- Main article: Books (Skyrim)
Lost Legends is a book in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.
Locations[]
Skyrim[]
- Can be bought from Urag gro-Shub in The Arcanaeum.
- Bards College, Solitude, on a bookshelf on the upper floor.
- Blue Palace in Solitude.
- Calcemo's Laboratory, Markarth, in the same room as the larceny target, the Dwemer Puzzle Cube.
- On a shelf in Castle Volkihar.DG
- College of Winterhold, The Arcanaeum.
- Cracked Tusk Vault.
- The Dark Brotherhood Sanctuary, on a shelf with candles in area where Astrid usually stand.
- Dengeir's House, Falkreath, on the left side of a dresser.
- Dragonsreach, in Farengar Secret-Fire's library.
- Dragonsreach Jarl's Quarters, on a shelf in the dining room.
- East Empire Company Office, Windhelm – After completion of the quest "Rise in the East," in the upon returning to the end, there is a bookshelf straight ahead. The book will be on the top shelf.
- Fellglow Keep, on a shelf near fireplace in a room with arcane enchanter and alchemy lab
- Folgunthur
- Geirmund's Hall
- House Gray-Mane in Whiterun.
- Aboard The Katariah during or after the quest "Hail Sithis!," on a table.
- Niranye's House in Windhelm.
- Palace of the Kings – When entering the palace, the door on the left leads to a set of stairs. Up the stairs, the book is in the first room on the left.
- Proudspire Manor, Solitude, on the third floor.
- The Ratway Warrens, on an end table in Esbern's shack.
- Reachwater Rock – Near the entrance, looted from an Adventurer's corpse by the pedestal holding the Emerald Dragon Claw.
- Saarthal
- The White Hall, Dawnstar, in the Jarl's Chambers.
Dragonborn[]
- Ashfallow Citadel, on a shelf in the lower corridor
Effect[]
- Starts quest "Forbidden Legend"
Contents[]
The history of Skyrim is vast, predating even the most ancient records of man and mer. Much has been lost, fallen to the ravages of war or the turning of the ages. But nothing is ever truly forgotten. Where no records exist, legends and folk tales offer us a key to the past, a way to piece together truths half-remembered in the minds of men.
For generations, the people of Morthal have told whispered tales of the The Pale Lady, a ghostly woman who wanders the northern marshes, forever seeking her lost daughter. Some say she steals children who wander astray, others that her sobbing wail strikes dead all those who hear it. But behind these tales may lie a kernel of truth, for ancient records speak of 'Aumriel,' a mysterious figure Ysgramor's heirs battled for decades and finally sealed away.
Reachmen tell the story of Faolan 'Red-Eagle', an ancient king who rallied his people and drove back the armies of Cyrodiil with a flaming sword. Though accounts vary, they too seem to be based on an underlying truth: the imperial chronicles of Empress Hestra mention a rebel leader of that era who was eventually cornered and slain in battle, at the cost of a full legion of men.
But some tales prove far harder to analyze. Among scholars, perhaps the best known is the 'Forbidden Legend' of the Archmage Gauldur.
In the dawning days of the First Era, the story goes, there lived a powerful wizard by the name of Gauldur. Wise and just, he was well known in the courts of King Harald and the Jarls of Skyrim, and his aid and counsel were sought by man and mer alike.
And then he was murdered. Some say one of his sons killed him, others that king Harald, jealous of his power, gave the order. But Gauldur's three sons fled into the night, pursued by a company of Harald's best warriors and the Lord Geirmund, the king's personal battlemage.
A great chase ensued, from the wilds of the Reach to the glacial north. One brother is said to have perished in the ruins of Folgunthur, at the Foot of Solitude. The others were run to ground soon thereafter. And once it was done, king Harald ordered every record of their murders destroyed, and Gauldur's name and deeds were struck from the rolls of history.
Even today, few sources remain, and no bard will tell the tale. But perhaps the truth yet remains in some ancient ruin, waiting to be unearthed. For nothing is ever truly forgotten.
Appearances[]
This book was taken from The Elder Scrolls series of video games or from websites created and owned by Bethesda Softworks, the copyright of which is held by Bethesda Softworks. All trademarks and registered trademarks present in the image are proprietary to Bethesda Softworks, the inclusion of which implies no affiliation with The Elder Scrolls Wiki. The use of such images is believed to fall under the fair use doctrine of copyright law.
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