Children of Armok: Difference between revisions
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'''Arkady Balotin''' | '''Arkady Balotin''' | ||
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[[File:Balotin A.jpg|300px|thumb|Arkady Balotin]] | |||
Affable, and balanced commander of the 2nd battalion 1st chapter. A staunch loyalist, he and some of his men become targets of the Purging, and Balotin goes on the run, eschewing his legion colours and going awol until he can ascertain what is going on inside the Children - whether Uriel himself is a traitor or not. | Affable, and balanced commander of the 2nd battalion 1st chapter. A staunch loyalist, he and some of his men become targets of the Purging, and Balotin goes on the run, eschewing his legion colours and going awol until he can ascertain what is going on inside the Children - whether Uriel himself is a traitor or not. | ||
POSSIBLY one of the 12-18 recruited by Malcador to form the Inquisition and its Chapter Militants, the Grey Knights and the Deathwatch. He dies as a Knight Errant, in mysterious circumstances, and this inspires one of the 4 original Inquisitors to direct one of his most promising first Inquisitor-aspirants to investigate Balotin's death. | POSSIBLY one of the 12-18 recruited by Malcador to form the Inquisition and its Chapter Militants, the Grey Knights and the Deathwatch. He dies as a Knight Errant, in mysterious circumstances, and this inspires one of the 4 original Inquisitors to direct one of his most promising first Inquisitor-aspirants to investigate Balotin's death. | ||
'''Ozihel Faulken''' | '''Ozihel Faulken''' |
Revision as of 07:27, 18 October 2014
Children of Armok | ||
---|---|---|
Number | XIII | |
Founding | First Founding | |
Successors of | N/A | |
Primarch | Uriel Starikov | |
Homeworld | Perfidiae V | |
Allegiance | Chaos |
This page details people, events, and organisations from The /tg/ Heresy, a fan re-working of the Warhammer 40,000 Universe.
Summary of Legion XIII, The Children of Armok
[WIP] Under a rewrite and restructure[WIP]
Tzeentch, manipulation, heavy levels of espionage, and politics - AlphaLegion meets WordBearers with Cold War era spy-games and politics thrown in.
The Children of Armok are the Original Traitor legion.
Legion Characteristics [Undergoing Rewrite]
The XIII legion is the Space Marine Legion that the least is truly known about; For every one thing you think you know about them, there is at least one other piece of evidence contradicting everything you think you know.
One thing is for certain though, nothing is ever what it seems with the Children of Armok. Or maybe it is, it really is hard to tell.
Infiltration and deceit are their strongest skills, Nothing is ever what it seems with the Children. Duplicity and deceit are their strongest suits, and they have grown in skill and power to become one of the most dangerous threats to the Imperium, having their supporters and sleeper agents embedded into all the major infrastructure of the Imperium. Why they do not use their full power is a mystery only Tzeentch and Uriel know. Maybe they love the 'great game' too much, that in their insane web of lies, they are starting to actively perpetuate it for its own sake. Of course nobody knows all of this, and to the outside eye, the Children look like a rather uninspiring legion, with no defining, or great victories and defeats to speak of. But that's exactly how the Children like it.
They are motivated by acquiring secrets, and plotting and scheming to further their own and Tzeentch's agenda's. They have no time, save passing respect for the other gods; their relationship with Tzeentch however, is wary at best. Which is partly why Tzeentch favors them as he does: he finds them so much fun to deal with... They make use of Psykers, but no more than any other Legion would, seeing Psykers as just another tool to use. They also prefer to eschew any mutations, any that become mutated are sent to join the Childrens Fallen Chapters to keep them hidden, but for the most part, mutations are extremely rare, and often concealable anyway. Uriel Starikov's greatest, most secret obsession is to gain access to the Black Library, and through the Black Augurs, has managed to broker some deals with the Dark Eldar, mostly by informing them of good places to raid for their slaves. In return they give the Children of Armok access to the webway. This clandestine invasion of the webway is why the Eldar are the Children's greatest foe - both the Eldar and the Children are engaged in a galaxy spanning clandestine war, usually fighting via proxies and the manipulation of unwitting pawns in their 'great game'.
You can bet that now matter what is happening in the galaxy, the Children of Armok will either know about it, be among the first to find out about it, or sometimes, be directly involved.
There are rumours that claim that some among the members of the Council of the High Lords of Terra themselves are under the sway of the Children. They don't seem to have any plan to use their network to do any great damage, maybe it's just a back up plan, maybe it's part of a milennia spanning plot, or maybe Tzeentch and their predisposition for intrigue and espionage has made them borderline insane, unable to stop themselves from continuing their addictive plotting by finally taking control.
Legion Organisation
++ Report Request Pending... ++
++ Clearance Challenge: Gamma. ++
++ Clearance Level: Recognised ++
++ Report Request Accepted. ++
++ Subject: Children of Armok. ++
++ Topic: Legion Organisation. ++
++ Authored by: Imperialis Logistica Corpus Logistician, Merlynn Xavius. ++
++ Accessing// ++
Foreword: Greetings reader, I am Merlynn Xavius formerly of the Imperialis Logistica Corpus
Attempting to make sense of the the inner workings and structure of the Children of Armok, one is once again forced to deal with paradox and contradiction, both by reports and the evidence left on worlds slaughtered at the hands of the XIII Legion, left wrecked and wretched in the wake of its arts of war. One report, sourced from an authoritative individual, might present the Children's organisational mechanics as highly complex and cloaked in intricate webs of secrecy far beyond any other legion; However a different report, also from reputable sources, might describe the Children's inner workings as unusually open and meritocratic in nature. Certain commonalities do however exist, particularly in accounts of how the XIII Legion fought, and to some extent trained its Aspirants and non-Astartes agents for war, but even with what we do know, there is doubt as to whether this is truth or misdirection and misinformation.
The first of these common characteristics, is the emphasis placed on unified action and interaction within its ranks. Such co-ordination and faultless loyalty was necessary to cope with the rapidly changing, offensive and defensive tactics Uriel introduced into his Legion, and the fluidity with which the Children deploy on the battlefield.
It has been reported that from their first days as Aspirants, the warrior-recruits of the Children of Armok would train and fight together as a single squad, rather than individual soldiers; the success of each marine, and even their very survival, dependent on the success of the unit as a whole.
The exercises and trials the XIII Legion's Aspirants were put through are believed to be just as deadly as any of the Astartes Legions, but required both intelligence and cooperation to overcome, so that no single Aspirant might alone survive them.
Paradoxically, despite this stress on the unit, each individual is taught to withstand torture and interrogation, and even some rudimentary principles in making a mind-probe by a Psyker a little more difficult.
A second common characteristic that can be extrapolated from observation of the XIII Legion was its supreme talents in the arts of espionage, politics, infiltration and assassination. The goal of which was to leave an enemy leaderless and fractured; helpless and unguarded before the XIII Legion's onslaught, if it finally came.
Tactics of attrition, trench warfare, static defence, and the frontal assault, are strategies eschewed by the Children, unless completely unavoidable, and even then they would only ever engage with those strategies on the XIII Legion's own terms.
When the time for an attack came however, it would be a tactical mistake to underestimate the Children of Armok's abilities in open warfare, abilities which had drawn grudging praise from both the Warmaster Hektor and Thomas Gaudin[?] in action. The tactical coherence and fluid mastery of complex stratagems deployed by the Children of Armok, especially in the realms of infiltration and covert assaults also made them masters of eloquent maneuvers, feints and ambushes, finding their beginnings in Uriels mastery of Regicide, that were then expanded on and honed down every day since.
It is unclear whether the Children ever conformed fully to the original operating structures and organisational patterns laid out for the Space Marine Legions in the Principia Belicosa at the start of the Great Crusade, and post-Heresy in the Codex Astartes.
To an external observer though, the Children bears extensive resemblance to the basic Legion patterns, although the command structure and the organisation of the XIII Legion can be discerned as being radically more fluid, complex and specialised than any other. It seems entirely probable, given the evidence available, that the individual Legionary's role and position within the division he was attached to was dynamic, and changed frequently, presumably whenever the tactical need demanded so, and perhaps had some higher purpose whose ultimate goal remains unknown to those looking in to the legion.
The Children's companies, battalions and chapters (sometimes appearing to be referred to as "Sections", "Bodies", "Groups", and "Blocks" in shifting meaning) were formalised and deconstructed seemingly at the whim of Uriel and the XIII Legion's commanders, making it impossible for anyone to gauge the strength the Children will deploy in.
Continuing this concept of formlessness, unit numerations were swapped, or used outside of the unit, and heraldry changed and adapted, personnel and resources were reassigned or removed entirely from an order of battle, only to be later again replaced.
Such organisational ebb and flow were noted not only between active deployments but also even during the course of a particular campaign. This made the Legion's strength, intentions and deployments almost impossible to gauge or track to foe and friend alike.
This practice seems to have been continued long after the Children of Armok complied with the Codex Astartes, with some questionable reports claiming that marines of successor chapters regularly changed their identifying colours and insignia with those of other chapters based from the legion, making it difficult to assess any individual chapters true strength.
This deceptive and secretive nature continues deeper, with some observers suspecting that some sightings of Uriel were actually just one of the Children marines tall enough to impersonate the primarch as a body double. Other theorists have suggested that some marines, believed to have been members of the Children's command structure, were actually Uriel himself, playing the part of a simple marine, as opposed to the primarch.
Such reports and theories are unfounded however, and how anyone could not recognise the primarch of the Children is unknown.
Exact figures for the martial strength of the XIII Legion prior to the beginning Hektor Heresy are few and far between. The few sources we do have vary wildly, some making incredible claims which may both overestimate or undervalue the Children's true manpower. The most reputable figure available, believed accurate around the time of the Istvaan Drop Site Massacre put the XIII Legion at between 120,000 and 130,000 Legionaries strong, placing it within the middle tier of Space Marine Legion strengths. Some theorists have argued that the true figure is far lower, somewhere in the 71,000 range based upon the largest concentration of Children forces ever seen in operation in a single theatre. With hindsight and diligent corroboration however, evidence of multiple simultaneous battle-groups operating in far distant locales suggests a far higher figure than either of these estimates. Numbers estimated well into the range of 190,000 Legionnaires which, if accurate, would make it one of the most formidable Legions in sheer size alone, a number obscured from both sides of the Heresy that was to follow. However, as with everything relating to the Children of Armok, separating truth from fiction is next to impossible, and while their is evidence that does corroborate the larger figure, many of the sources are unconfirmed, or unreliable at best, where the 120,000 figure seems far more credible.
I have recorded the various theorised Legion Strengths here for posterity, and because any insights we can get into the Children may help us to unravel the truth behind their deceptions; even though they are loyal, it makes me uneasy to imagine Space Marines could still be hiding secrets from the Imperium, the scope and implications of which we can only fathom.
The Legion appears to operate with only ~50% of their total forces ever campaigning together at once. The rest of the Legion being spread out across the Imperium in small self-reliant groups, regularly travelling great distances to the sectors and systems they see as areas of interest, always remaining in periodical contact with other divisions in the legion, even if that contact is through the Children's back channel intelligence networks.
The average Child of Armok will travel further in his lifetime, than 3 marines from any other legion.
They do this as a means of maintaining, extending, and culling their intelligence networks to ensure they know everything they possibly can about the galaxy, and more importantly, the players in it.
As a factor of this, the Children also spend the most time out of any Legion traversing through the warp.
From evidence gleaned from many hours searching old record, it seems that the Children use many terms for organisational force breakdown, with the 'Body' being the most regularly used term.
Although it seems interchangeable, shifting from a definition for a squad or group of squads, all the way up to multiple chapters in size.
The Children use a very dispersed organisational structure, dividing their legions into divisions, each individual division is referred to as 'a Body'.
Each 'body' is it's own self-contained, self-reliant combat force. Each 'body' is broken down further into a cell-style structure, compartmentalising each cell, and limiting their exposure, while keeping them more or less self-reliant. The 'body' is made up of the Head, Arms, Torso, and Legs.
The Head is presumably the brains of the operation. Breaking down into specific roles, such as the eyes, ears, nose, and mouth if need be.
The Arms are the muscle behind the body's operations. They do the on-the-ground shooting, and take part in the actual operations. The units committed to the field are called 'hands'. With a hand being made up of as few as 5 individual marines, and upwards in size as necessary for the scope of the operation.
The Legs do the legwork for the body as a whole. They are in charge of transportation, but are also entrusted with doing any pre-operation prep-work, ie scouting, infiltration, tailing targets etc. They operate in the field, but nearly always in support of the Arms.
The Torso makes up the largest part of the body, with reserve units to support any of the other sections as needed. They also maintain the body, including roles such as quartermaster, requisitions, armour, weapon, equipment, and vehicle maintenance and upgrading, logistics, and cleaning up after operations.
Specialist Squads
"Stalker Squads" Stalker squads specialise in reconnaissance and intelligence-gathering and were consummate masters of stealth, infiltration and sabotage deep behind enemy lines. Often remaining quiet when enemies were in sight, and reporting there location, direction, number, and armamement to command so that other forces could be assigned to destroy them, allowing the Stalker squads to remain undetected, and continue providing up to date battlefield intelligence, as well as utilising their snipers and explosive charges to take out strategic and tactical objectives.
Stalker squads were also responsible for the guerrilla operations undertaken by the Children, using their skills of infiltration and sabotage to great effect behind enemy lines, working in conjunction with a Political Operations Officer to distribute propaganda, and win the local hearts and minds, while crushing the resolve and morale of their enemies with their constant hit-and-run attacks; always striking their target and disappearing before a retaliation could be organised.
The origins of the Stalker squads come from the Iron Rangers Heliwyr squads, who would use stealth and infiltration to get deep into enemy territory and help guide allied forces and harass enemy supply lines. Where other legions reconnaissance squads were used in a purely observational role, the Heliwyr and Stalker squads turned the humble scout into a fearsome squad. The Iron Rangers often cooperated in operations with the Children, the two legions sharing an affinity for similar types of warfare, and thus the normally guarded Iron Rangers shared their experience and skills, the Children offering their own in return.
These squads then also spread to the other legions, although most were toned down from their incredibly clandestine beginnings, although still retaining the core concept and reconnaissance role; it was from these formations that the later Adeptus Astartes Scout Marines were created after the Second Founding in the early 31st Millennium.
Headhunter Squads the Headhunter squads were formed from those Legionaries who were chosen on pure merit as the best assault marksmen and close combat fighters in their Legion. Comprised of a specialised force of Space Marines, it was the job of a Headhunter Squad to identify and take out an enemy's command structure, its warlords, officers, priests, demagogues, whatever form their commanders took, and slay them with a well-placed bolt round or blade strike while the chaos of battle raged around them.
The Children of Armok Legion are said to have first crystalised this tactic and squad configuration, with the Emperor's approval, which soon spread to the other Legions, although its use sat poorly within the combat doctrine of some. Often, a Headhunter squad would be forced to rely on the briefest window of opportunity to take down their targets at close range, rather than have the luxury of distance and able sighting as a sniper in a Legion Reconnaissance Squad might have. To aid them in the kill, Seeker Squads were usually equipped with special issue ammunition (Kraken, Scorpius and Tempest bolt shells) and Combi-weapons where applicable, to better deal with their chosen victims.
Headhunter Squads in the Children are also usually the best at Urban fighting in the legion, their quick reactions, and high precision giving them the edge in the cramped battlefield conditions of urban fighting, where enemy fire can come from difficult and oblique angles. This predisposition for quick reactions and the emphasis on speed needed to function, meant that Headhunter squads would sometimes operate in scout armour, to allow them better range of movement.
Counter Tactic Units
Utilising the custom Koln pattern LandSpeeders and Schwarzefalken-Pattern Stormtalon ground attack aircaft, which were customised and outfitted for transporting troops, the Counter Tactic Units, or CTU's, undertake incredibly sudden assaults and raids on unsuspecting foes, often behind enemy lines, or in the flanks and rear of assaulting enemy forces, before their assault has finished.
Utilising the mobility offered by their transport vehicles, the CTU's strike the enemy hard and fast, hitting strategic or tactical targets quickly, then seizing and holding the ground, or remounting their transports to hit their next target.
Their targets are often designated by Stealth Squads, Insidiators, and Kukolny agents, giving the CTU's up to date intelligence to base their attacks off of.
They are the most cavalier of all the Children of Armok, and tend to focus less on espionage and subterfuge, in favour of rapidly removing and enemies ability to operate effectively.
In environments unsuited to fliers, the CTU's utilise vehicles, often favouring bikes and rhino's, dismounting to do their assigned mission before remounting and riding off.
On rare occasions they will deploy from drop pods, but this tends to be a one-use attack, and so is only used as a last resort, with the CTU switching over to a regular combat role once the ground has been secured.
Specialist Ranks
The Children have 4 distinct ranks of 'Officer' relevant to their particular set of strategies. All officers above sergeant will rotate through training in each of the 4 roles, whereby they can pick a specialisation, or put themselves onto rotation.
Being on rotation means that the marine will be given command in one of the 4 areas, on a case-by-case basis, meaning a Child of Armok officer on rotation could be put on political operations for one campaign, then in the next might be assigned to guerrilla operations, or counter-intelligence the next. Rotation is generally only staffed by those who display equal talents in all areas, and are usually candidates for higher command later on.
- GO2 - Guerrilla Operations Officer - in charge of insurgencies, working with locals, and recruiting networks on the ground. Also responsible for on the ground political based long operations that require shooting and combat.
CIO - Counter Intelligence Officer - in charge of keeping the Children's operation secure, and managing exposure to outside influences. Deals with enemy spies, and internal informants recruited by the legion.
PO2 - Political Operations Officer - In charge of political interactions, usually of a subtle nature, but also small-scale or contained/controlled operations. In charge of political analysis, and interactions of the areas they are based in. Requires above average (by the Children's standard) abilities with language and persuasion.
ICO - Intelligence Case Officer - In charge of gathering intelligence for the Children. They tend to operate alone, or with a small squad, and are often isolated from the rest of the 'body' they are assigned to. They are responsible for setting up networks, and are usually those who make the initial connections with Xenos/Rogue Traders on behalf of the legion, before passing them off to a PO2.
The Children also have 2 special roles they assign to Marines who display impressive talents in the required areas.
1 - 'Emissarius', or legion liasons - these individuals have a good grasp of both intelligence, and counter-intelligence, but excel in political interactions, and have a great deal of diplomatic and inter-personal skill. They are assigned to other Space Marine Legions, and travel with them, working as a point of contact between the legion they are attached to and the Children, usually feeding intelligence and messages to the Primarchs/Leaders they are attached with. They also spy passively on the legion they are attached to, obtaining in depth intelligence on all the key individuals, legion and unit strengths, and current actions the attached legion is undertaking. They don't always find out everything, but that isn't their role - that is covered by the Childrens non-marine agents and ICO's.
2 - The Insidiators, who are explained below.
Legion Infiltrators - The Insidiators
'Insidiators' or independent field agents - these are marines deemed to have skill sets that make them well suited to working alone or leading entire chapters outright. Displaying talent in all of the roles the Children have for officers, insidiator's are given their own jurisdiction to go where they please, and pursue the objectives they see as benefiting the Children in the short, or long-terms. They are occasionally given direct aims to achieve by their own chosen methods, but these are usually only when something needs to be done with the utmost speed and secrecy - this job falling to those most capable to achieve it. As a result, they are often on first name basis with Uriel himself, who commands the Insidiators directly. Operating under code names and aliases, they often pose as, or travel with rogue traders (or non-puritan Inquisitors post-Heresy) as they provide the insidiator with a good cover, and the means to achieve his ends.
In some cases, with Uriel's approval, the insidiator's will be assigned a 'body' to achieve their ends, posing as the higher command, thus keeping the 'Body' in the dark, and thus deniable. As a result of their covert nature, insidiators often eschew the use of their power armour, for less obvious garb or scout armour, but will always have their power armour available for any circumstance they can foresee they will require it. As a result of this, their power armour is nearly always repainted, only using the legion's colours when that serves a useful purpose.
Meta-Knowledge Notes Insidiators are believed to be recruited directly from the legions neophyte program, as no marine from any chapter can ever recognise them. In fact, the Insidiators are recruited from the ranks of Group 13. In extreme circumstances, a marine inducted into Group 13 will undergo Insidiator training before he has even seen active service with the Group.
Group 13
++ Report Request Pending... ++
++ Password Required. ++
++ //CircleOfArmok ++
++ Password Challenge: Recognised. ++
++ Clearance Level: Alpha Omega. ++
++ Report Request Accepted. ++
++ Subject: Children of Armok. ++
++ Topic: Group 13. ++
++ Welcome, Chapter Master. ++
++ Accessing// ++
Group 13 is a secret sub-group inside the Children of Armok. Only Uriel, his command staff and advisors, the Insidiators, and Chapter Masters know of their existence. All of Group 13's marines are selected personally by Insidiators, the Group 13 commander, or Uriel himself. They use different armour colours, and even have to learn and adopt different mannerisms to the Children, so that no-one could link the two. Most notably, they bear no legion emblem, their pauldron painted jet black.
The recruits for Group 13 are spirited away in the middle of operations, usually in a situation that makes it look as though they were killed, where they are written up as 'dead/missing'. Their identities are officially killed off, and they have any identifying marks removed, from fingerprints to tattoos, even old wounds are grafted up and new ones made to make them impossible to identify, then they undergo facial reconstruction surgery. Once they are completely unrecognisable, they begin their official training into Group 13, which brings them up to incredibly high levels of skill and fitness, and fostering self-reliance and initiative.
This gave rise to their own nickname, used among those who served in the G13 only: 'the Unlucky Bastards' They assume this nickname due to the fact joining the Group requires you to "die", lose all your friends, your battle honours, and all of your possessions; you lose your identity. Then you have the dirtiest, most suicidal missions the Children, maybe even any marine, has to go on. Thus casualties are high in Group 13, the kick being that no-one ever knows they existed or died - like they were never even born.
This harsh, unforgiving take on the reality is tempered by the Children of Armoks nascent humour. Thus the nickname 'Unlucky Bastards' is also used as a dark joke, with enemies treated as being 'Unlucky Bastards' too for having to face the elite Group 13. Common in-unit jokes are along the lines of "The enemy have us surrounded - now we can't miss them now, the unlucky bastards!", and "Which way to the front lines? Just drive down that road until you get blown up", and other jokes stemming from a casual attitudes towards dying caused by the high likelihood that they actually will die.
Any Group 13 marine questioned on who he is, will likely just reply with "I am an Unlucky Bastard", and nothing more.
Once training is complete, they are assigned to a section, whatever their previous rank was, they start in Group 13 as a marine/squad member.
In Group 13, there is very little room for advancement - those that survive long enough to become leaders, are by that point hardened and skilled enough that death in battle is unlikely, the only real room for advancement that offers consistent opportunity, is as an Insidiator.
Insidiators are all former Group 13 members, given almost unlimited jurisdiction and direct oversight by Uriel, and of course the Group 13 commander, whom they still operate under. Other than pursuing Legion specific aims, the Insidiators also prepare intelligence and ground work for the Group 13 troops, calling in the allocated sections when the designated target is identified and investigated. Then Group 13 hit hard, fast, and with the element of complete and utter surprise.
Group 13's purpose is black flag operations (attacks on friendly targets), assassinations, and long-term infiltration missions, as well as undertaking kidnap/capture missions, and guarding and smuggling intelligence and items deemed critical to Uriel or the Children's needs and aims. Sometimes Group 13 conducts operations against the Children themselves, but usually they are involved in attacks on Imperials - these attacks designed to turn opinion, galvanise support, or manipulate troop movements to better aid the Children, and Uriels plans.
During the Heresy, Group 13 was responsible for cleansing the relatively few loyalists in the Childrens ranks. Only Arkady Balotin and a handful of his marines escaped, being pursued all the way to Terra by a small force of Group 13 manhunter squads, where Balotin's pursuers, who he presumed to be a traitor legion unit from the colours of their armour, were forced to withdraw, leaving Balotin the lone survivor.
Group 13 remains loyal to Uriel, operating on both sides of the legion (the loyalist side, and those in the traitor ranks) But they mostly operate on the Imperial side, it being where the black operations Group is most needed.
Non-Astartes Agents: the Kokolny
++ Report Request Pending... ++
++ Alpha Clearance Required. ++
++ Clearance Challenge: Recognised. ++
++ Clearance Level: Alpha. ++
++ Report Request Accepted. ++
++ Subject: Children of Armok. ++
++ Topic: Non-Astartes Auxiliary Forces. ++
++ Authored by: Imperialis Logistica Corpus Logistician, Merlynn Xavius. ++
++ Accessing// ++
The Children of Armok make an abnormally high use of non-astartes in their ranks, surpassed by only by the Silver Cataphracts, and their Strelky in terms of numbers, but possibly not in terms of use.
Where other Legions interaction with Non-Astartes was limited to fighting alongside them, or having them under their direct command as Imperialis Auxilia, the Children utilised their Non-Astartes as espionage agents, terrorists, and saboteurs to sow anarchy and confusion in the enemy ranks, as well as provide up to date intelligence for the arrival of the Children themselves. Unlike the other legions who swore their fealty to the Emperor, the Kukolny swore fealty directly to the Children of Armok, serving them before others. Whether they do this for the (mistaken) concept of glory of being a spy, for personal gain, or for personal reasons is not entirely clear.
Believed to be called the 'Kokolny', an ancient Perfidian word believed to translate as 'puppet' or 'pawn', the Kokolny make up the largest percentage of the Children of Armoks networks of agents and assets. Whether Kokolny is the true term is under speculation, as in the few existing reports of Remembrancers and Imperialis Logistica officials, various names have been used. Kokolny being one of the most common names along with 'Chanakya', but others used are 'Peshka', 'Diandang', 'Zameya', 'Hydra', 'Colubrum', and 'Ningyo'. Other terms may also exist. It is unclear whether these terms are interchangeable, or if they represent different roles or ranks inside the Kokolny
The Kokolny's role seems to be in doing the 'grunt work', and infiltrating locations and organisations where the Children Legionaries can only remain temporarily, being the recognisable Astartes that they are.
More than just spies and assassins however, many Kokolny seem to keep their profession or job when they become Kokolny, giving the Children's networks facilitators for their operations; smugglers, legitimate and illegitimate merchants, rogue traders, hitmen, forgers, con-men, armed-robbers, criminal underbosses and enforcers, custodes officers, munitorum and other Imperial logistical and administrative officials, even Imperial Army/Guard soldiers and officers.
Even xenos are thought to have been brought into the fold of the Children's networks, presumably being identified in the same way all Kokolny are - by a discreet tattoo of a serpent, travelling in a circle to eat its own tail, usually hidden somewhere on the body, hidden by clothing, jewelry, or hair. The hands, palms, and armpits are common places to find these tattoos, but it varies so much that no true pattern can be ascertained.
Many Kokolny that are recruited undergo biochemical, cybernetic, and surgical augmentation to enhance their abilities, and to obtain the perfect disguises for where they are to be sent as undercover agents.
Others operate independently, being trained how to blend in, and being left to do so until they are contacted.
Others are highly trained, and work directly with the Children themselves, providing light infantry, manning vehicles, scouting, etc.
All recruits are trained in a facility, always referred to as the 'Greybox'. It is unknown whether there is one single facility, or a great number of these facilities scattered around every sector, as the Kokolny are believed to be recruited from all over the Imperium, making one single facility seem unlikely.
Basic Kokolny training seems to involve being instructed in intelligence, and counter-intelligence techniques, unarmed combat training, small-unit tactics, weapons training, with specialisation in the use of small weapons, such as knives, sub-machine stubbers and auto-guns, and pistols, as well as methods for making, using, and defusing explosives. Kokolny recruits also seem to be taught medicine, survival skills for harsh environments, the basics of Imperial law, and receive expert training in driving vehicles and piloting of small craft. Criminals captured that were believed to be Kokolny, have all displayed these talents along with a variety of other skills, these being the only constants.
After basic training is completed, Kokolny seem to go through voluntary specialisation training, where they may be taught skills such as forgery, smuggling, acting, disguising, methods of assassination, breaking and entry, safe-cracking, architecture, various forms of engineering, esoteric history, cryptography, how to read body language, and skills related to investigation and tracking. One claim torn from the mind of an agent believed to be one of the Kokolny, implied that the Kokolny recruits would instruct each other and their Giant Instructors (who are presumed to be Space Marines) in a very open and meritocratic manner, sharing experience and skills with everyone involved. The same mind-grab implied that the Kokolny were able to weigh in on discussions with the same weight to their words as their Giant Instructors and more experienced Kokolny members.
Some agents believed to be Kokolny have also been reported as displaying psyker abilities, usually limited to mind clouding, and wiping, possibly being used as a means for Children of Armok legionaries and their agents to walk openly in places they would normally be easily noticed. The Children themselves have been reported as having used these methods themselves, so to have taught the Kokolny would seem to make some degree of sense.
Those that are recruited into being Kokolny seem to come from a variety of professional backgrounds, although a great many seem to have military, or criminal related backgrounds.
Many are believed to be criminals, as there are many reports of prison complexes, and gulag-ships transporting penal regiments around the Imperium having been attacked, and prisoners taken.
Whether this is related to the Children of Armok or not is impossible to tell, but with so many of the captured or killed agents believed to be Kokolny having their DNA samples match known fugitive criminals, it seems a possible that the Children were involved. The implications of such a theory however, beggar belief, and in this light it seems implausible there is a link, yet when one delves through the scant available evidence, one cannot miss the potential link, although it would seem to be little more than a conspiracy theory to all but those convinced of the Children's guilt.
What missions exactly the Kokolny undertake are purely speculative, as any that have been captured and suspected of being Kokolny have never said a word to authorities, and have most peculiarly, had their minds wiped of their original identities, and seemed to be shielded from all casual mind-probing, only the most thorough of searches yielding anything relevant, most of this ,.
The mind shielding is most telling, as it indicates some form of mind reprogramming by a powerful psyker, which would presumably be far beyond the resources of any criminal organisation. However, shortly before publishing this report, in a small system near to the deathworld of Catachan, a criminal organisation operating out of the jungles of their own deathworld had a powerful psyker in their midst, blanking and shielding the minds of all the members of the organisation, so that they would never inform on their criminal brethren's operations. This would seem to prove it is within the capabilities of even a small criminal organisation, yet this could be yet another layer to the deception the Children would have us believe is the truth.
Most criminals believed to be Kokolny that are captured, yield very little to interrogation and mind probing, what we can ascertain is that they are highly trained, fanatically loyal, conditioned to withstand torture and interrogation, and rarely have any knowledge about other operatives or their masters.
Thus, with no evidence of who they work for or what their purpose is, the whole 'Kokolny' theory of the Children of Armok, is just that. A theory.
Worthy of note however, and the one thing that brings the whole theory to a close in a typical fashion, is that all those captured that were believed to be Kokolny, have been rescued and take away by unknown forces, usually by force, although sometimes through bluff and disguise.
This consistent recovery of suspected operatives makes one wonder if the Kokolny, if they exist as we believe them to, are a valuable member of the Children's legion, or a disposable asset.
++ End of Report ++
Meta-notes:
The Kukolny are recruited from all over the Imperium - they are always individuals who have displayed some level of talent in a field related to espionage or assassination, or have an unusual skill or knowledge that cannot be easily found at their level. They are looked after and trained heavily by the Children, and do the things the Children cannot do, such as infiltrate organisations, and blend into crowded places. However, they are still used in ruthlessly measured ways, and Kukolny agents are not expected to survive for more than a decade, though many still do - it all depends on how active the sector they operate in is.
They are often criminals or soldiers, but anyone with the talents or position the Children deem relevant for their operations are taken. Not all Kokolny survive the recruitment process and training, as it is quite rigourous, especially the torture and interrogation resistance training. But those that survive are highly skilled, highly motivated operatives.
The Kokolny agents skills and insights are recorded and anything new that they share is passed onto the rest of the Children legion, to further train Legion marines and Kokolny alike.
[WIP] Legion Command Hierarchy
++ Report Request Pending... ++
++ Alpha Omega Clearance Required. ++
++ Clearance Challenge: Recognised. ++
++ Clearance Level: Alpha Omega. ++
++ Report Request Accepted. ++
++ Subject: Children of Armok. ++
++ Topic: Legion Command Hierarchy. ++
++ Authored by: Imperialis Logistica Corpus Logistician, Merlynn Xavius. ++
++ Accessing// ++
Foreword: This was the hardest part of my report, as there is a veritable Logistica Librarium aisle just for reports and observations on the XIII Legion's apparent Command Structure. Thus the following can, at best, be only a theoretical guideline; There is simply too much conflicting evidence to draw any true pattern from.
Much of the information that I speak with confidence on, is only due to the insights and evidence gathered by Inquisitor Enoch Vestin, who has invested vast quantities of his time and power into investigating the Children's nebulous forms and elusive leaders. And it should be noted that, even Inquisitor Vestin is careful to add caveats to what he knows, but here I will take liberties with what he says, as his knowledge and insight is vastly superior to my own on this subject.
++
The Children of Armok seem to have an endless repertoire of command structures and various forms of complex hierarchies. However, based on the average, deduced from hundreds of reports, they have at least 2 main separate Chains of Command, either of which may be the real one, if they do only have the one. One we will call the 'official' hierarchy, recorded by the Logista Corpus and datalooms, which is of an uniform nature with the standard structure used by most legions. And another, that we will refer to as the 'unofficial' hierarchy, this being a far more complex structure, on a record authored by Inquisitor Vestin's former master, Inquisitor Harlon Zaros, before the Inquisitor was stranded in the warp. This record, though badly damaged in many places did survived, and gives those who can read between the bursts of static and harrowing screaming, a valuable insight into the possible inner workings of the Children of Armok. Though the single reference to a Group 13 is quite perplexing.
Leadership has been observed as being selected on a case-by-case basis, often given to the Marine with the most experience in the relevant field. This leads to strange phenomenon, whereby lower ranking officers are able to outrank their superiors as their expertise is deferred to in situations that are appropriate to it.
To hold any officer role in the Children a marine must have served in a minimum number of campaigns, having served in each area of the legions roles, and have experience relevant to the operation the marine is assigned to, ie having the most experience in guerrilla operations, will likely mean you are in command of guerrilla operations the next time they are needed. This has 2 main ramifications for the Children:
Firstly, their leaders are experienced and tested individuals, who have proven their talents, and thus have the utmost respect and loyalty of the men under their command. This is why the sergeants insignia is that of a veteran.
Secondly, the average experience of the average squad member is far higher than most, due to the fact that so many marines rotate through different roles as they survive campaigns, and continue this rotation through specialist roles, while only a relative handful of leadership roles are available. Leaving the average XIIIth Legionnaire skilled in all roles, if not an expert in one, which is often the case. This broad experience base is useful for a Marine, allowing them to maintain an understanding of the ever-changing strategy and tactics of the Children.
On the Razor's Edge: The Children of Armok and their Dual Loyalty
[CURRENT WIP]
This will detail how the Children are able to maintain their double agent position in the loyalists camp, while being a traitor legion, and how they work on the Traitors side of the divide.
Pending relocation to a more suitable heading/section of this wiki page.
Legion Combat Doctrine
Strategically, the Children are generalists, able to operate under any normal circumstances like any other legion can. But the Children's strength and main means of operating comes from their use of stealthy and rapid tactical assaults mixed with their long term strategic insurgencies and counter-insurgencies to weaken and manipulate their foes. They also make extensive use of espionage and political intrigue to cause confusion, and remove their enemies ability and will to fight, with the added benefit of often turning the enemy on itself with mutinies and rebellions.
Atypically to many legions, the Children always look for ways to minimize the fighting needed, by exploiting local politics, blackmailing targets, and using diplomacy to make their foes surrender or fall into line with the Imperial way. With xenos the Children often force them to leave through violence and coercion, or more commonly lull them into thinking they are at peace with the Imperials, before mounting a mass of attacks to prevent any concentrated retaliation from occurring, then mopping up the remnants.
They also are very skilled at manipulating friends and foes alike into achieving the Childrens aims for them, without the Children having had to fire a shot, or be directly involved. In the Great Crusade, the Children, using their dispersed operational breakdown, would often work in conjunction with other legions, playing the 'good cop', willing to talk and peacefully bring the non-imperial worlds into line, leveraging themselves against the violent and unforgiving 'bad cop' of the other legions.
Of course, the Children were actually using their diplomatic position to spy on the worlds and empires in question, and undertook clandestine raids and attacks on the worlds in question, weakening their means of detection, communication and defense, allowing the space marine legion they were working with at the time to attack with the minimum of resistance. Just prior to the 'Bad Cops' assault, the Children would launch widespread tactical operations on key locations and routes, so that the other legion could land and go about the fighting with a minimum of fuss.
Most notably, the Core Worlds were brought into line with this 'good cop/bad cop' strategy, with the Children working closely with the Void Angels - the terror tactics playing perfectly into the bad cop role, and allowing the Children to seem all the more reasonable and welcoming to deal with. In fact most of the Children's covert raids and insurgency tactics in the Core Worlds were blamed on the Void Angels by the victims, even though the Imperium itself knew better.
As for tactics, the Children are urban specialists. No other legion understands how to fight in cities as the Children do, having honed their skills over the centuries to incredibly scary levels. Its easy to contain situations the terrain does it for you. Cities are also closely linked with espionage, on account of most political and economic centers being located in cities.
The Children excel at contained tactical assaults - small, fast and very technical raids on well investigated targets, with a very specific goal. They get in fast, always using the element of surprise, and hit hard, grab/shoot/destroy the target, and get out before any response can be mounted. These raids always have a secure perimeter established, to contain any enemies/witnesses trying to escape, and reinforcements from getting in. (They operate like Swat or Counter-terrorists would do in a urban environment)
The Children also regularly make use of insurgency and counter insurgency tactics. Long, long campaigns aimed at destabilising the local status-quo through eroding their enemies public support, and using local media, and hearts-and-minds campaigns to win over the locals, and get them to provide assistance to the Children's operations. Then establishing pro-imperial (pro-Children) leaders in the chaos. They also excel at dealing with insurgencies, using their expertise, espionage skills and establish intelligence networks to root out cultists and insurgents and deal with them as the Children see fit.
The Group 13 branch of the Children of Armok undertake missions that cannot ever be linked back to the Children. They undertake assassinations, black flag operations (even sometimes against the Children themselves), kidnappings and capturing, and long term infiltration based raids, where the marines have to remain isolated behind enemy lines for incredibly long periods of time while still operating. As such, Group 13 is trained in all Imperial weapons, and many common non-imperial weapons, so as to keep them fighting when they run out of ammo for conventional space marine weaponry.
[WIP] Legion Beliefs
The Prank, and sense of humour.
Infiltration Dares/one-upsmanship
secret societies and brotherhoods
the belief and ingrained sense of unity and group initiative - everyone is included in planning, weighing in there own observations and experiences to the plan - even if the final decision is that of the highest ranking officer, ever had a chance to have their say. In this everyone is included in the plan, and has an idea of the bigger picture, allowing individual units to make judgement calls on events as they unfold, thus allowing them to react in a way that improves the strategic situation for the Children in the bigger picture.
Of course, with the Children it could never be that simple, and the intelligence supplied to the Children's units is always exactly what they needed to know, and little more. It wouldn't be surprising to discover that the Children's predilection for deception extends to their own units, who are fed lies to make them act in the desired manner, but this is just conjecture, as everything about the Children is suspect of being a fabrication. This seems to be tacitly understood by the Children, who follow their commanders regardless of any real or perceived duplicity; perhaps they do this through their ingrained sense of unified action, or maybe they are just fanatically loyal to Uriel, and the Children's cause, whatever it may be.
The Eldar Connection
The legions bitter hatred for/rivarly with the Eldar.
Legion Gene-Seed
Notable Children Of Armok Legionaries
Artyem Bezhryukov
After Uriel himself, Artyem Bezhryukov is perhaps the most important individual in the XIII Legion. Artyem is one of the various Equerry's Uriel uses, and a member of the Circle. Not an original Legion member, having been recruited after Uriel was discovered, Artyem rose up the ranks quickly, spending time as both an ICO and CIO officer, before being given his own battalion to command. After being identified by an Insidiator for his skillset, Artyem was recruited into Group 13, and later became an Insidiator himself. Artyem now officially operates as Uriel's Equerry, and is the most politically powerful man in the legion.
Artyem Bezhryukov is not his real name.
Ignacy Gagarin
A quiet, incredibly observant, and surgically precise member of Uriel's Circle. A former Emissarius to the Iron Rangers Legion, Gagarin acquired many of their mannerisms, and retained them when he returned to the XIIIth Legion. Smaller in stature than the other Astartes members of the Circle, Gagarin is respected for his stealth abilities, which are second to none. He lead a battalion usually put on Guerilla and Counter-Intelligence Operations, and is often used as the master of assassins inside the Circle, and as such has a close working relationship with the Group 13 Commander, and the Kokolny. He masterminded the Purge of all Children of Armok's loyalists, with only Balotin managing to elude the trap Gagarin had set the Group 13 commander to lay out, before Gagarin caught up with Balotin himself, killing the latter on Uriel's direct orders.
Arkady Balotin
Affable, and balanced commander of the 2nd battalion 1st chapter. A staunch loyalist, he and some of his men become targets of the Purging, and Balotin goes on the run, eschewing his legion colours and going awol until he can ascertain what is going on inside the Children - whether Uriel himself is a traitor or not. POSSIBLY one of the 12-18 recruited by Malcador to form the Inquisition and its Chapter Militants, the Grey Knights and the Deathwatch. He dies as a Knight Errant, in mysterious circumstances, and this inspires one of the 4 original Inquisitors to direct one of his most promising first Inquisitor-aspirants to investigate Balotin's death.
Ozihel Faulken
The most balanced member of Uriel's Circle, and the one whose role it was to find any problems in every proposed action by the Legion, from political and strategic, to those of public image and tone. Ozihel spent time rotating between a CIO, PO2, and ICO rank, before he was assigned to the XVIII Legion as an Emissarius. In the company of Darius and the Sand Keepers, Ozihel's level-headed nature and keen analytical mind earned Darius' respect, causing the primarch to recommended that Uriel keep an eye on Ozihel, as he clearly was a useful and wise council to have for any commander. After returning from the XVIII Legion, Ozihel was promoted into the rank of Battalion Commander, where he acquitted himself with consummate skill. Eventually he was elevated to Chapter Master of the 11th, and was inducted into the Circle, becoming a highly respected judge of people and their likely reactions.
Oskarr Reinhardt
Oskarr is the most straightforward of the Circle, and the most atypical of the rest of the Children. One of few surviving members of the XIII Legion's Sacred Band, Oskarr is one of the oldest and largest marines in the legion, and has imitated Uriel as a body double before, but he lacks the tact and diplomacy of his master and fellow brethren. Instead his skills lie in tactical and strategic matters, Oskarr could have written the book on battlefield tricks, and despite being quite old by marine standards, he could still use that book to beat them over the head with. Oskarr is one of the original members of the XIIIth Legion, rising from trooper to Chapter Master of the 2nd; if anyone has seen it all, it's Oskarr. He did a stint with the Bulwark as their Legion Emissarius. He acquitted himself so well while with them, that they gifted him a large tower storm shield when he left to return to the XIIIth.
Lucius Harrow
Lucius Harrow is the most ambiguous member of the Circle; the best Insidiator in the legion, very little is known of him, or his origins in the XIII Legion, perhaps only known to Uriel himself. He is also the most liked of the Circle, due to his unpredictable and fearless nature as a prankster. He is roguish and charming, but like Uriel there is a predatory intelligence behind his appraising eyes. Despite being an Insidiator, Harrow spends a large amount of his time shadowing his Primarch, possibly working as a kind of left hand man, or champion for Uriel; Where Artyem is Uriel's Equerry, Harrow is Uriel's dirty work guy, pursuing the things of highest importance. Harrow has Psyker abilties, at an unknown Psyker-grade. Like Artyem, Lucius Harrow is not his real name.
Non-Astartes Notables
Annastasya Key
A former Reclusiam Student turned Hiveworld Gangleader, Annastasya Key is one of the most important people in the Children, even though she is just a normal human; despite not even being a Kokolny, Anastasya is even part of Uriel's Circle. Anastasya is in charge of the XIIIth Legions Imperial interactions: any interaction with the Imperial Army, Adeptus Mechanicum, Remembrancers, etc all go through Annastasya as the primary medium. She was recruited by Uriel personally, after Harrow discovered her while on an operation that took him into the Hives of Malekkai VIII, where he worked alongside her briefly, allowing her to prove her skills in espionage, politics, and people management to him. Her networks ranging across several hives, her influence running from the Underhives to the top of one of the spires, and she hadn't even hit her 20th Terran Year. Uriel was immediately impressed by Annastasya, and hired her upon their first meeting. Having her trained by various people, including Harrow, Faulken, and Uriel himself, bringing her already notable talents up to incredible levels.
Liev Sparatin
Leader of the Kokolny, and member of the Circle. One of the first to become a human operative since Uriel was reunited with his legion. He was a former violent criminal in a penal-legion, and before that a space faring mercenary who ended up running his own mercenary group before being caught by an Imperial Army fleet coming out of warp travel. He was broken out of the maximum security prison ship the penal legion travvelled on by an Insidiator, with a few other convicts, and recruited into the Children in the first draft of the newly formed 'Kukolny' an old Perfidian word for 'puppet'.
Donovan Speer
One of the best operatives, recruited post-heresy. What he lacks in diplomatic skill, he more than makes up for in intelligence gathering, quick wits, and intimidation. A former Inquisitorial henchman/thug, who killed his own father, and managed to get the local Custodes leaders under his thumb through blackmail and coercion.
Legion Fleet
As for fleet strengths, the Children of Armok Legion was known to possess a very extensive and diverse fleet, although having less heavy capital ships and planetary siege craft in comparison to many other Legions. The main strength of the XIII Legion's fleets then was found in a plethora of different intermediate and Escort vessels, with range and speed being their primary focus, requiring these capabilities due to the extended distances their networks and missions presumably extend. The Children seem to favour boarding actions over full-on fleet based combat, but they do not shy from the latter, Uriel's consummate skills at regicide translating well into the positioning and manoeuvre based strategies employed in void battles.
The Children were also suspected of utilising a number of captured xenos and non-imperial vessels, and indeed sometimes incorporating xenos and non-imperial technology into their warship designs –- a practice strictly forbidden without the sanction of the Mechanicum - but given the Legion's frequent activities far beyond the Imperium's borders and its hidden strengths and bases of operation, such suspicions are next to impossible to prove, if indeed such suspicions are are not just misinformation originating from the Children themselves.
Perfidus Iter - Believed to be Uriel's Flagship since his reunification with the Children. Often confused (possibly intentionally) with the other believed Flagship of the same class, Eris. It is a contradiction, a vessel stripped down so that nothing remains that does not serve a useful purpose. Yet, everything that does remain is often lavish and of erudite taste, creating a strange dichotomy of purpose and aesthetics.
Eris - Identical to Perfidus Iter in almost every way, it is believed to have been used as Uriel's Flagship more than once. Some observers have theorised that both ships are indeed the same, with the name and call signs somehow being changed, while others claim that they are indeed two separate ships, and the Children are simply playing mind games.
Champion of Uraboros/Uraboros Aeternum - A Strike Cruiser. Linked with many major operations the Children have been a part of, seeing service since the XIII Legion left Sol. It was crippled beyond repair at Paramar, but it's parts were taken and rebuilt by the Mechanicum, being renamed Uraboros Aeternum.
Despite it's active status, there have been many conflicting reports that have all stated that this ship has either been lost to the warp, destroyed by Tyranids, Necrons, Orks, or Eldar, and even one report claiming that the crew were all Traitor Legionnaires. It is under the command of Children of Armok Battalion Commander Alggarnon Krieger.
Child of Armok - A Strike Cruiser. This ship is shrouded in mystery, and many have claimed that the Children simply name one ship in every fleet division Child of Armok, as reports have a Strike Cruiser named Child of Armok appearing in over 30 different locations around the Imperium, in a time-frame that would make it impossible for the ship to physically travel those distances. Those more inclined toward evidence-less theories, have claimed that Child of Armok is the same ship, fitted with Xenos technology, allowing it to travel far further and significantly faster than any Imperial ship is capable of.
Qarin - A Battlebarge under the command of XIII Legion Captain Zachariah Coreyeuses. Destroyed in the fleet combat preceding the Battle for the Arcus Cluster during M41. In it's first ever battle, it sacrificed itself to ensure it could destroy the Tyranid Hive Ship, boarding it, and deploying all manner of devious tricks to ensure that when they detonated the Exterminatus Bombs on the Qarin and those few it was able to get through the swarms of Tyranids onto the Hiveship, that the Hive Ship would be utterly ripped apart.
Of the few reports extant of this battle, everything from simple plasteel cable harpoons, to phosphex bombs were used to rip the Tyranid ship apart.
Legion Appearance and Equipment
At a strategic level the XIII Legion goes to great lengths to maintain a wide spectrum of military assets and capacities, its dedication to flexibility ensuring it was as capable in any eventuality, even though it would never operate outside of the legions preferred strategies, in situations where they had a choice. This mentality of being prepared for every eventuality was drilled into the Children by Uriel, but seems to have had some limited basis in the XIII legions operational ethos previous to being reunited with their primarch.
It was supported in maintaining these abilities by the legions voracious demand for, and questionable acquisition of matèriel, particularly supplied by Forge Worlds such as Ismazh, Degharon, Hohenzolle, and Behn-Gal - with some of these treaties of provender brokered directly by Uriel himself.
These arrangements do not, however, account for the full scope of the XIII Legion's observed armouries and arsenals, particularly their observed acquisition of rare and specialised war gear only manufactured by the armouries of certain Legions and never released to others, or not yet issued outside of close prototype deployments. How they acquire these otherwise restricted items is up for speculation.
A case in point is the evidence of the Children's access to a version of Mark VI Corvus Pattern Power Armour, not then in general circulation among the Legiones Astartes, as early as the Drop Site Massacre and the First Battle of Paramar. Later battlefield recovery and analysis of this so-called "Armok pattern-Corvus" armour shows it in fact to be a unique variant of the Mark VI suit likely developed separately from an early prototype of unknown manufacture. This suggests that the Children may have acquired incomplete schematics by covert means early in the project's life and chosen to develop it on their own without recourse to the Mechanicum.
It has been surmised that long before the Hektor Heresy was to tear the Imperium asunder, the Children of Armok had sought to secure its own extensive facilities of manufacture and positioned numerous hidden supply outposts and arms caches, both within Imperial space and beyond it, the full extent of which will never be known.
Another mysterious development observed by Loyalist Space Marines forces at Istvaan V and elsewhere, //???// were Banestrike Bolter rounds. These mysterious variant bolt shells, believed to have been designed in secret within the armouries of the Children of Armok long before the outbreak of the Hektor Heresy, had it seems a sole purpose; to breach the ceramite Power Armour of Space Marines.
Used openly for the first time at the Drop Site Massacre on Istvaan V //???//, their dense explosive cores and firing stresses reduced their range and would quickly degrade the firing weapon, but their effect against fellow Astartes was frightening. It is perhaps unfortunate that the Children were not present at Terra, as such rounds made available to the defenders, could have changed the course of the Heresy.
Legion Equipment
In terms of access to wargear and vehicles, the XIIIth Legion seem to have been formidably equipped. Again, true estimates are difficult to arrive at, but most pictorial and second party reports show the XIIIth Legion as possessing extensive access to the most modern forms of Legiones Astartes equipment, not limited to new power armour, the Sicaran Battle Tank and their sub-types as well as extensive stocks of plasma and melta weaponry, and specialised munitions unknown outside the Legion.
The Children of Armok have been observed to make use of all weapons available to them, seeming to hold a firm belief in adapting to changing circumstances, and as such seem to have no predisposition to any one weapon. With vehicles and equipment however, the Children are pragmatic; they may have something, but this does not mean they will use it. For example, the significant number of Sicaran Battle Tanks they possess only get used when the situation requires that, which given the XIIIth Legion's preferred methods of combat, means that this isn't often.
They do however have a predisposition to specific patterns of weapons and equipment. The Children use a custom pattern Bolter: the Grizwold-pattern Bolter. The magazine lies flat along the top of the Bolter, with the whole weapon coming together into a lightweight bullpup system, designed to be compact and versatile. This is believed to have been developed for urban combat specifically, as it is well suited to their city-fighting predisposition, and the close confines that terrain offers. It has been observed to be fitted with suppressed extended barrels, seem to often use Metal Storm and Stalker silent rounds, are fitted with combat sights, and have been observed to also take under-slung attached weapons.
The Children also make extensive use of Flash grenades, that emit a blinding set of flashes that disable and distract foes, as well as incapacitating gas grenades (like tear gas, but also mustard gas if necessary). Demolition charges are also common, which they normally have at least one marine from a squad carry on a mission.
In addition to the demolition charges, the Children use meltabombs, and breaching/directional charges for ambushes and for creating entrances into buildings where the enemy won't be guarding - especially useful in the brutal close quarters combat of city fighting, where every door and window can become a deadly killzone.
Each 'Body' division of the Children seems to have it's own individual armoury, giving them access to all the equipment they may need for any eventuality, suitable to their division size.
Group 13 has a large stockpile of non-imperial weaponry on top of their normal armoury, including various patterns of stubbers, autoweapons, xenos weaponry, and even some chemical weaponry. These non standard weapons are only used when deemed necessary, but also for training, as Group 13's deep infiltration missions often make resupply impossible, forcing the Group 13 marines to fight using whatever they can get their hands on. Also, when on black flag operations, they usually use non-imperial weapons, unless using imperial weapons serves a purpose.
All Children of Armok also go through extensive training in hand-to-hand fighting, deemed relevant due to the fact the Children often operate in close quarters, and often in the case of insurgencies, with limited supplies. Thus they are taught to use hand to hand fighting, as well as close combat using improvised and purpose-built weapons. Their hand-to-hand fighting technique is utterly pragmatic, with a focus on disabling or killing the opponent as quickly and efficiently as possible. It also makes extensive use of the environment, and balance, often using a free hand to pull an enemy of balance, making it difficult for them to mount a proper defense or counter-attack. This technique is taught to the Kokolny and any of the Children's non-astartes agents for protection.
Legion Colours
The Colour of Deception
Legion Badge
Notable Successor Chapters, & The Serpents
Due to the Children's unique position of being on both sides of the Heresy divide, they are forced to adhere to the Codex Astartes, and break down in chapters, but those on the Traitor side formed one coherent warband, the Children's ingrained tight-knit loyalty to the unit preventing them from too much splintering. Of course, not basing themselves in the Eye of Terror helps too.
Successor Chapter 1
Successor Chapter 2
Successor Chapter 4
[WIP NAME]The Serpents
The Traitor side warband of the Children of Armok.
Legion History
The Spectres
the early XIIIth Legion and the XIIIth Sacred Band squad. Ghost Legion stuff.
Proto- XIIIth Sacred Band squad
1 Marcellus Volker
2 Oskarr Reinhardt
3 Tobias Kastner
4 Yevgenney Sparovich
5 Ulysses Bohannon
5 Elias Halder
7 Pyotr Mishnin
8 Yuri Orolov
9 Duke Togo
1 Konstantin Malakhov
Shadow Wars
The XIIIths part in the early, pre-Uriel days of the Great Crusade. Great secrecy, and conspicuous lack of accountability. For the most part, no records exist of the XIIIth during this period.
Integration and Deceit
the arrival of Uriel, and the changes that brings to the XIIIth, including the end of the Spectres.
also amidst the rise of the Custodes, Assassinorum and other institutions.
Hijinks with the Sacred Band ensue
Something Dark This Way Comes
--working title--
Uriel's discovers the existence of a place called the Black Library, knowing little about it, except it's importance due to the secrecy surrounding it.
Uriel's discovery of Tzeentch and the other gods.
And slowly but surely, Uriel drew his plans against us.
The Fall
Uriels's fall to chaos. And the purge that came with it. The beginnings of the XIIIths moves to lay the foundations of the Heresy.
Ouroboros Rises
The operation begins
the XIIIth finish up their preparations for the Heresy, as they see it.
The turning of Aubrey and later others.
Some early opening clandestine actions against the Imperium, harking back to the days of the Spectres. Rumours abound of the return of the Spectres.
The Heresy
The Heresy itself, and the Children of Armoks role in it, or lack thereof.
Aftermath
Post Heresy aftermath.
Investigation, Codex Integration, and embedding agents into the Administration.
Also the Traitor side of things
and onwards into the far futuree
Notable Campaigns
Homeworld, and Notable Planets
One of thirteen planets in the Soltek system, eight of which are habitable to some degree, Perfidiae V is the homeworld of the Children of Armok.
Perfidiae V has the second highest population in the system, second only to the hive world Blackspire.
It's relatively high gravity is partly responsible for the increased reaction speed of Perfidians.
Due to the very large population of Peridiae V, citizens are given an identification number and implanted with a chip, denoting their place of origin, and list of destinations visited. The vast majority of the population are believed to have been 'chipped', but due to the nature of the poverty stricken, over-crowded conditions the poor live in, and the rampancy of crime, many newborn children are not chipped, and those that die are often not reported as dead, meaning the population figures are potentially way off, not to mention the multitudes of fake chip numbers, used by the criminals and spies of Perfidiae.
Perfidiae V is a civilised, industrial world, on the brink of becoming a hive world. Overcrowding, crime, and cynicism are rampant, as are the availability of technology and the proliferation of weapons. As far back as records show, independence, resolve, and ambition have always been highly prized on Perfidiae V. Many Perfidians aspire to start their own merchant empires, or rise to positions of power in the world; old Terran codes of morality dividing the population between those who think the ends justify the means, and those who believe it keeps people from evil. The cynicism and generally jaded nature of Perfidians however, has a habit of separating those who will submit to others, and those who will not. The world of Perfidiae V is split up into competing nations. From these nations, 2 major powers arose: Novo-Gorod and the Allied States of Usono (ASU), both drew smaller nations to their side through their immense influence on the worlds events and economies.
Despite the divisive and even hostile nature of these power blocs, the world of Perfidae V was largely peaceful. Most fighting took place through proxy states of the two major powers, both sides knew the risks of all out conflict.
Thus, hostilities between the two great powers spanned over a standard Terran century, though it never erupted into a real war. This period became known as the "Unseen War," both power blocs' leaders exploited tensions and events in order to accrue more power and influence. They took these opportunities to add new resources and allies to their blocs, without ever plunging the world of Perfidae V into outright war.
In this state of constant hostilities, espionage and intrigue flourished. Hidden wars took place behind the scenes, and shady dealings with criminals and even traitors were struck, the common people of Perfidae V lived in fear, wondering when they too would become targets. Though Perfidians were inclined to be ambitious, constantly seeking improvement, the new way of life left them too terrified that ambition would bring with it something far worse; attention.
Criminal enterprises rose and expanded in this state of covert conflicts and corruption, lending their networks and expertise to whoever paid the most. Nations, individuals, and merchant consortiums all made use of their abilities. The dedicated intelligence agencies of Novo-Gorod and the Allied States of Usono, the KSB13 and the MAI respectively, began essentially running the planet through their iron grip on the information and secrets of the world and it's leaders.
On this world Uriel, Primarch of the XIIIth Legion would be discovered by a high-ranking leader of the KSB13, who would raise and tutor the young primarch in the ways of espionage and manipulation. Until the arrival of the Emperor, the young primarch would fight with the clandestine methods of his adopted homeworld, rising into the highest circles of power and influence. When the Emperor arrived, Uriel's gambit brought victory to Novo-Gorod, along with the Imperial Truth. Though the majority of Perfidians accepted the truth in their typically cynical way, at the insistence of the now governor Uriel, some refused and were purged. Coincidentally, it seems that many of those purged were former leaders or allies of the Allied States of Usono
Recent efforts by the Administratum to confirm this account have revealed that the widely believed story of the XIIIth Legion’s primarch is quite possible false. No records of either the Emperor or Uriel's arrival exist on the planet, other than of the Legion’s stewardship over the Soltek System and Perfidae V’s status as a recruiting world. This leads one to wonder, what exactly is the true story of Uriel Starikov?
The other 7 inhabited worlds in the Soltek System are:
Koln - Important Forgeworld.
Blackspire - Hive world, home of the Blackspire IA/IG regiments.
Perfidiae I - Large temperate agri-world, often used as a Pleasure World for the very rich and powerful from the other planets in the sector due to it's astonishingly aesthetic terrain.
Perfidiae II - Very Large lush agri-world. Many of the Soltek systems nobility and wealthy retire to the handful of cities on this planet.
Perfidiae III - Ice planet, incredibly hostile climate and fauna, with an abundance of valuable resources below the surface. Before the Imperium arrived, it was dominated by merchant consortiums. All the cities are underground.
Perfidiae IV - Death world, Jungle planet used as a prison planet for the sub-sector, supplying lots of timber, and mined for resources.
Ikaruze - Feral World. A former Civilised world much like Perfidiae V, but was largely destroyed by nuclear war, famine, and disease. Now it's inhabitants live in a manner akin to Feral tribes, fighting each other amid the ruins of their old culture, for food, water, and valuable salvage.
Legion Relationships
The other legions like the Children as they always say the right thing, and seem to be the reasonable neutral in personal/legion disputes between other primarchs/legions; but will quietly imply that they understand and agree with *your* side of the dispute, but of course they secretly imply this to everyone. They are also liked for their prankster and jovial nature. In fact, the prank is the oldest tradition in the Children, but since the fall the once innocent prank has become something far more sinister, with often lethal tricks played on unsuspecting rival legions and imperial forces in a never ending game of espionage one-upsmanship. Uriel himself doesn't have true friends among the other Primarchs, to him they are just powerful assets. But that doesn't stop him, or his legion from enjoying themselves with the other Primarchs and Legions. Their constant ability to be incredibly useful, and their knack for politics and persuasion means even the Primarchs can't help but enjoy their company.
Hektor Cincinnatus, Wolves of Dawn
Alexandri, Silver Cataphracts
Arelex Orannis, War Scribes
Uriel was particularly close with Arelex, for Arelex had his own vast libraries and hoards of knowledge and tech that Uriel wanted access to, but also because both had a burning passion for acquiring more knowledge; one seeking to unlock the secrets of technology to further mankind, the other wanting to unlock the secrets of man for his own gain, but also to benefit mankind. After the failure of the Heresy, Arelex begins rebuilding the Imperium. Uriel uses Arelex to get some of his agents secretly embedded into the Imperial Government set up by Arelex after the Heresy; Uriel would provide 'suitable candidates' for various positions, after having carefully doctored and backed up the agents stories to make them the best candidates. But he also provided Arelex with use of some selected, 'clean' networks to help with ensuring that those Arelex puts in power, were not traitors. Of course, Uriel did this to engender trust in himself and the Children, but also to potentially have a means of feeding the Imperium false or accurate intelligence to further his goals. Despite how much Uriel used Arelex, he did like the man, finding a kindred spirit with the same thirst for knowledge he had. It upset Uriel when he had to manipulate the Mechanicum into making Arelex 'disappear'. [SUBJECT TO REWRITING]
Aubrey the Grey, Eternal Zealots
Bohemond, Knights of Justice
Brennus, Thunder Kings
Cromwald Walgrun, Lions Rampant
Darius Cyaxares, Sand Keepers
Gaspard Lumey, Void Angels
Uriel and the Children also get along with Gaspard Lumey of the Void Angels, although while their relationship is of mutual respect, under the surface they see eachother as opponents; Gaspard as the 'regulator', keeping his brothers in line, while Uriel is the opposite - pulling and pushing them away to suit his needs. Before the Heresy, Uriel and Gaspard get along well, their competitiveness driving them to push eachother to higher levels. Their partnership of Lumey's 'bad cop', to Uriel's 'good cop' style was incredibly effective, especially in the Core Worlds Campaign. Following that campaign however, Uriel maybe having fallen to chaos, Uriel doctors his testimony and plays on his friendship to manipulate Lumey into being censured, and exiled with his legion. But after the Heresy, and Lumey's return, their friendship develops a slightly darker tone, with Lumey wondering, but never truly knowing if Uriel was just played by Hektor, or if Uriel was involved somehow.
Golgothos, The Entombed
Inferox, Sons of Fire
Johannes Vrach, Life Bringers
Kleisthenes, Scions of Europa
Kranios, Horns of Ruin
Nathanog, Gorgers
Octullus Tyran, Eyes of the Emperor
Onyx the Indestructible, Stone Men
Rogerius Merrill, Iron Rangers
Roman Albrecht, Steel Marshals
Sebastian Rex, The Bulwark
Thomas Gaudin, The Crusaders
Thoren Grimm, Council of Iron
Tiran Osoros, Scale Bearers
Tollund Oztal, Mastadontii
Voidwatcher, Black Augurs
The Space Marine Legions of the /tg/ Heresy | |
---|---|
Loyalist: | The Entombed - Eyes of the Emperor - Scale Bearers - Silver Cataphracts Steel Marshals - Stone Men - Thunder Kings - Void Angels - War Scribes |
Traitor: | Black Augurs - The Justiciars - Eternal Zealots - Heralds of Hektor Iron Rangers - Life Bringers - Lions Rampant - Mastodontii - Sons of Fire |