep certain [[Primarch|Daemonic entities]] stable. This means that Sortiarius and the entire Prosperine system is basically [[Awesome|now an independent]] mini-[[Magocracy|magocratic empire]] with its own sphere of influence called [[New Kingdom]]. Suffice to say, the [[Imperium of Man|Imperium]] [[Rage|is not too pleased with this.]]
 
==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Sortiarius inside the Warp.jpg|Sortiarius when it was still inside the Warp.
File:Cityscape of Sortiarius.png|The Cityscape of Sortiarius.
File:Pyramids of Sortiarius.jpg|Where Magnus & Company plan their schemes.
</gallery>


{{40k-Planets}}
{{40k-Planets}}


[[Category:Chaos]]
[[Category:Chaos]]
[[Category:Thousand Sons]]
[[Category:Chaos Space Marines]]

Latest revision as of 11:26, 22 June 2023

Welcome to Sortiarius! Expect free mutations and warp fuckery with none of the safety precautions!

Sortiarius (roughly the Latin word for "Sorcerer", also called the Planet of the Sorcerers) is the Daemon World that serves as home and headquarters of the Thousand Sons Legion after the Burning of Prospero, after leaving their old home of Prospero was, evidenced by that battle's name, destroyed by the Space Wolves. Sortiarius was originally an unnamed and unpopulated Daemon World in the Eye of Terror, and Tzeentch had put the "Reserved" sign down on it when he first got his hands/feathers/tentacles on it.

History and Overview[edit]

Location of Prospero/Sortiarius.

The arrival of the Thousand Sons was more or less by accident (but not really), caused by being chased from their old home by Loyalist allies. Tragically, this was after the Thousand Sons only faithfully did their duty to the Emperor (but not really). At the end of the battle, Magnus ordered his surviving sons and what remaining humans they could take with them to go into the central pyramid, then he said the magic word, and the whole damn building and the surrounding districts were thrown through the Warp and ended up on a strange new world. Once they set foot on the planet, the Thousand Sons found that their powers had expanded, increasing their psychic potential and finding that they now had access to powers beyond the domain of their specialized cult. It also meant that mutation was a major problem - until Ahriman took charge of the situation, but that's another story.

Star chart of the Prospero System.

When the Thousand Sons arrived, Sortiarius was inhabited by wyrms which the legion slew when they first entered the planet's surface though if any of those wyrms still exist is unknown, it was undeveloped but they eventually built it up with materials and slaves taken in raids across realspace. Tizca, now more or less relocated, is now rebuilt into a twisted mockery of its old self. Every Thousand Son who could be bothered (i.e. only the Sorcerers) now has his own Wizard's Tower. The main population is comprised of humans, originally the descendants of the original Prosperine humans who still serve as the Sons' servants and occasionally in the Spire Guard auxiliaries, as well as the slaves that have been taken through raids into real space over the years. (Though calling any group but for the freshest of captives "human" is probably inaccurate.) Most of the humans that live on Sortiarius have mutated into Beastmen (IN SPACE), though for the most part they are a lot more civilized and smarter than the Beastmen of WFB. Many of the Tzaangors (beastmen of Tzeentch) are "wild", living and preying on the blasted planes of Sortiarius, but the Sons do occasionally recruit or enslave some to serve as enforcers and crew on their ships. Tzaangors are actually quite good at it by virtue of being much more intelligent and disciplined than most other beastmen, also notable for being very capable when it comes to formulating complex battle plans - Abaddon himself recognized Sortiarius Tzaangors as some of the best shipwrights of the Eye. Assuming their social structure is anything like Prospero's, life is probably better for the humans, mutants, and beastmen on Sortiarius than on many planets in the Imperium if they manage to stave off death or insanity from living in an actively hostile hellscape.

The world is ruled by Magnus, who has the biggest, blackest tower, and it has a giant eye hovering above it. We would wonder if the writers were even trying, but this was written before the LotR movies, leaving only the more credentialed neckbeards to wonder if the writers were even trying. Back on topic, Magnus is like most of the other traitor Primarchs, who are the daemonic equivalent of the guy who rarely ever gets off of his couch except for when he really needs to get shit done. He spends most of his time doing his part in the Great Game, leaving him to plan and scheme and occasionally yell orders to the Thousand Sons who've stayed on Sortiarius. While he rarely leaves Sortiarius, Magnus has occasionally lead his sons on incursions into realspace, particularly two notable invasions of Fenris. One of those lead to Sortiarius being brought into realspace, which was the opening event of the Great Game breaking out into realspace, a theme that's becoming more prominent with the Great Rift opening up. This has lead Magnus to becoming more proactive in the Long War, even if his focus is still more or less on securing dominance for Tzeentch.

Sortiarius also likely holds quite a few treasure troves of knowledge, arcane artefacts, strange valuables, and lots of otherwise weird shit. They also do low key recruiting there, training any young, prospective psykers and weeding out all but the most physically and mentally capable and elevating them into Sorcerers. It's also hypothesized that they resurrect fallen Rubric Marines, keeping their dead from resting and shackled to the will of their former brothers, but then there's always been as many Rubric Marines as needed by writers who had Thousand Sons Sorcerers who needed minions, so take that for what it's worth.

Not much is known about Sortiarius beyond that, but there are some known details. Want Wizard's Towers? They got those. Want mutants? They got those. Want a sky made of fire the colour of a kaleidoscope on crack? Want rains of blood so hard they'll take the paint off your ceramite? Want ambience made of the screams of the damned? No? They got that anyway. The planet even has a planetary ring, made of souls who died by deceit. Yeah. It's a pretty fucked up place. And there's plenty more weird shit to go around.

Most of this is mentioned in passing by figures like Iskandar Khayon and Ahzek Ahriman, or from a Thousand Sons short story: there have always been few references and only oblique descriptions of Sortiarius. Oh, and it was only called "The Planet of the Sorcerers" until Aaron gave it a proper name in 2014. Graham McNeil, however, doesn't use it, even stating that to the Thousand Sons no name for the world sticks for very long. Because Change, geddit?

We get a brief glimpse of Sortiarius in the Wrath of Magnus trailer with a full colouration being present in Gathering Storm III.

As of Wrath of Magnus, it is now in realspace around Prospero, bringing with it all the warp shit you'd imagine and making the galaxy flooded enough to keep certain Daemonic entities stable. This means that Sortiarius and the entire Prosperine system is basically now an independent mini-magocratic empire with its own sphere of influence called New Kingdom. Suffice to say, the Imperium is not too pleased with this.

Gallery[edit]

The Planets, Systems, Regions and Sectors of the Galaxy
Imperial Homeworlds: Holy Terra (Luna) - Sacred Mars
Primarch Homeworlds: Baal - Barbarus - Caliban - Chemos - Chogoris - Colchis
Cthonia - Deliverance - Fenris - Inwit - Medusa - Nostramo
Nocturne - Nuceria - Olympia - Prospero - Macragge
Notable Imperial Worlds: Accatran - Acreage - Agripinaa - Alaric Prime - Arkhona - Armageddon - Astaramis
Atoma Prime - Aurelia - Aurum - Badab Primaris - Bakka - Baraspine - Barbarossa IV
Belacane - Bellerophon's Fall - Belis Corona - Beseritor - Betalis III - Black Reach - Bodt
Branx Magna - Cadia - Calderis - Calth - Catachan - Chinchare - Coronis Agathon - Cretacia
Crucis - Cyrene - Death of Bianzeer - Dreah - Drenthal - Drusus' Shrine World - Dusk - Eleusis
Endymion Prime - Espandor - Equinox - Fedrid - Fenksworld - Fervious - Frostheim
Galen VI - Gantz - Ganymede - Ghosar Quintus - Grail - Gramarye - Gryphonne IV
Gulgorahd - Hale - Harakon - Hethgard - Hilarion - Hydra Cordatus - Hydraulic
Incron - Iocanthos - Isstvan III - Istrouma - Jupiter - K'otal - Klaisus - Kanak - Karrik
Kenov III - Klybo - Konor - Krieg - Kronus - Kurkaris - Laius Rift - Landunder - Loebos
Malfi - Medusa V - Mercury - Meridian - Messelina Gloriana - Mezoa - Midgardia - Minea
Mithron - Mordia - Mornax - Morwen VI - Naxos - ND0/K4 - Necromunda - Nemesis Tessera
Nemeton - Neptune - Nethamus - Novaris - Numinal - Ophelia VII - Orask - Orbel Quill
Pandrosar - Paramar V - Pavane - Percipre - Phyrr - Pluto - Port Maw - Prol IX - Pry - Pythos
Reth - Rophanon - Rocyria - Rynn's World - Ryza - Sacris - Sanctuary 101 - Saturn - Savlar
Scelus - Scintilla - Sepheris Secundus - Shaprias - Siscia - Soryth - Spectoris
St. Josmane's Hope - Tallarn - Tandaris - Tanith - Tantalus - Tartarus - Terrax
The Lathes - The Pearl Moon - Thracian Primaris - Thramas - Tranch - Tintaroth
Titan - Tsagualsa - Turtolsky - Typha-IV - Typhon Primaris - Uranus - Valhalla
Vanitor - Vaporius - Vaxanide - Venus - Vigilus - Vitria - Volonx - Vostroya
Vraks - Vyaniah - Wrack - Zayth - Zel Secundus - Zhao-Arkkad - 108/Beta-Kalapus-9.2
Chaos-aligned
or Daemon Worlds:
Bathamor - Black Marble - Bubonicus - Bulwark - Cyclothrathe - Eidolon - Exyrion
Fleshworld - Glass Moon - Iniquity - Kathalon - Medrengard - Oliensis - Plague Planet
Sicarus - Slaughtersphere - Sortiarius - The Writhing World - Triplex Worlds - Ulan Huda
World of Immortal Sorrows - Xana II
Xenos Worlds: Amontep II - Arkunasha - Arthas Moloch - Dal'yth - Lub'grahl - Mandragora - Mekslag-Ikks
Quintus - Salash'hei - Sagacity - Silva Tenebris - T'au - Taros - Tinek'la - Ursulia - Vior'los
Contested and
Other Worlds:
Falon's Lament - Kulth - Mahir - Obstiria - Ravacene - Scansion Beta - Skapula
Systems and Regions: Ghoul Stars - Halo Zone - Jericho Reach
Kaurava System - Solar System - Stygius Sector
T'au Septs - Taelus System - Ultramar
Types of Worlds: Agri-World - Craftworld - Daemon World - Death World - Eldar World
Forge World - Fortress World - Hive World - Civilised World - Tomb World