The Kingkiller Chronicle
Encyclopedia
The Kingkiller Chronicle is a fantasy trilogy by Patrick Rothfuss
Patrick Rothfuss
Patrick James Rothfuss is an American fantasy writer and college lecturer. He is the author of the projected three-volume series The Kingkiller Chronicle.- Biography :...

 (b. 1973), telling the biography of "Kvothe" , an adventurer, arcanist and famous musician. The plot is divided into two different action threads: The present, where Kvothe tells the story of his life to Devan Lochees (known as the "Chronicler") and Kvothe's past, where most of the story is located.

Books in the series

As of 2011, the first two books have been released, with the release date of the third still unknown.
  1. Day One: The Name of the Wind
    The Name of the Wind
    The Name of the Wind is a fantasy novel by Patrick Rothfuss, the first book in a series called The Kingkiller Chronicle. It was published in 2007 by DAW books with two possible hardcovers: one features the face of the Green Man with the title letters in silver and the other shows the figure of...

    (April 2007)
  2. Day Two: The Wise Man's Fear
    The Wise Man's Fear
    The Wise Man's Fear is a fantasy book by Patrick Rothfuss released March 1, 2011. It is the second volume in the ongoing trilogy The Kingkiller Chronicle.-Plot:...

    (March 2011)
  3. Day Three: The Doors of Stone

Structure

The series is essentially the biography of a famous musician, mage, and adventurer named Kvothe. After gaining notoriety at a young age, he disappears from public life and is eventually tracked down to a backwater inn by Devan Lochees, who is known as "the Chronicler". After some persuasion, the Chronicler convinces Kvothe to tell him his life story, which Kvothe announces will take three days (hence the name of the novel—The Kingkiller Chronicle, Day One—and its division into volumes). However, Kvothe's tale is occasionally punctuated by interludes set in the story's "present day", during which it becomes clear that faerie folk, known to the locals as demons, are showing up uncommonly frequently. Meanwhile, Kvothe's friend and apprentice Bast is unwilling to let the Chronicler tell all of Kvothe's story, and Kvothe is implied to be an untrustworthy narrator. The story thus proceeds on two levels: Kvothe tells his life story
Story within a story
A story within a story, also rendered story-within-a-story, is a literary device in which one narrative is presented during the action of another narrative. Mise en abyme is the French term for a similar literary device...

 via First-person narrative
First-person narrative
First-person point of view is a narrative mode where a story is narrated by one character at a time, speaking for and about themselves. First-person narrative may be singular, plural or multiple as well as being an authoritative, reliable or deceptive "voice" and represents point of view in the...

, while the framing device
Framing device
The term framing device refers to the usage of the same single action, scene, event, setting, or any element of significance at both the beginning and end of an artistic, musical, or literary work. The repeated element thus creates a ‘frame’ within which the main body of work can develop.The...

 hints that his life story may not actually be complete yet. The 3 books are just divisions in the same narrative, none of them standing alone in the story.

Settings

The world is referred to as "the four corners of civilization" in the book, but the kingdoms are not explicitly named.
Kvothe commonly travels, and the books follow his adventures across multiple lands.

Tarbean

Tarbean is described as the capital of the Commonwealth (one of the four kingdoms), and is (informally) divided into two sections: Waterside and Hillside. Waterside is the poorer section of the city, described as being similar to a slum and home to beggars, thieves and whores. Hillside is the more affluent section of Tarbean, home to solicitors, politicians and courtesans.

University

Situated across a river from the town of Imre, the University is the main center of higher learning described in the story so far. Students come from far and wide to study here. Master Elodin hints that the University is very old, with the subject of Naming having much more importance in the earlier days.

Several subjects taught at the University include:
  • History
  • Algebra and Geometry
  • Sympathy: Sympathy is a type of magic based on a combination of voodoo and quantum entanglement
    Quantum entanglement
    Quantum entanglement occurs when electrons, molecules even as large as "buckyballs", photons, etc., interact physically and then become separated; the type of interaction is such that each resulting member of a pair is properly described by the same quantum mechanical description , which is...

  • Artificery: This is a form of sympathy based on runes and engineering
  • Naming: Another type of "magic" taught at the University, which appears to be based on true name
    True name
    A true name is a name of a thing or being that expresses, or is somehow identical with, its true nature. The notion that language, or some specific sacred language, refers to things by their true names has been central to philosophical and grammatical study as well as various traditions of magic,...

     folklore
  • Medicine: At the Medica
  • Rhetoric/Logic
  • Languages
  • Alchemy


During Kvothe's time at the University, there are nine Masters each specialising in a different area. The first among the masters will also hold the title of Chancellor.

Ademre

A harsh, barren, rocky and windy land inhabited by the Adem people. Ademre is famous for its reputation of producing the powerful, capable, and talented fighters known as Adem mercenaries. It has many schools which teach different "paths" or styles of fighting. The people of Ademre practice a philosophy known as the Lethani.

The Fae

The world of fairies and other creatures that do not originate in the world of men. In the Fae, the sun and moon do not move across the sky. Instead, one can walk from lighter areas to darker areas, moving from morning to evening to night then back toward morning, or vice versa.

The moon sways between the world of the Fae and the world of men, tethered tight to both. The Creation Wars were prompted by one of the shaper of the Fae who pulled the moon into the world of the Fae. When the moon is full, the two worlds are close; it is then an easy matter for one of the Fae to enter into men through one of thousands of "doorways" between the worlds. Conversely, when there is a new moon, men can accidentally enter the Fae (at their peril). This is why wise men fear a moonless night.

Central Characters

Kvothe: Kvothe, pronounced nearly the same as "quothe" with the "kv" sounding as in the Yiddish word "kvetch", is the main protagonist of The Kingkiller Chronicle. Kvothe is born as an Edema Ruh, wandering entertainers who are often despised and mistrusted. At a young age he is tragically orphaned and forced to survive as a streetrat. Through skill and talent he is able to attend the University and learns combat from the Adem. This eclectic upbringing has provided Kvothe with a variety of skills including lockpicking, musical mastery (particularly the lute and vocals), magic, and survival skills. Kvothe is noted for his determination, willpower, and intelligence.

Denna: A young woman who shares romantic feelings with Kvothe. She values freedom highly and refuses to be tied down to one spot or person, occasionally causing strained relationships. Denna, like Kvothe, does not speak about her past and frequently changes her name as she takes on different personas. Beautiful and intelligent, she is also a talented musician and singer. She has currently secured the support of mysterious wealthy patron.

At Kvothe's Inn

Devan Lochees: Also known as Chronicler. Chronicler is rescued by Kvothe and taken to the small inn owned by the adult Kvothe while unconscious, and after some prodding, is able to convince a somewhat reluctant Kvothe to dictate his memoir
Memoir
A memoir , is a literary genre, forming a subclass of autobiography – although the terms 'memoir' and 'autobiography' are almost interchangeable. Memoir is autobiographical writing, but not all autobiographical writing follows the criteria for memoir set out below...

s to him. He left the university after being ridiculed by the master namer. The author of the first book Kvothe ever read at the Archives, and is considered to be the foremost biographer of his time.

Bast: Bast helps Kvothe run his inn. Although he attempts to pass himself off as human, Bast is actually a Faerie who has been traveling and learning from Kvothe. Recently he is concerned about Kvothe's mental state, fearing that Kvothe is no longer "acting" as Kote the innkeeper, but is instead wholly becoming "Kote". His greatest hope is that by recounting his life and adventures, Kvothe will cease being Kote and return to the man he originally was.

At the University and Imre

Ambrose Jakis: The firstborn son of a powerful and wealthy baron. Ambrose and Kvothe take an immediate dislike to each other; Ambrose holds Kvothe in contempt because Kvothe is young, poor, and not nobility, Kvothe hates Ambrose's arrogance and presumptuous attitude. Their rivalry deepens to dangerous levels and they attempt to sabotage the other..

Master Kilvin: Master Artificer and one of Kvothe's most influential mentors. Kilvin is a large Cealdish man with a large beard and large hands. Kilvin's prized possession is a collection of "ever-burning" lamps; Kilvin is attempting to discover a legendary substance that can burn forever.

Master Elodin: Master Namer. Eccentric but brilliant. The Chancellor before Master Herma, Elodin was 14 when admitted to the University, 18 when he graduated. However, an "incident" happened that the Masters don't speak of, and Elodin was locked up in the University's asylum until he regained most of his senses. He teaches Kvothe how to find the name of the wind. While Kvothe initially feels that his classes are a waste of time, he later begins to see the value of his teachings.

Master Hemme: Master Rhetorician. He hates Kvothe for embarrassing him during Kvothe's first term and tries to make Kvothe's life in the University as difficult as possible. Hemme replaces Herma as Chancellor near the end of The Wise Man's Fear
The Wise Man's Fear
The Wise Man's Fear is a fantasy book by Patrick Rothfuss released March 1, 2011. It is the second volume in the ongoing trilogy The Kingkiller Chronicle.-Plot:...

.

Master Herma: Chancellor of the University and Master Linguist. Herma falls ill near the end of The Wise Man's Fear
The Wise Man's Fear
The Wise Man's Fear is a fantasy book by Patrick Rothfuss released March 1, 2011. It is the second volume in the ongoing trilogy The Kingkiller Chronicle.-Plot:...

 and his duties are taken up by Master Hemme.

Simmon: Often called Sim. A close friend of Kvothe's. Simmon is skilled in alchemy and poetry. He's often considered rather naive, despite his quick intellect.

Wilem: Often called Wil. A close friend of Kvothe's. Wilem is Cealdish and works as a scriv(librarian of sorts) in the University Archives.

Manet: A student who has remained at the University for thirty years. Taught Kvothe articifing in The Name of the Wind
The Name of the Wind
The Name of the Wind is a fantasy novel by Patrick Rothfuss, the first book in a series called The Kingkiller Chronicle. It was published in 2007 by DAW books with two possible hardcovers: one features the face of the Green Man with the title letters in silver and the other shows the figure of...

.

Fela: A beautiful woman at the University. Kvothe and Fela have helped each other out in several occasions, and Kvothe once carried Fela out of a burning building. Fela had romantic interest in Kvothe but Kvothe leaves for an extended period of time and she pairs up with Simmon.

Auri: A young woman and former student of the University who has gone "cracked" and lives in hiding in passages beneath the university. Auri is frightened by strangers, loud noises, and direct questions, but is befriended by Kvothe and is shown to greatly enjoy Kvothe's singing and lute
Lute
Lute can refer generally to any plucked string instrument with a neck and a deep round back, or more specifically to an instrument from the family of European lutes....

-playing. "Auri" is not her real name, and she will not tell anyone her real name, so Kvothe named her Auri, thinking that the word meant "sunny", matching her personality.

Devi: A moneylender in Imre who makes loans to Kvothe so that he can pay his tuition. A former student of the University, she is extremely skilled in sympathy, and as such, many locals fear her. Their relationship is largely business, though they are cautious friends. It is known that Devi, Fela, and Mola are good friends as well.

Mola: A student at the University, she works in the Medica and has helped Kvothe with his injuries on multiple occasions.

Count Threpe: A patron of the musical arts living in Imre, he wants to help Kvothe and tries to find Kvothe a patron (unsuccessfully) and eventually is able to recommend him to the service of the Maer.

In Vintas

Maershon Lerand Alveron: Also called the Maer. Ruler of a major portion of Vintas, and descendant of the King of Vintas. Kvothe serves for a time as his romantic adviser and occasional arcanist. The Maer is ultimately forced to dismiss Kvothe from his services due to his new wife's revulsion for the Edema Ruh. However, he allows Kvothe to travel and perform anywhere within his lands and pays for Kvothe's tuition at the University.

Meluan Lackless: Heiress of the Lackless family, an ancient family of Vintas. In the oldest part of their estates there is rumored to be a secret door without a handle or hinges. She possesses an unusual box without handle, lid, or hinges meant to safeguard its unknown contents. She has a deep hatred of Edema Ruh resulting from her sister eloping with a Ruh.

Stapes: The Maer's manservant and most trusted friend since childhood. Initially hostile to Kvothe, Stapes has a change of heart when Kvothe saves the Maer from Caudicus's poisoning.

Caudicus: An arcanist and alchemist in the employ of the Maer. Kvothe discovers that Caudicus has been killing the Maer slowly for many years by means of lead poisoning and warns the Maer. Caudicus kills several of the Maer's personal guard and escapes for a time, but is eventually killed by the Maer's servant, Dagon.

Bredon: A Vintas noble who lives at the Maer's court and befriends Kvothe by teaching him the game of tak (possibly similar to go) and teaches him court customs. According to the rumors circulating in court, Bredon is involved in pagan frolics.

In Tarbean

Skarpi: A relatively minor character in The Name of the Wind, though he has (in the present day) befriended Chronicler, and was instrumental in discovering Kvothe's post-kingkilling whereabouts. He enters Kvothe's narrative in Tarbean, as an eccentric old man who will tell any story asked of him.

Trapis: A kindly old man who lives in the basement of a burnt out building and feeds and tends to the needs of street children. Kvothe befriended Trapis during his three years of living as a street urchin in Tarbean following the murder of his troupe.

In the Fae

Felurian: One of the magical Fae, she is the most beautiful and sensual woman in either the world of mortals or the Fae. She crosses over into the mortal world to seduce men and brings them into her own world. There, she proves her power over them by driving them to madness and/or death through excess of yearning and sexual debauchery. Kvothe spends time with her and eventually uses his wits to convince Felurian to allow him to leave. Before he leaves, she gives him a magical cloak called a shaed which she makes from shadows sewn together with starlight.

Cthaeh: A malicious entity living in a great tree in the Fae. The Cthaeh sees all possible futures and uses this power to manipulate people into making life decisions that will cause the most suffering. Kvothe unknowingly speaks to it and is affected by its revelations.

In Ademre

Ademre is a barren land of little value populated by the Adem because the Adem were forced out of every other land they tried to settle in. The Adem are highly skilled mercenaries who are trained to fight in schools and send their earnings back to their homeland to support their schools and families. The Adem follow a philosophy called Lethani and a barehanded/sword-fighting style called the Ketan.

Tempi: An Adem mercenary whom Kvothe meets in Vintas, under the employ of Maer Alveron. Tempi introduces Kvothe to the Ketan and Lethani, though he does so without permission of his teachers, facing rebuke and expulsion. Tempi is a capable fighter, but is revealed to be only mediocre by Adem standards.

Shehyn: An old woman and master of the Ketan fighting style as well as the head of the school in Haert, where Kvothe stays. She approves of Kvothe being taught the Ketan and the Lethani.

Vashet: Nicknamed "the Hammer", she is the teacher assigned to Kvothe to determine if he is worthy to become one of the Adem and so to learn their ways. Vashet teaches Kvothe how to fight barehanded and with a sword.

Penthe: A young woman, she is a highly capable fighter and beats Shehyn in a sparring contest. She is the first among the Adem to speak to Kvothe of her own free will.

Carceret: A female Adem who first rebukes Tempi for teaching Kvothe their secrets. She hates Kvothe and considers him a thief of their secrets. She hates him more when he is given the sword that once belonged to her mother.

Celean: An exceptionally talented student of the Ketan who becomes Kvothe's sparring partner. She is only 10 years old and much smaller than Kvothe, but wins their sparring matches on a regular basis. By the time Kvothe leaves Ademre, Celean enjoys his presence and talks about him often to her friends.

Magwyn: Grandmother of Vashet, Magwyn gives Kvothe the name Maedre, which can mean The Flame, The Lightning, or The Broken Tree. Later, Magwyn helps Kvothe memorize the history and names of the carriers of his sword, Caesura.

Origin of the Lethani

The Ademe seek to live by the light of the Lethani, an understanding of what one should do and how one should act, much like Bushido
Bushido
, meaning "Way of the Warrior-Knight", is a Japanese word which is used to describe a uniquely Japanese code of conduct and a way of the samurai life, loosely analogous to the concept of chivalry. It originates from the samurai moral code and stresses frugality, loyalty, martial arts mastery, and...

 or chivalry
Chivalry
Chivalry is a term related to the medieval institution of knighthood which has an aristocratic military origin of individual training and service to others. Chivalry was also the term used to refer to a group of mounted men-at-arms as well as to martial valour...

. The Lethani was developed from the 99 tales which Rethe told to Aethe. Before the Lethani, it was not uncommon for an Adem to kill another out of jealousy, pride, or proof of skill.

Aethe, in a duel, shot his student Rethe. While dying, Rethe spoke of wisdom and restraint in battle and Aethe repented his action. Rethe lived three more days, during which she dictated 99 stories to Aethe which became the basis for understanding the Lethani and the root of Ademre. Aethe lived forty more years but never killed again. He continued to train his students to be masters of the bow but also taught them wisdom, and the nine-and-ninety tales became the first Lethani to be known by Ademre.

The Chandrian

The Chandrian are also known as the Seven and, by the Adem, as the Rhinta. They are generally dismissed as a child's tale, but most people fear them and it is thought to be bad luck to speak of them. They will take drastic measures to insure that writings, songs, and depictions of them are destroyed, along with the people possessing these things. As a result, factual knowledge of the Chandrian is extremely rare. It is unknown if they are human or otherwise, what their final goal is, or how to stop them.

In a tale of the Chandrian told by Skarpi, their leader is Lord Haliax, formerly known as Lanre. Once a great hero, Lanre, whose wife's love for him was so great that she brought him back from death, finds that after her subsequent death he can neither bring her back nor die to join her. Filled with despair, he conspires to destroy the world and so betrays the city of Myr Tariniel. He is resisted by Selitos who curses him to be surrounded by shadow. According to another tale also told by Skarpi, Selitos gathers the survivors of Myr Tariniel and together they form the Amyr, opposing the Chandrian whenever and wherever they can.

According to legend among the Adem, there was once an empire of seven cities and one city. The seven fell and their names were lost. The one was also destroyed but its name remains, Tariniel (or Myr Tariniel). The empire had a great enemy that poisoned seven to betray the cities that trusted them. Six betrayed their cities. One did not betray a city and so it did not fall. The empire was left with hope, but even that city was forgotten. After the fall of the empire, the "land was broken and the sky changed." The names of the seven traitors and their signs are these:
Cyphus bears the blue flame.
Stercus is in thrall of iron.
Ferule chill and dark of eye.
Usnea lives in nothing but decay.
Grey Dalcenti never speaks.
Pale Alenta brings the blight.
Last there is the lord of seven.
Hated. Hopeless. Sleepless. Sane.
Alaxel bears the shadow's hame.


In "The Song of Seven Sorrows", composed by Denna with the assistance of her mysterious patron, Lanre is portrayed "in tragic tones" as a fallen hero "wrongly used". Kvothe and Denna had a chilly argument over which story is correct, which resulted in a falling out in their relationship.

Among the Fae, it is held that before Lanre betrayed the empire he had spoken to the evil Cthaeh.

The Creation Wars and the Stealing of the Moon

The Creation Wars ended with the world being split into two and with the moon trapped between both worlds. According to Felurian, the stealing of the moon ended the last chance for peace. She tells Kvothe that before men and the fae, when there was still only one sky, "there were those who walked with their eyes open. They knew all the deep names of things", and live in peace with the world knowing the "space" between things. "Then came those who saw a thing and thought of changing it. They thought in terms of mastery. They were shapers and proud dreamers." The shapers became increasingly bold in reshaping things, and the old knowers told them to stop, but the shapers refused and continued to create, forming the Fae realm "from whole cloth, a place where they could do as they desired." When finished, each shaper fashioned a star for empty sky. For a time there were two worlds and two skies. But then the first and greatest of the shapers, a shaper of the "dark and changing eye" chose not to just fashion his own star, but instead to pull the moon into the sky of the Fae. But he could not make her stay, so she moves between the worlds of man and of the fae. It was this act that provoked a war between the old knowers and the shapers.

A variation on this tale is told by Hespe, a female mercenary. In this tale, an unhappy boy named Jax bet a tinker that he could not make him happy. The tinker lost, but in the course of the contest, Jax looked upon the moon and decided that the only thing that would make him happy was to possess the moon. So taking his winnings, all the tinkers packs and his hat (an unlucky sign), Jax traveled long and far to capture the moon. Many years passed and he met a wise man with knowledge of names. When Jax asks the old man's name, he declines to give it explaining that knowing even a small portion of a true name gives power over that person. When the old man learns of Jax desire to possess the moon, he tells him, "When you love something, you have to make sure it loves you back, or you'll bring about no end of trouble chasing it." The old man then offers to teach they young man how to listen to the moon to see if he is loved. But at the prospect of taking a couple years to learn how to listen in this way, Jax goes on his way. After climbing to the highest peaks, he built a crooked mansion and called to the moon by playing a sad song on a magic flute found in the tinker's pack. The moon came to him, and she was beautiful and Jax had the first moment of happiness in his life. When the moon went to leave, Jax said, "I have given you three things. My song, a house, and my heart," and asks for three things in return. She answered that while she possessed nothing, if she had what he asked of her, she would give it. So he asked for a touch of her hand, a kiss, and her name. After telling Jax her name is Ludis, Jax brought out a black iron box and trapped her name in it, proclaiming that now that he had capture her name, he had power over her. Though he had not captured her entirely, he did catch a piece. This is why the moon must always return to him, yet always slips away again. This is what accounts for the changing of the moon.

See also

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