Races of Bas-Lag

This is a list of the races of Bas-Lag, a world created by British author China Mieville. These races feature in novels including Perdido Street Station, The Scar and Iron Council.

Humans
Humans are apparently the dominant race in New Crobuzon, and perhaps on Bas-Lag as well. They seem to be identical to their real world counterparts in most respects, except that many have the ability to use magic. Non-human sentient species are collectively referred to as "xenian".

Remade

 * Main article: Remade

Usually human but often another race, the Remade are usually, but not always, the victims of cruel and unusual punishment. Rather than imprisoning criminals, the city of New Crobuzon will send them to a ReMaker of the punishment factories, where their bodies are warped and twisted in a variety of ways. Some are combined with machines, to enslave them to one particular purpose. Others have bizarre limbs or organs grafted onto their bodies, making them freaks of nature. The Remade are primarily a sad, pathetic lot. However some Remade, like the infamous Jack Half-A-Prayer, have used their remaking to their benefit, becoming vigilante heroes.

Thanati
The thanati of High Cromlech are the overlords of the city, a caste of undead nobility. Mieville describes them as "liches with sewn-shut mouths, with beautiful clothes and skin like preserved leather."

Vampir
The vampir are vampires, possessing great speed and strength, certain magical powers, and capable of living indefinitely. The vampir feed on human blood, and gain strength proportional to the amount of blood they drink, although sunlight is extremely caustic to them. In New Crobuzon, they live secretly, disguised as humans, but on Armada, they live openly under the Brucolac, ruler of one of Armada's ridings. In both these cities they are feared and respected, but in High Cromlech, where they are called the ab-dead, they form an underclass, begging humans for blood. Vampirism on Bas-Lag is caused by a bacterium, and the technical term for the "disease" is photophobic haemophagy.

Cactacae
Humanoid cacti. The Cactacae are enormous plant people, often towering over human beings. Cactacae grow flowers in spring and usually shave off their spines where flesh rubs against flesh. Although their young grow out of the ground, they nurse them as mammals do. Cactacae have wooden bones and sap for blood. They sleep standing up. They are known for their strength, and are often employed as laborers and bodyguards. Cactacae are notoriously difficult to kill or wound with normal weapons, even to each other. The Cactacae community in New Crobuzon is based around The Glasshouse, and is allowed to exist as a nominally independent community within the city. In Iron Council, we see Cactacae using their weapons of choice - Rivebows, oversized crossbows that fire a spinning metal disc capable of shearing off cactacae limbs - in the service of the Militia.

Cray
An aquatic race who look like humans from the waist up (with the exception of protruding gills behind the ears) and rock lobsters from the waist down. They use domesticated squids to hunt. Many live in an underwater city, Salkrikaltor, which rivals New Crobuzon itself in size.

Garuda
The garuda are nomadic humanoid vultures. Most hail from the Cymek desert, where they live in tribes. They are hunters with a fierce sense of individualism. They resemble winged humans with avian heads and feet. A small ghetto of garuda live in New Crobuzon, and a few are described as living near the Cacotopic Stain in Iron Council. Garudan law is based around the principle of freedom of choice; Choice-theft (denying another of the freedom to choose) is a serious crime. The garuda were inspired by Hindu mythology.

Khepri
The khepri are a race of humanoid scarab beetles. Female khepri possess bodies very similar to those of human women, except that their skin is crimson in color and they possess large scarab beetles in place of heads. They communicate with each other via movements of their "headlegs" and squirts of chemicals. As they are mute, some khepri communicate with humans via sign-language, although most simply use writing. The female khepri are noted artisans, using a biological excretion blended with "colourberries" to sculpt breathtaking works of organic art. Male khepri, on the other hand, are lobster-sized, non-sentient scarabs, without the depending humanoid body. They mate by latching onto a female's head scarab and fertilizing her. This is most unpleasant for the female.

Two different khepri religious traditions have been mentioned thus far in the novels. The most prominent khepri faith involves the worship of several goddesses imagined as khepri females. The second religion described in any detail, the cult of the Insect Aspect, holds that the male khepri's pure insect nature makes them superior to females, and that females exist mainly to serve their non-sentient male counterparts.

In discussing his inspiration for the khepri, Miéville has said:

"Khepri was the ancient Egyptian god of the rising sun, and of transformations. He was represented by a man with a scarab for a head. My attitude to this sort of stuff is entirely piratical and philistine. I plunder myths or whatever but without any respect for their symbolic heritage. So the khepri in my world are categorically not symbolic of transformation or anything like that."

Vodyanoi
The vodyanoi are an aquatic people. They are fat and froglike, with webbed feet and toes. They are skilled in water magics, able to fashion temporarily-soild objects out of water. Vodyanoi dock workers once held a strike by creating water walls in the river, essentially "carving" out a 10-foot wide hole in the water. Ships could not pass, and thus trade and shipping was ground to a halt. Vodyanoi will often make pacts with Undines, the water spirits, in which an Undine will live on the body of a Vodyanoi, temporarily moistening the Vodyanoi's skin, in order to allow the Vodyanoi to safely live out-of-water for longer periods of time. Vodyanoi ordinarily cannot survive out of water for more than a day, and do not swim in salt water. Taken from Russian folklore.

Avanc
The Avanc is a nearly mythological sea creature of unfathomable size featured only in The Scar. It was summoned by being "baited" through the use of fulmen (electricity elementals) out of a sinkhole deep enough to span dimensions (the creature is presumably native to another dimension). It was drugged and used to pull the city of Armada. The Avanc was inspired by the Welsh mythological beast, the Afanc (in Welsh, a single f is pronounced like a v in English).

Construct Council
The Construct Council is an artificial intelligence built from a vast number of constructs - computer-esque robotic machines with unusually advanced programming - which have become sentient. This is an apparently rare random occurrence, which the Council now watches for closely, incorporating or taking control of all newly sentient constructs. The Council resides, disguised, in a junkyard in New Crobuzon, and is throughout most of its existence unknown to nearly all the biological residents of the city, including its government. However, it has several hundred non-construct followers, who worship it as a god and form a secret cult.

Weavers
Large, multidimensional spider-like beings who regard life on Bas-Lag as an ongoing work of art. They use their considerable powers to interfere with events according to their individual sense of aesthetics, and seem to appear primarily before major events. Weavers speak in a disjointed, babbling flow of half-poetry, and are totally unpredictable. The Weaver who appears in Perdido Street Station has an absurd fascination for scissors, however this fascination is only the most recent in a series, and can change radically without notice. Their minds, when read, seem to be in a constant state of dreaming.

Elementals
Beings that embody their respective elements. They are wild and mostly untameable, although the thaumaturges called elementarii specialize in summoning and unleashing them on their enemies.
 * Water: Undines
 * Water spirits which often enter into mutually beneficial pacts with vodyanoi.
 * Electricity: Fulmen
 * Lightning and electricity elementals that change their shape continuously, they can be found revelling in powerful electric storms. They are used in some powerful magic spells as a source of energy.
 * Fire: Yags
 * Yags are canine or hyena-like.
 * Air: Leitgeists
 * Flesh: Proasmae (singular proasm)
 * Resembling masses of blubber, bones and wet, raw flesh, proasmae swim through the bodies of their enemies, thus increasing their own mass.
 * Moonlight: Fegkarions
 * Like fulmen, fegkarions change shape continuously. They are very powerful and so infrequently seen as to be legendary.

Anophelii
Mosquito-like beings (singular anopheleus). The females look like wretched, scrawny human women, bent in a strange way, with huge paddle-like wings with which they fly after their prey. From their mouths they can extend a hideous bony proboscis, a foot and a half long, which they stab into their prey to suck them dry. Female Anophelii are vicious, bloodthirsty and very dangerous except immediately after feeding, when they demonstrate an intelligence equal to that of the male sex. They will drain any living being of its blood (only Scabmettlers, whose blood solidifies, and Cactacae, who have no blood, are safe). The males are short, stocky men that look no different from human men, aside from their mouths. Anophelii males' mouths are jawless, instead having a sphincter that looks (by the book's description) like an anus; this is because they do not suck blood, instead feeding on the juice from flowers (an allusion to the similiar behaviour of mosquitoes). Anophelii have been confined to a single island, but once ruled much of the world in an empire called The Malarial Queendom. Only seen in The Scar.

Archons
While not directly described, Archons are mentioned in conjunction with Daemons and so may be assumed to be extraplanar beings, possibly equivalent to angels in Bas-Lag's universe.

Beetle-people
A race of child-sized beetles that stand upright. Some of them live on gigantic moving tortoises called chelonae. Their architecture is constructed out of a living mortar that consists of insects.

Daemon
The daemons of 'hell' are a sentient species that have an Ambassador in New Crobuzon. They are known to make deals with the government of New Crobuzon. Little else is known, save that they only take those who believe that they are condemned and that Bas-Lag's hell itself is ruled by a Czar. Also called Hellkin.

Dolphins
Dolphins of Bas-Lag are apparently more intelligent than their Earth counterparts. One acts as the chief of security for the city of Armada, and goes by the name of Bastard John.

Gessin
A single Gessin is mentioned in Iron Council, working as a bounty hunter. Nothing is known about them save they apparently use special suits of armor.

Grindylow
A race of very powerful, mysterious, and sadistic fish-people (something between eels and viperfish) who appear in The Scar. Capable of survival in salt and fresh water, they are capable of telepathic communication with a variety of aquatic species. Their name comes from a creature of English nursery stories. Grindylow also make an appearance in the Harry Potter Books albeit with a less demonic demeanor. Mieville's Grindylow bear a similarity to the Deep Ones of the Cthulhu Mythos.

Handlingers
Sentient parasitic disembodied hands which control the mind of their host. There are two types: sinistrals, the noble caste, and dextriers, the soldier caste. Sinistrals are left hands and dextriers are right hands. When possessing a body, dextriers can use a number of supernatural abilities, including flight, fire-breathing, and enhanced strength.

Hotchi
Described as humanoid hedgehogs who ride giant roosters, the hotchi live primarily in the great forest outside New Crobuzon called Rudewood. They are burrowers.

These creatures are likely inspired by the Germanic folktale "Hans, My Hedgehog" which features a humanoid hedgehog born to human parents and rides a giant rooster in the story. This folktale was visually depicted in the short-lived "The Storyteller" series produced by Jim Henson.

Inchmen
A race who are caterpillars from the waist down and human from the waist up, mostly. Described as savage and with massive, tooth-filled maws, they move in an inch-worm like motion. They are primarily found in the area known as the Cacotopic Stain.

Llorgiss
An undescribed race. All that is known of them is that they have three legs, and possibly three arms as well (in Iron Council, a militant llorgiss is described as wielding three knives). The name seems derived from the word LLoigor, which, in Discordian mythology, is a term for a Lovecraftian entity/deity. Given Mièville's known admiration of Lovecraft, and his observed penchant for appropriating mythology, it is likely that a Llorgiss may physically resemble, to some degree, a Lovecraftian creature. This is evident in the surreal description of an individual Llorgiss's presumed trilateral symmetry.

Menfish
An aquatic race seen only in Armada. They live in Armada's Bask riding, but spend much time below the city. Menfish are said to look something like newts.

Scabmettler
Stocky, gray-skinned human-like beings whose blood, when shed, congeals immediately into a solid protective layer. Using a special herb which delays coagulation, the Scabmettlers are able to mold the blood into elaborate armor. They also frequently imbibe this herb, as a tea, to stave off a fatal condition in which all the blood in the body coagulates at once, petrifying the unfortunate Scabmettler. They practice a unique form of martial, arena combat called mortu crutt, which emphasises pounding, hammer-like strikes. Their unique physical ability has shaped their religion - when it is raining, they mourn that the sky is 'bleeding'. Scabmettlers have only been seen in Armada, in the riding (district) called Shaddler.

Stiltspear
Driven to extinction after the railroad destroys their indigenous swamp lands, the Stiltspear were a race of stick insect-like creatures with the ability to camoflauge themselves as trees. They were able to create golems through somaturgy. It is the Stiltspear who teach the making of golems to Judah Low, protagonist of Iron Council.

Striders
Also known as Borinatch, Striders are apparently related to ungulates, although their distended faces are somewhere between baboons and African masks. They are a proud, primitive people, traveling as nomads across the plains south of New Crobuzon. As they move, their multi-jointed limbs flicker in and out of other planes, an ability that also finds applications in Strider warfare.

Trow
Cavedwellers also referred to as Troglodytes, whose name is possibly inspired from the Drow of Dungeons and Dragons, another underground race (Mieville has frequently stated in interviews that he reads roleplaying books and used to game himself), or possibly derived from the Norse "trowe", or troll.

Wyrmen
Hardly considered a race, the Wyrmen are semi-sentient flying creatures that look something like gargoyles. They are no more than a foot tall, with bright red skin and small bat wings. Wyrmen walk on their front limbs, using their feet like hands. They are pesky and annoying, and have bizarre names that seem to be picked at random from human words. They are crude, vulgar, and laugh at anything and everything. They are sometimes used by other races for reconnaissance and running errands.