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Freed from societal restraint, Aginor was finally allowed to experiment with genetics, and it was he who created the [[Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Shadowspawn|Shadowspawn]]: Trollocs, Draghkar, Darkhounds, ''gholam'', and others. (Including the Worms that Rand and the others see in the Blight, in the first book. In "Lord of Chaos", Sammael mentions them later saying that they are but the larvae of an unknown Shadowspawn called the ''Jumara''). It is estimated that in order to do this, 35 to 50 million people were killed, not including the ones fed to Trollocs.
Freed from societal restraint, Aginor was finally allowed to experiment with genetics, and it was he who created the [[Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Shadowspawn|Shadowspawn]]: Trollocs, Draghkar, Darkhounds, ''gholam'', and others. (Including the Worms that Rand and the others see in the Blight, in the first book. In "Lord of Chaos", Sammael mentions them later saying that they are but the larvae of an unknown Shadowspawn called the ''Jumara''). It is estimated that in order to do this, 35 to 50 million people were killed, not including the ones fed to Trollocs.


Although proud of his achievements, the almost human throwbacks from the Trollocs made him uneasy. Aginor created Trollocs by mixing human and animal stock; when Trollocs mated, most of the offspring were Trolloc, but sometimes stillborn animal throwbacks were the result, and sometimes the human stock dominated: these were the [[Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Myrddraal|Myrddraal]]. It is said that not even Aginor knew how Myrddraal got their dark powers, like the ability to see with no eyes, or to vanish/travel via shadows. (LoC Chapter 6) Graendal mentions in The Path of Daggers that he says the Myrddraal are "slightly out of phase with time and reality," which explains why their clothes do not flutter in the wind when they move and several other foibles.
Although proud of his achievements, the almost human throwbacks from the Trollocs made him uneasy. Aginor created Trollocs by mixing human and animal stock; when Trollocs mated, most of the offspring were Trolloc, but sometimes stillborn animal throwbacks were the result, and sometimes the human stock dominated: these were the [[Concepts in the Wheel of Time series#Myrddraal|Myrddraal]]. It is said that not even Aginor knew how Myrddraal got their dark powers, like the ability to see with no eyes, or to vanish/travel via shadows. Graendal mentions in The Path of Daggers that he says the Myrddraal are "slightly out of phase with time and reality," which explains why their clothes do not flutter in the wind when they move and several other foibles.


==Sealed, Imperfectly==
==Sealed, Imperfectly==

Revision as of 20:46, 17 April 2008

Aginor (AGH-ih-nohr)is one of the primary antagonists of the Wheel of Time fantasy series by Robert Jordan. He is one of the Forsaken.

Life as Aginor

Ishar Marrad Chuain was a renowned biologist and Aes Sedai; it is said that no others understood "the most basic structures of living things" the way he did. He was banned from doing any genetic engineering - his true passion - by the Hall of Servants, after conducting some experiments on animals. His work apparently concerned new variations of plant life, both as ornaments and as crops. His strength in the One Power was also considerable, considered second only to Ishamael and Lews Therin Telamon himself. When he escaped from his prison, he boasted to Lews Therin and his group that he had faced the former in the Hall of Servants and "matched him blow for blow." He turned to the Shadow about three decades after the Bore was drilled in the Dark One's prison.

Shadowspawn

Freed from societal restraint, Aginor was finally allowed to experiment with genetics, and it was he who created the Shadowspawn: Trollocs, Draghkar, Darkhounds, gholam, and others. (Including the Worms that Rand and the others see in the Blight, in the first book. In "Lord of Chaos", Sammael mentions them later saying that they are but the larvae of an unknown Shadowspawn called the Jumara). It is estimated that in order to do this, 35 to 50 million people were killed, not including the ones fed to Trollocs.

Although proud of his achievements, the almost human throwbacks from the Trollocs made him uneasy. Aginor created Trollocs by mixing human and animal stock; when Trollocs mated, most of the offspring were Trolloc, but sometimes stillborn animal throwbacks were the result, and sometimes the human stock dominated: these were the Myrddraal. It is said that not even Aginor knew how Myrddraal got their dark powers, like the ability to see with no eyes, or to vanish/travel via shadows. Graendal mentions in The Path of Daggers that he says the Myrddraal are "slightly out of phase with time and reality," which explains why their clothes do not flutter in the wind when they move and several other foibles.

Sealed, Imperfectly

When the Chosen were sealed in the Bore, Aginor was closest to the seal, along with Balthamel, so that while his soul was preserved, his body was subjected to the process of aging. He was one of the first to escape, but he was disfigured, described as being old beyond old. His skin was like thin parchment, his scabby scalp had bits of tuffy white hair, his ears looked like old leather, his teeth yellowed, and his eyes sunken. His fingernails had disappeared.

He and Balthamel travelled to the Eye of the World, where they killed Someshta, the Last of the Nym. In doing so, Someshta killed Balthamel. During the battle between Rand al'Thor and Aginor for the pure saidin held within the Eye, Aginor started rapidly regaining his young look, but Rand won. Aginor was burned to ashes by trying to handle too much of the One Power, something Rand never revealed to anyone else.

Reincarnation as Osan'gar

It is likely that Aginor was recreated as Osan'gar by the Dark One, using the body of a Borderland man (contrast with Aran'gar). Using the name Corlan Dashiva, he posed as a farmer from the Black Hills, and was recruited to the Black Tower. After Dumai's Wells, he was selected, seemingly at random, to be a part of Rand's personal entourage, much to Mazrim Taim's consternation.

Corlan Dashiva

In retrospect, there were many hints that Dashiva was Aginor/Osan'gar: he hated exercise and bad weather, much like Aginor the reclusive scientist; his suggestion to Damer Flinn helped create a new way of healing, lost since the Age of Legends; and whenever the Asha'man are described as doing something, Dashiva always does something different. (Quintessential example: Rand, fighting, throws fire from his palms; the Asha'man throw fireballs in every direction, "all save Dashiva," who draws lightning across the sky instead.) Also, at the end of Winter's Heart, during the cleansing of saidin, during one of the few parts of the series from the point of view of Aginor/Osan'gar, he was on the hill that Elza obliterated with Callandor. Elza decribed the man on the hill as "only one of those renegade Asha'man."

He and some other Asha'man deserted Rand after their assassination plot failed. They waited for him in Far Madding, and Osan'gar tried to kill Rand when Rand was using the Choedan Kal to clean saidin, but was killed by Elza Sedai (who was ironically Black Ajah).