Toreador of London - Pax Britannica: Difference between revisions

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===== <span style="color:#800000;"> Neonates =====
===== <span style="color:#800000;"> Neonates =====
:[[Duke]] <span style="color:#800000;">- Toreador neonate, childe of Edward
 
:[[Lorna Dingwall]] <span style="color:#800000;">- The Scottish Hostage
:[[Lorna Dingwall]] <span style="color:#800000;">- The Scottish Hostage
:[[Henry Stern]] <span style="color:#800000;">- Renowned Toreador Sculptor  
:[[Henry Stern]] <span style="color:#800000;">- Renowned Toreador Sculptor  

Revision as of 17:26, 15 November 2025

London - Pax Britannica

The Toreador of London are not what they used to be, the Sabbat Siege of 1848 destroyed many of the city's Roses, both elders and ancilla perished in the flames of sect warfare. The arrival of Edward Williamson shortly thereafter allowed for the Clan of the Rose to survive and even flourish in London instead of withering away into obscurity. To accomplish this end, Edward used the Ventrue's Treaty of Durham against them and imported a number of ancilla and neonate Toreador as supposed hostages, but whose presence allow the clan to remain firmly planted in London throughout the Victorian Age into the Twentieth Century.

Ancilla
Horace Holden - Insightful Poseur, recently made Guardian of Ellysium
Endymion -- Poet of the Night (1863)
Gore Rayne -- Master of Protocol (1863) London Borough of Southwark
Jools Tash -- Pickpocket turned Cat Burglar (1863)
Fionntan Grier -- Glasgow Hostage and Agent Provocateur (1863)
Artemis Wylde-Whitney -- Esquire, Courtier of London (1863) London Borough of Southwark
Neonates
Lorna Dingwall - The Scottish Hostage
Henry Stern - Renowned Toreador Sculptor




Eric Baring-Gould - Toreador Primogen of London {Embraced: 1880}
Regina Blake - Toreador Neonate {Embraced: 1888}
Toreador in the rain.jpg