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Eternal Champion

The Eternal Champion is a fictional character created by British author Michael Moorcock and is a recurrent feature in many of his speculative fiction works.

General overview edit

Many of Moorcock's novels and short stories take place in a shared Multiverse: an array of interconnected parallel universes, many-layered dimensions, spheres, and alternative worlds, spanning from the Big Bang to the End of Time and from planet Earth to faraway galaxies. All these regions of spaces and parallel timelines are given shape by two metaphysical forces which are perpetually opposed to each other: Law and Chaos, which represent perpetual stasis and ever-changing disorder. Since a clear-cut prevalence of either Law or Chaos would erase all life from the Multiverse, a third force known as the Cosmic Balance enforces certain limits on the powers of Law and Chaos, which in turn ensure the continued existence of the Multiverse. Law, Chaos, and the Balance are implied to be non-sentient, but they do manifest through god-like beings who express one facet or another of the three cosmic principles, and in turn, these deities can empower mortal creatures as their heralds and representatives.

The Eternal Champion is an appointed paladin of Balance who is bound to exist in each and every world and age of the Multiverse, so that Law and Chaos are perpetually kept in check; however, he often does not know of his role or struggles against it, never to succeed. Since he must intervene whenever either Law or Chaos has gained an excess of power, requiring him to tip the scales accordingly, he is always doomed to be surrounded by strife and destruction, although he may go through long periods of relative quiet.

All the different Eternal Champions are implied to be different facets or "incarnations" of one semi-conscious being (a platonic archetype of a sort): most of them are peerless fighters and generals and have an unbreakable bond with a sentient Chaos-aligned weapon, the Black Sword, which in turns takes on a different form for each Champion. Likewise, many Champions are aided by an Eternal Companion and an Eternal Consort: a sidekick and a love interest who are themselves aspects of two semi-divine figures. This recursivity through the Multiverse is further underlined by the number of Champions, Companions, and mentor-figures to the Champions Moorcock has given the J and C initials, as a form of naming fil rouge; in the same vein, many Champions and Companions belong to one branch or another of the extensive von Bek dynasty.

Space- and time-travels through the Multiverse are in fact possible, to the point that one humanoid species called the Eldrens is spread among many different worlds and ages and interacts with many different Champions; however, cosmic laws establish that no two Eternal Champions can coexist in the same situation, or the very fabric of reality would be severely damaged. The only exceptions are cataclysmic events such as the end of a Cycle of Cycles of the Multiverse's progression, or an invasion by hostile entities from an entirely separate multiverse: in these cases, different incarnations of the Champion may join forces to thwart the impending threat, possibly by temporarily merging their individual bodies into a true demigod of immense power.

Incarnations edit

The following list presents all known Champions in alphabetical order, mentions their respective Swords, Companions, and Consorts, and briefly summarizes their individual plotlines and publishing history:

  • Alerik
  • Alivale
  • Konrad Arflane: the hero of the postapocalyptic novel The Ice Schooner (1969), Arflane lives during a new ice age that has engulfed most of Earth and forced the surviving humans to revert to a hunting-gathering economy; he sets sails on the eponymous ice schooner to reach the fabled settlement of New York and scavenge all ancestral knowledge that could help restore human civilization.
  • Artos the Celt
  • Asquiol of Pompeii: the main character of the science-fiction novella "The Blood Red Game" (1963), Asquiol is leading a human colonizing force into a parallel universe and has to fight for supremacy against a hostile native species. "The Blood Red Game" was eventually combined with the earlier novella "The Sundered Worlds" (1962) into the full-length novel The Sundered Worlds (1965), making Asquiol somehow of a guest character into the Von Bek saga.
  • Aubec, Earl of Malador: Aubec debuted in a 1964 short story titled either "The Dream of Earl Aubec" or "Master of Chaos" depending on the collection: he lives in the same world as Elric of Melniboné many generations before that character's birth, serves as a national champion of the human kingdom of Lormyria and is the paramour of the Lormyrian monarch, Queen Eloarde. Moorcock planned a whole series about Aubec's wars against Melniboné in order to ensure human independence, eventually reconnecting to Elric's saga as a direct prequel, but the project was eventually aborted; consequently, "The Dream of Earl Aubec" was reincorporated into Elric's series as a prologue.
  • Captain Oswald Bastable: the main character and narrator of the Nomad of Time trilogy (1971–1981), Captain Bastable is an officer of the British Imperial Army stationed in the Raj in the early 20th Century, until a series of time-travel incidents transports him into three different uchronias: a 1973 where the World Wars have not been fought and the British Empire is now encroached by decolonizing movements; a 1904 where Europe has been left in tatters by a precocious and even more devastating Great War; a 1941 where the British and German Empires are firmly allied. Bastable's misadventures in these alternative timelines are constructed as a biography and literary historians regard them as the prototypes of the steampunk subgenre.
  • Brian
  • Jherek Carnelian: one of the last humans to be alive on Earth as the Multiverse is nearing the End of Time, Carnelian is a creature of semi-divine power, hedonistic interests, and obnoxious morality (not unlike his fellow End-Timers), but his lifestyle changes forever once he falls in love with Mrs. Amelia Underwood, a time traveler from the Nineteenth Century; the couple's courtship, relationship and shared adventures across time and space are the subject of a trilogy called The Dancers at the End of Time (1972-1976); this series is complemented by the Legends at the End of Time: five semi-autonomous short stories and novelettes taking place at the End of Time, themselves composed in the late Seventies (with an additional sixth one being published in 2008). This series is characterized by a high number of cameos from other leading and supporting characters of the Eternal Champion mythos.
  • Jerry Cornelius: an adventurer and dimensional traveler Moorcock created in the mid-1960s and developed for the following forty years, resulting in an early tetralogy of novels, The Cornelius Quartet (1968–1977), a ponderous collection of short fiction, The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius (1976), and a later hexalogy of novels, The Cornelius Calendar (composed in two stages, 1976–1981 and 2002–2008), with more tales in the working. Cornelius' saga consists of a wide array of surreal situations kept together by the character's uniquely fluid identity and it represents an influential form of experimental literature in the wider context of psychedelic counterculture. This series also includes two spin-off works, a Doctor Who licensed novel titled The Coming of the Terraphiles (2010), whose Captain Cornelius is, in fact, Jerry's incarnation in the Whoniverse; and The Distant Suns (1975), a late example of pulp space opera Moorcock co-authored with James Cawthorn, depicting Jerry as an air force Colonel and a space explorer. Moreover, it is implied that Lord Jagged of Canaria from Jherek Carnelian's series, Jaspar Colinadous from one of Elric's adventures, Dorian Hawkmoon's Jehamia Cohnahlias, Corum's Jhary-a-Conel, and John Daker's Jermays the Crooked are Jerry's counterparts in their respective dimensions. Jerry's version of the Black Sword is a Needle Gun (later morphed into a Vibragun), his Consort is his own sister Catherine (depicted as his wife in The Distant Suns, to avoid any incestuous undertones), and he has a conflictual bond with fellow dimensional adventurer Una Persson.
  • Jerry Cornell: in 1966 Moorcock edited (and in fact ghost-wrote) a sizeable section of the spy novel The LSD Dossier by Roger Harris and eventually authored two novels starring Harris's original main character, secret agent Nick Allard; later on Moorcock revised his solo works into a stand-alone series centered upon Agent Jerry Cornell (1970–1980), an overt parody of character tropes and clichés from Ian Fleming's James Bond series.
  • John Daker: a human implied to come from 20th Century Earth, he is forced by Balance to reincarnate into various aspects of the Champion while staying fully aware of all his identities after every transmigration. Through his own series, he takes on four different personas:
    1. Lord Erekosë: a warrior from an unspecified age of Earth's history and the only human capable of holding the radioactive sword Kunajana. At the beginning of the novella "The Eternal Champion" (1962; expanded into a novel of the same title in 1970) Erekosë has been dead for generations, but a necromantic ritual resurrects him as a new existence for John Daker; the reborn Erekosë consequently gets entangled into a world war between humans and Eldrens and into a love triangle between the two factions' princesses, Eldren Ermizhad and human Iolinda.
    2. Count Ulrik Skarlsol: once his missions as Erekosë are resolved, Daker is forcibly transferred into Count Ulrik Skarlsol, Lord of the Frozen Keep, a hybernated hero native to an ice-bound planet. During the novel Phoenix in Obsidian (1970) Count Ulrik embarks on a quest for the mysterious "Chalice" (possibly a counterpart of the Holy Grail) and is forced to wield the Cold Sword, an extremely powerful and malevolent form of the Black Sword.
    3. Clen of Clen-Gar: Daker assumes this identity during The Swords of Heaven, the Flowers of Hell (1979), a graphic novel co-authored by Moorcock and Howard Chaykin which bridges the time gap between the second and third prose novel. Clen is a human lord of a prosperous bucolic territory called "Heaven", whose "Angel" denizens are responsible for the abysmal state of their neighboring land of "Hell"; as the two country clashes in war, Clen gets romantically involved with Lady Gradesmor from Heaven.
    4. Prince Flamadin: Flamadin is the ruler of a dimension called Draachenheem and owns both the Dragon Sword (a Black Sword comparable in power to Ulrik Skarlson's Cold Sword) and the Actoris Stone, an enchanted gem that would later become Elric of Melniboné's family heirloom. In The Dragon in the Sword (1986) Daker as Flamadin and his Companion from 20th Century Germany, Ulrich von Bek, travel across many interconnected dimensions to prevent a major cataclysm.
  • Elric of Melniboné: Moorcock's breakthrough character, Elric lives in a prehistorical age of Earth and is the sorcerer-emperor of the Melnibonéans, a pre-human species of Chaos-aligned feys (later retconned into being a branch of the Eldren); he wields the soul-eating sword Stormbringer, on which he is co-dependent due to his frail health, and spends his life trying to thwart the Chaos God Arioch, who is also his undesired personal patron due to an ancestral Melnibonéan tradition; the first and last novels in this series also feature Mournblade, Stormbringer's twin sword, which is wielded by Elric's kinsmen. In the early stages of his saga, Elric is enamored of his cousin Princess Cymoril and gets one-time help from Oone the Dreamthief, an enchantress, and Count Smiorgan, a well-known reaver; later on, he falls in love with the human aristocrat Zarozinia and casts his lot with Moonglum of Elwher, a sybaritic sellsword, and Rackhir the Red Archer, a powerful paladin of Balance. Elric's series represents a major milestone in sword & sorcery fiction and, unlike Moorcock's later works, was composed anachronically: it originally consisted of seven short stories and a serialized conclusive novel written from 1961 to 1967, but it was later expanded with three additional novels in the 1970s, two in the 1990s, and some more peripheral contents during the early 21st century.
  • Franik
  • Professor Faustaff: the leading character in The Wrecks of Time (1965), he is a physicist fighting the space-faring marauders known as the D-Squads in order to protect a cluster of fifteen different Earths that exist in parallel to Faustaff's own planet. The 1996 revision of The Wrecks of Time renamed Faustaff's ally Gordon Ogg into "Gordon Begg", in order to retcon him into a Von Bek and underline those character's respective status as an Eternal Champion and Companion, but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint.
  • Goldberg
  • Duke Dorian Hawkmoon von Köln: a German soldier in a post-nuclear Europe where magic and ancient technology coexist, Duke Hawkmoon embarks on a quest together with his retainer Oladahn to recover the fabled Runestaff (a magical talisman akin to the Holy Grail) and protect the world from the warmongering Dark Empire of Granbretan, which is ruled by the ruthless half-human half-machine King Huon; as this enterprise progresses, Hawkmoon is forced to bear the enchanted Black Jewel, a manifestation of the Black Sword, and falls in love with Yisselda of Brass, heiress of a fiefdom in the land of Kamarg. Dorian's war against Granbretan is central in the Runestaff tetralogy (1967–1969) while his family life with Yisselda serves as a backdrop to the Chronicles of Castle Brass/Count Brass trilogy (1973-1975), which culminates into a crossover with Elric's, Daker's, and Corum's respective series.
  • Ilanth
  • Queen Ilian of Garathorm: one of the very few female Championesses, she teams up with Duke Hawkmoon once he travels to her own world during his sixth novel, The Champion of Garathorm.
  • Karl Glogauer: a hedonist and a hippie with a countercultural background, Glogauer debuts in the novella "Behold the Man" (1966; expanded into a novel of the same title in 1969), in which he time-travels to Roman Palestine so that he can meet Jesus Christ; the later novel Breakfast in the Ruins (1972) details the character's gay romances and hallucinatory experiences in contemporary London. He also cameos in Jerry Cornelius's adventures.
  • Corum Jhaelen Irsei: a prince of the Vadhagh, a Law-aligned branch of the Eldren people, Corum effectively becomes the last of his kin after a disastrous war against the Mabden, a species created by Chaos of which Homo sapiens is the Terran variant. After a period of thralldom, the mutilation of his left hand and right eye, and their replacement with magical prosthetics (hence his alias as Corum Llaw Ereint, "Corum of the Silver Hand"), the former prince rises in rebellion against his captors and wages a veritable crusade against Chaos, which takes place both in Corum's own age during the Swords trilogy (1971) and in a distant future during the Silver Hand trilogy (1973-1974). As his vendetta unfolds, Corum pursues troubled romances with two human women, Rhalina and Medhbh, and is reliably backed by Jhary-a-Conel, a well-versed dimensional traveler who occasionally supports Hawkmoon as well. Notice that Corum's name is an anagram of "Jeremiah Cornelius".
  • Jack Karaquazian: a leading character in the Second Ether trilogy (1995–1996), which depicts the power struggles between god-like beings (such as Karaquazian himself) of Lawful, Chaotic and neutral affiliation to take control of Balance and swing it their own respective way. Jack is involved in an entangled love affair with his Consort Colinda Dovero, his Companion Sam Oakenhurst and Sam's other love interest Rose von Bek.
  • Michael Kane of Old Mars: the hero of a 1965 trilogy of novels, Michael Kane is a human scientist from Earth transported to a fictional version of Mars, where he gets embroiled in swashbuckling adventures and court intrigues, including a romance with Martian queen Shizala. Kane is constructed as an explicit homage and throwback to the planetary romance subgenre and, more specifically, to John Carter of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs; in turn, the biographical style of the trilogy represents a direct antecedent to Oswald Bastable's saga.
  • Clovis Marca: the leading character in The Shores of Death (1966), Marca is one of the last human denizens of a future Earth which stopped rotating and is now split between a daily and a nightly hemisphere; he embarks on a quest to cure humankind's severe sterility and grant his species a future. The 1996 revision of The Shores of Death renamed Marca into "Clovis Becker" in order to retcon him into a distant Von Bek, but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint.
  • Mejink-La-Kos
  • M'v Okom Sebpt O'Riley, Gunholder of the Qui Lors Ventures: another female Championess, she wields the Black Sword under the guise of a soul-eating pistol, the Banning Gun. She acts as a mentor to Eric Beck in Elric: The Balance Lost.
  • Oshbek-Uy
  • Pournachas
  • Alan Powys: the leading character in The Winds of Limbo (1965), Powys is a state functionary in a distant future where humankind has retreated underground under the stewardship of a despotic government; he strives to protect his home country from a space terrorist known as "The Fireclown". The 1996 revision of The Winds of Limbo renamed Powys into "Alain von Bek" in order to retcon him into a distant Von Bek, but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint.
  • Colonel Maxim Arturovitch "Pyat" Pyatnitski: possibly the only Champion whose adventures are fully mimetic rather than fantastical, Colonel Pyat is a long-lived Russian aristocrat and military man born on 1 January 1900. He spends his life traveling across the globe and getting entangled into all sorts of high-level political intrigues, effectively shaping the fates of Earth before, during, and after the World Wars, his only stable human connection being his lover Honoria Cornelius, Jerry's mother. Moorcock originally created Pyat as a supporting character in Jerry Cornelius's series and eventually fleshed him out in the Pyat Quartet (1981–2006); this series is structured it as a self-celebratory four-volume autobiography by the Colonel himself, with Moorcock acting as an editor.
  • Ryan: the lead character of The Black Corridor (1969), Ryan lives in a dystopian future of rampaging xenophobia, nuclear warfare and societal collapse; he commandeers the interstellar spaceship Hope Dempsy and tries to bring a rag-tag group of refugees to safety.
  • The "Scar-Faced Brooder" or "Cronarch": a character from Moorcock's juvenile novelettes The Time Dweller (1964) and Escape from Evening (1965), dealing with the state of human society in a dying Earth scenario.
  • Shaleen
  • Sojan the Swordsman: Moorcock's first original character and a prototype to the Eternal Champion concept, Sojan is a deceased Terran who reincarnates on the planet Zylor and embarks on a series of picaresque adventures; interestingly, while he does wield a sword and a pneumatic gun, his actual signature weapon is a shield (hence the moniker of "Sojan Shieldbearer"). Sojan's adventures first appeared around 1955 as a twenty-three parts serial on the Burroughsania fanzine, which Moorcock had been contributing to, were reprinted for profit in Tarzan Adventures between 1957 and 1958, and they were eventually fixed-up in book form in 1977; finally, the 2013 edition combined this serial together with other sword-and-planet short fiction focusing on Dek of Noothar, Klan the Spoiler, and Rens Karto Of Bersnol.
  • Umpata
  • Ghardas Valabasian, Conqueror of the Distant Suns
  • Graf Ulrich von Bek: a German soldier fighting in the Thirty Years' War, Graf Ulrich is the leading character of the historical fantasy novel The War Hound and the World's Pain (1981), in which he strikes a deal with the Devil and takes upon his family the duty of locating and guarding the Holy Grail;[1] his Companion and Consort in this adventure are Gurni Gurnisson and Sabrina. Graf Ulrich's actions reverberate through space and time by making the von Beks aware of the Multiverse, the designated owners of the sword Ravenbrand (which is, in fact, Mournblade from Elric's series) and uniquely attuned to magic and dimensional travel, so that different members of the bloodline are involved in many other sagas and stand-alone episodes of the Eternal Champion mythos.
    Ulrich von Bek and his descendants are a somewhat unusual family in Moorcock's works, as they function both as an aspect of the Eternal Champion and as a companion to him. The family is considered to be the current Keeper of the Holy Grail. The von Bek family motto is "Do you the Devil's work", a nod to the relationship that the family developed with Lucifer in The War Hound and the World's Pain.
    • Manfred von Bek: the main character of The City in the Autumn Stars (1986), a direct sequel to The War Hound and the World's Pain, Manfred carries on Graf Ulrich's quest for the Grail as Europe is engulfed by the French Revolution; he is aided by the Duchess of Crete, Libussa Cartagena y Mendoza-Chilperic. Due to their shared main plotline, The War Hound and the World's Pain and The City in the Autumn Stars are usually collected together as the core of the "Von Bek saga".
    • Renark von Bek: a citizen of humankind's stellar empire established in the aftermath of World War Three, Renark is tasked with traveling to a secluded dimension known as the Sundered Worlds so that he can stabilize the Multiverse and prevent its untimely collapse. He is the lead character in the novella "The Sundered Worlds" (1962), which was eventually combined with "The Blood Red Game" (1963) into the full-length novel The Sundered Worlds (1965).
    • Rose von Bek: the last survivor of a militant order devoted to Balance, she was originally known as "The Rose", but married into the von Bek family and kept the surname after her divorce. She is the titular coprotagonist in Elric's novel The Revenge of the Rose (1991) and a leading character in the Second Ether trilogy. While no Championess herself, her cosmic power is comparable to that of the various Champions. Her signature weapons are the sword Swift Thorn and the dagger Little Thorn.
    • Ulrich von Bek: a direct descendant of Graf Ulrich, he rebels against Adolf Hitler and escapes death by serving as an Eternal Companion to John Daker once the latter incarnates into Prince Flamadin during The Dragon in the Sword.
    • Ulric von Bek: a distinct character from the former (notice the h-less spelling of his name), he too opposes the Third Reich together with his wife Oona von Bek, a half-human half-Melnibonéan hybrid who has relocated to 20th Century Germany. Ulric and Oona are the leading characters of the Moonbeam Roads Trilogy (2001–2005), an explicit crossover between Elric's saga and the Von Beks'.
    • Count Ulrich Rudric Renark Otto von Bek-Krasny, also known as "Zenith the Albino": an Eternal Champion existing on 20th Century Earth and most likely a reincarnated Elric of Melniboné, since his Black Sword is Stormbringer itself; he is a criminal mastermind and is perpetually engaged into a cat-and-mouse game against his distant cousin Sir Seaton Begg, a British "metatemporal detective" belonging to the English branch of the dynasty. Zenith and Begg's shared adventure were composed anachronically and collected for the first time in The Metatemporal Detective (2007), while some of them had already appeared in the second volume of the Second Ether series, Fabulous Harbours (1995).
    • Eric Beck: the main character of the graphic novel Elric: The Balance Lost (2011-2012), he is an Eternal Champion living on 21st Century Earth and gets dragged into an ensemble adventure together with Elric, Hawkmoon, Corum, Oswald Bastable, and the cast of the Second Ether series. His Black Sword is a Japanese katana named Murakamo-No-Tsurugi ("Sword of the Gathering Clouds"). He is a collateral member of the Von Bek dynasty through the Begg lineage (originally, van Beek).
    • Karol von Bek: the melancholy Duke of Waldenstein (mentioned in "The Citadel of Forgotten Myths")

In addition to Moorcock's own creations, a number of references through his works have stated that Ulysses and Roland have been Earth's Eternal Champions as well.

Publishing history edit

The Tale of the Eternal Champion edit

Between 1992 and 1993 Moorcock partnered with British publisher Millenium (later absorbed into the Orion Publishing Group) to print a multi-volume collection of all novels and short stories belonging to the Eternal Champion sequence, under the moniker of "The Tale of the Eternal Champion"; starting from 1994 and up to 2000, a parallel project simply called "The Eternal Champion" was undertaken by White Wolf Publishing for the North American market, but each of the two series ended up including some contents left out of its counterpart due to licensing issues, while certain works could not make into the collection whatsoever. This publishing operation represented Moorcock's first attempt to systematize his magnum opus both in terms of editorial uniformity and textual revisions.

The following table and paragraph list the full contents of both the European and North American versions of the collection. It should be noticed that the Orion collection was arranged according to Moorcock's then-preferred reading order, which was altered in the White Wolf version.

The Tale of the Eternal Champion
Millenium/Orion White Wolf
1. Von Bek The Eternal Champion
2. The Eternal Champion Von Bek
3. Hawkmoon Hawkmoon
4. Corum A Nomad of the Time Streams: A Scientific Romance
5. Sailing to Utopia Elric: Song of the Black Sword
6. A Nomad of the Time Streams The Roads Between the Worlds
7. The Dancers at the End of Time Corum: The Coming of Chaos
8. Elric of Melniboné Sailing to Utopia
9. The New Nature of the Catastrophe Kane of Old Mars
10. The Prince with the Silver Hand The Dancers at the End of Time
11. Legends from the End of Time Elric: The Stealer of Souls
12. Stormbringer Corum: The Prince with the Silver Hand
13. Earl Aubec and Other Stories Legends from the End of Time
14. Count Brass Earl Aubec and Other Stories
15. Count Brass

Both versions of the collection included Elric's saga, Corum's hexalogy, Hawkmoon's heptalogy, and the End of Time series as two-volumes sets and devoted one volume each to John Daker's trilogy, Captain Bastable's trilogy, and the von Bek duology (which was complemented by the detective short story "The Pleasure Garden of Felipe Sagittarius"); Sailing to Utopia was a thematical anthology combining The Ice Schooner, The Distant Suns, The Black Corridor and the novella "Flux", and likewise Earl Aubec and Other Stories collected thirty-three works of short fiction from across Moorcock's production, among them the two short stories focussing on the Scared-Face Brooder and the short novels The Golden Barge and My Experiences in the Third World War.

As for region-exclusive contents, the European-only The New Nature of the Catastrophe was an anthology of short fiction centered upon Jerry Cornelius, expanding upon the earlier collection The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius, whereas the North American-only Kane of Old Mars collected Michael Kane's trilogy. Moreover, White Wolf Publishing did secure the rights over the stand-alone science fiction novels The Sundered World, The Wrecks of Time, The Winds of Limbo, and The Shores of Death, but their inclusion came at the expense of Moorcock's preferred reading order: The Sundered World was inserted into John Daker's volume as an interlude between that character's first and second novel; Daker's third novel was moved into the von Bek volume as a coda; and The Wrecks of Time, The Winds of Limbo, and The Shores of Death were collected into the thematical anthology The Roads Between the Worlds, which interconnected the three novels through an original framing device.

It is also worth mentioning that the first edition of the Second Ether trilogy was published by Millenium itself right after "The Tale of the Eternal Champion" was completed, and that while Jerry Cornelius's and Karl Glogauer's novels were not formally included in the series, nonetheless they were still being distributed in the UK by Orion under its Phoenix House imprint, together with Moorcock's non-Champion novels Gloriana; or, the Unfulfill'd Queen and The Brothel in Rosenstrasse. As a result, Jerry Cornell's duology was the only series in the Eternal Champion mythos not to be included in either collection, nor officially nor informally.

The Michael Moorcock Collection edit

Moorcock's second attempt to systematize the Eternal Champion corpus took place between 2013 and 2015, once Victor Gollancz Ltd (another imprint of the Orion conglomerate) secured the rights for all of his fantasy and science-fiction works and consequently reprinted them in a cohesive series, labeled as "The Michael Moorcock Collection"; as of 2021, these Gollancz editions represent the most updated versions of Moorcock's opus, due to their contents having been jointly revised by the author and his bibliographer John Davey into a definitive textual rendition. This publication included both all of the author's full-length novels and a selection of short fiction and was eventually complemented by two stand-alone series collecting the author's non-Champion sagas, the London Sequence and The Sanctuary of the White Friars.

The following table and paragraph list the full contents of the collection.

The Michael Moorcock Collection
Volume Contents
1. Elric of Melniboné and Other Stories "Master of Chaos" (1964), Moorcock's original script for the graphic novel Elric: The Making of a Sorcerer (2005), Elric of Melniboné (1972)
2. Elric: The Fortress of the Pearl The Fortress of the Pearl (1989)
3. Elric: The Sailor on the Seas of Fate The Sailor on the Seas of Fate (1976), "The Dreaming City" (1961), "A Portrait in Ivory" (2007), "While the Gods Laugh" (1961), "The Singing Citadel" (1967)
4. Elric: The Sleeping Sorceress "The Eternal Champion" (1962), "The Greater Conqueror" (1963), The Sleeping Sorceress (1971), "The Stone Thing: A Tale of Strange Parts" (1974), "Sir Milk-and-Blood" (1996), "The Roaming Forest: A Tale of the Red Archer" (2006), "The Flaneur des Arcades de l'Opera" (2007). All content but the titular novel is miscellaneous short fiction only passingly related to Elric's series.
5. Elric: The Revenge of the Rose The Revenge of the Rose (1991), "The Stealer of Souls" (1962), "Kings in Darkness" (1962), "The Caravan of Forgotten Dreams" (1962), "The Last Enchantment" (1962), "To Rescue Tanelorn..." (1962)
6. Elric: Stormbringer! Stormbringer (1963-1964)
7. Elric: The Moonbeam Roads Daughter of Dreams (originally titled The Dreamthief's Daughter, 2001), Destiny's Brother (originally titled The Skrayling Tree, 2003), Son of the Wolf (originally titled The White Wolf's Son, 2003)
8. Corum: The Prince in the Scarlet Robe The Knight of the Swords (1971), The Queen of the Swords (1971), The King of the Swords (1971)
9. Corum: The Prince with the Silver Hand The Bull and the Spear (1973), The Oak and the Ram (1973), The Sword and the Stallion (1974)
10. Hawkmoon: The History of the Runestaff The Jewel in the Skull (1967), The Mad God's Amulet (1968), The Sword of the Dawn (1968), The Runestaff (1969)
11. Hawkmoon: Count Brass Count Brass (1973), The Champion of Garathorm (1973), The Quest for Tanelorn (1975)
12. The Cornelius Quartet The Final Programme (1968), A Cure for Cancer (1971), The English Assassin (1972), The Condition of Muzak (1977)
13. Jerry Cornelius: His Lives and His Times Expanded revision of The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius (1976)
14. A Cornelius Calendar The Adventures of Una Persson and Catherine Cornelius in the Twentieth Century (1976), The Entropy Tango (1981), The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle (1980), The Alchemist's Question (1984), Firing the Cathedral (2002), Modern Times 2.0 (2008)
15. Von Bek The War Hound and the World's Pain (1981), The City in the Autumn Stars (1986)
16. The Eternal Champion The Eternal Champion: A Fantastic Romance (1970), Phoenix in Obsidian (1970), The Dragon in the Sword (1986)
17. The Dancers at the End of Time An Alien Heat (1972), The Hollow Lands (1974), The End of All Songs (1976)
18. Kane of Old Mars City of the Beast (1965), Lord of the Spiders (1965), Masters of the Pit (1965)
19. Moorcock's Multiverse The Sundered Worlds (1965), The Winds of Limbo (1969; a revised version of The Fireclown, 1965), The Shores of Death (originally titled The Twilight Man, 1966)
20. The Nomad of Time: A Scientific Romance The Warlord of the Air (1971), The Land Leviathan (1974), The Steel Tsar (1981)
21. Travelling to Utopia The Wrecks of Time (1967), The Ice Schooner (1969), The Black Corridor (1969)
22. The War Amongst the Angels Blood: A Southern Fantasy (1994), Fabulous Harbours (1995), The War Amongst The Angels (1996)
23. Tales from the End of Time Pale Roses (1976), White Star (1976), Ancient Shadows (1976), Constant Fire (1977), Elric at the End of Time (1981), Sumptuous Dress (2008)
24. Behold the Man Behold the Man (1969)
25. Gloriana; or, The Unfulfill'd Queen Gloriana; or, The Unfulfill'd Queen (1978)
26. My Experiences in the Third World War and Other Stories My Experiences in the Third World War (1979-1989), "The Mountain" (1964), "The Deep Fix" (1964), "The Frozen Cardinal" (1987), "Wolf" (1966), "The Pleasure Garden of Felipe Sagittarius" (1965), "The Real-Life Mr Newman" (1966), "The Cairene Purse" (1990)
27. The Brothel in Rosenstrasse and Other Stories The Brothel in Rosenstrasse (1982), "The Opium General" (1984), "London Bone" (1997), "A Winter Admiral" (1994), "Doves in the Circle" (1997), "A Slow Saturday Night at the Surrealist Sporting Club" (2001)
28. Breakfast in the Ruins and Other Stories Breakfast in the Ruins (1972), "The Time Dweller" (1964), "Escape from Evening" (1965), "A Dead Singer" (1974), "London Flesh" (2006), "Behold the Man" (1966).

The Collection was further complemented by five digital-only releases:

  • Jerry Cornell's series:
    1. The Chinese Agent (1970)
    2. The Russian Intelligence (1980)
  • The Golden Barge (1979, but originally composed in 1958)
  • Sojan the Swordsman (1977, but originally composed in 1954–1958)
  • The Distant Suns (1975, but originally composed in 1969)

As of 2021, Gollancz has not yet acquired the rights for the Pyat Quartet, consisting of:

  1. Byzantium Endures (1981)
  2. The Laughter of Carthage (1984)
  3. Jerusalem Commands (1992)
  4. The Vengeance of Rome (2006)

See also edit

  • The Hero with a Thousand Faces: an anthropological essay on the narrative structures of myths by influential scholar Joseph Campbell and a prominent source of literary inspiration for Moorcock's generation.

References edit

  1. ^ "Michael Moorcock's Von Bek: A Review". Black Gate. Retrieved 15 February 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Darren Harris-Fain, "British fantasy and science-fiction writers since 1960", Gale Group, 2002, ISBN 0-7876-6005-1, p. 293
  • Carter Kaplan, "Fractal fantasies of transformation: William Blake, Michael Moorcock and the utilities of mythographic shamanism" in "New boundaries in political science fiction", (edd Donald M. Hassler, Clyde Wilcox) Univ of South Carolina Press, 2008, ISBN 1-57003-736-1, pp. 35–52
  • Frank Northern Magill, "Survey of modern fantasy literature, Volume 1", Salem Press, 1983, ISBN 0-89356-451-6, p. 489

eternal, champion, this, article, about, michael, moorcock, character, concept, book, novel, john, daker, redirects, here, amateur, singer, name, daker, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, re. This article is about the Michael Moorcock character concept For the book see The Eternal Champion novel John Daker redirects here For the amateur singer see My name is Jon Daker This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Eternal Champion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia s general notability guideline Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary sources that are independent of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention If notability cannot be shown the article is likely to be merged redirected or deleted Find sources Eternal Champion news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Eternal Champion is a fictional character created by British author Michael Moorcock and is a recurrent feature in many of his speculative fiction works Contents 1 General overview 2 Incarnations 3 Publishing history 3 1 The Tale of the Eternal Champion 3 2 The Michael Moorcock Collection 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingGeneral overview editMany of Moorcock s novels and short stories take place in a shared Multiverse an array of interconnected parallel universes many layered dimensions spheres and alternative worlds spanning from the Big Bang to the End of Time and from planet Earth to faraway galaxies All these regions of spaces and parallel timelines are given shape by two metaphysical forces which are perpetually opposed to each other Law and Chaos which represent perpetual stasis and ever changing disorder Since a clear cut prevalence of either Law or Chaos would erase all life from the Multiverse a third force known as the Cosmic Balance enforces certain limits on the powers of Law and Chaos which in turn ensure the continued existence of the Multiverse Law Chaos and the Balance are implied to be non sentient but they do manifest through god like beings who express one facet or another of the three cosmic principles and in turn these deities can empower mortal creatures as their heralds and representatives The Eternal Champion is an appointed paladin of Balance who is bound to exist in each and every world and age of the Multiverse so that Law and Chaos are perpetually kept in check however he often does not know of his role or struggles against it never to succeed Since he must intervene whenever either Law or Chaos has gained an excess of power requiring him to tip the scales accordingly he is always doomed to be surrounded by strife and destruction although he may go through long periods of relative quiet All the different Eternal Champions are implied to be different facets or incarnations of one semi conscious being a platonic archetype of a sort most of them are peerless fighters and generals and have an unbreakable bond with a sentient Chaos aligned weapon the Black Sword which in turns takes on a different form for each Champion Likewise many Champions are aided by an Eternal Companion and an Eternal Consort a sidekick and a love interest who are themselves aspects of two semi divine figures This recursivity through the Multiverse is further underlined by the number of Champions Companions and mentor figures to the Champions Moorcock has given the J and C initials as a form of naming fil rouge in the same vein many Champions and Companions belong to one branch or another of the extensive von Bek dynasty Space and time travels through the Multiverse are in fact possible to the point that one humanoid species called the Eldrens is spread among many different worlds and ages and interacts with many different Champions however cosmic laws establish that no two Eternal Champions can coexist in the same situation or the very fabric of reality would be severely damaged The only exceptions are cataclysmic events such as the end of a Cycle of Cycles of the Multiverse s progression or an invasion by hostile entities from an entirely separate multiverse in these cases different incarnations of the Champion may join forces to thwart the impending threat possibly by temporarily merging their individual bodies into a true demigod of immense power Incarnations editThe following list presents all known Champions in alphabetical order mentions their respective Swords Companions and Consorts and briefly summarizes their individual plotlines and publishing history Alerik Alivale Konrad Arflane the hero of the postapocalyptic novel The Ice Schooner 1969 Arflane lives during a new ice age that has engulfed most of Earth and forced the surviving humans to revert to a hunting gathering economy he sets sails on the eponymous ice schooner to reach the fabled settlement of New York and scavenge all ancestral knowledge that could help restore human civilization Artos the Celt Asquiol of Pompeii the main character of the science fiction novella The Blood Red Game 1963 Asquiol is leading a human colonizing force into a parallel universe and has to fight for supremacy against a hostile native species The Blood Red Game was eventually combined with the earlier novella The Sundered Worlds 1962 into the full length novel The Sundered Worlds 1965 making Asquiol somehow of a guest character into the Von Bek saga Aubec Earl of Malador Aubec debuted in a 1964 short story titled either The Dream of Earl Aubec or Master of Chaos depending on the collection he lives in the same world as Elric of Melnibone many generations before that character s birth serves as a national champion of the human kingdom of Lormyria and is the paramour of the Lormyrian monarch Queen Eloarde Moorcock planned a whole series about Aubec s wars against Melnibone in order to ensure human independence eventually reconnecting to Elric s saga as a direct prequel but the project was eventually aborted consequently The Dream of Earl Aubec was reincorporated into Elric s series as a prologue Captain Oswald Bastable the main character and narrator of the Nomad of Time trilogy 1971 1981 Captain Bastable is an officer of the British Imperial Army stationed in the Raj in the early 20th Century until a series of time travel incidents transports him into three different uchronias a 1973 where the World Wars have not been fought and the British Empire is now encroached by decolonizing movements a 1904 where Europe has been left in tatters by a precocious and even more devastating Great War a 1941 where the British and German Empires are firmly allied Bastable s misadventures in these alternative timelines are constructed as a biography and literary historians regard them as the prototypes of the steampunk subgenre Brian Jherek Carnelian one of the last humans to be alive on Earth as the Multiverse is nearing the End of Time Carnelian is a creature of semi divine power hedonistic interests and obnoxious morality not unlike his fellow End Timers but his lifestyle changes forever once he falls in love with Mrs Amelia Underwood a time traveler from the Nineteenth Century the couple s courtship relationship and shared adventures across time and space are the subject of a trilogy called The Dancers at the End of Time 1972 1976 this series is complemented by the Legends at the End of Time five semi autonomous short stories and novelettes taking place at the End of Time themselves composed in the late Seventies with an additional sixth one being published in 2008 This series is characterized by a high number of cameos from other leading and supporting characters of the Eternal Champion mythos Jerry Cornelius an adventurer and dimensional traveler Moorcock created in the mid 1960s and developed for the following forty years resulting in an early tetralogy of novels The Cornelius Quartet 1968 1977 a ponderous collection of short fiction The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius 1976 and a later hexalogy of novels The Cornelius Calendar composed in two stages 1976 1981 and 2002 2008 with more tales in the working Cornelius saga consists of a wide array of surreal situations kept together by the character s uniquely fluid identity and it represents an influential form of experimental literature in the wider context of psychedelic counterculture This series also includes two spin off works a Doctor Who licensed novel titled The Coming of the Terraphiles 2010 whose Captain Cornelius is in fact Jerry s incarnation in the Whoniverse and The Distant Suns 1975 a late example of pulp space opera Moorcock co authored with James Cawthorn depicting Jerry as an air force Colonel and a space explorer Moreover it is implied that Lord Jagged of Canaria from Jherek Carnelian s series Jaspar Colinadous from one of Elric s adventures Dorian Hawkmoon s Jehamia Cohnahlias Corum s Jhary a Conel and John Daker s Jermays the Crooked are Jerry s counterparts in their respective dimensions Jerry s version of the Black Sword is a Needle Gun later morphed into a Vibragun his Consort is his own sister Catherine depicted as his wife in The Distant Suns to avoid any incestuous undertones and he has a conflictual bond with fellow dimensional adventurer Una Persson Jerry Cornell in 1966 Moorcock edited and in fact ghost wrote a sizeable section of the spy novel The LSD Dossier by Roger Harris and eventually authored two novels starring Harris s original main character secret agent Nick Allard later on Moorcock revised his solo works into a stand alone series centered upon Agent Jerry Cornell 1970 1980 an overt parody of character tropes and cliches from Ian Fleming s James Bond series John Daker a human implied to come from 20th Century Earth he is forced by Balance to reincarnate into various aspects of the Champion while staying fully aware of all his identities after every transmigration Through his own series he takes on four different personas Lord Erekose a warrior from an unspecified age of Earth s history and the only human capable of holding the radioactive sword Kunajana At the beginning of the novella The Eternal Champion 1962 expanded into a novel of the same title in 1970 Erekose has been dead for generations but a necromantic ritual resurrects him as a new existence for John Daker the reborn Erekose consequently gets entangled into a world war between humans and Eldrens and into a love triangle between the two factions princesses Eldren Ermizhad and human Iolinda Count Ulrik Skarlsol once his missions as Erekose are resolved Daker is forcibly transferred into Count Ulrik Skarlsol Lord of the Frozen Keep a hybernated hero native to an ice bound planet During the novel Phoenix in Obsidian 1970 Count Ulrik embarks on a quest for the mysterious Chalice possibly a counterpart of the Holy Grail and is forced to wield the Cold Sword an extremely powerful and malevolent form of the Black Sword Clen of Clen Gar Daker assumes this identity during The Swords of Heaven the Flowers of Hell 1979 a graphic novel co authored by Moorcock and Howard Chaykin which bridges the time gap between the second and third prose novel Clen is a human lord of a prosperous bucolic territory called Heaven whose Angel denizens are responsible for the abysmal state of their neighboring land of Hell as the two country clashes in war Clen gets romantically involved with Lady Gradesmor from Heaven Prince Flamadin Flamadin is the ruler of a dimension called Draachenheem and owns both the Dragon Sword a Black Sword comparable in power to Ulrik Skarlson s Cold Sword and the Actoris Stone an enchanted gem that would later become Elric of Melnibone s family heirloom In The Dragon in the Sword 1986 Daker as Flamadin and his Companion from 20th Century Germany Ulrich von Bek travel across many interconnected dimensions to prevent a major cataclysm Elric of Melnibone Moorcock s breakthrough character Elric lives in a prehistorical age of Earth and is the sorcerer emperor of the Melniboneans a pre human species of Chaos aligned feys later retconned into being a branch of the Eldren he wields the soul eating sword Stormbringer on which he is co dependent due to his frail health and spends his life trying to thwart the Chaos God Arioch who is also his undesired personal patron due to an ancestral Melnibonean tradition the first and last novels in this series also feature Mournblade Stormbringer s twin sword which is wielded by Elric s kinsmen In the early stages of his saga Elric is enamored of his cousin Princess Cymoril and gets one time help from Oone the Dreamthief an enchantress and Count Smiorgan a well known reaver later on he falls in love with the human aristocrat Zarozinia and casts his lot with Moonglum of Elwher a sybaritic sellsword and Rackhir the Red Archer a powerful paladin of Balance Elric s series represents a major milestone in sword amp sorcery fiction and unlike Moorcock s later works was composed anachronically it originally consisted of seven short stories and a serialized conclusive novel written from 1961 to 1967 but it was later expanded with three additional novels in the 1970s two in the 1990s and some more peripheral contents during the early 21st century Franik Professor Faustaff the leading character in The Wrecks of Time 1965 he is a physicist fighting the space faring marauders known as the D Squads in order to protect a cluster of fifteen different Earths that exist in parallel to Faustaff s own planet The 1996 revision of The Wrecks of Time renamed Faustaff s ally Gordon Ogg into Gordon Begg in order to retcon him into a Von Bek and underline those character s respective status as an Eternal Champion and Companion but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint Goldberg Duke Dorian Hawkmoon von Koln a German soldier in a post nuclear Europe where magic and ancient technology coexist Duke Hawkmoon embarks on a quest together with his retainer Oladahn to recover the fabled Runestaff a magical talisman akin to the Holy Grail and protect the world from the warmongering Dark Empire of Granbretan which is ruled by the ruthless half human half machine King Huon as this enterprise progresses Hawkmoon is forced to bear the enchanted Black Jewel a manifestation of the Black Sword and falls in love with Yisselda of Brass heiress of a fiefdom in the land of Kamarg Dorian s war against Granbretan is central in the Runestaff tetralogy 1967 1969 while his family life with Yisselda serves as a backdrop to the Chronicles of Castle Brass Count Brass trilogy 1973 1975 which culminates into a crossover with Elric s Daker s and Corum s respective series Ilanth Queen Ilian of Garathorm one of the very few female Championesses she teams up with Duke Hawkmoon once he travels to her own world during his sixth novel The Champion of Garathorm Karl Glogauer a hedonist and a hippie with a countercultural background Glogauer debuts in the novella Behold the Man 1966 expanded into a novel of the same title in 1969 in which he time travels to Roman Palestine so that he can meet Jesus Christ the later novel Breakfast in the Ruins 1972 details the character s gay romances and hallucinatory experiences in contemporary London He also cameos in Jerry Cornelius s adventures Corum Jhaelen Irsei a prince of the Vadhagh a Law aligned branch of the Eldren people Corum effectively becomes the last of his kin after a disastrous war against the Mabden a species created by Chaos of which Homo sapiens is the Terran variant After a period of thralldom the mutilation of his left hand and right eye and their replacement with magical prosthetics hence his alias as Corum Llaw Ereint Corum of the Silver Hand the former prince rises in rebellion against his captors and wages a veritable crusade against Chaos which takes place both in Corum s own age during the Swords trilogy 1971 and in a distant future during the Silver Hand trilogy 1973 1974 As his vendetta unfolds Corum pursues troubled romances with two human women Rhalina and Medhbh and is reliably backed by Jhary a Conel a well versed dimensional traveler who occasionally supports Hawkmoon as well Notice that Corum s name is an anagram of Jeremiah Cornelius Jack Karaquazian a leading character in the Second Ether trilogy 1995 1996 which depicts the power struggles between god like beings such as Karaquazian himself of Lawful Chaotic and neutral affiliation to take control of Balance and swing it their own respective way Jack is involved in an entangled love affair with his Consort Colinda Dovero his Companion Sam Oakenhurst and Sam s other love interest Rose von Bek Michael Kane of Old Mars the hero of a 1965 trilogy of novels Michael Kane is a human scientist from Earth transported to a fictional version of Mars where he gets embroiled in swashbuckling adventures and court intrigues including a romance with Martian queen Shizala Kane is constructed as an explicit homage and throwback to the planetary romance subgenre and more specifically to John Carter of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs in turn the biographical style of the trilogy represents a direct antecedent to Oswald Bastable s saga Clovis Marca the leading character in The Shores of Death 1966 Marca is one of the last human denizens of a future Earth which stopped rotating and is now split between a daily and a nightly hemisphere he embarks on a quest to cure humankind s severe sterility and grant his species a future The 1996 revision of The Shores of Death renamed Marca into Clovis Becker in order to retcon him into a distant Von Bek but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint Mejink La Kos M v Okom Sebpt O Riley Gunholder of the Qui Lors Ventures another female Championess she wields the Black Sword under the guise of a soul eating pistol the Banning Gun She acts as a mentor to Eric Beck in Elric The Balance Lost Oshbek Uy Pournachas Alan Powys the leading character in The Winds of Limbo 1965 Powys is a state functionary in a distant future where humankind has retreated underground under the stewardship of a despotic government he strives to protect his home country from a space terrorist known as The Fireclown The 1996 revision of The Winds of Limbo renamed Powys into Alain von Bek in order to retcon him into a distant Von Bek but this change was eventually dropped in the 2014 reprint Colonel Maxim Arturovitch Pyat Pyatnitski possibly the only Champion whose adventures are fully mimetic rather than fantastical Colonel Pyat is a long lived Russian aristocrat and military man born on 1 January 1900 He spends his life traveling across the globe and getting entangled into all sorts of high level political intrigues effectively shaping the fates of Earth before during and after the World Wars his only stable human connection being his lover Honoria Cornelius Jerry s mother Moorcock originally created Pyat as a supporting character in Jerry Cornelius s series and eventually fleshed him out in the Pyat Quartet 1981 2006 this series is structured it as a self celebratory four volume autobiography by the Colonel himself with Moorcock acting as an editor Ryan the lead character of The Black Corridor 1969 Ryan lives in a dystopian future of rampaging xenophobia nuclear warfare and societal collapse he commandeers the interstellar spaceship Hope Dempsy and tries to bring a rag tag group of refugees to safety The Scar Faced Brooder or Cronarch a character from Moorcock s juvenile novelettes The Time Dweller 1964 and Escape from Evening 1965 dealing with the state of human society in a dying Earth scenario Shaleen Sojan the Swordsman Moorcock s first original character and a prototype to the Eternal Champion concept Sojan is a deceased Terran who reincarnates on the planet Zylor and embarks on a series of picaresque adventures interestingly while he does wield a sword and a pneumatic gun his actual signature weapon is a shield hence the moniker of Sojan Shieldbearer Sojan s adventures first appeared around 1955 as a twenty three parts serial on the Burroughsania fanzine which Moorcock had been contributing to were reprinted for profit in Tarzan Adventures between 1957 and 1958 and they were eventually fixed up in book form in 1977 finally the 2013 edition combined this serial together with other sword and planet short fiction focusing on Dek of Noothar Klan the Spoiler and Rens Karto Of Bersnol Umpata Ghardas Valabasian Conqueror of the Distant Suns Graf Ulrich von Bek a German soldier fighting in the Thirty Years War Graf Ulrich is the leading character of the historical fantasy novel The War Hound and the World s Pain 1981 in which he strikes a deal with the Devil and takes upon his family the duty of locating and guarding the Holy Grail 1 his Companion and Consort in this adventure are Gurni Gurnisson and Sabrina Graf Ulrich s actions reverberate through space and time by making the von Beks aware of the Multiverse the designated owners of the sword Ravenbrand which is in fact Mournblade from Elric s series and uniquely attuned to magic and dimensional travel so that different members of the bloodline are involved in many other sagas and stand alone episodes of the Eternal Champion mythos Ulrich von Bek and his descendants are a somewhat unusual family in Moorcock s works as they function both as an aspect of the Eternal Champion and as a companion to him The family is considered to be the current Keeper of the Holy Grail The von Bek family motto is Do you the Devil s work a nod to the relationship that the family developed with Lucifer in The War Hound and the World s Pain Manfred von Bek the main character of The City in the Autumn Stars 1986 a direct sequel to The War Hound and the World s Pain Manfred carries on Graf Ulrich s quest for the Grail as Europe is engulfed by the French Revolution he is aided by the Duchess of Crete Libussa Cartagena y Mendoza Chilperic Due to their shared main plotline The War Hound and the World s Pain and The City in the Autumn Stars are usually collected together as the core of the Von Bek saga Renark von Bek a citizen of humankind s stellar empire established in the aftermath of World War Three Renark is tasked with traveling to a secluded dimension known as the Sundered Worlds so that he can stabilize the Multiverse and prevent its untimely collapse He is the lead character in the novella The Sundered Worlds 1962 which was eventually combined with The Blood Red Game 1963 into the full length novel The Sundered Worlds 1965 Rose von Bek the last survivor of a militant order devoted to Balance she was originally known as The Rose but married into the von Bek family and kept the surname after her divorce She is the titular coprotagonist in Elric s novel The Revenge of the Rose 1991 and a leading character in the Second Ether trilogy While no Championess herself her cosmic power is comparable to that of the various Champions Her signature weapons are the sword Swift Thorn and the dagger Little Thorn Ulrich von Bek a direct descendant of Graf Ulrich he rebels against Adolf Hitler and escapes death by serving as an Eternal Companion to John Daker once the latter incarnates into Prince Flamadin during The Dragon in the Sword Ulric von Bek a distinct character from the former notice the h less spelling of his name he too opposes the Third Reich together with his wife Oona von Bek a half human half Melnibonean hybrid who has relocated to 20th Century Germany Ulric and Oona are the leading characters of the Moonbeam Roads Trilogy 2001 2005 an explicit crossover between Elric s saga and the Von Beks Count Ulrich Rudric Renark Otto von Bek Krasny also known as Zenith the Albino an Eternal Champion existing on 20th Century Earth and most likely a reincarnated Elric of Melnibone since his Black Sword is Stormbringer itself he is a criminal mastermind and is perpetually engaged into a cat and mouse game against his distant cousin Sir Seaton Begg a British metatemporal detective belonging to the English branch of the dynasty Zenith and Begg s shared adventure were composed anachronically and collected for the first time in The Metatemporal Detective 2007 while some of them had already appeared in the second volume of the Second Ether series Fabulous Harbours 1995 Eric Beck the main character of the graphic novel Elric The Balance Lost 2011 2012 he is an Eternal Champion living on 21st Century Earth and gets dragged into an ensemble adventure together with Elric Hawkmoon Corum Oswald Bastable and the cast of the Second Ether series His Black Sword is a Japanese katana named Murakamo No Tsurugi Sword of the Gathering Clouds He is a collateral member of the Von Bek dynasty through the Begg lineage originally van Beek Karol von Bek the melancholy Duke of Waldenstein mentioned in The Citadel of Forgotten Myths In addition to Moorcock s own creations a number of references through his works have stated that Ulysses and Roland have been Earth s Eternal Champions as well Publishing history editThe Tale of the Eternal Champion edit Between 1992 and 1993 Moorcock partnered with British publisher Millenium later absorbed into the Orion Publishing Group to print a multi volume collection of all novels and short stories belonging to the Eternal Champion sequence under the moniker of The Tale of the Eternal Champion starting from 1994 and up to 2000 a parallel project simply called The Eternal Champion was undertaken by White Wolf Publishing for the North American market but each of the two series ended up including some contents left out of its counterpart due to licensing issues while certain works could not make into the collection whatsoever This publishing operation represented Moorcock s first attempt to systematize his magnum opus both in terms of editorial uniformity and textual revisions The following table and paragraph list the full contents of both the European and North American versions of the collection It should be noticed that the Orion collection was arranged according to Moorcock s then preferred reading order which was altered in the White Wolf version The Tale of the Eternal Champion Millenium Orion White Wolf1 Von Bek The Eternal Champion2 The Eternal Champion Von Bek3 Hawkmoon Hawkmoon4 Corum A Nomad of the Time Streams A Scientific Romance5 Sailing to Utopia Elric Song of the Black Sword6 A Nomad of the Time Streams The Roads Between the Worlds7 The Dancers at the End of Time Corum The Coming of Chaos8 Elric of Melnibone Sailing to Utopia9 The New Nature of the Catastrophe Kane of Old Mars10 The Prince with the Silver Hand The Dancers at the End of Time11 Legends from the End of Time Elric The Stealer of Souls12 Stormbringer Corum The Prince with the Silver Hand13 Earl Aubec and Other Stories Legends from the End of Time14 Count Brass Earl Aubec and Other Stories15 Count BrassBoth versions of the collection included Elric s saga Corum s hexalogy Hawkmoon s heptalogy and the End of Time series as two volumes sets and devoted one volume each to John Daker s trilogy Captain Bastable s trilogy and the von Bek duology which was complemented by the detective short story The Pleasure Garden of Felipe Sagittarius Sailing to Utopia was a thematical anthology combining The Ice Schooner The Distant Suns The Black Corridor and the novella Flux and likewise Earl Aubec and Other Stories collected thirty three works of short fiction from across Moorcock s production among them the two short stories focussing on the Scared Face Brooder and the short novels The Golden Barge and My Experiences in the Third World War As for region exclusive contents the European only The New Nature of the Catastrophe was an anthology of short fiction centered upon Jerry Cornelius expanding upon the earlier collection The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius whereas the North American only Kane of Old Mars collected Michael Kane s trilogy Moreover White Wolf Publishing did secure the rights over the stand alone science fiction novels The Sundered World The Wrecks of Time The Winds of Limbo and The Shores of Death but their inclusion came at the expense of Moorcock s preferred reading order The Sundered World was inserted into John Daker s volume as an interlude between that character s first and second novel Daker s third novel was moved into the von Bek volume as a coda and The Wrecks of Time The Winds of Limbo and The Shores of Death were collected into the thematical anthology The Roads Between the Worlds which interconnected the three novels through an original framing device It is also worth mentioning that the first edition of the Second Ether trilogy was published by Millenium itself right after The Tale of the Eternal Champion was completed and that while Jerry Cornelius s and Karl Glogauer s novels were not formally included in the series nonetheless they were still being distributed in the UK by Orion under its Phoenix House imprint together with Moorcock s non Champion novels Gloriana or the Unfulfill d Queen and The Brothel in Rosenstrasse As a result Jerry Cornell s duology was the only series in the Eternal Champion mythos not to be included in either collection nor officially nor informally The Michael Moorcock Collection edit Moorcock s second attempt to systematize the Eternal Champion corpus took place between 2013 and 2015 once Victor Gollancz Ltd another imprint of the Orion conglomerate secured the rights for all of his fantasy and science fiction works and consequently reprinted them in a cohesive series labeled as The Michael Moorcock Collection as of 2021 these Gollancz editions represent the most updated versions of Moorcock s opus due to their contents having been jointly revised by the author and his bibliographer John Davey into a definitive textual rendition This publication included both all of the author s full length novels and a selection of short fiction and was eventually complemented by two stand alone series collecting the author s non Champion sagas the London Sequence and The Sanctuary of the White Friars The following table and paragraph list the full contents of the collection The Michael Moorcock Collection Volume Contents1 Elric of Melnibone and Other Stories Master of Chaos 1964 Moorcock s original script for the graphic novel Elric The Making of a Sorcerer 2005 Elric of Melnibone 1972 2 Elric The Fortress of the Pearl The Fortress of the Pearl 1989 3 Elric The Sailor on the Seas of Fate The Sailor on the Seas of Fate 1976 The Dreaming City 1961 A Portrait in Ivory 2007 While the Gods Laugh 1961 The Singing Citadel 1967 4 Elric The Sleeping Sorceress The Eternal Champion 1962 The Greater Conqueror 1963 The Sleeping Sorceress 1971 The Stone Thing A Tale of Strange Parts 1974 Sir Milk and Blood 1996 The Roaming Forest A Tale of the Red Archer 2006 The Flaneur des Arcades de l Opera 2007 All content but the titular novel is miscellaneous short fiction only passingly related to Elric s series 5 Elric The Revenge of the Rose The Revenge of the Rose 1991 The Stealer of Souls 1962 Kings in Darkness 1962 The Caravan of Forgotten Dreams 1962 The Last Enchantment 1962 To Rescue Tanelorn 1962 6 Elric Stormbringer Stormbringer 1963 1964 7 Elric The Moonbeam Roads Daughter of Dreams originally titled The Dreamthief s Daughter 2001 Destiny s Brother originally titled The Skrayling Tree 2003 Son of the Wolf originally titled The White Wolf s Son 2003 8 Corum The Prince in the Scarlet Robe The Knight of the Swords 1971 The Queen of the Swords 1971 The King of the Swords 1971 9 Corum The Prince with the Silver Hand The Bull and the Spear 1973 The Oak and the Ram 1973 The Sword and the Stallion 1974 10 Hawkmoon The History of the Runestaff The Jewel in the Skull 1967 The Mad God s Amulet 1968 The Sword of the Dawn 1968 The Runestaff 1969 11 Hawkmoon Count Brass Count Brass 1973 The Champion of Garathorm 1973 The Quest for Tanelorn 1975 12 The Cornelius Quartet The Final Programme 1968 A Cure for Cancer 1971 The English Assassin 1972 The Condition of Muzak 1977 13 Jerry Cornelius His Lives and His Times Expanded revision of The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius 1976 14 A Cornelius Calendar The Adventures of Una Persson and Catherine Cornelius in the Twentieth Century 1976 The Entropy Tango 1981 The Great Rock n Roll Swindle 1980 The Alchemist s Question 1984 Firing the Cathedral 2002 Modern Times 2 0 2008 15 Von Bek The War Hound and the World s Pain 1981 The City in the Autumn Stars 1986 16 The Eternal Champion The Eternal Champion A Fantastic Romance 1970 Phoenix in Obsidian 1970 The Dragon in the Sword 1986 17 The Dancers at the End of Time An Alien Heat 1972 The Hollow Lands 1974 The End of All Songs 1976 18 Kane of Old Mars City of the Beast 1965 Lord of the Spiders 1965 Masters of the Pit 1965 19 Moorcock s Multiverse The Sundered Worlds 1965 The Winds of Limbo 1969 a revised version of The Fireclown 1965 The Shores of Death originally titled The Twilight Man 1966 20 The Nomad of Time A Scientific Romance The Warlord of the Air 1971 The Land Leviathan 1974 The Steel Tsar 1981 21 Travelling to Utopia The Wrecks of Time 1967 The Ice Schooner 1969 The Black Corridor 1969 22 The War Amongst the Angels Blood A Southern Fantasy 1994 Fabulous Harbours 1995 The War Amongst The Angels 1996 23 Tales from the End of Time Pale Roses 1976 White Star 1976 Ancient Shadows 1976 Constant Fire 1977 Elric at the End of Time 1981 Sumptuous Dress 2008 24 Behold the Man Behold the Man 1969 25 Gloriana or The Unfulfill d Queen Gloriana or The Unfulfill d Queen 1978 26 My Experiences in the Third World War and Other Stories My Experiences in the Third World War 1979 1989 The Mountain 1964 The Deep Fix 1964 The Frozen Cardinal 1987 Wolf 1966 The Pleasure Garden of Felipe Sagittarius 1965 The Real Life Mr Newman 1966 The Cairene Purse 1990 27 The Brothel in Rosenstrasse and Other Stories The Brothel in Rosenstrasse 1982 The Opium General 1984 London Bone 1997 A Winter Admiral 1994 Doves in the Circle 1997 A Slow Saturday Night at the Surrealist Sporting Club 2001 28 Breakfast in the Ruins and Other Stories Breakfast in the Ruins 1972 The Time Dweller 1964 Escape from Evening 1965 A Dead Singer 1974 London Flesh 2006 Behold the Man 1966 The Collection was further complemented by five digital only releases Jerry Cornell s series The Chinese Agent 1970 The Russian Intelligence 1980 The Golden Barge 1979 but originally composed in 1958 Sojan the Swordsman 1977 but originally composed in 1954 1958 The Distant Suns 1975 but originally composed in 1969 As of 2021 Gollancz has not yet acquired the rights for the Pyat Quartet consisting of Byzantium Endures 1981 The Laughter of Carthage 1984 Jerusalem Commands 1992 The Vengeance of Rome 2006 See also editThe Hero with a Thousand Faces an anthropological essay on the narrative structures of myths by influential scholar Joseph Campbell and a prominent source of literary inspiration for Moorcock s generation References edit Michael Moorcock s Von Bek A Review Black Gate Retrieved 15 February 2022 Further reading editDarren Harris Fain British fantasy and science fiction writers since 1960 Gale Group 2002 ISBN 0 7876 6005 1 p 293 Carter Kaplan Fractal fantasies of transformation William Blake Michael Moorcock and the utilities of mythographic shamanism in New boundaries in political science fiction edd Donald M Hassler Clyde Wilcox Univ of South Carolina Press 2008 ISBN 1 57003 736 1 pp 35 52 Frank Northern Magill Survey of modern fantasy literature Volume 1 Salem Press 1983 ISBN 0 89356 451 6 p 489 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eternal Champion amp oldid 1217347549, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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