Tomb Kings

"In that dread desert, beneath the moon´s pale gaze, dead men walk. They haunt the shifting dunes of the breathless, windless night, brandish weapons of bronze in mocking challenge and bitter resentment of the life they no longer possess. And sometimes, in ghastly dry voices, like the rustling of sun-baked reeds, they whisper the one word they remember from life. The Name of the one who cursed them to their existence, more than death but less than life. They whisper the name, Nagash..."

- Extract from the Liber Necris, translated by Mannfred von Carstein



The Tomb Kings, known as the Priest Kings in their former lives are the unliving rulers of Nehekhara, an ancient Human civilization that formed a great and powerful empire some two thousand five hundred years before the birth of Sigmar Heldenhammer and the founding of the Empire of Man. Out of all the unliving creatures that would claim dominion over the dead, only the Tomb Kings can truly be called their rightful monarchs, they who once ruled a far-flung Empire during a time when the rest of Mankind were little more than savage barbarians living within wild and uncivilized tribes.

Long ago, during an ancient and forgotten age, the civilization of Nehekhara stood as the shining beacon of Human civilization and achievement; a golden age where its cities shone with a majestic splendor, its buildings crafted from magnificent marble and limestone, its armies conquering entire kindgoms from the face of the earth and their mighty rulers reigning as living Gods amongst Man. But this great realm was razed millennia ago through acts of great treachery and powerful sorcery. The living of the land had long ago perished in a single, mournful night, and in their absence, the dead stirred from their graves and claimed the land anew.

Even as their ancient civilization now lies buried beneath the sands, their once verdant plains turned to searing desert and their mighty and glorious Empire fractured and in ruin, the Tomb Kings have once more awoken from their long sleep. Rising from their decrepit sarcophagi, the mummified rulers of Nehekhara awoke with eyes of burning balefire, their thirst for power, conquest and vengeance just as strong in death as they were even in life. They are coming to reclaim their rightful dominion over the Kingdoms of the living, their legions innumberable, rising up from the scorching sand brandishing weapons of ancient bronze and priceless gold. Ancient, emotionless and spiteful to all those that had slighted them, woe and behold those that would be foolish enough to stand before their silent onslaught.

History
The ancient kingdom of Nehekhara was at its most powerful when other tribes of Men were still primitive and savage, about two and a half millennia before the coming of the barbarian hero, Sigmar Heldenhammer. According to myths and legends of Nehekhara, in the time before Men, Gods walked the world as mortals. It was believed by the ancient Nehekharans that when the Desert Gods first arrived in the Great Land, they fought the armies of vile Daemons and foul spirits that lurked there in great battles that lasted for many centuries. In numerous inscriptions, carved on the tombs and monuments of ancient cities, it is written that Ptra, the Sun God and King of the Nehekharan pantheon, led the final battle against the dark powers.

Riding a resplendent golden chariot, he drove the darkness back; even the most powerful Daemon recoiled from the touch of his divine light. Ptra and the Desert Gods were victorious, and the evil ones retreated north to escape destruction. Legends tells that the Desert Gods then transformed the lands into a verdant realm and ruled there for thousands of years until the birth of the race of Man. It is said that these people were so favored by the heavens that Ptra himself bestowed upon them the fertile land that would later be called Nehekhara. In exchange for their worship, the dieties offered to protect and watch over those that dwelt within the Great Land. With the covenant made, the Gods nurtured the people of the nomadic tribes, teaching them how to read, write and build great cities. Thus was the Nehekharan civilization born.

The Founding: The Rise of Settra (-2500 to -2460 IC)
Through centuries of work and culture, Nehekhara, known to its people as the Great Land, was built into a powerful civilization. Its people built great cities out of white stone and carved marble. They constructed vast roads and fleets of ships to connect each city to it's neighbors. Mighty kings, whose every whim was law, ruled the people. Vast armies of disicplined soldiers were raised and trained in the King's name, and those that invaded their cities were mercilessly cut down. Greatest of these cities was Khemri, the City of Kings, and by tradition, whoever ruled it was considered the King of all Nehekhara. The other cities were each governed by their own king, though all were expected to show loyalty and pay tribute to Khemri. Together, these kings subdued the tribes in the surrounding lands, drove back the Greenskin hordes that plagued the border and ruled from the western deserts of Araby to the eastern Sea of Dread.

The Time of Strife


At its height, the lands of Nehekhara had expanded and conquered the lands as far north as what is now barbaric Empire of Man, south into the primordial jungles of the Southlands and even east into the foreboding Dark Lands. The King's armies marched across the world, subjugating all before them, and their vast fleets of galleys adn war barques terrorized the Great Ocean. Though Nehekhara and its cities grew in size, wealth and influence, the Kings thirsted for ever greater power. To this end, tehy began to war upon each other.

Over the following years, the Crown of Nehekhara, a symbol of rulership over all of the Great Land, passed from King to conquering King. Dozens of Kings have arisen and fallen during this time, so many that their names are not even remembered, but it is known that none had the strength to previal or maintain power for long. With every Nehekharan city's military might turned upon each other, the Great Land was open to attack from invaders. The city of Lybaras was completely destroyed by the scaled creatures that lurked within the southern jungles. Numerous Greenskin hordes and Human barbarian tribes descended from the northern border, destroying and slaughtering as they rampaged unchecked across Nehekhara.

During this time, the Great Land was stricken with drought and plague. No single army, exhausted as they were from war, famine and disease, could hope to hold back the tide alone, but the arrogant and distrustful Kings refused to put aside their differences to form a lasting alliance, bow their knee to another or halt in their pursuit of domination over their rivals. The first great civilization of Mankind stood on the brink if destruction. That all change with the coming of Settra.

Settra the Great


Of all the Kings of Nehekhara, none could match the splendor, cruelty and arrogance of Settra, the newly crowned King of Khemri. He was a vain and egotistical man, and demanded not only the obedience of his subjects but also their absolute adoration. However, Settra was no fool, and when he listened to his priest he realized that only a leader who could command the respect of the Gods would earn the full adulation of the people. To this end, King Settra, alone amongst all the kings of Nehekhara, paid homage to the ancient Gods; early in his reign he ordered the restoration of temples and erected magnificent statues to be built in their honor.

On the first anniversary of his coronation, Settra beseeched the gods to restore Khemri to its former glory and great him the strength to conquer his rivals, sacrificing his own children in a grand ritual to show his commitment and prove his worth. The next day, the Great Vitae River flooded for the first time in several decades. With the waters, disease was washed away from Khemri and the crop harvest was plentiful for the first time in living memory. This was seen as a sign by both the Nehekharan priesthood and the populace of Khemri that Settra was indeed chosen by the Gods. So it was that Settra became the first Priest King of Khemri, a ruler who commanded not only the loyalty of his people and his legions, but who also wielded the power of the Gods themselves.

Settra was an all-powerful king who had fought alongside his father's legion for many years before ascending to Khemri's throne. He was a ruthless warlord, and his keen tactical and strategic sense was matched only by his courage and martial skill. One by one, Settra brought the other great cities of Nehekhara to heel, leading his legions from the front where he could slate his own battle-lust and thirst for conquest. First the city-state of Numas, known as the Scarab City, fell before his might. Then the city of port-city of Zandri surrendered, and with every victory more warriors flocked to his banner. Before long, Settra commanded the largest and most devout army that Nehekhara has ever known. Vast legions of battle-hardened soldiers marched across the land of Nehekhara, and no mercy was shown to those who would dare oppose his might. In time, all the Kings were conquered and Nehekhara stood unified once more.

The Golden Age
Few rivals emerged to oppose the great king, and those who did were crushed mercilessly, either at his own hands or by those of the Herald Nekaph, his imposing champion. Settra's agents would root out and quell any trace of dissent and the merest hint of rebellion that threatened the stability of their lord's realm, and soon none dared to even think of defying the King of Kings. Thereafter, Settra reigned as the undisputed king of not just Khemri, but of all Nehekhara, and for many decades he suffered no challenge to his rule.

Though Settra was a ruthless and tyrannical ruler, Khemri, and indeed the whole of Nehekhara entered a golden age of prosperity and plenty under his iron-fisted rule. The war-ravaged cities were quickly restored, and many grand monuments were erected to not just the gods, but now also to the honor of Nehekhara's ever-expanding borders and repel the many mutated mosnters and savage barbarians that had sunk their claws into the Great Land during the Time of Strife.

Yet Settra was not content with merely restoring the kingdoms of his ancestors. The armies of Nehekhara spread far and wide, conquering the surronding lands and enslaving their tribes. Settra's warfleet ravaged the realms across the seas, and his armies brought the terror of the Priest Kings of Khemri to many distant lands. Foreign cities fell, faraway lands were conquered and vash riches were brought back to the Great Land from as far afield as the jungles of Lustria. Nehekhara reached the peak of his power and influence during the reign of Settra, and his name was feared across half the world.

There was nothing that could stay Settra's hunger for war, nor his thirst for conquest, and for many years the armies of Nehekhara swept across the world. Settra's vast kingdom stretched across the lands, but for all his victories and accomplishments, the Priest King was unsatisfied. It is said that in the fortieth year of his reign, with his body begging to show the first signs of old age and frailty, Settra stood in the peaks of the Black Mountains, upon the very edge of his empire and surveyed all that he had conquered. He then turned and gazed upon the distant lands that lay on the other side of the mountain and roared in anger. It was with bitter dissapointment that Settra realized that even if he were to live a hundred years, there would still be realms beyond his grasp.

Settra simmered with rage, for he knew that one day he would be defeated, not by a mortal foe, nor by any superior army but by the cruel passage of time and his own mortality. Settra knew that his dreams of global conquest was unreachable in his mortal lifespan and though the fires of ambition burned brightly within his heart, his body would wither and fail him before he could see his vision fufilled. Worse, Settra knows that death might rob him of all he had achieved in his lands, his people and his power. In his arrogance, he vowed that the grave would not claim him, and set in motion events that would forever chagne his kingdom.

The Cult of the Dead: The Mortuary Priest (-2460 to -2000 IC)
Settra became obseed with unlocking the secrets of immortality so that he could rule over his lands for all eternity. In his quest for ever-lasting life, Settra founded the Mortuary Cult and demanded that his wisest and most powerful priest devote their efforts to discovering the secrets of preventing his passing. The priest of Khemri did as Settra bade them, and for years they brewed potions, recited incantations and travelled into unknown lands in search of the secret to overcome death. In their research, the priest learned much, and they used their powers to extend Settra's life far beyond its natural span. However, they could not halt the passage of time indefinitely, they were merely postponing the inevitable while their lord's mortal body became ever more frail. The priest of the Mortuary Cult were naturally reluctant to reveal these limitations to Settra, whose wrath was legendary, and continued to search in vain for a way to accomplish this impossible task.

The Priest journeyed for many years throughout the world. They studied all aspects of death, and over the years they've learned much, and their powers grew. Using their arcane knowledge, they also extended their own lives as well. They learned how to preserve a corpse from decay, until the art of mummification had become tuned to perfection. With the passing of the years, the hierophants of the Mortuary Cult had even begun to experiment with harnessing the Winds of Magic as well.

The Pyramid of Settra


Though they made incredible progress, it was to no avail; true immortality lay beyond their power. Great was Settra's wrath, for though the priests' magic kept him alive far beyond the span of any mortal Man, they could not prevent his death. However, the Mortuary Cult devised a vast lore of magical incantations and rituals, which they claim could bridge the gap between the mortal world and the Realm of Souls. They believed that with careful preparation and the proper incantations, it might be possible for the dead to return to life in imperisable bodies, though it may take many centuries to perfect and perform the necessary rituals. Left with no other choice, Settra commanded that a vast burial tomb be constructed for his body to rest within until the Mortuary Cult finished their work and he could be reborn into the eternal existence he so craved.

As Settra lay dying, full of anger, spite and pride to his very last breath, the priest of the Mortuary Cult promised him a golden paradise that, upon his awakening, he would rule for millions of years. When the King perished at last, it was with a final curse upon his lips. Powerful incantations were intoned over his corpse and he was embalmed in a great ritual. Preserved against decay, the body of Settra was entombed within a mighty sarcophagus in the heart of the majestic pyramid of shining white stone. The monument was so bright that it hurt the mortal eyes just to look at it. The pyramid was vast and it towered over the city of Khemri. It was the largest and most magnificent monument ever created in Nehekhara, for no simple cairn would befit a king as mighty and powerful as Settra.

All of his treasures, along with his most loyal servants and bodyguards, were also interred within his pyramid. Settra's mighty legions, which had carved out his realm at his behest, were arrayed deep beneath it in colossal tomb pits. Loyal even unto death, these soldiers were buried alive in preparation for the Day of Awakening when Settra would arise and lead them to war once more. At the head of the funeral procession strode Nekaph, Settra's most loyal servant, mummified at the right-hand side of his beloved king, in order to send him in the next life. For thousands of year afterwards, the priests of Khemri tended the funeral flames outside the sealed tomb, nurturing Settra's immortal spirit with sacrifice and incantations in preparation for the Day of Awakening. No tomb before or since has ever had such powerful hieroglyphs of warding and incantations of protection heaped upon it. During this time, the priests of the Mortuary Cult continued to develop their understanding of magical incantations in the hopes of finally unlocking the secrets of immortality and of bringing about the time of Settra's resurrection.

The Time of Kings


Following Settra's death, many dynasties came and went. However, without Settra's stern control and merciless leadership, no single Priest King had the ability to rule over all of Nehekhara. Thus, the individual cities vied and competed with each other over riches and status. Though Nehekhara did not revert to the all-out civil Wars of the Time of Strife, skirmishes between neighbouring cities were not unheard of. During this centuries-long era, known as the Time of Kings, the borders of Nehekhara were as changing as the shifting dunes. What existed was a feudal state where power and territory were decided by strength of arms. A king was only as powerful as the size of his armies, and so vast legions were raised with each passing decade.

Though the expansion of the Great Land did not proceed at the same pace as it had during the reign of Settra, every now and then a warrior-king would extend his realm, either by conquering his neighbours or by pacifying some of the savage lands surrounding Nehekhara. Armies of highly disciplined warriors and fearsome chariots warred against the Priest Kings enemies. To the west, the crude desert nomads were subjugated and their chieftains were enlightened by the great civilisation of Nehekhara. To the north and the south, the Priest Kings fought many battles against tribes of greenskins, barbaric men and crocodilian lizard-warriors.

These wars brought much wealth to Nehekhara, and slave gangs toiled like ants, hauling their prizes bock to the necropolises. Gold was taken from the strongholds of the bearded mountain-dwellers, precious jewels from reptilian temple-cities, exotic stone from as far away as distant Cathay and fresh slaves from the primitive lands to the north that would one day become known as the Empire. Almost the entirety of this conquered wealth was spent in raising larger legions of soldiers and in the construction of ever-more elaborate tombs and monuments.

The Mortuary Cult Grows
All the Priest Kings of Nehekhara shared the same lust for worldly wealth and power, and had the same ambition to defy death and rule for all eternity. However, just as with Settra, none could escape death's embrace, so they maintained the Mortuary Cult in order to reawaken them after their passing. During this time, the power and influence of the Mortuary Cult grew. The first generation of priests, whose skills were comparatively rudimentary; died after prolonging their lives far beyond their natural span.

They passed on their knowledge to the next generation who exceeded them in both wisdom and expertise. In this way, the Mortuary Cult's skill accumulated until the fifth generation of priest discovered the secrets of binding their souls into their bodies and did not die. After long years of perseverance and endless research, they had finally unlocked the secrets of eternal life, and though they had not perfected the necessary incantations, the ability to awaken the deceased kings from the sleep of death was almost in their grasp as well.

However, the priesthood, whose members had become known as the Liche Priests, were very careful to keep the secrets of their magical lore to themselves. They had gained unprecedented power and enjoyed a dominion over the lands of Nehekhara second only to that of the royalty themselves, and they were reluctant to give that status up. The Liche Priests reasoned that, so long as the Priest Kings had need of the Mortuary Cult to reawaken them into a golden paradise, nothing would change and they could officiate in perpetuity. Whilst the Liche Priests continued to develop their lore of magical incantations, they witnessed the rise and fall of dynasties, and still they did not die. However, as the centuries passed by, the Liche Priests began to discover the unpleasant difference between eternal life and eternal youth.

Rise of the Necropolises
Nehekhara became a society completely obsessed with death and immortality. Deities such as Djaf, the God of the Dead, and Usirian, the God of the Underworld, became as widely worshipped as Ptra, the King of the Gods. Skulls and skeletons became common symbols of immortality and everlasting life, and such motifs were emblazoned on their shields, banners and chariots of the Priest Kings' armies. Heroic warriors were rewarded not with riches and luxuries in life, but with the promise of mummification upon death and the chance of sharing in their lord's eternal rule. It was not just the culture of Nehekhara that changed as the Mortuary Cult grew in power; as the Nehekharans' obsession with death flourished, the architecture and landscape of the Great Land irrevocably changed as well.

Every Priest King demanded that his pyramid outdo the efforts of his predecessors in order to prove his superiority. Though none had the audacity to surpass the majesty of the Great Pyramid of Settra, ever-bigger monuments were raised to honour the achievements of the kings. Titanic statues were carved to stand guard over their remains, keeping them secure through all eternity. Before long, all efforts of the people were expended in building and maintaining the necropolises.

Necrotects directed the construction as Liche Priests oversaw the mummification rituals that the Priest Kings believed would one day lead to their resurrection. Soon, lesser nobles demanded similar rites and had tombs of their own constructed beside the royal pyramids. Over centuries, as hundreds of royal lines and their armies were entombed, the shining necropolises of the dead outgrew the now meagre-looking dwellings of the living. No expense was spared in paving the path for immortality, and the splendour, wealth and power of Nehekhara was breathtaking to behold. However, none could imagine that all this majesty would be destroyed by a single man.

The Great Treachery: Nagash the Necromancer (-2000 to -1151 IC)
The Fall of Nehekhara, and the tragic destruction of its people, was brought about by the ambition of a twisted priest named Nagash. As the firstborn son of King Khetep of Khemri, Nagash was destined to serve in the Mortuary Cult whilst his younger brother, Thutep, ascended to rule following their father's death. Nagash was an exceptionally gifted student, and due to his talents and heritage he quickly became one of Khemri's High Priests, but this did not sate his thirst for power.

Filled with pride and greed, Nagash coveted the throne held by his brother and set into motion a plot to seize the crown for himself. Nagash began to corrupt the religious incantations of the Mortuary Cult, and he gathered together a dozen like-minded acolytes, of which a cruel noble named Arkhan was the foremost. One night, as the clouds covered the moon, Nagash murdered Thutep's bodyguard before entombing the young king alive within the Great Pyramid of their father. The next morning, blood still staining his hands, Nagash placed himself on the throne, and none dared confront him.

The reign of Nagash was a time of terror for all the people of Nehekhara. The usurper king sought to increase his own power by means of devilish sorcery; a blasphemy that the people of Nehekhara felt certain would incur the wrath of the gods. Nagash had learned the art of Dark Magic from a cabal of shipwrecked Dark Elves, captured and imprisoned within his father's pyramid on the eve of his funeral. Nagash tortured the pale-skinned foreigners until they divulged the secrets of their mystical powers, and he proved to be an apt pupil indeed. After only a few years, Nagash had surpassed his tutors' powers, and he destroyed them in a deadly magical duel as they tried to escape.

The Black Pyramid


Nagash began to experiment with necromancy, combining his mastery of Dark Magic with his knowledge of death from the Mortuary Cult. He committed his findings into nine accursed tomes the Books of Nagash — the most powerful source of necromantic magic in the world. One of Nagash's chief successes was the creation of the cursed Elixir of Life. With it, Nagash had finally unlocked the secret of eternal youth. He allowed Arkhan, his trusted vizier, and his other principal lieutenants, to imbibe the elixir. It granted them immortality and incredible strength but, unable to recreate the potion themselves, they were little more than slaves to Nagash's sinister will.

To increase his power and maintain dominance over the land, Nagash ordered the building of a vast black pyramid. Whilst the populace of Khemri believed this to be just another burial tomb, it was in fact a structure that would channel and harness the Winds of Magic to Nagash's every whim. The pyramid became Nagash's obsession, and its construction quickly drained Khemri's resources, forcing the necromancer to wage war to capture building material and replenish his workforce. Nagash demanded great quantities of gold and slaves from other cities to be sent in tribute to Khemri. That which was not given freely was taken by force, and several cities were brutally conquered by Nagash.

Marble the colour of midnight was brought from afar, and innumerable slaves toiled day and night for fifty years until the Black Pyramid of Nagash towered above all other monuments in the whole of Nehekhara. Such was Nagash's arrogance that he had built for himself a tomb that dwarfed even the Great Pyramid of Settra. The broken corpses of countless slaves were built into its foundations, and mystic sigils of power were woven into the Black Pyramid's walls. Even in the baking desert sun, the pyramid was cold to the touch, and not even starlight reflected off its magic-saturated surface. Upon its completion, the Winds of Magic blew more strongly across Nehekhara, and Nagash's mastery of Dark Magic and necromancy increased ten-fold. However, the tribute exacted by Khemri was so great that the poverty-wracked cities of Nehekhara had begun to fall into ruin. Eventually, the other Priest Kings rallied against the tyranny of Khemri. They refused to submit to Nagash any longer, and they began to draw their plans against him.

The War of the Dead


To face the defiant Priest Kings, Nagash used his infernal powers to raise a legion of Skeleton Warriors. This was the first time that the dead were made to walk at the will of another, and the horror of it caused many mortal soldiers to flee before the Undead armies. City after city fell before Nagash, and though the living warriors of Nehekhara fought bravely, every soldier who fell only served to swell the ranks of the Undead. Nagash believed it was only a matter of time before the Priest Kings relented and bent their knees in supplication once more, but his arrogance was to prove his undoing, for he underestimated both their resolve and pride.

After many long years, the remaining Priest Kings threw all their strengths and hopes into one final gambit, and the combined armies of seven kings marched upon Khemri. It was not only flesh and blood warriors who besieged Khemri, for beside the Priest Kings' armies strode towering statues. Faced with destruction by Nagash's sorcery, the Mortuary Cult had finally decided to take action and put their centuries of magical research into practice on the battlefield.

In a grand ritual, they summoned the spirits of ancient heroes from the Realm of Souls and bound them into the numerous statues that lined the passageways of the necropolises. The god-like Ushabti, towering Necrolith Colossi and powerful Khemrian Warsphinxes were awakened, ready to be directed to war. With creations such as these fighting at their side, the living warriors of Nehekhara were emboldened, and they crashed into the Undead legions with devastating force.

After a titanic battle, Nagash's forces were defeated by the combined might of the Army of the Seven Kings. Khemri was besieged, and then sacked. Nagash's immortal lieutenants, who had taken refuge in the cursed Black Pyramid, were dragged out of their sarcophagi into the sunlight one by one and were executed by the vengeful Priest Kings. However, Nagash maanged to escape before the Priest Kings found his tomb thanks to the sacrifice of Arkhan, who stalled the attackers long enough for his master to flee. With a curse on his lips, Nagash vowed to turn the entire world into a kingdom of the dead, and travelled north to plot his revenge.

Alcadizaar the Conqueror


For hundreds of years, the Priest Kings continued to rule Nehekhara, but the corruption of Nagash had forever tainted the land, and it never truly recovered. The individual city rulers had exhausted their populace in overthrowing Nagash, and they now had to contend with famines, civil wars and marauding barbarians from distant lands. The treachery of Nagash had also tarnished the authority of the royal lines, and it was not until several centuries later that a truly powerful king arose. Alcadizaar, a ruler the likes of which had not been seen since the days of Settra, ascended to the rule of Khemri.

Under his wise and charismatic leadership, Alcadizaar bound the Great Cities under his rule, and Nehekhara began to prosper once more. The treachery of Nagash was hard to forget, and since his Reign of Terror, the Mortuary Cult was watched closely. The Liche Priests were forbidden from deviating from their age-old lore of incantations, which had remained unchanged for centuries. However, the lords of the city of Lahmia hungered for power over their rivals. They saw in Nagash's sorcery the means not only to dominate all of Nehekhara, but also the chance to live forever and sever their dependence on the Mortuary Cult.

To this end, they stole one of the blasphemous Books of Nagash from the Black Pyramid, and over the course of centuries they secretly become adept practitioners of necromancy. The queen of Lahmia, Neferata, embraced the malign magic and used her powers to consort with daemonic entities. She created a tainted version of Nagash's elixir, extending her life indefinitely, yet cursing herself for all eternity. Not possessing the skill or knowledge of Nagash, Neferata and her court were struck by an unquenchable thirst for mortal blood.

Lahmia had become the birthplace of the Vampires, fell creatures whose individual strength and unholy power were greater than that of a dozen men. Fearful that necromancy would bring about the wrath of the gods, King Alcadizaar made war on the tainted Vampire queen. Alcadizaar gathered legions from every other Nehekharan city and forged them into a single massed army that he led against Lahmia. Thousands of chariots raced across the land ahead of vast regiments of archers, mighty phalanxes of spearmen and battalions of giant war-statues. Against such a host, not even the accursed Vampires could prevail, and the power of Lahmia was smashed. The pale queen fled, accompanied by those she had embraced into her cursed vampiric existence.

The Fall of Nehekhara


Unbeknownst to the Vampires, they had been guided by the implacable will of Nagash since their creation. Residing far away in his fortress, Nagashizzar, amid the mountains to the north-cast of Nehekhara, the arch-necromancer recognised the spawn of his own ancient evil and was gladdened by the corruption of Lahmia. Here were worthy champions, their damnation a tribute to his dark genius. Drawing them to him, Nagash welcomed the Vampires, and they became his dark captains. Through them, Nagash began a new offensive against Nehekhara, and the two sides fought numerous ibattles — the outcomes of which would pave the way for the necromancer's inevitable return. Beside the Vampires came the dead warriors of a vast host, Skeletons drawn from the ninths and cairns of the northern lands by the power of Nagash's sorcery.

Nagash resurrected his trusted servant, Arkhan the Black, who won many victories in his master's name. War assailed Nehekhara for years on end, and the land was irredeemably scarred. However, Alcadizaar was the greatest general of his age, and he led the unified army of Nehekhara against Nagash's evil for all their long years of battle. Under his leadership, the living legions of Nehekhara never yielded, and finally, during the Battle of the Golden Skull, the Undcad hordes of Nagash were repulsed from Nelickhara. The Vampires scattered throughout the world to escape destruction, and without their magic and leadership, their armies of Skeletons crumbled. Nagash had been defeated. There was much rejoicing throughout Nehekhara, though the evil sorcerer himself still walked the land.

Such was Nagash's bitterness, so great the potency of his thwarted ambition, that he chose to end all life in Nehekhara rather than see anyone else hold power over the land. He polluted the Great Vitae River, poisoning it until it turned thick and dark, tainting the lands that relied on tis life-bring waters. Forever after it was known as the Great Mortis River. Pestilence and disease ran rampant across the Great Land. Within a few weeks, those who had succumbed to the terrible plagues outnumbered the living. The city streets were choked with corpses as fully nine-tenths of the Nehekharan population perished. Mourning for his lost people, Alcadizaar sat upon his throne as his kingdom was destroyed — for all his skill at arms, he was powerless. Nagash's Undead forces marched upon Khemri, brushing aside the city's plague-ravaged guard with impunity and walking past the fortress walls and siege-barracks unchallenged. His Skeleton Warriors broke into Khemri's royal palace and dragged Alcadizaar away to rot in a dungeon cell. For the first time in centuries, Nagash sat upon the throne of Khemri.

The Death of Nagash
However, Nagash did not linger in Khemri for long. Filled with insane visions of power, he returned to Nagashizzar and began to cast the greatest and most terrifying spell ever conceived. He intended to enact the Great Ritual, a spell powerful enough to resurrect every corpse across the globe and bind them under his control. With them, Nagash would command an unstoppable army of the dead that he could use to conquer the entire world. To power his Great Ritual, he consumed vast quantities of warpstone and summoned all the energies stored within his cursed Black Pyramid. As Nagash chanted within his fortress, the sky began to darken for hundreds of miles around and the ground shook. As his spell reached its crescendo, a great wave of power surged from the sorcerer's body, washing over the lands of Nehekhara and stealing the life from everything in its path. Crops shrivelled and animals perished within seconds.

The last people of Nehekhara fell to the ground, their skin withering as if they had aged a century in the blink of an eye. Within minutes, there was not a single living creature in the entirety of Nehekhara. Such was Nagash's execration of Alcadizaar, who had thwarted his plans for so long, that he spared the imprisoned king to witness the horrifying fate that had befallen his former kingdom. Whilst the Great Ritual scoured the land of life, some things remained undetected far beneath Nagashizzar. While Nagash was channelling his great spell, drunk with magical power and lost in dreams of triumph, Alcadizaar, the last mortal king of Nehekhara, was mysteriously freed from his prison below Nagashizzar by a group of hunched, heavily cloaked, rat-like creatures. A powerful blade, made of purest warpstone, was pushed into his hands, and the emaciated king stumbled into Nagash's throne room just as the sorcerer was reaching the climax of his mighty ritual. Through sheer force of will, Alcadizaar summoned the strength to swing his baleful sword and cut the hated necromancer down. As Nagash died, the energies of his accursed spell spiralled out of his control and swept across his homeland. Alcadizaar, filled with horror at the obscenities he had seen and having witnessed the death of his beloved realm, then faded from history

The Awakening: The Rise of the Tomb Kings (-1151 to -1149 IC)
As Nagash's powerful sorceries coursed across Nehekhara, countless corpses stirred and rose, animated solely by the dark will of the necromancer. With his destruction, their source of animus vanished and they fell like marionettes whose strings had been mysteriously cut. Nagash's foul magic also penetrated the tombs of the kings and reverberated throughout the charnel pits of the dead cities. However, protected and shielded to a degree by the wards and incantations placed upon their pyramids and necropolises, Nagash's spell affected the long-dead kings and their buried legions differently. After centuries of entombment, the stiffened corpses of monarchs and heroes awoke.

The mummified kings rose from their resting places. Legions of Skeleton Warriors burst forth from their sand-filled tomb pits, ready to do their liege's bidding. Due to the incantations of preservation performed on their embalmed bodies, the Tomb Kings awoke from their long journey through the Realm of Souls with their memories and faculties intact. They emerged from their tombs in horror. Where the ancient kings had been promised eternal life in a paradise where they would rule supreme, they instead awoke to find themselves clad in desiccated flesh and rotten vestments, with their cities shattered, their lands desolate and their kingdoms all but destroyed — little more than ruins poking out from beneath the sand dunes.

The War of the Kings


There had been countless kings during the long history of Nehekhara. The fires of ambition and pride that had driven them in life still resided in their ancient bodies, and they instantly set out to reclaim their empires as best they could. Kings who were great and powerful in life, who had reigned unchallenged for centuries, now awoke from death in a land where they were but one amongst hundreds. All believed the right to rule the land was solely theirs, and none would relinquish their perceived power. Dynasties that were built upon the shoulders of more powerful monarchs were forced to confront their founders, and there were long battles in the necropolises as king fought king. Undying legions arose at their command, and many tens of thousands of Skeleton Warriors were destroyed as the Undead Tomb Kings struggled for supremacy.

Of all the tombs and pyramids, only one remained silent and untouched by the fighting — the Great Pyramid of Settra the Imperishable. The wards heaped on the white burial monument had protected the mummified corpse of Settra from Nagash's tainted sorcery, and its occupants still slumbered in the sleep of death, oblivious to the turmoil of battle taking place outside the pyramid walls. As the battles raged, the Liche Priests looked on. Their bodies, already extended far beyond their natural span, were unaffected by Nagash's spell. They had survived the rise and fall of Nagash, whose sorcerous power they could not match, but it looked like the warring Tomb Kings were going to destroy what remained of Nehekhara. The head of the Mortuary Cult, Grand Hierophant Khatep, oldest and wisest of the Liche Priests, took it upon himself to restore order. As king smote king, Khatep broke the seals to Settra's pyramid and began to recite the incantation of awakening.

In Khemri, the battles between rival kings lasted for days before the tomb of Settra opened, and the mightiest of all the kings of Nehekhara strode out into the blazing sunlight at the head of thousands of his warriors. In undeath, Settra hungered for the domination of his fellow Tomb Kings, and he would suffer no rival to his rule. Settra waded into the carnage. His Herald, Nekaph, stood as ever by his side. Together, they led Settra's elite Tomb Guard and quickly carved a path through the rival Skeleton legions. Settra struck down dozens of lesser Tomb Kings who stood against him, powdering their bones to dust and destroying them utterly. Not even Arkhan the Black, with his command of dark sorcery, could prevail against Settra's strength of arms, and he was forced to flee Khemri. Before long, all the Tomb Kings bowed their heads to Settra the Imperishable —the undisputed ruler of all Nehekhara.

Settra Awakens


Settra returned to his throne room and commanded the Lithe Priests to explain to him why the awakening had gone awry, and so long before the right and proper time. Settra's fury was great; his cities were in ruins, his treasures had been plundered and much of his kingdom had been lost to foreign invaders. The golden paradise he was promised did not exist, and worst of all, it appeared as if the ancient gods had abandoned Nehekhara. Grand Hierophant Khatep cowered before the outraged king and told the history of Nehekhara since his passing over two thousand years before. As best he could, Khatep told Settra of the spell that the foul Nagash had cast, cursing Nehekhara for all time.

Settra listened with a barely controlled rage simmering within him. Once he had learned all he could from Khatep, he commanded that the Tomb Kings return to their eternal rest. The Liche Priests were given the duty of watching over the tombs and of awakening his vassal kings as needed. Settra vowed that he would stay vigilant, taking stock of the world and waging war as was his right. Never again would he slumber, lest his kingdom slide into ruin. Settra set about restoring his former empire without delay. In particular, he watched for the return of the hated Nagash, he who had cursed his realm, for he knew that the necromancer might yet reappear in the world and that Nagash's sorcery could still threaten his immortality. So it was that Nehekhara became the Land of the Dead and Settra the Imperishable renewed his rulership, which would become known as the Reign of Millions of Years.

An Age of Kings: The Reign of a Million Years (-1149 to 2518 IC)
Settra the Imperishable had ruled as the Undead king of all Nehekhara for over a millennia when an army of marauding tribesmen from the frozen north made landfall on the baking shores of Nehekhara. The barbaric warriors plundered several tombs before the Skeleton Warriors of Settra's legions began to rise from the sands to bar their escape. Even as the Marauders prepared to face this threat, the skies began to darken. The barbarians gazed to the heavens, and a heartbeat later, a cloud of arrows fell amongst them that cut down hundreds of warriors. In the wake of the volley, vast flocks of Carrion descended upon the wounded and the dying, razor-sharp beaks tearing open throats and bellies.

The tribe's chieftain, Valgar the Butcher, ordered a savage counter-attack, unleashing packs of bloodthirsty Warbounds that tore the Carrion apart in a frenzied gnashing of teeth. 1/2Igar then redressed his surviving warriors' ranks and prepared to meet the approaching Skeleton battle line. Axes clashed with spears as the two forces collided, but wherever %blgar fought, the Undcad were hewn by his axe or crushed beneath the hooves of his daemonic steed. Despite Valgar's fearsome skill, his forces were vastly outnumbered and his own warriors were growing tired, their strength sapped by the punishing glare of the desert sun. In the distance, Valgar could see a single figure emerge through the heat-haze, a majestic warrior riding forwards on a golden chariot. Valgar raised his rune-covered axe to the air and bellowed a challenge to the new-comer — a challenge that was answered with a rumble of thunder.

That figure was none other than Settra the Imperishable, and he smashed into the invaders with the wrath of ancient gods, driving a bloody path towards Valgar. As the two generals collided, Settra swung his enchanted blade in a mighty arc that decapitated Valgar's daemonic mount in a single blow. Even as Valgar's steed was slain from beneath him, the chieftain's axe glowed with baleful energy, and it was suddenly wreathed in sorcerous flames. The axe bit deep into Settra's chest and set his form ablaze. Before Valgar could enjoy his victory, Settra's body exploded into a ravenous swarm of beetles that stripped the chieftain's flesh from his bones before flying back to the Great Pyramid of Khemri to regenerate the Tomb King's immortal form.

Amidst the carnage, Valgar's lieutenant, Khagul Bloodfist, stooped down to pick up Settra's regal crown before rallying the surviving tribesmen and driving a path through the skeletal shield-wall back to the coast. Only a dozen Marauders managed to survive and escape back to their frozen realm, bloodied, but rich beyond their wildest dreams.

Settra's Revenge
It was a decade before Settra remerged from his sarcophagus, his body restored but his heart burning with the need for vengeance. The men of the north had not only dared to enter his realm, soiling the desert with their barbaric feet, they had the temerity to face him in battle, even going so far as to strike him down. However, most heinous of all crimes had been the bold act of laying their lowborn hands upon the Crown of Nehekhara — a deed that brought with it a sentence of death. Settra the Imperishable would punish the barbarians for their insolence by staining the snows of their homeland red with their blood. The King of Nehekhara turned to his Liche Priests and ordered them to awaken his vassal kings; the combined might of Nehekhara's armies was going to war. Settra's war fleets sailed north, towards the frozen wastelands, laden with legions of Undead soldiers and war-constructs.

The King of Nehekhara swore that only when every last gold coin was recovered, and every one of the barbarians who had escaped his wrath a decade ago was slain, would he return to Khemri. Each of those men had become a chieftain in his own right, with the wealth they brought back from the Land of the Dead securing them much power and many followers. Several had become Champions of Chaos and now they led whole tribes of merciless warriors and mutated monsters. Settra's warhost collided with the iron-clad Warriors of Chaos across the entire length of the northern lands. Enormous statues strode relentlessly through driving blizzards, and regiments of Skeleton Chariots tirelessly ploughed through snow-drifts in their hunt for the guilty.

Untold thousands of men were slaughtered upon the swords and spears of Settra's host as tribe after tribe was destroyed. Dragon Ogres were cut down by powerful Ushabti, Trolls were turned into pillars of sand by Sepulchral Stalkers and grotesque Giants were slain by the monstrous claws of ferocious Necrosphinxes. Driven by Settra's unyielding will, the legions of Nehekhara were unstoppable. Within five years only one of the dozen Mauraders remained alive, and only a single treasure — the Crown of Nehekhara — remained unclaimed. Settra's revenge was almost at hand.

Rulership
"And behold, the almight God-King Settra did awaken from his sleep of blessed oblivion. His legions, long buried beneath the sands, did arise and stand to attention, awaiting his order. And he did say "War!", and the world did tremble"

- Grand Hierophant Khatep

The Tomb Kings are the sovereign and undying rulers of all Nehekhara. They are all that remains of an ancient and far-flung civilization that had long ago vanished from history, its people long dead and their cities naught but dried ash and shifting sand. These unliving Kings and his personal retinue of warriors and priest are all that remains to remember their passing. Since then, the Tomb Kings have ever reign from their necropolis as they had always done, attempting to imitate the life they once knew and loved.

Alongside these mighty rulers are their trusted advisors, an ancient caste of religious figures known as the Liche Priest. These Wizards of great power were once the keepers of great knowledge and forbidden lore, and the caretakers of Nehekhara's long-passed Kings and Queens. And below them stands the uncountable legions of warriors that serve for him eternally, never tiring nor dying for their unliving master.

Yet there were many ancient and powerful Kings that once ruled the lands of Nehekhara, and like all of them, they too were buried beneath their tombs only to awaken from their crypts to the rays of a dying world. From here, they saw their once ancient ancestors walking amongst it's streets, demanding other Kings to kneel in fealty to him. One by one, each arisen King of Nehekhara has vied themselves in a titanic power struggle over the lands of Nehekhara, each petty Tomb King ruling over his own patch of territory whilst vying for power against other Tomb Kings. The greatest of these unliving rulers are those that claim the dominion of Nehekhara's ancient city-states, cities that were as powerful as any Old World kingdom in it's own right.

Many Tomb Kings behave as if nothing is awry, ruling as if they were still beings of flesh and blood. Perhaps some are truly unaware of their unliving state, whilst others are in denial of their cursed existence or have been driven mad by the sight of their own hideous visage. A Tomb King may demand a bowl of sweet figs and a goblet of fine wine, seemingly oblivious that the contents of such a meal would spill through their desiccated bodies onto the floor. When the proffered meal arrives, a Tomb King will simply stare at the fruit, wondering what such a thing is for, until it either rots to dust or a vestigial memory surfaces allowing a moment of clarity to reassert itself.

In that instant, the Tomb King recalls all the pride, majesty and greatness of what he was and the cruel parody of what he has become. Realising that he will never know the taste of food, the quenching relief of cool water, the sensation of touch or any other simple joy ever again, the Tomb King will enter a fit of incandescent rage. Ancient and wrathful, all that is left for the Tomb Kings is their hunger for power, their thirst for conquest and their need for vengeance. The Tomb Kings are unremitting in their eternal war upon those who have the temerity to live whilst their rightful rulers languish in undeath.

Nehekharan Dynasties
There have been many Tomb Kings, even before they assumed that name, the Kings of Nehekhara, after it was united, ruled for hundreds of years before their downfall. The High Kings, the ruler of Nehekhara (usually of Khemri) who commanded the loyalty of the lesser Kings of the other cities, are as follows.

Pre-Dynastic Times
The primitive nomadic people who first inhabited the land which would later be called Nehekhara, living in much the same way as the desert nomads of Araby do today.


 * Nehek - One of the first known rulers of Nehekhara and the one who was named after the land itself.
 * Zakash - Ancient King of Zandri.
 * Khesek - Ancient King who subjugated the desert nomads and founded the city of Numas.
 * Hekesh - Ancient Ruler who made war against many Nehekharan Kings.

1st Dynasty
After the various cities of Nehekhara grew, Settra was the first King to unite them all under the rule of Khemri, proclaiming himself the King of Kings.


 * Settra - First King of Khemri and that of all Nehekhara. Settra was also the founder of the Mortuary Cult and was the first Ruler to have built a pyramid in his honor and the first to be wrapped for his awakening in the afterlife.
 * Ahtaf I - Heir of King Settra who desired a pyramid as mighty as his father. His reign saw half the kingdom rebell against him, with Numas and Zandri regaining independence.
 * Khutef - A ruler who reunited Nehekhara and paid no tribute to any King.
 * Ahtaf II - A ruler known for having built a strong fleet of ships.
 * Utep - A ruler whose reign saw the Mortuary Cult discover a small measure of immortality.
 * Wakhaf - A ruler who repelled the nomads of the desert.
 * Sekhef - A ruler whose reign sowed discord amongst the priest.
 * Nekhesh - A ruler whose reign saw strife within the necropolis.

2nd Dynasty
During the second dynasty, Nehekhara expanded greatly and became very wealthy.


 * Rakaph I - A ruler who pacified the lands of Khemri and restored the preist of the former Kigns.
 * Rakhash - A ruler who craved great wealth and set about conquering lands beyond the mountains to the east of Nehekhara.
 * Rakaph II - A ruler who saw that the city-states of Mahrak, Lybaras and Lahmia within the eastern borders were subjugated.
 * Pharakh - A ruler who saw the construction of the Canal of Abundance for ten years and the aid of ten thousand laborers. The canal saw Nehekhara prospered exceedingly and his pyarmid was mighty as a reward.
 * Rakaph III - A ruler who lived for so long that no heir lived to succeed him. He also repelled the desert nomads on three occassions.
 * Queen Rasut - A female ruler who forcefully took the throne of Khemri so that no king of Zandri or Numas should reign over the city. None dared oppose her. She exalted the priest and rewarded her soldiers. Her infant son was placed upon the throne on her demise but he did not live to see his third year.

3rd Dynasty
A period of turbulence and strife.


 * Khetep - A great ruler who acted as the regent of Queen Rasut's infant son. When the infant died, he built a mighty pyarmid with the aid of one million slaves over the course of twenty-five years. None dared oppose him and as such, the lands of Nehekhara prospered as never before.
 * Thutep - Heir to King Khetep and brother of Nagash. Was entombed by his father while still alive when Nagash siezed power over Khemri.
 * Nagash the Great Necromancer - The accursed ruler of Khemri who brought the ultimate downfall of Nehekhara. Was dethroned by the other Priest Kings of Nehekhara and fled to Nagashizzar.

4th Dynasty
The empire is divided into civil wars, many cities rebel and separatist movements form.


 * Lahmizzar - King of Lahmia who waged war against Nagash. Was slained at the hands of the Necromancer.
 * Lahmizzash - Son of Lahmizzar who continued the war against Nagash and sacked the city of Khemri.
 * Lakhashar - Son of Lahmizzash who ruled the city of Khemri as right of conquest.
 * Lahkashaz - A ruler whose reign resulted in open civil war amongst the Priest Kings. His city went up in rebellion and he was defeated and slain.

5th Dynasty
The empire is united again and begins to flourish.


 * Setep - A ruler who usurp the throne of Khemri and restored the Necropolis and the Priesthood.

6th Dynasty
A period of reconquest, ended by the last invasion of Nagash and the death and final sacrifice of Alcadizaar.*


 * Alkhazzar II - A former general of Setep who was given rulership of the kingdom. He was known as a mighty leader of a host of charioteers and the subjugator of Numas.
 * Alkhazzar I - A ruler who marched upon Zandri and subjugated the city. He also ensured the continued fear from the desert dwellers.
 * Alkharad - A ruler who fought against Mahrak and Lybara and brought Rasetra under his rule.
 * Alcadizaar the Conqueror - The last and perhaps most greatest Priest King of his age. Alcadizaar united all of Nehekahra under his rule and his empire was at the zenith of their power. He fought back the great Nagash in many great battles and pushed him back. Then pestilence and death destroyed his kingdom from within, and the last King of Nehekhara avenged his homeland by slaining the great Nagash for good.

7th Dynasty
Returning to an Undead mockery of life, Settra rules over his descendants and successors with an iron fist.


 * Settra the Imperishable - The first King of Nehekahra returns to finally reign over his kingdom for a million years.

Beliefs
"Damnation awaits those who would disturb his rest! Here be the souls of those that are lost..."

- Inscribed on the Casket of Souls within the tomb of King Setep



The ancient Nehekharans had many religious cults dedicated to the worship of many deities. Known simply as the Desert Gods, it is said that these ancient deities were the ones responsible for turning back the darkness that once engulfed the world in a primeval age and brought with them the light from which the cradle of Human civilization will blossom and flourish. Yet out of all the cults, it is the Mortuary Cult which holds the greatest sway within Nehekhara. Foremost amongst the cults' beliefs is the importance of the soul.

The ancient Nehekharans had a more complex and sophisticated view of what the soul is in comparison to the contemporary views of scholars and clerics of the Empire. Whereas Sigmar's Priest may speak of the anima and animus, known as the the identiy and energy of the soul, the Nehekharans did not believe in so simple a spiritual dyad as this. The verbose codices of the book, "Magistrum Chaotica", describes the soul as a triad; Qeyos, being the spirit energy or raw magic, Feyos, the unconscious and non-sentient inner being; Deyos, being a kind of spirit consciousnesses, immaterial and yet an intermediary between the inner realms of the mind and the outer realm of the physical world. So the soul, as defined by the Lich Priest of Nehekhara, was called the Akbu and it was the immortal, incorporeal person.

Realm of Souls
Since the soul is considered one of the most important aspect of the Mortuary Cult's belief, the Realm of Souls is considered the revered afterlife from which the Cult promises Nehekhara's many Kings. It was believed that upon death, the deceased's spirits would enter the Realm of Souls, also known as the Underworld or the Netherworld. Here, the Kings of Nekehara would reside in fantastic palaces until such time as a golden paradise worthy of their status was prepared, whereupon they would rule for a million years. It would be filled with all their servants, soldiers and worldly possesions, and so these were necessarily buried beside their monarchs upon death.

However, not all inhabitants in the Realm of Souls would be afforded such luxury, for in the lowest levels, the cursed and the damned would be subject to an eternity of torture for their sins. Only the wretches, the unworthy and the traitors of Nehekharan society were condemned thus, and the idea that those of noble blood could be damned to such a fate was unthinkable. The Liche Priest of the Mortuary Cult believe that their magical powers originate from the Realm of Souls. With the proper incantations, the Liche Priest are able to summon forth the spirits of deceased warriors from this mystical plain and bind them into corporeal form to fight for Nehekhara once more.

Language


The written language of the Nehekharan tongue follows a highly organised and logical, if not complex grammatical structure. The Nehekharan written language, which are known as Hieroglyphs, uses a series of carved or drawn images which are meant to represent words or objects within a sentence. A combination of such glyphs are then used together to form complete sentences. Most of these glyphs are often written within the walls and stone faces of many obelisk and temples.

Since the lands of Nehekhara was considered the cradle of Human civilization, it can be said that the Nehekharan's were the first to produce the first Human written language upon ancient papyrus long before the rise of the Empire of Man or even the Tilean City-States. According to Nehekharan legend, it is said that the Desert Gods of that land were the ones responsible for teaching these early Nehekharans how to read and write, thus allowing them to become the powerful nation they would one day become.

Society
"The first day, I found no trace of the wisdom I sought, nor could I decipher the location of the Library of Horeptis. On the second day, I awoke to the prodding of a bronze headed spear, clutched in the hand of an armoured skeletal warrior. I’ve have seen such sights in my days that I’m all but jaded to terror, but being awoken by one of the undead surely took another year or two off my life."

- Metrious Null from "The Quest for My Heart"



Ever since mighty Settra embarked upon his impossible quest of gaining true immortality for all time, the entire social order of Nehekhara became preoccupied with the very nature of Death and the Afterlife. When the Mortuary Cult was first formed under the orders of Settra and went about the task of finding immortality, the Cult's influence eventually seeped into Nehekharan society. These ancient Priest were of many talents and professions. They were holy men, alchemist, apothecaries, daemonologist and much more.

When Settra finally died, the rulers of nehekhara, blinded by their pride and united by their now culturally pre-dispositional horror of death, turned their attention ever more to their lives after death, even at the expense of their own lives and that of their loyal subjects. In mimicry of Settra's own great burial, the kings and princes of Nehekhara ordered magnificent necropolis and mighty pyramids to be built to store their souls until the time came when they will be reborn into their new and unending earth-bound life. More often than not, the husbands, wives and servants of the dead kings and princes were either slain and mummified or else just buried alive with them when they died, along with the ruler's worldly possessions and warmachines. For the greatest kings, entire phalanxes of his most loyal guards sometimes drank poison so as to join their lord even in death and stand guard over him until resurrected altogether.

The practice of mummification and tomb building spread down through society until everyone who could afford it spent much of their worldly wealth preparing for their own afterlives. The Priest of the Mortuary Cult grew to eclipse all other religious cults within the entire lands of Nehekhara, elevating their authority and position over all of Nehekharan society. Soon, in the deserts beyond each city stood sprawling necropoleis, veritable cities of the dead and as the years passed these cities became larger and more numerous than the great settlements of the living. So it was that death became the defining nature of this ancient Human kingdom.

Military
"And behold, the almight God-King Settra did awaken from his sleep of blessed oblivion. His legions, long buried beneath the sands, did arise and stand to attention, awaiting his order. And he did say "War!", and the world did tremble"

- Grand Hierophant Khatep

The ancient armies of the Tomb Kings are vast beyond counting. Loyal even unto death, legions of skeletal warriors, cavalry and chariots from each and ever generation have arisen from their crypts to awnser the call of their liege, advancing by their side as mighty war constructions awaken from their resting place to pulverize all those that would dare to defile the lands of Nehekahra. Such were the armies that once served these mighty rulers of an powerful Empire, an army the likes of which had crushed and conqueror whole kingdoms in a ancient, long-forgotten Golden Age.

When the armies of the Tomb Kings are summoned by the King of Kings, each warrior, no matter how lowly or powerful, will always answer his call. The ancient Hierophants, the mighty Liche Priest of the Mortuary Cult, will scour the deserts of Nehekhara, awakening each and every legion to war. These Undead Warriors are no longer beings of flesh and blood, but instead abominations of sun-bleached bones animated by magic more ancient than even the Empire of Man. These fearless and emotional warriors are petrifying to behold as they stride inexorably forward to strike down the enemies of their Tomb Kings.

Even unto death, these warriors still fight in the same style that their forebearers once fought when they too were still flesh and blood. The main component of the Tomb Kings armies consist of legions of armored warriors, skilled archers, swift cavalry and mighty Charioteers. Fighting like their forebearers before them, the Tomb Kings rely heavily on the swiftness and flexibilty of their armies to achieve victory, using their regiments of light infantry as their core battleline while a swift force of Horsemen, Horse Archers and Charioteers runs circles around the enemy, releasing hail upon hail of javelins and poisoned arrows upon their foe.

Tomb King Infantry

 * Skeleton Warriors - The core of any Tomb King army. The mighty armies of the Tomb Kings, are made up of regiment after regiment of valiant soldiers who perished in battle and were interred in the great tomb pits of the king's necropolis. These troops are armoured in light armour and carry shields these warriors fight with either blade or spear.


 * Skeleton Archers - Armed with bows and equipped with arrows blessed by the goddess Asaph. No cover can protect the foe from these arrows which when fired seek their prey like a living predator.


 * Tomb Guard - The Tomb Guard are the bravest and best soldiers serving the Tomb Kings. They serve as their personal bodyguards and palace guards during life and death. Just as they guarded the palace in life, so now they guard the inner sanctum of the necropolis.

Tomb King Cavalry

 * Skeleton Horsemen - The light armored Skeleton Horsemen are swift and deadly if used properly. Now mounted on skeleton steeds these undead horsemen and their steeds require no rest, food, water or shelter and are relentless in the pursuit of any foe.


 * Skeleton Horse Archers. - The Skeleton Horse Archers act as scouts for their Tomb King masters. These troops fire the deadly arrows of Asaph from horseback.


 * Skeleton Chariots - The pride of a Tomb King's army, entire armies of skeleton chariots have been seen, trampling weaker races in their wake. Tomb Kings are the only army that have and can sustain entire armies of chariots, mostly because they're skeletons and don't get tired, and don't require any food or drink.


 * Necropolis Knights - Monstrous cavalry that are used by the Tomb King armies. Tomb Guards who in life failed their Tomb King master as punishment committed ritualistic suicide via serpent venom. Now in death they receive a chance to redeem themselves mounted on serpentine undead constructs.

Tomb King Warbeast

 * Tomb Swarms - The tombs of the necropoleis are infested with the animated dried husks and shells of countless poisonous insects mostly scarabs, and other vicious creatures of the desert. These animated swarms of deadly insects can be call upon to attack and distract an enemy army.


 * Tomb Scorpions - The powerful creations of the Liche Priests. Within their carapace is the shriveled corpse of a mighty Liche Priest, though they appear to be dead, their corpse still emits their magical influence animating the construct.


 * Carrion - Carrions are massive scavenging birds, akin to vultures, whose wings are said to darken the sky. These creatures once lived in Nehekhara and their reanimated corpses serve in the armies of the Tomb Kings.

Tomb King Artillery

 * Screaming Skull Catapults - The only artillery that the Tomb Kings have. These magical constructs are huge catapults made from bones and crewed by skeletons. They behave as normal stone throwers with one exception; any unit taking fire from the catapult automatically begin to lose moral.

Tomb King Constructs

 * Ushabti - The guardians of the statues of the many gods and goddesses of Nehekhara. The Ushabti also stand as guardians around the perimeters of the great pyramids of the Tomb Kings. In times of need, the Liche Priests imbue the Ushabti with tremendous power through complex incantations and charms. These animated constructs are slow if terribly strong and powerful fighters.


 * Khemrian Warsphinx - A monster that towers over infantry, cavalry and even chariots, these animated creatures are more powerful than the largest of elephants, they serve as excellent mounts for the Tomb King himself, or for his elite tomb guard.


 * Sepulchral Stalkers - Another undead constructs used by the Tomb Kings. Fashioned out of bone, marble and gold. These animated constructs were crafted to have predatory instincts by the Necrotects, they lurk beneath the desert sands ready to spring out and attack the unwary with their halberds while their deadly gaze can transform their foe into sand.


 * Necrolith Colossus - One of the rarer, but more powerful units of the Tomb Kings. The Necrolith Colossus are constructs, painstakingly crafted from jet black obsidian, white marble or dark grey stone and held together by the powerful incantations of the Necrotects. Being the same size of a giant, the Necrolith Colossus is a very powerful and useful to have in a Tomb King Army.


 * Hierotitans - gigantic animated statues of ancient Nehekaran deities of death. These animated titans aid the Liche Priests in the magic phase. Their mere presence increasing the magical power of the priests. These giants are one of the best units available to the Tomb Kings, only second to one.


 * Necrosphinx - The largest and most deadly construct in a Tomb Kings' arsenal. A behemoth of Marble, stone, metal and jade. These constructs resembling mythical creatures of the underworld are borne aloft upon huge wings and are capable of killing a dragon or a giant with one swing of its decapitating blades.


 * Casket of Souls - Within the tombs of the mightiest kings lies a casket sealed with pitch and inscribed with hieroglyphs. Taken to battle by a Liche Priest, the casket can be opened, releasing a blinding light made from countless lost souls, screaming into the air and plunging through the hearts and minds of the enemy ranks.

Notable Characters

 * Settra the Imperishable - The greatest living Tomb King and founder of the Mortuary Cult. In life he ruled all of Nehekhara through his iron will, and in undeath he continues that tradition. Though an arrogant, cruel tyrant, under his 150 years of leadership Nehekhara entered a golden age. Settra desires to restore Nehekhara to its former glory and to expand his realm as he did in life- through conquest. Settra fights atop the golden Chariot of the Gods and wields the Blessed Blade of Ptra, and his skill at arms and aura of command makes him a terrifying foe for any enemy to face.


 * Herald Nekaph - Settra's personal champion and sacred bodyguard, whose weapon "the Flail of Skulls" bears the heads of the formidible foes he has defeated in his king's name. When fighting a foe in a challenge Nekaph fights much harder knowing he fights for his king's honor, upon his resurrection Nekaph retains his warrior soul and his devotion to King Settra.


 * High Queen Khalida - Slain by her own cousin Neferata the first Vampire. When reborn as a Tomb Queen, Khalida vowed not to return to rest until she rids the entire world of the hated vampires. Blessed by the goddess Asaph, Khailida moves with serpent like speed and no poison can harm her.


 * Grand Hierophant Khatep - The most powerful Liche Priest of the Mortuary Cult, banished by Settra until he discovers a way to grant true immortality and restore Nehekhara to its former glory. Khatep roams the deserts searching for the answers while appearing seemingly from nowhere every now and again to aid the armies of the Tomb Kings.


 * Arkhan the Black - Nagash's most trusted follower and a powerful necromancer in his own right. Arkhan searches for a means to resurrect his master, travelling the world to retrieve his master's lost heirlooms. He has already recovered the Staff of Nagash and the Liber Mortis (one of the dreaded nine black tomes of Nagash). Until the time Arkhan can gather the rest of his master's lost artifacts and begin the spell to return Nagash, he fights for any Tomb King who can afford his price.


 * Apophas - A prince who killed his own family to usurp his brother's throne. He was cast down and as punishment, he was entombed alive with countless desert scarabs which devoured his still living flesh. Once this punishment was complete, the tomb was opened and his skull was cast into the desert- so great were his crimes, he was denied a permanent crypt. Usirian, the god of death, claimed his soul but the Prince struck a bargain with the god- Apophas would be granted undeath in order to search the world for a perfect soul to take his place in the realm of the dead. Thus Apophas was reborn, his body now taking the form of man-shaped swarm of desert scarabs, with his skull on top in place of a head, the body wielding the same knife he used to murder his own family. Unknown to Apophas, Usirian tricked him, as no soul is ever exactly equal to another, thus Apophas is doomed to spend eternity sending souls to Usirian.


 * Ramhotep the Visionary -  The most revered Necrotect of Nehekhara.