Warhammer 40k an in depth analysis: Part 4, The Necrons: part 2, The ancient terrors

Ancient Egypt has for decades inspired modern man with their mystery, and seeming fixation with death and reincarnation. The mystery hieroglyphs and monuments of this long lost civilisation has inspired fantasy, horror sand sciense fiction writer since the early 1800s. In this chapter will we delve in to the origins of these tropes, as well as some examples of the tropes that eventually led up tot he modern interpretation of the Necrons in the 7th edition of Warhammer 40k.

Ancient Egypt

until the discovery of the Rosetta stone was the texts of the ancient Egyptians a total mystery to the western researchers and archaeologists, as well as the general public. The strange animal headed gods, the mummified remains and the ominous structures and tombs awoken something in the public consciousness of the general public of the time. The text The tomb by Edgar Allan Poe, as well as numerous texts by HP Lovecraft al played on these new fears and fascinators.

The pop cultural fascination with ancient Egypt have not waned since then, and lived on trough several movies, comic books and physical and electronic games. Most relevant to this text is the faction the Tomb Kings, found in the Warhammer Fantasy franchises, also published and produced by Games Workshop, the creators of Warhammer 40k. This faction draws some clear and obvious inspirations to real life Egypt, as well as many of the theories of earlier theories of Egypt. Much of the faction, as the title suggests is based on the Egyptians connection with death and mummifications, as they are a faction made fully out of undead retextures, and hailing form a civilisation that is described as being obsessed with the quest of overcoming death. Note that these are themes that can be found in the Necrons as well. The Tomb kings are worthy of their own text eventually, as they share some interesting ties to real life events, as well as old cultural fears of orientalism and the great Crusades. The Tomb Kings, as well as the Necrons both play with the idea that some secrets are best left in the earth, undisturbed.

Let the dead rest where they lie

The idea of forbidden or dangerous secrets being buried by ancient lost civilisations is far form a new idea. From aliens and interdimensional creatures, to mycological monsters and fey, it seems that the idea of predecessor civilisations and deities have seemingly haunted the human imaginations for as long as ruins could be found. A well known myth is the idea of the pharaohs curse, once again originating in Egypt, where the texts found inside tombs of pharaohs believed to be wards designed to cure intruders. These texts were later translated and found to be used to primarily ward off evil spirits, and not mortal invaders.

Arriving on an alien seminally deserted planet, only to later find out that it is indeed filled with ruins, and possible remnants of a possibly malicious alien race is a common sciences fiction trope. The Necrons follows in this reach cultural tradition by presenting them as a poorly understood, and previously overlooked danger from the past. As discussed in the Adeptus Mechanicus chapter, the world of Warhammer 40k is one full of buried dangers and secrets bet lost in the past. The Necrons furhter cements the universe as a cold, pitiless and dangerous place for humanity to explore.

Necrons and the other races

The the human factions the Necrons has, at least until the ninth edition (a topic for a later time), been seen exclusivity as an unknowable foe. This role is not their only one tough, and I will here present the main uses that the Necrons fall in to in the wider narrative of the Warhammer 4k universe.

The old foes of the Necrons still live across the stars, most predominately the Orcs and the Eldar. Both of these factions are seemingly created by the Old once with the direct purpose of stopping the Necrons, something they were inevitably unable to do, but of vastly different reasons. The Eldar of the 41th millennium is constantly vigilant against the arrival of their old foes, and will sacrifice much to make sure that their burgeoning empire is safe from these terrors. The Orks on he other hand see them as just another foe to fight, tough just as with the Eldar, they find their technology to digest and complicated to properly loot and incorporate in to their own designs.

From the Necron point of view, these are just another hurdle to overcome, another plague of life that needs to be eradicated form the face of the universe. Many Eldar tales and myths tells about the return of the Necrons as the ancient foes. Many stories centring on the Eldar is indeed focused on fighting the deathless once.

For the races of humanity and Tau, the Necrons are an unknowable nightmare of death and destruction. Humanity in particular, as a result of being the galaxies most prominent inhabitant has met most of the Necrons ire. Humanity has had several traumatic experiences with the Necrons, often leading to the utter destruction of the hapless human populations involved. When victory is achieved it is always at a great cost for the humans involved (Games Workshop 2015). It is easy yo draw parallelises between the use of the Necrons in the Warhammer 40k franchise, and a similar faction from the Start Trek franchise, namely the Borg. Both are positioned as unimaginably advanced mindless creatures with no other interest then to subjugate and destroy their human adversaries. (Paramount Pictures 2002)

One of the more interesting facets of the 40k universe is indeed the sense of intermitted destruction, only held at bay by other, equally catastrophic forces of destruction. The rise of chaos is for example directly at odds with the goals of the Deathless Necrons and the every consuming Tyranids. (Games Workshop 2015)

Conclusions

In this chapter I have presented you to a small number of inspiration and tropes from real life as well as previous fictional works. We have also discussed how their role as an ever present unknowable evil can be understood in relationship to the rest of the narrative. We can see how the mysteries of ancient Egypt, as well as tales of death and resurrection has been an inspiration for fantasy and existential horror, and how these themes eventually found their way in to the Necrons of the 7th edition of the Warhammer 40k franchise. Next chapter of this series will conclude our discussions on the Necrons for now, before moving on to the other existentialist horror of the franchise, the Tyranids!

References

Games Workshop (2015) Codex: Necrons. Games Workshop

Cavendish, R. (1983). The Black Arts: A Concise History of Witchcraft, Demonology, Astrology, and Other Mystical Practices Throughout the Ages. TarcherPerigee

Paramount Pictures. (2002). Star trek, the next generation.

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