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| Born into this royal family as the youngest of five siblings, Haran grew up in some modicum of luxury with a strong emphasis on education and martial prowess. The son of a king, his life as a child was peaceful. Haran devoted his free time to exploring the rugged, colorful deserts of his homeworld, sparring in scrubby forests with his siblings and cousins, and relaxing in the constant breeze cutting across the surface of cool rivers. His education was broad, yet with a martial focus. He traveled across the world, studying ancient battle sites and ruined, brick-built cities alongside his peers and tutors. In addition to history and natural studies, Haran learned to pilot the rugged spacecraft his family possessed; a feat considering some were literally held together with wire and glue. He learned to fight with both martial and ranged weapons, and studied the tactics of his ancestors, considered by most people on his homeworld to be a religious matter: a holy sequence of steps in a mass dance. Haran, like his siblings and cousins, was reared to be an oppressor — a fervent juggernaut of soldierly prowess and divine favor, wading through a battlefield of untrained and ill-equipped farmers, who would tell tales of his deeds after the fact. | | Born into this royal family as the youngest of five siblings, Haran grew up in some modicum of luxury with a strong emphasis on education and martial prowess. The son of a king, his life as a child was peaceful. Haran devoted his free time to exploring the rugged, colorful deserts of his homeworld, sparring in scrubby forests with his siblings and cousins, and relaxing in the constant breeze cutting across the surface of cool rivers. His education was broad, yet with a martial focus. He traveled across the world, studying ancient battle sites and ruined, brick-built cities alongside his peers and tutors. In addition to history and natural studies, Haran learned to pilot the rugged spacecraft his family possessed; a feat considering some were literally held together with wire and glue. He learned to fight with both martial and ranged weapons, and studied the tactics of his ancestors, considered by most people on his homeworld to be a religious matter: a holy sequence of steps in a mass dance. Haran, like his siblings and cousins, was reared to be an oppressor — a fervent juggernaut of soldierly prowess and divine favor, wading through a battlefield of untrained and ill-equipped farmers, who would tell tales of his deeds after the fact. |
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| === Cousins' War === | | === Brothers' War === |
| Haran never actually got the chance to complete his training and be unleashed upon his family's subjects. When their father died in 0 BBY, Haran's elder brother, Tiyokash — supported by a cadre of dissatisfied nobles — took up the family tradition and marched against the capital with his warriors. He promised a return to the old ways (the ''very'' old ways, considering there were no new ways on Ziz) where rulers and their representatives exerted absolute authority over all their subjects, and where brutal campaigns were regularly led against already subservient peoples. Being 15 years old, Haran was expected to accompany his elder brother into battle. The usurpers met little resistance in the countryside, ransacking towns and villages along the major river leading toward the capital city. It was outside the great city that the monarch, Demid II, finally met the brothers in battle. His army was shattered and he was driven into the desert. Haran and his elder brother were denied entry into the capital, despite their success on the battlefield. The inhabitants had rallied behind the younger brother of Demid, also named Tiyokash, and were prepared, not only to withstand a siege, but sally against the usurpers. Tiyokash, formerly an unknown quantity, proved to be a ferocious warrior, and personally killed Haran's older brother on the field. The rebel army was dispersed upon seeing their leader killed and virtually annihilated. | | The suppressive peace of Ziz was shattered suddenly, as a minor dispute over power sharing between Haran's father and uncle (both also named Haran) boiled over into a full blown rebellion on the part of his uncle, who established his power base at a rival city south of the capital. This war quickly turned cold, with neither ruler willing to commit their army to battle and risk its destruction. Instead, the two forces spent the better part of a decade circling one another across the countryside, ransacking towns and villages deemed loyal to the other, and pillaging food and money to provide for their armies. As a martially oriented upper class, both families accompanied their respective patriarchs in the field. When Haran's father (Haran VIII) experienced a stroke of good fortune and fell upon his brother's (Haran IX's) lagging baggage train, he captured his rebellious brother's wife. She was summarily executed at the insistence of her sister, Haran VIII's own wife, against the rest of the family's wishes. The consequences of this would prove disastrous for Haran and his elder siblings, when their uncle, Haran IX, managed to lure his brother away and seize the capital for himself, along with the ruler's wife. She was also put to death for her role in her sister's execution, leaving the siblings with only the guidance of their father. This did not last for long, however. After years of depleting the countryside's resources in a pointless back and forth with no clear advantage on either side, the army took its destiny into its own hands, and Haran's father was executed in a plot by his closest companions. |
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| Knowing that he could not return to his royal estate, Haran fled into the mountains with his most loyal retainers (those who survived the massacre, at any rate). There the small band of rebels survived by raiding villages and temples, but were not pursued by the new king, who suddenly faced a myriad of challengers to his rule, including his youngest brother, the children of Demid, and the deceased Tiyokash's general Tirohon. Unlike the others, Haran did not possess a viable power base to press a claim for the throne, despite having a better claim than several of the other combatants. What he did have was a substantial treasury from raiding temples and the smuggler contacts of a wealthy family intent not to sure in the luxuries it possessed. Rather than continue the fight, Haran and his followers left the planet.
| | Suddenly alone, the five children of Haran VIII fled the heart of the empire, leaving their uncle--Haran IX--as sole king and ruler. They did not sit idle, however. Now 15, Haran assisted his eldest brother, Sybar VI, in levying forces in the fringes of the empire to attack their uncle and now king. Establishing his authority over the capital, there was little Haran IX could do as the rural army marched to confront him outside its gates, with his brother's five children at its head. The siblings were successful in defeating and slaying their uncle, but Sybar's rule was short. Their cousin, Haran X had arrived with reinforcements only days after his father's death and put the opposing army to flight. Sybar VI was cornered and burned alive by the forces of Haran X in the city he had made his capital. The four remaining siblings now scattered throughout the empire. Haran XI (the eldest brother after Sybar's death) and his twin sister Avila I established their power in cities on either side of the capital. The next eldest sister, Demida III and Haran (who became Haran XII) now set up a powerbase deep in the deserts to the south of Haran X. The war raged for another decade. Haran XI was slain in battle by Haran X, who was killed in battle fighting the Imperial Remnant when they established a frontier garrison on the planet. Avila I and Haran XII teamed up to seize the capital and drive their sister, Demida III, into exile. Finally, Avila was slain in battle by the Imperial Remnant forces, whose numbers were steadily increasing as their grip on the planet tightened. Left as the sole ruler of a minor city, facing the might of an Imperial garrison, Haran XII, the last member of the ruling family still on Ziz, fled the world along with his closest friends and companions. |
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| == Rebellion and the New Republic (2 ABY - 11 ABY) == | | == Rebellion and the New Republic (2 ABY - 11 ABY) == |
Revision as of 19:00, 21 May 2022
Haran
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Ziz
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15 BBY
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Human
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Male
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1.88 meters
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90 kilograms
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Brown
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Brown
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Djem So
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Teras Kasi
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- Jedi Councillor
- Captain of the Solari
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9709
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- "What happens when we've bent the rules so far that they come around and stab us in the back?"
- ―Gilad Pellaeon to Grand Admiral Thrawn
Haran Arad, is a sitting Councillor of Urr and acting captain of the Solari, the flagship of Clan Odan-Urr. He was born in the Unknown Regions on a sparsely populated (by Galactic Standards) planet known to locals as Ziz. In his capacity as a ship captain, Haran oversees and directs some of the clan's most powerful and destructive assets. Fortunately, and despite his penchant for rebellious tom-foolery, he is regarded by his colleagues as an even-handed and restrained member of the council, fervently dedicated to Clan Odan-Urr and to the Light Side of the Force.
Royal Life on Ziz (15 BBY - 2 ABY)
Homeworld and Origins
On the edges of known space, lies the insignificant, arid world of Ziz. Beautiful, yet devoid of any valuable natural resources, agriculture (and its various support industries) is and will remain the primary occupation of its population. Farming the narrow strips of fertile land that originate in high mountain peaks and cut through the rugged deserts along a dozen exotic rivers, the politics of the outer galaxy matter little to the people who inhabit this agrarian paradise, who live comfortably, yet simply. Advanced technology has yet to permeate through the communities of Ziz. Only major public institutions, such as the royal palaces and great temples possess reactors to provide consistent power. Most homes rely on ancient windmills and waterwheels to generate the electricity they need for cooking and temperature control. Archaic weapons are also prevalent. Force staves and vibroblades tend to be the preferred weapons of the inhabitants, blasters and slugthrowers being difficult to maintain without a steady supply of parts. The lifestyle of the royalty, as is always the case, is an exception. As previously mentioned, the palaces are powered by advanced and modern reactors. The royal family has access to the wider HoloNet, and the youths regularly train with blasters, making them fierce and aggressive standouts on an otherwise melee-oriented battlefield. The royal family also possesses a handful of squadrons of ancient starfighters, which it refers to as a planetary defense force, though they are almost exclusively used for maintaining control over the local populations of farmers. While these ships would pose little (if any) danger to modern models, the royalty had developed a good head for piloting small craft over generations.
Born into this royal family as the youngest of five siblings, Haran grew up in some modicum of luxury with a strong emphasis on education and martial prowess. The son of a king, his life as a child was peaceful. Haran devoted his free time to exploring the rugged, colorful deserts of his homeworld, sparring in scrubby forests with his siblings and cousins, and relaxing in the constant breeze cutting across the surface of cool rivers. His education was broad, yet with a martial focus. He traveled across the world, studying ancient battle sites and ruined, brick-built cities alongside his peers and tutors. In addition to history and natural studies, Haran learned to pilot the rugged spacecraft his family possessed; a feat considering some were literally held together with wire and glue. He learned to fight with both martial and ranged weapons, and studied the tactics of his ancestors, considered by most people on his homeworld to be a religious matter: a holy sequence of steps in a mass dance. Haran, like his siblings and cousins, was reared to be an oppressor — a fervent juggernaut of soldierly prowess and divine favor, wading through a battlefield of untrained and ill-equipped farmers, who would tell tales of his deeds after the fact.
Brothers' War
The suppressive peace of Ziz was shattered suddenly, as a minor dispute over power sharing between Haran's father and uncle (both also named Haran) boiled over into a full blown rebellion on the part of his uncle, who established his power base at a rival city south of the capital. This war quickly turned cold, with neither ruler willing to commit their army to battle and risk its destruction. Instead, the two forces spent the better part of a decade circling one another across the countryside, ransacking towns and villages deemed loyal to the other, and pillaging food and money to provide for their armies. As a martially oriented upper class, both families accompanied their respective patriarchs in the field. When Haran's father (Haran VIII) experienced a stroke of good fortune and fell upon his brother's (Haran IX's) lagging baggage train, he captured his rebellious brother's wife. She was summarily executed at the insistence of her sister, Haran VIII's own wife, against the rest of the family's wishes. The consequences of this would prove disastrous for Haran and his elder siblings, when their uncle, Haran IX, managed to lure his brother away and seize the capital for himself, along with the ruler's wife. She was also put to death for her role in her sister's execution, leaving the siblings with only the guidance of their father. This did not last for long, however. After years of depleting the countryside's resources in a pointless back and forth with no clear advantage on either side, the army took its destiny into its own hands, and Haran's father was executed in a plot by his closest companions.
Suddenly alone, the five children of Haran VIII fled the heart of the empire, leaving their uncle--Haran IX--as sole king and ruler. They did not sit idle, however. Now 15, Haran assisted his eldest brother, Sybar VI, in levying forces in the fringes of the empire to attack their uncle and now king. Establishing his authority over the capital, there was little Haran IX could do as the rural army marched to confront him outside its gates, with his brother's five children at its head. The siblings were successful in defeating and slaying their uncle, but Sybar's rule was short. Their cousin, Haran X had arrived with reinforcements only days after his father's death and put the opposing army to flight. Sybar VI was cornered and burned alive by the forces of Haran X in the city he had made his capital. The four remaining siblings now scattered throughout the empire. Haran XI (the eldest brother after Sybar's death) and his twin sister Avila I established their power in cities on either side of the capital. The next eldest sister, Demida III and Haran (who became Haran XII) now set up a powerbase deep in the deserts to the south of Haran X. The war raged for another decade. Haran XI was slain in battle by Haran X, who was killed in battle fighting the Imperial Remnant when they established a frontier garrison on the planet. Avila I and Haran XII teamed up to seize the capital and drive their sister, Demida III, into exile. Finally, Avila was slain in battle by the Imperial Remnant forces, whose numbers were steadily increasing as their grip on the planet tightened. Left as the sole ruler of a minor city, facing the might of an Imperial garrison, Haran XII, the last member of the ruling family still on Ziz, fled the world along with his closest friends and companions.
Rebellion and the New Republic (2 ABY - 11 ABY)
Fighter Pilot
Captain of the Benefactor
Life as a Jedi
Training on Yavin IV
Jedi Liaison to the New Republic 5th Defense Fleet
Rumors from New Tython
Councillor of Odan-Urr
Life on New Tython
Captain of the Solari
Characteristics
Appearance
Personality