Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Hyborian Age ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: The Hyborian Age is a fictional, prehistoric "lost era" of Earth's history, a brutal and mythical time of sword-and-sorcery that serves as the primary setting for legendary heroes like [[conan_the_cimmerian|Conan the Cimmerian]] and [[kull_the_conqueror|Kull the Conqueror]] within the Marvel Universe.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Positioned chronologically after the sinking of Atlantis and before the rise of recorded ancient history, the Hyborian Age provides a deep, barbaric, and magic-infused backstory for Earth-616. It is an age of high adventure, forgotten kingdoms, and primal cosmic threats, most notably the influence of Elder Gods like [[set_(elder_god)|Set]]. * **Primary Impact:** Its greatest influence on the modern Marvel Universe is through its surviving villains and artifacts. The ancient sorcerer [[kulan_gath|Kulan Gath]] has repeatedly time-traveled to menace the [[avengers]], while the dark god Set and his mystical [[serpent_crown|Serpent Crown]] remain potent threats. The era also serves as the origin point for [[conan_the_cimmerian|Conan]], who has been brought to the present day to become a member of the [[savage_avengers]]. * **Key Incarnations:** In the Earth-616 comics, the Hyborian Age is a fully integrated part of Earth's history, coexisting with the activities of the Eternals and Deviants, and its magic and gods directly impact modern heroes. The Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), by contrast, has made **no references** to the Hyborian Age, Conan, or any related concepts; it does not currently exist within that continuity. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== The Hyborian Age was not an original Marvel Comics creation, but rather the masterwork of pulp author **Robert E. Howard (REH)**, conceived in the 1930s. Howard created this detailed sandbox to serve as the setting for his Conan stories, which were primarily published in the magazine //Weird Tales//. To give his world a sense of verisimilitude and history, Howard penned a detailed essay, also titled "The Hyborian Age," outlining the rise and fall of its various peoples and kingdoms. This essay formed the bedrock of the world's lore. In 1970, Marvel Comics, under the editorial direction of Stan Lee, sought to expand its genres. Editor and writer **Roy Thomas** championed the idea of licensing Howard's Conan character. The gamble paid off spectacularly. //Conan the Barbarian// #1, written by Thomas with groundbreaking art by **Barry Windsor-Smith**, was released in October 1970. It was an instant success, launching a sword-and-sorcery boom in comics. Marvel didn't just license Conan; it licensed his entire world. Thomas and subsequent creators faithfully adopted Howard's "Hyborian Age" essay as the canonical history for Earth-616's distant past. They meticulously mapped its geography, chronicled its kingdoms, and, most importantly, began weaving its mythology into the broader Marvel tapestry. Characters like the Stygian god Set were seamlessly identified with the pre-existing Marvel Elder God of the same name, creating a powerful link between Conan's adventures and the cosmic lore being developed in titles like //Thor// and //Doctor Strange//. Marvel held the license for decades, publishing hundreds of comics, including the long-running //Conan the Barbarian//, the more mature black-and-white magazine //The Savage Sword of Conan//, and spin-offs like //Kull the Conqueror// and //Red Sonja//. After a period where the license was held by Dark Horse Comics (2003-2018), Marvel reacquired the rights in 2019, fully reintegrating Conan and the Hyborian Age into modern continuity with titles like //Savage Avengers//. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== === The "Lost Age" of Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe) === Within the established timeline of Marvel's Earth-616, the Hyborian Age is a genuine, though largely forgotten, period of history. It is not an alternate dimension or a separate reality. Its history is slotted into the vast expanse of time between the Great Cataclysm that sank the continents of Atlantis and Lemuria (circa 18,000 BCE) and the beginning of recorded ancient history (circa 4,000 BCE). The era that preceded the Hyborian Age was the **Thurian Age**, the time of Kull of Atlantis. This was an age of advanced civilizations, including the Seven Empires of Valusia, Grondar, and the elder Atlantis. This epoch came to a violent end in a geological cataclysm that reshaped the face of the planet. The surviving humans were thrown into a primitive state. Over millennia, these scattered tribes evolved and migrated, eventually forming the nations that would define the Hyborian Age. The name itself comes from the dominant tribe, the Hyborians, who were said to be fair-haired barbarians who swept down from the north to overthrow an ancient, decaying empire centered around the evil city of Acheron.((The fall of Acheron to the Hyborians is a key event in the pre-history of Conan's time, roughly 3,000 years before his birth. Acheron was a kingdom of powerful necromancers, and its dark legacy influenced many subsequent threats.)) The Hyborian Age is characterized by a "low-fantasy" aesthetic; it's a brutal, violent world with feudal kingdoms, scheming sorcerers, and monstrous beasts lurking in the shadows. Magic is real but is often dark, difficult, and carries a terrible price, usually involving pacts with demonic entities or Elder Gods. The gods worshipped by the people, such as Cimmeria's grim god **Crom**, rarely intervene directly. The true powers of the age are entities like Set, whose followers in the nation of Stygia wield immense influence. This era lasted for several thousand years before it too was brought to an end by another cataclysm, which again reshaped the continents into a configuration roughly recognizable as our own, paving the way for the rise of Egypt, Sumeria, and other ancient civilizations. The memory of the Hyborian kingdoms faded into myth and legend. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === The Hyborian Age **does not exist** in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) continuity. As of the latest film and Disney+ releases, there have been no direct mentions, Easter eggs, or allusions to Conan the Cimmerian, Kull, Red Sonja, the kingdoms of Aquilonia or Stygia, or the specific sword-and-sorcery context of this era. While the MCU has explored Earth's ancient history through films like //Eternals//, which depicted events thousands of years in the past involving Deviants and Celestials, it has not incorporated the specific timeline or lore of Robert E. Howard's creation. The ancient threats and historical events in the MCU are currently centered around cosmic beings, alien interventions (like the Kree), and mystical dimensions (as seen in //Doctor Strange// and //Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings//), but none of these connect to the Hyborian past. Any potential introduction of the Hyborian Age into the MCU would require a significant creative decision. It could theoretically be integrated as a "lost chapter" of history that the Eternals were aware of, or its magical elements could be tied to figures like Agatha Harkness or the origins of the Darkhold. However, this is purely speculative. For now, the Hyborian Age remains exclusive to the Marvel Comics continuity. ===== Part 3: A World of Sword and Sorcery: Geography, Cultures, and Deities ===== === The Hyborian Nations and Peoples === The world of the Hyborian Age is a vast continent teeming with diverse and often warring cultures. The geography was meticulously laid out by Robert E. Howard and adopted wholesale by Marvel. ^ **Kingdom/Region** ^ **Culture & Key Characteristics** ^ **Notable Inhabitants/Ties** ^ | **Cimmeria** | A rugged, northern land of grim, grey hills and dark forests. The Cimmerians are a barbaric, clannish people; tough, sullen, and born to be warriors. They worship the grim, uncaring god Crom. | [[conan_the_cimmerian|Conan]]'s homeland. | | **Aquilonia** | The most powerful and "civilized" of the Hyborian kingdoms, modeled on a romanticized medieval Rome or France. It is a land of proud knights, powerful legions, and political intrigue. | The ultimate prize of Conan's ambition; he eventually becomes its king. | | **Stygia** | A sun-scorched, southern desert kingdom reminiscent of ancient Egypt. It is a land of dark magic, ancient tombs, and sinister priests who worship the serpent god, Set. | The seat of power for [[set_(elder_god)|Set]]'s cult and home to sorcerers like [[thoth-amon|Thoth-Amon]]. | | **Nemedia** | The second most powerful Hyborian kingdom and Aquilonia's chief rival. Known for its scholars and historians, but also its arrogant and decadent nobility. | Often at war with Aquilonia. | | **Koth** | A southern kingdom known for its skilled armorers and contentious city-states. It often acts as a buffer zone between the Hyborian kingdoms and Stygia. | Home to many mercenaries and adventurers. | | **Shem** | A land of city-states nestled between Koth and Stygia, populated by nomadic tribes and skilled archers. Its culture is analogous to the biblical lands of the ancient Near East. | Known for its skilled archers and fractious politics. | | **Zingara** | A coastal nation famous for its skilled sailors, swashbuckling pirates, and fiery-tempered nobility. It shares a cultural feel with Renaissance-era Spain. | A place of high seas adventure and courtly intrigue. | | **The Black Kingdoms** | A collective term for the tribal lands south of Stygia, analogous to sub-Saharan Africa. Populated by numerous powerful tribes, fearsome warriors, and potent shamans. | Conan adventured here extensively, respecting the strength of its warriors. | | **Turan** | A wealthy, expansive empire on the eastern Vilayet Sea, with a culture inspired by the Seljuk Turks. Known for its lavish cities, disciplined cavalry, and slave trade. | A frequent employer of and antagonist to Conan in his mercenary days. | | **Hyperborea** | A grim, cold northern kingdom, one of the original Hyborian realms. Ruled by cruel, pale-skinned sorcerer-priests. | Not to be confused with the Hyperborea of Greek myth or the home of Marvel's Eternals, though they share a name.((In Marvel lore, this naming similarity is often considered a case of later cultures echoing names from a forgotten, primal age.)) | === The Pantheons and Primal Powers === The supernatural forces of the Hyborian Age are a mixture of remote, conceptual deities and very real, very dangerous demonic and cosmic entities. * **The Gods:** Most cultures have their own pantheons. * **Crom:** The chief god of the Cimmerians. He is a grim, savage god who lives on a great mountain and has no love for weaklings. He grants a man courage and strength at birth and cares little for him afterward. Cimmerians do not pray to him, as it might draw his unwelcome attention. * **Mitra:** The primary god of the Hyborian kingdoms like Aquilonia. Mitra is a god of justice, law, and order, representing the "civilized" values of the era. His worship is in direct opposition to the dark cults of Set. * **Asura:** A god of seekers and mystics, worshipped in Vendhya (a land analogous to India). * **Ishtar:** A goddess of love and war, often worshipped in the lands of Shem and Khoraja, analogous to the Babylonian deity. * **The Elder Gods & Demons:** This is the era's most significant connection to the wider Marvel Universe. The Hyborian Age was a time when the influence of ancient, malevolent entities was felt more directly. * **Set the Serpent God:** The most prominent of these beings. In Marvel lore, Set is one of the ancient Elder Gods who degenerated into a demon. In the Hyborian Age, he is a primary antagonist, worshipped by the Stygians and the Serpent Men. His goal is to usher in an age of eternal darkness. His influence persists into the modern era through the [[serpent_crown]] and the terrorist group, the [[serpent_society]]. * **Chthon:** Another powerful Elder God, the author of the dark magical tome known as the [[darkhold]]. While less overtly worshipped than Set, Chthon's corrupting magical influence was potent during this era, and many dark sorcerers likely drew their power from his chaos magic, whether they knew it or not. * **Demons and Outer Gods:** Many sorcerers of the age, such as [[kulan_gath]], made pacts with various demons and otherworldly horrors, granting them immense power in exchange for their souls or servitude. These entities often resemble the cosmic horrors of H.P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos, a fitting tribute to Howard's contemporary and friend. ===== Part 4: Key Inhabitants & Legacy ===== ==== Legendary Heroes ==== * **[[conan_the_cimmerian|Conan the Cimmerian]]:** The quintessential hero of the age. Born on a battlefield in grim Cimmeria, Conan's life was a saga of constant struggle and adventure. He was, at various times, a thief, a mercenary, a pirate, and finally, a king, usurping the throne of Aquilonia. He is defined by his gigantic melancholies and gigantic mirth, his brute strength, animal cunning, and an unyielding will to live free. He is the standard by which all other Hyborian heroes are measured. * **[[kull_the_conqueror|Kull of Atlantis]]:** A character who technically predates the Hyborian Age, living in the preceding Thurian Age. Kull was an Atlantean barbarian who, like Conan, rose from savagery to become king of the most powerful civilized nation of his time: Valusia. He is more philosophical and brooding than Conan, often pondering the nature of reality and kingship. His stories established many of the themes and the "barbarian king" archetype that Conan would later perfect. * **[[red_sonja|Red Sonja]]:** A fiery warrior from Hyrkania, known as the "She-Devil with a Sword." Though inspired by a character from an REH historical story ("The Shadow of the Vulture"), Red Sonja as she is known was a creation of Roy Thomas and Barry Windsor-Smith for Marvel Comics. She is a peerless swordswoman who, after a traumatic event, was granted incredible skill by a goddess and vowed never to lie with a man unless he could defeat her in fair combat. She has a complex, often adversarial, but mutually respectful relationship with Conan.((The rights to Red Sonja are now held separately from Conan, meaning she is no longer published by Marvel Comics and her modern adventures take place in her own distinct continuity.)) ==== Notorious Villains ==== * **[[thoth-amon|Thoth-Amon]]:** Conan's most persistent and dangerous nemesis. The greatest sorcerer of Stygia and the high priest of Set, Thoth-Amon is a master of dark magic who commands legions of demons. His power is often tied to his mystical Ring of the Serpent. He rarely confronts Conan with physical force, preferring to use his magic and political influence to try and destroy the Cimmerian from afar. * **[[kulan_gath|Kulan Gath]]:** An ancient and incredibly powerful sorcerer of the Hyborian Age. Unlike most of his contemporaries, Kulan Gath has managed to survive the ages, primarily through magical means, to become a recurring threat in the modern Marvel Universe. He has clashed with the [[avengers]], the [[x-men]], [[doctor_strange]], and even [[spider-man]]. His cruelty is legendary, and his magic is potent enough to transform entire cities, as seen in the storyline where he turned Manhattan into a Hyborian-era fiefdom. He is the most direct and dangerous living link between the Hyborian Age and present-day Earth-616. * **[[thulsa_doom|Thulsa Doom]]:** The arch-enemy of Kull the Conqueror. Thulsa Doom is a skeletal-faced necromancer who is effectively immortal. He is a servant of the Serpent Men and the god Set. His long history has seen him clash not only with Kull in the Thurian Age but also with Conan in the Hyborian Age and other heroes in later eras. He was famously portrayed by James Earl Jones in the 1982 film //Conan the Barbarian//. ==== The Hyborian Age's Enduring Legacy ==== The end of the Hyborian Age did not erase its influence. Its legacy continues to ripple through the timeline of Earth-616. * **Artifacts of Power:** Many potent magical items created during this era have survived. The most infamous is the **[[serpent_crown]]**, an artifact containing the consciousness of the Elder God Set. It has possessed countless individuals throughout history, from heroes to villains, and remains one of the most dangerous objects on Earth. Other magical items and tomes of forbidden knowledge also trace their origins to this period. * **Surviving Threats:** The most significant legacy is Kulan Gath, who continues to plague the modern era. The worship of Set also endures in hidden cults and through the activities of the Serpent Society. * **The Time-Displaced Barbarian:** The most direct legacy is Conan himself. In the 2019 //Savage Avengers// series, Conan was transported via magic from his native time to the modern-day Savage Land. Stranded in the present, he has fallen in with a loose-knit team of anti-heroes including Wolverine, Venom, Elektra, and Doctor Doom. His presence serves as a living, breathing, sword-swinging reminder of the Hyborian Age's brutal reality in the heart of the modern Marvel Universe. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== The Coming of Conan (//Conan the Barbarian//, 1970) ==== Marvel's first foray into the Hyborian Age was a landmark. Issue #1, "The Coming of Conan," adapted parts of REH's lore while establishing the tone for the series. Written by Roy Thomas with art by Barry Windsor-Smith, the story introduced Conan as a young, restless barbarian seeking his fortune among the "civilized" kingdoms. It immediately established the key themes: the clash between barbarism and civilization, the presence of dark and insidious magic, and Conan's fierce independence. This storyline was critical as it successfully translated the pulp-era hero for a new generation and proved that non-superhero comics could thrive at Marvel. ==== The Tower of the Elephant (//Conan the Barbarian// #4) ==== This story is widely considered one of the greatest Conan tales ever, both in prose and comics. The adaptation by Thomas and Windsor-Smith is a masterclass in visual storytelling. In it, a young Conan attempts to steal a legendary jewel, the "Heart of the Elephant," from a sorcerer's tower. What he finds inside is not just a monster, but a tragic, alien being held captive for centuries. The story perfectly encapsulates the Hyborian Age's blend of sword-and-sorcery adventure with cosmic horror and a surprising touch of pathos. It showed that the era was not just about bloody battles but could also contain profound and strange mysteries. ==== What If... Conan the Barbarian Walked the Earth Today? (//What If?// #13, 1979) ==== This classic issue was the first significant exploration of how Conan would interact with the modern Marvel Universe. Transported to 1970s New York City by a wizard, Conan is a man out of time. He briefly works for a construction company, gets into a brawl with local thugs, and is mistaken for an eccentric strongman. The story culminates in him encountering a mugging and, in a classic Conan moment, finding a new purpose in this strange new world as a protector of the innocent, albeit a brutally violent one. It was a fascinating character study that laid the conceptual groundwork for Conan's eventual, canonical arrival in the present day forty years later. ==== Savage Avengers (2019) ==== This series represents the full, modern integration of the Hyborian Age into Earth-616. After being ensnared in a plot by Kulan Gath, Conan is ripped from his own time and deposited in the Savage Land. He immediately falls in with a violent and dysfunctional ad-hoc team including [[wolverine]], [[the_punisher]], [[venom]], and [[elektra]]. The storyline treats Conan not as a guest star but as a main character in the Marvel Universe. His barbarian code constantly clashes with modern morality, and his raw combat skill proves effective even against super-powered threats. This event permanently altered Conan's trajectory, making the Hyborian Age's greatest champion a permanent fixture of the current timeline. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **The Original Robert E. Howard Prose Stories:** This is the prime reality from which all other versions spring. Howard's original stories, published in //Weird Tales// in the 1930s, are darker, grittier, and more grounded than many comic adaptations. The supernatural is often more subtle and horrific. These stories are the foundational text, and Marvel's Hyborian Age is best understood as an expansion and integration of this original vision into a superhero continuity. * **The Dark Horse Comics Era (2003-2018):** For fifteen years, Dark Horse Comics held the Conan license. Their approach was critically acclaimed and differed from Marvel's. The flagship //Conan// series by Kurt Busiek and Cary Nord was a more direct and chronological adaptation of Howard's original stories, weaving them into a single, cohesive biography. This version was less concerned with integrating the Hyborian Age into a shared universe and more focused on being a faithful literary adaptation. * **Film Adaptations (1982, 1984, 2011):** The Hyborian Age has been brought to the big screen three times. The 1982 //Conan the Barbarian// film starring Arnold Schwarzenegger is an iconic piece of 80s fantasy cinema. It significantly altered lore, making Thulsa Doom (a Kull villain) into Conan's nemesis and focusing on the riddle of steel. The 1984 sequel, //Conan the Destroyer//, was a lighter, more adventure-oriented film. The 2011 reboot, //Conan the Barbarian// starring Jason Momoa, was a more violent and fast-paced attempt to hew closer to the brutality of Howard's writing but was not a commercial or critical success. Each of these films presents its own unique, self-contained version of the Hyborian Age. ===== See Also ===== * [[conan_the_cimmerian]] * [[kull_the_conqueror]] * [[red_sonja]] * [[set_(elder_god)]] * [[kulan_gath]] * [[savage_avengers]] * [[serpent_crown]] * [[elder_gods]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((The name "Hyborian" was derived by Howard from the classical Greek concept of "Hyperborea," a mythical land to the north.)) ((Robert E. Howard's foundational essay, "The Hyborian Age," was written in 1932 to help him maintain consistency while writing the Conan stories but was not published until 1938, after his death.)) ((Roy Thomas created Red Sonja for //Conan the Barbarian// #23 (1973). He based her on Red Sonya of Rogatino, a character from Howard's 1934 historical fiction story "The Shadow of the Vulture," but transplanted her to the Hyborian Age and gave her a new backstory.)) ((In the Marvel Universe, there is a historical connection between the serpent-worshipping Stygians of the Hyborian Age and the serpent-themed Deviants led by Ghaur, suggesting the Deviants may have impersonated or influenced the cult of Set in the distant past.)) ((The first official crossover between Conan and a mainstream Marvel hero occurred in //What If?// #39 (1983), "What If... Thor of Asgard Had Met Conan the Barbarian?".)) ((The map of the Hyborian continent was originally drawn by Robert E. Howard himself. Marvel's artists have largely adhered to this original map for all their publications.))