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|style = {{{style|}}}
 
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|sortkey = Frostback Mountains
 
 
|name = The Frostback Mountains
 
|name = The Frostback Mountains
 
|sortkey = Frostback Mountains
|number DAO = 119 (+5[[Warden's Keep|WK]])
 
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|image = Frostback mountains.jpg
 
|image = Frostback mountains.jpg
|px = 270px
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|number DAO = 119 (+5[[Warden's Keep|WK]])
 
|category DAO = Culture and History
 
|category DAO = Culture and History
 
|location DAO = Book in the [[Mountainside Caverns]]
 
|location DAO = Book in the [[Mountainside Caverns]]
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|number DAI = 1
 
|number DAI = 1
 
|category DAI = Places (Inquisition)
 
|category DAI = Places (Inquisition)
|location DAI = [[Haven]]: inside the inn (or) if missed, available for purchase from [[Willvan]] in [[Val Royeaux]] for {{CurrencyInquisition|17}}
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|location DAI = Inside [[Haven]]'s inn (or) if missed, available for purchase from [[Willvan]] in [[Val Royeaux]] for {{CurrencyInquisition|17}}
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|excerpt =
 
|related =
 
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|see also =
 
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|value = 2.55
 
|value = 2.55
 
|appearances = [[Dragon Age: Origins]] <br> [[Dragon Age: Inquisition]]
 
|appearances = [[Dragon Age: Origins]] <br> [[Dragon Age: Inquisition]]
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Even mountains had a heart, once. When the world was young, Korth the Mountain-Father kept his throne at the peak of Belenas, the mountain that lies at the center of the world, from which he could see all the corners of earth and sky. And he saw strong men become weak, brave men grow cowardly, and wise men turn foolish for love.
 
Even mountains had a heart, once. When the world was young, Korth the Mountain-Father kept his throne at the peak of Belenas, the mountain that lies at the center of the world, from which he could see all the corners of earth and sky. And he saw strong men become weak, brave men grow cowardly, and wise men turn foolish for love.
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Korth devised a plan that he might never be betrayed by his own heart, by taking it out and hiding it where no soul would ever dare search for it. He sealed it inside a golden cask, buried it in the earth, and raised around it the fiercest mountains the world had ever seen, the [[Frostback Mountains|Frostbacks]], to guard it.
 
Korth devised a plan that he might never be betrayed by his own heart, by taking it out and hiding it where no soul would ever dare search for it. He sealed it inside a golden cask, buried it in the earth, and raised around it the fiercest mountains the world had ever seen, the [[Frostback Mountains|Frostbacks]], to guard it.
   
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Resources found here: [[Elfroot (Inquisition)|Elfroot]], [[Iron]].
 
Resources found here: [[Elfroot (Inquisition)|Elfroot]], [[Iron]].
   
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[[es:Entrada del códice: Las montañas de la Espalda Helada]]
 
[[es:Entrada del códice: Las montañas de la Espalda Helada]]
 
[[Category:Dragon Age: Origins codex entries]]
 
[[Category:Dragon Age: Origins codex entries]]

Revision as of 00:35, 22 September 2020

Note: In Dragon Age: Inquisition, this codex entry is called A Tale of the Frostbacks.


Codex text

Even mountains had a heart, once. When the world was young, Korth the Mountain-Father kept his throne at the peak of Belenas, the mountain that lies at the center of the world, from which he could see all the corners of earth and sky. And he saw strong men become weak, brave men grow cowardly, and wise men turn foolish for love.

Korth devised a plan that he might never be betrayed by his own heart, by taking it out and hiding it where no soul would ever dare search for it. He sealed it inside a golden cask, buried it in the earth, and raised around it the fiercest mountains the world had ever seen, the Frostbacks, to guard it.

But without his heart, the Mountain-Father grew cruel. His chest was filled with bitter mountain winds that shrieked and howled like lost souls. Food lost its flavor, music had no sweetness, and he lost all joy in deeds of valor. He sent avalanches and earthquakes to torment the tribes of men. Gods and men rose against him, calling him a tyrant, but with no heart, Korth could not be slain. Soon there were no heroes left, either among men or gods, who would dare challenge Korth.

The Lady of the Skies sent the best of her children—the swiftest, the cleverest, and strongest fliers—to scour the mountains for the missing heart, and for a year and a day they searched. But sparrow and raven, vulture and eagle, swift and albatross returned to her with nothing.

Then the ptarmigan spoke up, and offered to find the god-chief's heart. The other birds laughed, for the ptarmigan is a tiny bird, too humble to soar, which spends half its time hopping along the ground. The Lady would not give the little creature her blessing, for the mountains were too fierce even for eagles, but the ptarmigan set out anyway.

The little bird traveled deep into the Frostbacks. When she could not fly, she crawled. She hugged the ground and weathered the worst mountain winds, and so made her lonely way to the valley where the heart beat. With all the god's terrible deeds, the heart was far too heavy for the tiny bird to carry, so she rolled it, little by little, out of the valley and down a cliff, and when the golden cask struck the earth, it shattered. The heart was full almost to bursting, and the pain of it roused the mountain god to come see what had happened.

When Korth neared his heart, it leapt back into his chest and he was whole again. Then Hakkon Wintersbreath bound Korth's chest with three bands of iron and three bands of ice, so it could never again escape. And all the remaining gods named the ptarmigan honored above even the loftiest eagles.

—"The Ptarmigan: An Avvar Tale," from Ferelden: Folklore and History, by Sister Petrine, Chantry scholar


Resources found here: Elfroot, Iron.