As we know, male Orc chiefs have many wives. Hearth wife, Forge Wife, Hunts Wife, etc. Does this mean when a female Orc becomes chief does she get a Hearth Husband, Forge Husband, Hunts Husband? Or does she have multiple wives as well?
As we know, male Orc chiefs have many wives. Hearth wife, Forge Wife, Hunts Wife, etc. Does this mean when a female Orc becomes chief does she get a Hearth Husband, Forge Husband, Hunts Husband? Or does she have multiple wives as well?
WhiteCoatSyndrome wrote: »There was an Orc lady in...IIRC Bangkorai...who had left her tribe because she didn't like the idea of being the wife of someone in charge and wanted to be someone in charge herself. She talked about making the Redguard fellow who also appeared in that quest a 'hearth husband' at the end although I don't know if anything came of that; he sounded a little horrified at the idea.
More generally, they've frequently stated that there are no set in stone rules that are universal across all Orc clans, and that the clans frequently have differing traditions.
What I'm wondering is how they deal with the whole incest issue if a chief's options for wives within the clan consist only of his sisters and half-sisters all fathered by the previous chief. There's probably a fair amount of intermarrying between allied clans, but that would tend to homogenize the clan pool after a few generations. Or maybe they just don't care about incest. I'm a little surprised it didn't come up anywhere in the Orsinium DLC.
What I'm wondering is how they deal with the whole incest issue if a chief's options for wives within the clan consist only of his sisters and half-sisters all fathered by the previous chief. There's probably a fair amount of intermarrying between allied clans, but that would tend to homogenize the clan pool after a few generations. Or maybe they just don't care about incest. I'm a little surprised it didn't come up anywhere in the Orsinium DLC.
As we know, male Orc chiefs have many wives. Hearth wife, Forge Wife, Hunts Wife, etc. Does this mean when a female Orc becomes chief does she get a Hearth Husband, Forge Husband, Hunts Husband? Or does she have multiple wives as well?
crashen17b14_ESO wrote: »I have always wondered about the clan wise woman. Its usually the mother of the chief, but what would make her qualified? The wise woman seemingly is the clan shaman/alchemist/healer. Does that mean a forgewife would become wise woman if her son became chief? What would she know about that role? Or does the outgoing wise woman teach the incoming one? That might be a little awkward "your son killed my son but thats cool."
Considering orc culture, i suppose there wouldnt be any bad blood but still it might be a little difficult, considering orcs DO care about each other and have loved ones. Yes your son was a mighty chief and yes he died with honor and has joined malacath, but he is still your son and you probably miss him.
Furthermore, what happens to the male heirs who DONT become chief? In some cases they go off to join the imperial legion or form their own strongholds, or they stay with the current stronghold. But that seems like kind of a *** deal if say, you arent really interested in being chief. Maybe your elder brother really seems better suited to being the chief, and you are just a really good hunter, or maybe you are more intellectually inclined. Can you take the place of the wise woman and be the shaman/healer while your brother leads? Still kind of sucks that you cant have your own family.
Unless a wife is only a wife if she is an orc. Supose you are a male who isnt the chief of a stronghold. Can you take a female nord or redguard or whatever as your technically-not-wife lover?
Add that the ones who don't like it has other options, some of the clans don't like new Orsinium as it make it easier to select another option. Multiple quests about it.notimetocare wrote: »crashen17b14_ESO wrote: »I have always wondered about the clan wise woman. Its usually the mother of the chief, but what would make her qualified? The wise woman seemingly is the clan shaman/alchemist/healer. Does that mean a forgewife would become wise woman if her son became chief? What would she know about that role? Or does the outgoing wise woman teach the incoming one? That might be a little awkward "your son killed my son but thats cool."
Considering orc culture, i suppose there wouldnt be any bad blood but still it might be a little difficult, considering orcs DO care about each other and have loved ones. Yes your son was a mighty chief and yes he died with honor and has joined malacath, but he is still your son and you probably miss him.
Furthermore, what happens to the male heirs who DONT become chief? In some cases they go off to join the imperial legion or form their own strongholds, or they stay with the current stronghold. But that seems like kind of a *** deal if say, you arent really interested in being chief. Maybe your elder brother really seems better suited to being the chief, and you are just a really good hunter, or maybe you are more intellectually inclined. Can you take the place of the wise woman and be the shaman/healer while your brother leads? Still kind of sucks that you cant have your own family.
Unless a wife is only a wife if she is an orc. Supose you are a male who isnt the chief of a stronghold. Can you take a female nord or redguard or whatever as your technically-not-wife lover?
In a stronghold, no. Orc culture is very rigid and very foreign to most modern people. Even if you could, it would Dishonor your clan.
Orcs are accustomed to short, brutal lives.
Add that the ones who don't like it has other options, some of the clans don't like new Orsinium as it make it easier to select another option. Multiple quests about it.notimetocare wrote: »crashen17b14_ESO wrote: »I have always wondered about the clan wise woman. Its usually the mother of the chief, but what would make her qualified? The wise woman seemingly is the clan shaman/alchemist/healer. Does that mean a forgewife would become wise woman if her son became chief? What would she know about that role? Or does the outgoing wise woman teach the incoming one? That might be a little awkward "your son killed my son but thats cool."
Considering orc culture, i suppose there wouldnt be any bad blood but still it might be a little difficult, considering orcs DO care about each other and have loved ones. Yes your son was a mighty chief and yes he died with honor and has joined malacath, but he is still your son and you probably miss him.
Furthermore, what happens to the male heirs who DONT become chief? In some cases they go off to join the imperial legion or form their own strongholds, or they stay with the current stronghold. But that seems like kind of a *** deal if say, you arent really interested in being chief. Maybe your elder brother really seems better suited to being the chief, and you are just a really good hunter, or maybe you are more intellectually inclined. Can you take the place of the wise woman and be the shaman/healer while your brother leads? Still kind of sucks that you cant have your own family.
Unless a wife is only a wife if she is an orc. Supose you are a male who isnt the chief of a stronghold. Can you take a female nord or redguard or whatever as your technically-not-wife lover?
In a stronghold, no. Orc culture is very rigid and very foreign to most modern people. Even if you could, it would Dishonor your clan.
Orcs are accustomed to short, brutal lives.
On the other hand orc clans work, plenty of orc strongholds in gratewood and greenshade to who is pretty fun.
Probably the largest out of faction race so an AD orc is very lore friendly,