Difference between revisions of "Ra's al-Ghul"
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|Theme=DC | |Theme=DC | ||
|Chartype=VFC | |Chartype=VFC | ||
|Active= | |Active=Dropped | ||
|Occupation=The Shears of Time | |Occupation=The Shears of Time | ||
|Citizenship=Saudi Arabia | |Citizenship=Saudi Arabia | ||
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|Song="Shepherd of Fire" by Avenged Sevenfold | |Song="Shepherd of Fire" by Avenged Sevenfold | ||
|Profile=Born out of tragedy, surviving bloodshed, and becoming more than a man, Ra's al-Ghul was once a Chinese doctor in Rafha, in modern day Saudi Arabia. His study of the mystical and the material led him to discover the Lazarus Pit, a powerful alchemist's boon meant to help humans reach their peak potential. Although the origins of these strange spectral magicks have eluded him over the course of his centuries upon this planet, their meaning to him is simple; there are signs, patterns, within human existence, that can be studied and duplicated, to bring a higher order to human affairs. And within this higher order, Ra's al-Ghul finds himself to be a champion of it, sacrificing the lives of many for the betterment of larger systems, seeing himself as the same humble doctor he found himself as at the beginning of his strange, fated journey. A fire blooming a new forest, a chance mutation from a dying species, or an entire set of species destroyed for the evolution of a new form of life, these are the things he sees in nature. And he finds himself now an agent of nature, wielding his immensely intelligent mind to aid this nature as a newly evolved life form, a demon sought in the terrors of priests, and the rising tide forcing humanity towards a new form of sapience. For a docile man is livestock, and a hungry man is a predator, but a man without a soul? He is a sculptor. | |Profile=Born out of tragedy, surviving bloodshed, and becoming more than a man, Ra's al-Ghul was once a Chinese doctor in Rafha, in modern day Saudi Arabia. His study of the mystical and the material led him to discover the Lazarus Pit, a powerful alchemist's boon meant to help humans reach their peak potential. Although the origins of these strange spectral magicks have eluded him over the course of his centuries upon this planet, their meaning to him is simple; there are signs, patterns, within human existence, that can be studied and duplicated, to bring a higher order to human affairs. And within this higher order, Ra's al-Ghul finds himself to be a champion of it, sacrificing the lives of many for the betterment of larger systems, seeing himself as the same humble doctor he found himself as at the beginning of his strange, fated journey. A fire blooming a new forest, a chance mutation from a dying species, or an entire set of species destroyed for the evolution of a new form of life, these are the things he sees in nature. And he finds himself now an agent of nature, wielding his immensely intelligent mind to aid this nature as a newly evolved life form, a demon sought in the terrors of priests, and the rising tide forcing humanity towards a new form of sapience. For a docile man is livestock, and a hungry man is a predator, but a man without a soul? He is a sculptor. | ||
===Current Player Approved: | ===Current Player Approved: Not Applicable=== | ||
|Description=A man of Chinese-Mongol descent, his head held high and haught, with black hair swept backwards and carved with white through the sideburns, a pair of whiskers carefully cultivated on either side of a pair of noble lips sitting above a black pointed goatee, this is the legendary figure, Ra's al-Ghul. His face is a dour one, if one is lucky, pleasured in the sight of something he wants or savagely happy in the heat of combat, with maddening hatred at the sign of final victory. The desert is on this one's face, the sand swept yehindis of Rafha that he maneuvered as a child having carved its peace through his clay colored flesh. He's tall, very tall, six foot five, a Mongol warrior blended with the narrow confines of a Chinese Shaolin monk, his body tightly wound with slim, muscled limbs and a proudly taut chest with lean, iron pectorals and a snake's abdomen beneath it. This body is gilded in a white shirt, woven together from the base of the sternum and arrayed with a green cloak hanging about the shoulders. Brown britches are worn on his nimble legs, an Arab corsair's cutlass at his hip, held within a faithful brown sheath. On his feet are a pair of black riding boots, selected for their soft leather composition and their old fashioned reliable soles. | |Description=A man of Chinese-Mongol descent, his head held high and haught, with black hair swept backwards and carved with white through the sideburns, a pair of whiskers carefully cultivated on either side of a pair of noble lips sitting above a black pointed goatee, this is the legendary figure, Ra's al-Ghul. His face is a dour one, if one is lucky, pleasured in the sight of something he wants or savagely happy in the heat of combat, with maddening hatred at the sign of final victory. The desert is on this one's face, the sand swept yehindis of Rafha that he maneuvered as a child having carved its peace through his clay colored flesh. He's tall, very tall, six foot five, a Mongol warrior blended with the narrow confines of a Chinese Shaolin monk, his body tightly wound with slim, muscled limbs and a proudly taut chest with lean, iron pectorals and a snake's abdomen beneath it. This body is gilded in a white shirt, woven together from the base of the sternum and arrayed with a green cloak hanging about the shoulders. Brown britches are worn on his nimble legs, an Arab corsair's cutlass at his hip, held within a faithful brown sheath. On his feet are a pair of black riding boots, selected for their soft leather composition and their old fashioned reliable soles. | ||
|History=The pace of Earth's potential has increased in more and more rapid terms. For each setback, new adaptations appear and overcome these difficulties. But there have always been irregularities. When a function becomes morose, it fails and is overtaken by the more cunning device. This is the pattern as it should be, and when a strange occurrence occurs, that trick of the light that sets aside the rules of a system in interests of a disaster, agents are placed into play to reset this balance that will eventually breed the lost potential back into play. But there is sacrifice involved in both the loss of something to antiquity, and to the upraised fist of God. The downfall of the Golden Age of Islam because of the Mongol Horde's success against the internally divided Chinese Empire, is the example that created the Demon's Head, Ra's al-Ghul.<br><br>As the Mongol Horde journeyed west, taking over society after society and reducing them to ashes from such potentialities, their legend and expertise grew to the point that the Library of Baghdad, the finest collection of intellect in all of the Old World, with knowledge from the deepest heart of Africa during the Empire of Nimrod, to the secrets of Alexander's battle tactics and the Roman histories and the medicines of the Arab states, was thrown into the Euphrates. As they say, the Euphrates turned black with the ink blood of civilization. That was 1258, AD, that Baghdad fell, and this disaster happened. And a small group of Mongols and Chinese, agents of the Horde, were so horrified that they rebelled against the perceived power of might instead of righteous wisdom, and they fled along a Bedouin track south, into the Arab Peninsula, to Rafha. | |History=The pace of Earth's potential has increased in more and more rapid terms. For each setback, new adaptations appear and overcome these difficulties. But there have always been irregularities. When a function becomes morose, it fails and is overtaken by the more cunning device. This is the pattern as it should be, and when a strange occurrence occurs, that trick of the light that sets aside the rules of a system in interests of a disaster, agents are placed into play to reset this balance that will eventually breed the lost potential back into play. But there is sacrifice involved in both the loss of something to antiquity, and to the upraised fist of God. The downfall of the Golden Age of Islam because of the Mongol Horde's success against the internally divided Chinese Empire, is the example that created the Demon's Head, Ra's al-Ghul.<br><br>As the Mongol Horde journeyed west, taking over society after society and reducing them to ashes from such potentialities, their legend and expertise grew to the point that the Library of Baghdad, the finest collection of intellect in all of the Old World, with knowledge from the deepest heart of Africa during the Empire of Nimrod, to the secrets of Alexander's battle tactics and the Roman histories and the medicines of the Arab states, was thrown into the Euphrates. As they say, the Euphrates turned black with the ink blood of civilization. That was 1258, AD, that Baghdad fell, and this disaster happened. And a small group of Mongols and Chinese, agents of the Horde, were so horrified that they rebelled against the perceived power of might instead of righteous wisdom, and they fled along a Bedouin track south, into the Arab Peninsula, to Rafha. |
Latest revision as of 14:38, 29 April 2019
Ra's al-Ghul (Scenesys ID: 299) | |||
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Quote | |||
"A system, in order to survive, must periodically alter its equilibrium in order to reach a higher adaptability. This is the purpose of all human endeavor." | |||
Profile | |||
Full Name: | The Demon's Head | ||
Gender: | Male | ||
Species: | Human | ||
Theme: | DC (VFC) | ||
Occupation: | The Shears of Time | ||
Citizenship: | Saudi Arabia | ||
Residence: | Himalayan Mountains | ||
Education: | Timeless Student of Mankind | ||
Status: | Dropped | ||
Groups: | Batman Family, Hench, Gotham-OOC | ||
Other Information | |||
Apparent Age: | {{{PAge}}} | Actual Age: | 767 |
Date of Birth | 12 January 1260 | Actor: | Oded Fehr |
Height: | 195 cm | Weight: | 81 kg |
Hair Color: | Black | Eye Color: | Brown |
Theme Song: | "Shepherd of Fire" by Avenged Sevenfold |
Profile
Born out of tragedy, surviving bloodshed, and becoming more than a man, Ra's al-Ghul was once a Chinese doctor in Rafha, in modern day Saudi Arabia. His study of the mystical and the material led him to discover the Lazarus Pit, a powerful alchemist's boon meant to help humans reach their peak potential. Although the origins of these strange spectral magicks have eluded him over the course of his centuries upon this planet, their meaning to him is simple; there are signs, patterns, within human existence, that can be studied and duplicated, to bring a higher order to human affairs. And within this higher order, Ra's al-Ghul finds himself to be a champion of it, sacrificing the lives of many for the betterment of larger systems, seeing himself as the same humble doctor he found himself as at the beginning of his strange, fated journey. A fire blooming a new forest, a chance mutation from a dying species, or an entire set of species destroyed for the evolution of a new form of life, these are the things he sees in nature. And he finds himself now an agent of nature, wielding his immensely intelligent mind to aid this nature as a newly evolved life form, a demon sought in the terrors of priests, and the rising tide forcing humanity towards a new form of sapience. For a docile man is livestock, and a hungry man is a predator, but a man without a soul? He is a sculptor.