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The Strike at Shayol Ghul
by Robert Jordan


Foreword by Robert Jordan
Sometimes fans ask me whether I mean to write prequels to The Wheel of Time. While some requests are
for books about The Trolloc Wars or the rise and fall of the High King, Artur Hawking, or the life
histories of various characters, the most frequent are for books about the AOL and its end in the War of
the Power, and the most often asked question is, I believe, "Why, when the greatest feats of the Age of
Legends were done by men and women working together with the One Power, was the final attack on
Shayol Ghul carried out by men alone?" At present I do not intend to write any of those books, but I
won't say that a story or two might not creep out eventually. I do not normally do short fiction. My editor
claims that for me, a short story means fifty thousand words. As for the question, though...I hope that
those fans (and the rest of you) will be satisfied for the time with what follows, a fictional bit of
"non-fiction," a piece from an Age called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past...
(A version of this will be included in An Illustrated Guide to The Wheel of Time, which will appear from
Tor in 1997.)

The Strike at Shayol Ghul
(A Preliminary Introduction)
by Jorille Mondevin,
Royal Historian to the Court of
Her Most Illuminated Majesty, Ethenielle Kirukon Materasu,
By the Blessing of the Light,
Queen of Kandor,
Protector of the Land,
Shield of the North,
High Seat of House Materasu.

One of the most important finds of recent years, perhaps since the Breaking, is a partial copy of no less
than a history of the world from the drilling of the Bore into the Dark One's Prison to the End of the
Breaking of the world. The original apparently dated from early in the First Century A.B. Despite the
extreme paucity of material from the entire first millennium after the Breaking, we can only be thankful
that the art of printing survived the Breaking of the World when so much else did not, and was indeed
practiced to some extent during the Breaking itself, though under severe and restricted conditions.
Considering the widespread destruction of The Trolloc Wars and the War of the Hundred Years, which
although far less than the near totality of the Breaking still saw cities, nations, and far worse, knowledge,
go to the fires, we must marvel at any writing that has survived more than three thousand years. What we
know is based on fragments, copied and recopied a thousand times, but at least we know something from
them. Even a little knowledge is better than ignorance.
Discovered in a dusty storage room in Chachin, the pages were in a chest full of old bills and receipts,
students' copy books and private diaries, some so foxed by age and with ink so faded as to be unreadable
where the pages themselves had not crumbled. The fragmentary manuscript was readable, barely, but
presented the usual problems, quite aside from the difficulties of translation and dealing with centuries of
copyists' errors; such a history would no doubt be a vast, multi-volume work (please see the author's
Note ), yet of the two hundred and twelve surviving pages, the largest number of consecutive
pages number six, and nowhere else more than two. Such dates as are given are totally incomprehensible,
as no calendar dating from the Age of Legends has ever been found. Many references to cataclysmic
events (dire battles and cities destroyed by balefire during the War of the Shadow, whole regions covered
by the sea and mountain ranges raised overnight during the Breaking) and to such minutiae as the