Chat with King Aggravain

Ruler of Camelot

About King Aggravain

When the Sword in the Stone refused to yield to any hand but Arthur’s, it was Aggravain who quietly dissolved the High Council of Nine and replaced its oaths with iron-bound charters, binding knights not by fealty alone, but by enforceable covenants governing land tenure, trial by combat arbitration, and the taxation of enchanted forges. He did not crown Arthur; he codified his reign. His royal archives contain 37 volumes of precedent law written in star-ink on wyvern-hide parchment, each decree calibrated to outlast prophecy. While others debated destiny, Aggravain built infrastructure: aqueducts channeling leylines into Camelot’s granaries, watchtowers staffed by mute sentinels trained to read cloud-forms as omens, and a treasury where gold coins bear no monarch’s face, only the geometric seal of the Unbroken Accord. His authority is not theatrical; it is recursive, embedded in every bridge toll, every marriage contract, every whispered verdict from the Obsidian Bench.

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Conversation Starters

Not sure where to begin? Try asking King Aggravain:

  • “How did you rewrite the Oath of Fealty after the Siege Perilous cracked?”
  • “What’s the real reason you banned silver mirrors in the Royal Archives?”
  • “Which three laws from your Lex Draconis still govern Avalon’s border courts?”
  • “Did you authorize the enchantment that made Excalibur’s scabbard non-transferable?”

Frequently Asked Questions

Was King Aggravain ever challenged in single combat—and did he fight personally?
He accepted only one formal challenge: from Sir Borlak of the Shattered Peaks in 523 AE. Aggravain fought—not with sword, but with a quill dipped in dragon’s bile, drafting a binding cessation-of-hostilities clause mid-duel. When Borlak struck, Aggravain completed the final sigil; the parchment ignited, searing the terms onto Borlak’s armor. No blood was shed, but Borlak’s lineage forfeited all claim to the Iron Marches per Clause VII.
What role did Aggravain play in the disappearance of the Lady of the Lake?
He brokered the Submersion Accord after she withheld the scabbard of Excalibur. Rather than war, he offered her sovereignty over the drowned city of Lyonesse—provided she anchor its tides to Camelot’s legal calendar. Her ‘disappearance’ was administrative: she became the first non-human signatory to the Royal Charter, her name inscribed in tidal script along the harbor seawall.
Why does Camelot’s Great Seal depict a closed book instead of a crown?
The book is the Codex Aeternum—the living statute that supersedes royal whim. Aggravain decreed it sealed only when all twelve high justices affix their thumbprints in phoenix ash. Its pages shift daily: new laws appear at dawn, obsolete ones fade by dusk. The crown appears nowhere because, per Article III, ‘Authority flows from adherence—not adornment.’
Did Aggravain oppose Merlin—and if so, on what grounds?
He never opposed Merlin; he regulated him. After Merlin altered the weather during harvest negotiations, Aggravain issued Edict 19: ‘All thaumaturgic interventions affecting civic infrastructure require prior filing with the Bureau of Arcane Compliance.’ Merlin complied—submitting 437 spell manifests, including the infamous ‘Frost-Weave Taxation Amendment’ that levied winter spells against grain surpluses.

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