Priam is a playable character from Fire Emblem Awakening , and the last SpotPass character that is able to be recruited. Priam does not appear at all during the main storyline, unlike previous characters recruited through Paralogues.
He claims to be the descendant of the Radiant Hero and possesses Ragnell , implying that he is descended from Ike and even wears a similar headband. In Paralogue 23 , Chrom and the Avatar investigate rumors of a village that houses a descendant of the Radiant Hero Ike.
Knowing the legend of this man, Chrom comes to the Garden of Giants , where he encounters Priam. Chrom attempts to recruit Priam, but he declines his initial offer. Priam states that he will join if Chrom can prove that he can fight for himself and battles his army with his band of soldiers.
Priam and his mercenaries are eventually defeated by Chrom's army. Impressed with his skills, Priam honors his deal and joins the army. Before he is able to do so, a soldier stops him and asks him for one final fight.
Priam accepts the soldier's request, but later decides to change it and have one final fight with his group. After the war, Priam vanishes without a trace. Rumors continue to debate whether he lived a life of peaceful solitude or to another continent in his quest for power. Priam has a great sense of fighting and trains vigorously, albeit in an excessive way. He has a "training regimen" for everything; making weapons, utilizing chi, and even eating. At a young age, he went for his first training regimen and was attacked by a bear.
He states that he was able to win due to the energies in the forest that helped him prevail. He also gets along well with friends and worthy opponents.
Priam also notes Walhart's aura, stating that it "chokes anything unworthy out of existence". The DLC also reveals they are eager to fight each other, but are unable to do so as their allies continually request their aid. Chrom also notes that Priam treats his men as peers regardless of their origins; his group consisting of soldiers from both continents. His conversations with Yen'fay also show that he does not like the "D-word" — defeat. Sire Line Beningbrough.
Family 6-a. His dam Cressida b f was a full sister to the Derby and Oaks winner Eleanor b f , to the July Stakes winner Julia br f and half sister to the stallion Sorcerer bl c Trumpator.
The trainer Mr Dilly purchased him as a barely turned two year old for guineas at a public auction in May of and sold him again in to Mr William Chifney for guineas. Mr Chifney campaigned him in and at the beginning of He was then purchased for guineas by George Stanhope , 6th Earl of Chesterfield, in whose colours he finished his turf career. The Druid observed that he was "a mare-looking horse, especially about the head, and so delicate a feeder that his owner, Wm Chifney, could tell, to a handful, the quantity of oats he would eat in a week.
His head and neck were light, and his coat feathered, from his ears to his withers, in a most eccentric fashion. He drooped rather on his hind pasterns, and stood on a straight hind leg. Lord Jersey had the offer of him, when a yearling, but declined it, thinking he would put out ringbones.
His memorable Derby adventure commenced after an hour of thirteen false starts in a "drenching shower," in which he overtook Little Red Rover ch c Tramp at half the distance and won easily by two lengths. Another Industry daughter, Stitch , by Hornsea was also tail-female ancestress of good horses, including the great French filly, La Toucques , by The Baron , and more recently Danzatore , by Northern Dancer.
Industry's last foal was the bay Chevalier d' Industrie , by Orlando , winner of Goodwood's Gratwicke Stakes and several other races, and second in some good races, such as the Chesterfield Stakes, the Bentinck Memorial, and the Epsom Cup; he later got some good runners, such as Friponnier. She was at the foot of her twenty-one year old dam, Octaviana, who was by Octavian.
Octaviana had produced a fairly good runner in her son, July Stakes winner Crusader, five years earlier. Crucifix and her dam were purchased by Lord George Bentinck for 54 guineas. Crucifix turned out to be Bentinck's best purchase ever, an outstanding juvenile and a multiple classic winner, and later produced a classic winner herself.
She was Priam's most brilliant offspring, and one whose potential may never have been fully realized, at least by the standards of those days, when few youngsters were faced the kinds of demands her connections made of her. Crucifix was placed in the less than tender hands of trainer John Day, and being a somewhat uneven mover who tended to cross her legs when running, she was always raced in wraps. Her wins were Newmarket's July Stakes, the Chesterfield Stakes carrying 9 pounds more than any other runner , Goodwood's Lavant Stakes and Molecombe Stakes, the Hopeful Stakes Newmarket , the Clearwell Stakes, the Prendergast Stakes, and a walk-over in a sweepstakes at Newmarket October; the ninth race was a dead-heat for the Criterion Stakes with Gibraltar, where the owners divided the stakes rather than take a run-off.
At age three she came out three times. She won the Two Thousand Guineas, beating Confderate and Clearwell and three others by a length, and proceeded on to easily beat the few fillies that came up against her in the One Thousand Guineas.
She entered her last race, the Oaks, with her failing legs a well-kept secret; there was little betting action because she was considered a sure winner. It took fourteen or fifteen starts to get the fifteen runners off cleanly, and Crucifix barely won, by one-half a length. Another filly in this race was Pocahontas , who was to gain lasting fame in the breeding shed.
The Oaks was Crucifix's last race, from which she emerged obviously lame, "sacrificed ere she has reached the zenith of her age, by premature abuse of her great powers.
Crucifix, and some of the other Bentinck stock were sold on to Henry Agar-Ellis 3rd Viscount Clifden, and she bred four more youngsters for him, dying in She was buried at the Days' stables, Danebury. Her best runner was Surplice , who, for Mostyn, easily won the Ham Produce Stakes and the Produce Stakes at Goodwood, and the Municipal Stakes at Doncaster, also receiving a forfeit in the Buckenham Stakes in the fall, consequently an undefeated juvenile winner, like his dam.
He was sold to Clifden after this, and started in his colors for the Derby, his first race at age three, which he won by a neck in a fierce contest in its closing yards with Springy Jack, a Hetman Platoff son. His other wins that year included the St. He later got some good daughters, and was broodmare sire of the good race mare and top producer, Queen Bertha.
Of Crucifix's other offspring, most were good runners, and Cowl was later a moderately successful sire and is seen in the pedigree of Hermit. Crucifix's most influential offspring in the breeding shed was her daughter, Rosary , by Touchstone , whose daughter Penance , by The Flying Dutchman is the conduit through which this successful and prolific branch of Family 2 descends.
The French Derby winner and sire Ajax , the Cambridgeshire winner and great broodmare Double Life dam of Precipitation and Persian Gulf , and a great many other good horses descend from Crucifix in tail-female. Other Priam daughters also ran well. She ran second to Crucifix in the Oaks, and at age four won the Ascot Stakes.
The Bessie branch of The Deformed's family churned out a series of good jumpers over succeeding generations, including Conyngham Cup winner Ballyhooley. Another Priam daughter with an influence on jumpers was an unnamed one, out of an unknown mare who is at the head of the Half-Bred Family 7.
This Priam mare was second dam of the good runner and Cesarewitch winner Mrs. Taft , by Don John. New Owestry by Knight of Kars , who won races on the flat and over fences, descended tail-female from her, and in the stud in Shropshire got a number of good hunters and steeplechasers, including the Grand National winning mare, Zoedone. Left to Right: Annette, Polyxena and Polydora.
Priam sired other good producing daughters. ANNETTE , out of a Don John mare was born in Ireland, and never raced; after producing two foals, she was repurchased to England and passed through several owners, producing seventeen foals in 25 years. The most notable was Agnes, bred by trainer John Osborne, who was promising, but proved to be a roarer and was retired as a broodmare, establishing an enormously successful family that populates most of Family Annette's other foals included Paladin , by Clarion , a winner at Newmarket, and Nina , by Cotherstone a good juvenile that won Newmarket's Criterion Stakes.
Albans , by Blair Athol. A number of German classic winners and good sires were children or grandchildren of Sweet Kate in tail-female, including Flibustier and Amalie Von Edelreigh; another Cannisbrook daughter, La Traviata, was also the dam of top German racehorses. Whiskey b.
0コメント