The Warriors of the Reborn were a thousand-strong army of former Human helots (slaves) of the Word Bearers Traitor Legion recruited by the Chaos-corrupted Blood Angel Space Marine Arkio the Blessed from the population of the planet Shenlong.
The Warriors of the Reborn were chosen through a series of gruelling arena combats, with only the most brutal and savage surviving to the end. During their short existence, these warriors fought alongside those Space Marines of the Blood Angels Chapter who had also been duped into following Arkio's false message.
History[]
Similar to the Tyrant's Legion formed by Chapter Master Lufgt Huron of the Astral Claws leading up to the Badab War, the Warriors of the Reborn were a cult-like army of standard Humans formed to serve the Chaos-corrupted Space Marine Arkio the Blessed, who claimed to be the primarch Sanguinius reborn.
Liberated from many standard years of horrific abuse and enslavement by the Word Bearers Traitor Legion, the people of the world of Shenlong were quick to worship Arkio as a god, not knowing he was himself an unwitting pawn of the Chaos God Tzeentch.
Following Arkio on his crusade against those who resisted the idea of his ascendence, the army was wiped out on the world of Sabien while fighting the overwhelming force of the Blood Angels.
Notable Campaigns[]
- Blood Angels Civil War (ca. 999.M41) - Following a successful battle on the world of Cybele, Brother Arkio, who possessed the sacred relic known as the Spear of Telesto, proclaimed himself to be the reincarnation of Sanguinius. Fealty was given to the so-called "Reborn Angel" by many within the ranks of the Blood Angels' 6th Company. Unknown to the Blood Angels, an Ordo Hereticus Inquisitor named Remius Stele, a secret servant of the Ruinous Powers, manipulated the situation to cause a schism within the Chapter. Chief Librarian Mephiston arrived on the Blood Angels' Shrine World of Sabien to judge Arkio, and turned the powers of his formidable witch-sight upon him. He saw the carefully hidden seed of Chaos that Stele had planted inside Arkio and denounced the "Reborn Angel" as false and Inquisitor Stele as a Heretic. Mephiston then challenged Arkio to a duel but before it began, Arkio's biological brother Sergeant Rafen, a fellow Blood Angel, arrived and offered to challenge Arkio instead. Rafen was one of the few Blood Angels of the 6th Company who had doubted the veracity of Arkio's supposed resurrection, keeping faith with the Emperor and their primarch, and formally denounced his brother as a false reincarnation. Mephiston looked into Rafen's mind and saw that he had seen a vision of Sanguinius and that he was destined to fight Arkio. The Lord of Death allowed Rafen to take his place, and the two siblings duelled to the death. After Rafen wounded Arkio and he fled, the corrupted Inquisitor Stele ordered the Loyalist Blood Angels and the Warriors of the Reborn to attack Mephiston and his entourage. Eventually, Rafen emerged triumphant, impaling Arkio through the heart with the Spear of Telesto. Arkio died begging for his brother's forgiveness. After his sibling's death, the true master behind the nefarious Chaos plot revealed himself -- Malfallax, a Lord of Change of Tzeentch. Malfallax and Inquisitor Stele had entered into a devil's bargain with Warmaster Garand of the traitorous Word Bearers Traitor Legion to turn the Blood Angels to Chaos by using Arkio as a false messiah. When Arkio was killed by his sibling Rafen, Stele attempted to summon Malfallax, intending to have the Greater Daemon possess his slave Ulan. Instead, Malfallax betrayed the Inquisitor and possessed his body instead, fully manifesting as a Lord of Change on the mortal plane. Malfallax then attempted to cause the Blood Angels to succumb to the Black Rage, but was in turn banished by Rafen using the Spear of Telesto. By the time Rafen had defeated Malfallax, Mephiston's iron will had snapped, and he fell once more into the Black Rage. Rafen directed the power of the Spear of Telesto at Mephiston himself, breaking the hold of the curse upon the great Librarian for a second time. In the aftermath of this great tragedy, Arkio's remains were eventually burned upon a pyre out of respect for the fact that he had been duped into heresy through no fault of his own. The Blood Angels that willingly followed Arkio learned of the perfidy of the agent of Chaos, Inquisitor Stele, and tried to comprehend the awful realization that they had been duped. For they had been turned into unwitting pawns in a grand scheme unleashed by the Chaos God Tzeentch to steal their very souls. The fallen battle-brothers were brought aboard Mephiston's warship, the Europae, stripped of their wargear and shackled in manacles. One of the Blood Angels strike teams loyal to Mephiston located the hardened steel module from the interior of the Bellus that housed the Progenoid capsules containing the genetic material of the traitorous fallen Blood Angels who had followed Arkio. Many of the clerics aboard the Europae were of the opinion that this gene‐seed was now tainted and fit only for the fires of the fusion furnace, but Mephiston thought otherwise. The genetic material was placed in secure holding for the journey back to Baal; it would be Lord Commander Dante alone who would decide the fate of this gene-seed. Though offered a promotion to the rank of captain and the command of his own company, Rafen refused, choosing to earn the position on his own merits when the time was right. Rafen only made one request of the Lord of Death -- clemency and compassion for his battle-brothers of the 6th Company who had strayed and followed his sibling into heresy unwittingly. Blinded by their belief in Sanguinius, their faith had been turned against them and misused. Mephiston counseled Rafen that the rites of cleansing and purification that might be employed were quite arduous. Many of his battle-brothers would not survive the process. But Rafen informed Mephiston that they would endure and their faith would be twice as strong for it.
Sources[]
- Deus Encarmine (Novel) by James Swallow
- Deus Sanguinius (Novel) by James Swallow