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I believe Egypt likely had no native extant dragons until they were conquered by Rome. The deity Apep (sometimes known as Apophis) strikes me as being rather similar to a fire-breathing dragon (perhaps like the Kazilik), which bodes ill for the wellbeing of dragons in Kemet. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 21:42, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
 
I believe Egypt likely had no native extant dragons until they were conquered by Rome. The deity Apep (sometimes known as Apophis) strikes me as being rather similar to a fire-breathing dragon (perhaps like the Kazilik), which bodes ill for the wellbeing of dragons in Kemet. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 21:42, 18 June 2015 (UTC)
  
==Mixed Theories==
 
 
Thank you for your response. Many interesting new ideas. Here are some of my other thoughts:
 
Thank you for your response. Many interesting new ideas. Here are some of my other thoughts:
 
+
-A theory (I'm very proud of) about the ''Divine Wind''. We all know that the Celestials weren't originally from China. Kublai Khan invaded Japan with chinese and korean forces in 1274 (funny: he landed in the Hakata-Bay where Lord Jinai lives now). He destroyed the Hakozaki-Temple (that really exists) and stole the Celestial's last eggs. He failed to conquer Japan because half of his fleet and a third of the korean fleet was destroyed by a taifun. Later the Japanese called this storm the ''Divine Wind'' because a deity send the storm to help the Japanese. What if this wasn't a storm but a dragon? A Celestial who blew the ships away with his destructive breath? (Possible but not as matching: it was a Sui-Riu with his water waves). Temeraire's favourite story is about Raiden who fought against Kublai Khan and liberatet Japan. What if Raiden was a Celestial and one of the dragon(s) who destroyed the Armada? There are two possibilities, either NN was inspired by this taifun for the naming of her special ability or the people in her alternate history were inspired by this event or both. When the Khan tried a second invasion some years later (which failed in reality because of better organization of the Japanese) he killed nearly all living Celestials. Lord Jinai says that he saw Celestials before 400 years but it isn't said if they were chinese or japanese. There are no japanese Imperials so the japanese Celestails must have been able to breed among themselves or with an other japanese breed. The chinese Imperials had Celestial mutations so both countries were equal in breeding. If Jinai's Celestials were japanese he/she must have been the last of his/her breed (what supports that they were able to breed among themselves) as he/she hasn't reproduced.
-A theory (I'm very proud of it) about the ''Divine Wind''. We all know that the Celestials weren't originally from China. Kublai Khan invaded Japan with chinese and korean forces in 1274 (funny: he landed in the Hakata-Bay where Lord Jinai lives now). He destroyed the Hakozaki-Temple (that really exists) and stole the Celestial's last eggs. He failed to conquer Japan because half of his fleet and a third of the korean fleet was destroyed by a taifun. Later the Japanese called this storm the ''Divine Wind'' because a deity send the storm to help the Japanese. What if this wasn't a storm but a dragon? A Celestial who blew the ships away with his destructive breath? (Possible but not as matching: it was a Sui-Riu with his water waves). Temeraire's favourite story is about Raiden who fought against Kublai Khan and liberatet Japan. What if Raiden was a Celestial and one of the dragon(s) who destroyed the Armada? There are two possibilities, either NN was inspired by this taifun for the naming of her special ability or the people in her alternate history were inspired by this event or both. When the Khan tried a second invasion some years later (which failed in reality because of better organization of the Japanese) he killed nearly all living Celestials. Lord Jinai says that he saw Celestials before 400 years but it isn't said if they were chinese or japanese. There are no japanese Imperials so the japanese Celestails must have been able to breed among themselves or with an other japanese breed. The chinese Imperials had Celestial mutations so both countries were equal in breeding. If Jinai's Celestials were japanese he/she must have been the last of his/her breed (what supports that they were able to breed among themselves) as he/she hasn't reproduced.
 
 
 
 
-Jinai says that Celestials just travel together with the Emperor's family. We know about 8 chinese Celestials (Xian,Qian,Chu,Ming,Zhi,Lien,Chuan,Temeraire), even if just the Emperor had a Celestial there are too few Celestials to have accompanied all chinese Emperors since Kublai Khan. (P.e.: Chu-Jiaqing,Zhi-Qianlong,Ming-Yongzhen,Qian-Kangxi,Xian-Shunzhi. Shunzhi became Emperor in 1644 but Xian is much older than 200 years (these were all Emperors of the Qing dynasty, Shunzhi was the first). I have never heard of a dead Celestial except for Chuan. If no Celestail has ever died and the breed began with Xian (and all Emperors received their dragons when they were still hatchlings) there are over 350 years between the stolen eggs and the living Celestials. Somehow impossible, isn't it? Otherwise there were many Emperors who hadn't any Celestial as their companion. Maybe the dragons lived as part of the Emperor's family in the palace but were not related to a specific person or dynasty. Or some dragons had further companions but this should be difficult (even if Xian was 300 years old, there are still 2 centuries missing). Maybe the Mongols took their conquered Celestials home to Mongolia after they had to leave the chinese throne at the end of the 14th century. Then I could understand why the Chinese haven't remembered the Celestials' names. The Mongols conquered a chinese people during the 12/13th century and the Qing-Dynasty was of this mongol-chines people. Naturally they would take their own breed to new China, the Celestials too. But this would require a second population of Celestials, one mutated deriving from Xian and the mongolian population. But it doesn't exist. It's difficult to fill these logical gaps, unfortunately.
 
-Jinai says that Celestials just travel together with the Emperor's family. We know about 8 chinese Celestials (Xian,Qian,Chu,Ming,Zhi,Lien,Chuan,Temeraire), even if just the Emperor had a Celestial there are too few Celestials to have accompanied all chinese Emperors since Kublai Khan. (P.e.: Chu-Jiaqing,Zhi-Qianlong,Ming-Yongzhen,Qian-Kangxi,Xian-Shunzhi. Shunzhi became Emperor in 1644 but Xian is much older than 200 years (these were all Emperors of the Qing dynasty, Shunzhi was the first). I have never heard of a dead Celestial except for Chuan. If no Celestail has ever died and the breed began with Xian (and all Emperors received their dragons when they were still hatchlings) there are over 350 years between the stolen eggs and the living Celestials. Somehow impossible, isn't it? Otherwise there were many Emperors who hadn't any Celestial as their companion. Maybe the dragons lived as part of the Emperor's family in the palace but were not related to a specific person or dynasty. Or some dragons had further companions but this should be difficult (even if Xian was 300 years old, there are still 2 centuries missing). Maybe the Mongols took their conquered Celestials home to Mongolia after they had to leave the chinese throne at the end of the 14th century. Then I could understand why the Chinese haven't remembered the Celestials' names. The Mongols conquered a chinese people during the 12/13th century and the Qing-Dynasty was of this mongol-chines people. Naturally they would take their own breed to new China, the Celestials too. But this would require a second population of Celestials, one mutated deriving from Xian and the mongolian population. But it doesn't exist. It's difficult to fill these logical gaps, unfortunately.
 
 
-The Yellow Emperor (sometimes categorized as a dragon in the wikia) was one of 3 mythical Emperors who were supposed to have brought culture to the humen around 3500 bc. An other dragon was supposed to have teached humen to write in 5000 bc although the real China's history isn't very clear there. When the dragons brought the culture to the humen, the relationship between dragons and humen must have been different, like in Pusantinsuyo where the humen depend on dragons too. In reality the chinese plains were settled and agricultured since 11,000 bc. If dragons needed human agriculture to nurrish and startet a "symbiosis" why didn't it happen in other parts of the world too (Europe?)? It's likely that dragons were highly developped earlier than mammals and humen but why don't the african or feral dragons have a highly developped culture (yes, it is and was the same thing in the human's world)?
 
-The Yellow Emperor (sometimes categorized as a dragon in the wikia) was one of 3 mythical Emperors who were supposed to have brought culture to the humen around 3500 bc. An other dragon was supposed to have teached humen to write in 5000 bc although the real China's history isn't very clear there. When the dragons brought the culture to the humen, the relationship between dragons and humen must have been different, like in Pusantinsuyo where the humen depend on dragons too. In reality the chinese plains were settled and agricultured since 11,000 bc. If dragons needed human agriculture to nurrish and startet a "symbiosis" why didn't it happen in other parts of the world too (Europe?)? It's likely that dragons were highly developped earlier than mammals and humen but why don't the african or feral dragons have a highly developped culture (yes, it is and was the same thing in the human's world)?
 
 
-When the Mongols could conquer China, the country of dragons, couldn't it be that the other riding peoples like the Huns, the Tatars, the Hungarians were dragon-riding peoples too? The Cossacks (historically known to be a horse-riding people) are a dragon-riding people in NN's universe.
 
-When the Mongols could conquer China, the country of dragons, couldn't it be that the other riding peoples like the Huns, the Tatars, the Hungarians were dragon-riding peoples too? The Cossacks (historically known to be a horse-riding people) are a dragon-riding people in NN's universe.
 
 
-There are other chinese legends about mythical Emperors. The scientists doesn't believe them but with dragons it could be possible. The mythical Emperors with a historical personalitiy behind them reigned estimated over 100 years (because there are far too less information to find out details). For a human impossible but not for a dragon. Since 45,000bc Emperors reigned (after these legends) but their reign was for many hundreds or thousands of years, this is too long for a dragon too. But what if a dragon passed the reign to one of his children and so on? We know that Churki and Curicuillor look very similar so why shouldn't it be with other breeds too? Maybe it lasted centuries before the humen discovered that it isn't any longer the same dragon that reigns but one of his children? During a dragons reign many human generations pass and it is nearly impossible for a human to remind a changing when he has never seen or known the old Emperor because he doesn't live as long as a dragon.
 
-There are other chinese legends about mythical Emperors. The scientists doesn't believe them but with dragons it could be possible. The mythical Emperors with a historical personalitiy behind them reigned estimated over 100 years (because there are far too less information to find out details). For a human impossible but not for a dragon. Since 45,000bc Emperors reigned (after these legends) but their reign was for many hundreds or thousands of years, this is too long for a dragon too. But what if a dragon passed the reign to one of his children and so on? We know that Churki and Curicuillor look very similar so why shouldn't it be with other breeds too? Maybe it lasted centuries before the humen discovered that it isn't any longer the same dragon that reigns but one of his children? During a dragons reign many human generations pass and it is nearly impossible for a human to remind a changing when he has never seen or known the old Emperor because he doesn't live as long as a dragon.
 
 
-What if Marco Polo's and Sindbad's Bird Roc wasn't a giant bird but a big dragon? I think it's more possible to have a dragon stealing elephants and attacking ships than a giant bird. We don't know anything about nearer eastern dragon culture and the Africans started to breed dragon in the 17th century (Sipho reports) but it's a nice idea.
 
-What if Marco Polo's and Sindbad's Bird Roc wasn't a giant bird but a big dragon? I think it's more possible to have a dragon stealing elephants and attacking ships than a giant bird. We don't know anything about nearer eastern dragon culture and the Africans started to breed dragon in the 17th century (Sipho reports) but it's a nice idea.
 
 
-Francis Drake's nickname was in nearly each language "the dragon". What if he was the first to have dragons and the Navy fight together? Maybe he got the idea to build dragon transporters. Ships aren't supposed to fire in the sky so why not attacking them from above? (The same time the Lonwings were domesticated).
 
-Francis Drake's nickname was in nearly each language "the dragon". What if he was the first to have dragons and the Navy fight together? Maybe he got the idea to build dragon transporters. Ships aren't supposed to fire in the sky so why not attacking them from above? (The same time the Lonwings were domesticated).
 
 
-Marcus Antonius later committed suicide with Cleopatra. A dragon rider committing suicide is nearly not possible, at least not in the modern world. What about Vici then? Did she became crazy and killed all of Octavian's troops? Or did she die before on a battle-field (or was executed) what could have been an other reason for Antonius' suicide. But Vici is as known as Antonius to the future generations because Shakespeare made a scene with her in "Julius Caesar" which Laurence wants to tell to Lady Kiyomizu.
 
-Marcus Antonius later committed suicide with Cleopatra. A dragon rider committing suicide is nearly not possible, at least not in the modern world. What about Vici then? Did she became crazy and killed all of Octavian's troops? Or did she die before on a battle-field (or was executed) what could have been an other reason for Antonius' suicide. But Vici is as known as Antonius to the future generations because Shakespeare made a scene with her in "Julius Caesar" which Laurence wants to tell to Lady Kiyomizu.
 
 
-What if Turner's picture "Fighting Temeraire" wouldn't show the ship Temeraire and a steam ship but the ship and our dragon temeraire instead of the steam ship? Namesakes together.
 
-What if Turner's picture "Fighting Temeraire" wouldn't show the ship Temeraire and a steam ship but the ship and our dragon temeraire instead of the steam ship? Namesakes together.
 
 
-Joseph Pachacuti Yupanqui (Napoleon's and Anahuarque's son) is in reality Napoleon's son with the princess of Austria, Joseph. He is definitely the greatest discrepancy from real history. Do you think Anahuarque could die and Napoleon marries the princess of Austria and legalize his child so that NN gets back to real history again?
 
-Joseph Pachacuti Yupanqui (Napoleon's and Anahuarque's son) is in reality Napoleon's son with the princess of Austria, Joseph. He is definitely the greatest discrepancy from real history. Do you think Anahuarque could die and Napoleon marries the princess of Austria and legalize his child so that NN gets back to real history again?
 
 
-How could Pizarro conquer the Incans? He couldn't transport many dragons (maximum 3 small ones, one on each ship) and so many dragons as the Incans had couldn't just been killed by a musket shot. In NN's history the Incans survived and chased him out of South America but the beginning was the same. Even if he had 3 Flechas-del-Fuego they couldn't win against the hundreds of dragons the Incans have.
 
-How could Pizarro conquer the Incans? He couldn't transport many dragons (maximum 3 small ones, one on each ship) and so many dragons as the Incans had couldn't just been killed by a musket shot. In NN's history the Incans survived and chased him out of South America but the beginning was the same. Even if he had 3 Flechas-del-Fuego they couldn't win against the hundreds of dragons the Incans have.
 
 
-I think NN was ispired by Napoleon's ideas to build up a Montgolfière-fleet or a submarine-fleet and combined these two ideas (which failed in reality because of money and missing technology) for the battle of Dover and the invasion in Victory of Eagles. Maybe she was inspired a bit by the aerial warfare in Britain during the 2nd World War even an invasion never happened.
 
-I think NN was ispired by Napoleon's ideas to build up a Montgolfière-fleet or a submarine-fleet and combined these two ideas (which failed in reality because of money and missing technology) for the battle of Dover and the invasion in Victory of Eagles. Maybe she was inspired a bit by the aerial warfare in Britain during the 2nd World War even an invasion never happened.
 
-(Not a historical theory now, more a biological one): Western dragons hide most of their egg possibilities. Or they can influence their fertility. (eg: Obversaria had 1 egg all 10 years, Wringe has 1 egg all 4 years, Iskierka could have had 1 egg all 1,5 years). Understandable that they don't want to be abused as egg-laying-machines although they are proud and admired by others for many eggs. Feral dragons need to have many eggs to save their population.
 
  
 
I think, I've written everything I thought about and I hope you have some fun to think about it too. Where will you publish your FanFiction? Did you change the history? NN wrote at Goodreads.com that dragons would certainly hate airplanes and that the technical developpment would certainly not have passed like this in her dragon universe. I asked some of my questions to NN but she hasn't answered the importent ones. Good luck in writing! [[User:LordJinai|LordJinai]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 11:11, 23 June 2015 (CET)
 
I think, I've written everything I thought about and I hope you have some fun to think about it too. Where will you publish your FanFiction? Did you change the history? NN wrote at Goodreads.com that dragons would certainly hate airplanes and that the technical developpment would certainly not have passed like this in her dragon universe. I asked some of my questions to NN but she hasn't answered the importent ones. Good luck in writing! [[User:LordJinai|LordJinai]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 11:11, 23 June 2015 (CET)
 
 
While I ponder on those ideas, I can at least offer [http://s13.zetaboards.com/Dragon_War_1939/topic/7408953/1/ this] for the fan-fiction you'd asked to read. I can't say much for the plot, as it's one of those things I'm writing just to write, but I rather liked some of the moments where I managed to work in looking at the setting.
 
I'm rather pleased to see NN wrote that dragons hate airplanes; that's another reason the world would likely lack advanced aircraft. Another is that the existence of dragons themselves would forestall the development of airplanes, in much the same way as fossil fuels have forestalled the development of alternative energy sources: There's already a cheaper, readily available alternative. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 19:45, 23 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
*Solaris, this is damn good stuff. Really really good. A bit similar to NN's style of writing but not too much. If you publish a book in future times, please inform me. How will your story go on? [[User:LordJinai|LordJinai]] 18:47, 26 June 2015 (CET)
 
**Heh, thanks. That kinda made my day.
 
I plan on making something of a travelogue out of it, and thus I'm writing down bits and pieces in between research on the locales. They're going to go to Nepal, and from there make their way across Eurasia down to Egypt and then up near Germany to wind up in Poland right about the same time the Nazis invade, which is where the egg's been stashed after a long succession of thefts and counter-thefts (and that's not just so I can have an excuse to write about WWII-era warfare with dragons, honest).  [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Divine Wind in Japan'''
 
I think you're right about it being a Japanese Celestial, considering what Lien did to the British fleet at Shoeburyness.
 
I do believe that the reason the Celestials don't interbreed has more to do with their all being closely related than with a more literal inability. The fact that Kublai Khan was able to kill them all off, however, indicates that they were never terribly fecund. I suspect that, hundreds of years ago, there was a breed of dragon very much like Celestials in Japan (perhaps more like the Sui-Riu than the Imperial, though).
 
 
As an aside, I think the Sui-Riu's water-spouting may have evolved from pyrogenesis crossbred with the divine wind; it involves heating up water (greater temperatures than the dragon's internals, that is, and the fire-breathing coming from inside the dragon's throat indicates that it might well involve the dragon's air sacs as fuel) and expelling it in a manner like a cruder version of the divine wind. To my mind, that lends support to your theory that the divine wind was involved with Kublai Khan's first defeat, as I believe it was suggested the Sui-Riu was the one responsible for the feat. Blood of Tyrants is next on my to-read list, once I finish up with Crucible of Gold (which ought to be either today or tomorrow morning), so I'll be able to offer a bit more a recently-informed opinion then, as the last time I read it was a bit of time ago. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Ancient Chinese Dragons'''
 
You know, that thought's occurred to me, too. I suspect the reason China embraced dragons so well and the Europeans did not was due to the draconic cultures more than the human cultures. In China, we see a great number of dragons with a more placid and peaceable temperament ''and'' a greater intelligence, whereas the European dragons aren't very bright in the main. I think Chinese dragons domesticated humans much earlier, while the European dragons mostly warred with humans until the Europeans enslaved them. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Mongols and Other Horse-Riders'''
 
I think the setting practically demands such historically horse-mounted people be instead associated with dragons. The Akhal-Teke being a breed of dragon supports this theory, and I don't doubt there's a Bedouin dragon lineage as well. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:33, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Roc/Simurgh/Garuda'''
 
That's what I'm going with; the various legends about giant birds (some of which involve fire) are based off of big dragons, maybe even fire-breathers of a type similar to the Kazilik. They're remarkable to Marco Polo because they grew to such immense size even before modern breeding generated heavyweights in Europe. (One of the two Indian breeds I've written up was based loosely off of the Garuda, though in truth it bears little resemblance beyond being a big flying thing and is enemies with the native Naga dragons. I plan on doing a Persian Simurgh and perhaps a Mongolian Rukh, as well.) [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Sir Francis Drake'''
 
Mayhaps at that (and good catch on the time-frame), although the notion that he was a brilliant dragon using a human as a mouthpiece appeals to me as well. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Pizarro and the Inca'''
 
You know, that one's a bit of an eyebrow-raiser to me, too. The best answer I think I can come up with is that throughout the series we've seen a marked tendency in domesticated dragons to dislike attacking humans directly. I caught the sense in reading CoG that the Incan dragons could have attacked at any point, but held back for fear of harming the prisoners Pizarro and his men were taking. Once Pizarro demonstrated he couldn't be trusted with the prisoners, natural selection took its course. [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
'''Re: Eggs'''
 
I suspect you're right about dragons being able to breed much more frequently than they necessarily let their humans know. It may not even be about worries of being abused as egg-laying machines so much as they don't want to deal with the bother, and there's definitely an instinctive precaution against overpopulation necessary to the evolution of such a large predator. That's a nice bit of insight, and I think it shows us a hint of the dragons' personalities. After all, Iskierka is always eager to show off, so why wouldn't she seek that bit of extra glory that comes with having a remarkable egg? [[User:Solaris|Solaris]] ([[User talk:Solaris|talk]]) 03:31, 28 June 2015 (UTC)
 
 
*I've read the next part of your "Zephyr&Hollins" story. Good, but it doesn't carry on the story of thefts and action you told me. Does this part happen after the both have dropped off their passenger in Hongkong and fly back to America? Did you invented this pyrogenic lizard to support your theory of how dragons/fire-breathing could have developed in nature? What will you use instead of the two atomic bombs over Japan at the end of WWII (maybe a destructive army of fire-breathers and acid-spitters?)? Bellophon is a Celestial and I suppose Temeraire is still living, so why is your story called "The last Celestial"? Couldn't these both dragons breed with other Imperials (I don't think the Chinese have eliminated them all)?[[User:LordJinai|LordJinai]] 21:26 11 July 2015 (ECT)
 

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