The Brotherhood of the Phoenix was a warrior lodge that existed secretly within the Emperor's Children Legion during the Great Crusade and Horus Heresy eras.
This confraternity of warriors was instituted after the IIIrd Legion had spent some time fighting alongside their brother Legion, the Luna Wolves, who were the first to adopt the custom of creating a warrior lodge secretly within their Legion organisation following their conquest of the world of Davin, sixty standard years before the start of the Horus Heresy.
Given the Emperor's Children's love of formal hierarchy, the Brotherhood of the Phoenix was much more rigid in structure and behaviour than their brethren Legions' more egalitarian warrior lodges and was open for membership only to their Primarch Fulgrim, the Legion's eleven Lord Commanders, and its company captains so as to maintain the Legion's strict hierarchical structure.
The Brotherhood of the Phoenix would eventually be used as the conduit by which Fulgrim and the other members of the Emperor's Children who were corrupted by Slaanesh would seize control of the IIIrd Legion and rid themselves of the Imperial Loyalist elements within the Legion during the Isstvan III Atrocity.
History[]
In the early years of the Emperor's Great Crusade to reconquer the galaxy and reunite the disparate worlds of Humanity under one ruler, there was a great disaster that would leave a terrible mark upon the early decades of the IIIrd Legion's existence.
This was the catastrophic loss of nearly the entire gene-seed stock of the Emperor's Children in an accident while transferring the gene-seed stocks and then a terrible pathogen known as "the Phage" that nearly wiped out what remained. At the same time, the disease killed many of the Legion's Astartes.
Coming within a solar year of their great moment of triumph fighting at the Emperor's side at Proxima where they helped to put down an insurrection against Imperial rule and saved the Emperor's life, this disaster was to prove a turning point that was to forever alter the IIIrd Legion's future.
When Fulgrim was finally rediscovered upon the Mining World of Chemos and reunited with the IIIrd Legion, the Space Marine Legion raised from his genetic inheritance, he found not a resplendent host like that of his brother primarchs', but a mere 200 battle-brothers.
It was thus necessary for Fulgrim and his warriors to be integrated into the ranks of another Legion until such time as their numbers were sufficiently restored for them to take to battle on their own.
The Legion to which Fulgrim and his warriors were assigned was the XVIth Legion, the Luna Wolves, the Legion of Horus, the most favoured son and preeminent warrior amongst all the primarchs.
When the Emperor's Children had fought alongside the Luna Wolves early after the rediscovery of their Primarch Fulgrim, they had formed great bonds of friendship with the warriors of Horus, and in the times between the fighting, a few loose tongues amonst the warriors of the XVIth Legion had spoken to their brothers in the IIIrd Legion of the existence of their warrior lodge.
The warrior lodges were a conceit that had been instituted in the Luna Wolves and other Legions following the pacification during the Great Crusade of the Feral World of Davin. Though that pre-industrial world had fallen easily to the Imperial Compliance campaign waged against it, Horus had been greatly impressed by the warrior spirit and honour of the Human tribes who called it home.
At the recommendation of Lorgar, the primarch of the Word Bearers Legion, Horus had allowed a warrior lodge similar to the warrior lodges to which many Davinite warriors belonged to spring up within the Luna Wolves. Horus could not know that that Lorgar had already turned to the service of Chaos, and that Davin was home to a large contingent of Chaos Cultists.
Lorgar hoped to use the establishment of warrior lodges in all of the Space Marine Legions as the primary vector by which those Legions might be corrupted to the service of the Ruinous Powers.
The Luna Wolves' lodge was, in theory, open to any warrior who desired to be a member, an informal place of lively debate where rank held no sway and an Astartes could speak his mind freely without fear of reprisals. Eventually a few Astartes from the Emperor's Children were permitted to attend one such meeting, a pleasant evening of honourable camaraderie under the titular leadership of the Lodge Master Serghar Targost.
Some enjoyed the meeting, despite the clandestine nature and theatrics of it, but some remained uncomfortable with the informality and mingling of the ranks. In the traditionally hierarchical Emperor's Children Legion, only warriors of officer rank could join the similar confraternity which was soon created within the IIIrd Legion.
Eventually, over the course of several solar decades, the Emperor's Children's ranks were swelled by new Astartes who had been recruited from both Terra and Fulgrim's homeworld of Chemos, where the IIIrd Legion had established its fortress-monastery at the old factory-fortress of Callax.
When the Emperor's Children were judged to have reached an appropriate size, Fulgrim was given command of the 28th Expeditionary Fleet of the Great Crusade and set off on his own course of conquest, returning dozens of Human-settled worlds to the rule of the Emperor. Among them was the advanced Xenos World of Laeran, where Fulgrim's fate would be sealed.
Fulgrim's Fall[]
The point at which Fulgrim and the Emperor's Children embraced darkness is not known. Some amongst those who serve the Emperor pointed to Fulgrim's cleansing of the dangerous xenos known as the Laer as the event that finally doomed him, as there are indications that the malign servants of Chaos used this event to ensnare Fulgrim and begin the rapid corruption of the Emperor's Children.
It is believed that Fulgrim first fell from the Emperor's grace on the xenos planet called Laeran, officially designated by the Imperium as Twenty-Eight-Three, being the third world the 28th Expedition had brought to Imperial Compliance. Unbeknownst to the IIIrd Legion, the serpentine Laer species were corrupted xenos worshippers of the Chaos God of Pleasure, Slaanesh.
Though the resource-rich Ocean World of Laeran would be of immeasurable value to the crusade of the Emperor, its alien inhabitants did not wish to share what blind fortune had blessed them with. They had refused to see the manifest destiny that guided Mankind through the stars and had made it abundantly clear that they held the Imperium in nothing but contempt. The IIIrd Legion's diplomatic advance had been rebuffed with violence, and honour demanded that they answer in kind.
Fulgrim's 28th Expeditionary Fleet conquered Laeran for the Imperium, exterminating its hostile native reptilian species. Completely unaware of the real dangers he and his Astartes Legion faced on the Chaos-corrupted world, Fulgrim ordered the Emperor's Children and the other forces of the 28th Expeditionary Fleet to assault the planet and conquer it for the Imperium within a single Terran month, completely eradicating the Laer species in the process.
During the final slaughter of that serpentine xenos race, Fulgrim and his Astartes discovered the great temple dedicated to Slaanesh that lay on the central floating coral island of Laeran. The Imperium, ignorant of the existence of the Chaos Gods at this time and holding to the extreme rationalism and atheism of the Imperial Truth, did not realise the significance of such a find or what they had really discovered.
The expedition led by Fulgrim began to be unwittingly corrupted by the temple's potent and malign influence. After defeating the temple's fanatical Laer defenders, Fulgrim discovered what the Laer were so fiercely protecting -- at the centre of the chamber of the unholy temple was a circular block of veined black stone, and embedded within was a tall, single-edged silver sword with a gently-curved blade and a crude amethyst gem set in the pommel. This sword was not only a potent Slaaneshi artefact but also the physical vessel of a Greater Daemon of Slaanesh.
Once Fulgrim had claimed the blade as his own, the Daemon within it began whispering in his mind and corrupting his soul towards the service of Slaanesh. Thinking the whispers in his mind was only his own subconscious speaking to him, Fulgrim began listening to what it offered. Eventually, he discovered these were actually the whispers of the Daemon that existed within the blade.
After a lot of persuasion from his brother Horus, himself already corrupted by the Ruinous Powers after his mortal wounding on the plague moon of Davin, Fulgrim gave himself over to Chaos, and found his particular patron in the Prince of Pleasure, who offered the primarch a route to the ultimate perfection he so craved for himself and his Astartes, free of all morality and dependent upon the pursuit of ultimate self-obsession.
Many of the IIIrd Legion's senior commanders that were with their primarch during the final assault on the Laer temple were similarly enraptured by the dazzling sights and strange discordant music as the cacophonous flood of sensations assaulted them with surges of light and noise.
After their return to the Emperor's Children fleet in orbit, many of these affected Astartes continuously sought ways to stimulate their senses in an effort to recapture what they had felt in the Laer temple, both on and off the battlefield.
As their primarch fell to the whispered temptations of the Daemon-possessed sword he had taken from the Laer temple, the Emperor's Children Legion continued its descent into a downward spiral of corruption marked by the affected Astartes' insatiable desires to satisfy their hedonistic wants.
Isstvan III Atrocity[]
Before Horus openly launched his rebellion to overthrow the Emperor, an opportunity presented itself that would enable him to get rid of the Loyalist elements within the Astartes Legions under his command. The Imperial Planetary Governor of Isstvan III, Vardus Praal, had been corrupted by the Chaos God Slaanesh whose cultists had long been active on the world even before it had been conquered by the Imperium.
Praal had declared his independence from the Imperium, and had begun to practice forbidden Slaaneshi sorcery, so the Council of Terra charged the Warmaster Horus with the retaking of that world. This order merely furthered Horus' plan to overthrow the Emperor.
Although the four Legions under his direct command -- the Sons of Horus, World Eaters, Death Guard and the Emperor's Children -- had already turned Traitor and pledged themselves to Chaos, there were still some Loyalist elements within each of these Legions that comprised approximately one-third of their forces.
The corrupted Fulgrim and his senior officers within the Brotherhood of the Phoenix secretly convened in order to mark those for death that were judged to be fractious or deemed disloyal to their Primarch and the Warmaster.
Horus, under the guise of putting down the rebellion against Imperial Compliance on Isstvan III, amassed his troops in the Isstvan System. Horus had a plan by which he would destroy all of the remaining Loyalist elements of the Legions under his command. After a lengthy bombardment of Isstvan III, Horus dispatched all of the known Loyalist Astartes down to the planet, under the pretence of bringing it back into the Imperial fold.
At the moment of victory with the capture of the Choral City, the planetary capital of Isstvan III, these Astartes were betrayed when a cascade of terrible Life-Eater virus-bombs fell on the world, launched by the Warmaster's orbiting fleet.
Even before the first treacherous blow was struck, Horus' grand plan had, unknown to him, begun to unravel. Before the virus-bombs fell, the impending atrocity had been discovered by several Astartes among the orbiting fleet who remained loyal to their Emperor and their comrades and who resisted.
The Loyalist Captain Saul Tarvitz of the Emperor's Children had discovered the far-reaching treachery of the Warmaster and stole a Thunderhawk gunship. He was able to reach the surface of Isstvan III despite pursuit, bringing a timely warning to those Loyalist Space Marines he could find of all four Legions of their impending doom.
Those that heard or passed on Tarvitz's warning took shelter before the virus-bombs struck. The surviving Loyalists, under the command of Captains Tarvitz, Garviel Loken and Tarik Torgaddon, another Loyalist member of the Sons of Horus, fought bravely against their own traitorous brethren. The few remaining Loyalists of the Emperor's Children Legion fought bravely on Isstvan III, led by Captains Saul Tarvitz and Solomon Demeter.
To prove his worth and loyalty to Lord Commander Eidolon of the Emperor's Children -- and thus to his primarch, Fulgrim -- Captain Lucius of the 13th Company of the Emperor's Children, the future Champion of Slaanesh known as Lucius the Eternal, turned against the Loyalists that he had fought beside because of his prior friendship with Saul Tarvitz. He wanted to punish Tarvitz for taking command of the defence, which had incited Lucius's fierce jealousy of his fellow captain.
Lucius slew many of his former comrades personally, an act for which he was then accepted back into the IIIrd Legion on the side of the Traitors. In the end, the Loyalists retreated to their last bastion of defence, only a few hundred of their number remaining. Finally, tired of the conflict, Horus ordered his warriors to withdraw, and then had the remains of the Choral City bombarded into dust for a final time from orbit.
Later, at the Drop Site Massacre on Isstvan V, Fulgrim would lead his Astartes in an assault upon the Iron Hands Legion, which was led by the Primarch Ferrus Manus. Ferrus had once been Fulgrim's greatest friend and brother amongst the primarchs, but had rejected Fulgrim's entreaty to join Horus in a betrayal of the Emperor.
Fulgrim defeated his brother in battle and beheaded him using the Daemon-possessed Laer blade. But at the moment of Ferrus' death, Fulgrim came back to himself and realised with growing horror what he had done and what atrocities he had been a party to.
In that moment of weakness, the Daemon within the blade pounced and convinced the primarch to relinquish control of his own mind. The Daemon then possessed the body of the primarch, holding Fulgrim as a prisoner within his own body.
Fulgrim's Fate[]
Those that served in the IIIrd Legion had no idea that their beloved leader was clawing ineffectually at the bondage of his own mind in which his soul was held captive by the Daemon. Only the swordsman, Captain Lucius of the 13th Company, had appeared to realise that something was amiss with Fulgrim, but even he had said nothing.
Lucius came to the conclusion that the entity that paraded around as their Legion's lord was an imposter. Determined to free his primarch by any means at his disposal, Lucius secretly convened the Brotherhood of the Phoenix. This had to be done with the utmost secrecy, for by this time the corrupted senior officers had become powerful, volatile and self-obssessed with the pursuit of their individual pleasures.
Also, many of these senior officers carried a loathing for Lucius, whom they viewed as a despised upstart. Through his skilled oratory, the swordsman was able to persuade his mercurial brothers that their primarch was not himself.
He further challenged their egos and stroked their vanity, tempting them into boldly capturing their primarch. Shortly after, the Brotherhood of the Phoenix ambushed Fulgrim, and despite taking several casualties, managed to subdue their lord by rendering him unconscious.
During a torture session carried out under the direction of the IIIrd Legion's Chief Apothecary Fabius, Lucius suddenly realised that they had been misled. Misinterpreting the situation, they had been duped by their lord, who had, in fact, beaten the Daemon at its own game, regaining control over his own body and imprisoning the Warp entity once more within a portrait of Fulgrim that hung within the shuttered confines of the theatre called La Fenice aboard the Emperor's Children flagship, Pride of the Emperor.
Lucius immediately bent his knee and prostrated himself before his primarch as Fulgrim easily tore himself free from his restraints. His fellow conspirators all bowed to their lord and master.
Content that his favoured sons had learned from the experience, the primarch did not punish them for their transgressions, for he was not the Daemon-possessed shell of the Phoenix he had allowed his Astartes to believe, but Fulgrim himself.
Following these events and those that would follow over the next seven standard years as the Horus Heresy played out to its inevitable conclusion, it is not known if the Brotherhood of the Phoenix still exists within the hierarchy of the corrupted Emperor's Children Traitor Legion some ten thousand Terran years later.
Notable Members of the Brotherhood of the Phoenix[]
- Fulgrim (Primarch)
- Eidolon (Lord Commander)
- Vespasian (Lord Commander)
- Abdemon (Lord Commander)
- Anteus (Lord Commander)
- Cyrius (Lord Commander)
- Iddinam (Lord Commander)
- Julius Kaesoron (First Captain)
- Solomon Demeter (Captain), 2nd Company
- Marius Vairosean (Captain), 3rd Company
- Krysander (Captain), 9th Company
- Saul Tarvitz (Captain), 10th Company
- Lucius (Captain), 13th Company
- Kalimos (Captain), 17th Company
- Fabius (Chief Apothecary)
- Charmosian (Reclusiarch), 18th Company
- Ruen (Captain), 21st Company
- Abranxe (Captain)
- Daimon (Captain)
- Heliton (Captain)
- Lycaon (Equerry to First Captain Kaesoron)
- Ancient Rylanor, "Ancient of Rites" (Venerable Dreadnought)
Sources[]
- Fulgrim (Novel) by Graham McNeill, pp. 58-61, 63-64, 66, 188
- The Primarchs (Anthology) edited by Christian Dunn, "The Reflection Crack'd" (Short Story) by Graham McNeill, pp. 11, 30