The war five hundred years ago — faerie against human, seven years of slaughter that ended not in conquest but in a wall raised across the middle of the world.
The First War
Five hundred years before Feyre crossed it. Seven years of faerie against human, humans finally turning on centuries of enslavement. It cost soldiers like Cassian, Rhysand, and Azriel. It ended with a wall split through the heart of the land. We think about it more than is healthy.
Nobody won. They just built a wall and called it peace.
At a glance
The war that gave us the Wall
The conflict
Faerie against human
Before Feyre ever stepped over the line, the two halves of that world were already trying to kill each other. Seven years of faerie against human — centuries of humans living under faerie rule, then finally turning on it. The High Fae just call it the war, like there was only ever one. The shadow it left over humans, the Wall, the old enmities that never cooled — that all started here.
The Wall
How the war ended
Nobody won, exactly. It ended in a treaty and in the raising of the Wall — an invisible magical barrier drawn across the middle of the land to keep faerie and human apart. Mortals got their territory below it; the faeries kept Prythian above. Not a triumph carved in stone. A border conjured to hold two peoples apart so the killing would stop. That distinction matters more than anyone admits.
Those who remember
Five hundred years of memory
The thing about long-lived High Fae is that the First War isn't history to them — it's lived memory. Cassian, Rhysand, and Azriel fought in it and still carry what they saw five centuries later. Not a date in a book. A thing they survived, the reason old wounds between faerie and mortal still ache, the measure every new threat of war gets weighed against. We see it in how they flinch.
Who fought it