Your post gave me a good deal of food for thought, Morris. So, let's see here....
Wencit states that there are no indications that someone is a wild wizard until he has his crisis.
In Wencit's millennia of life he has only encountered 1 individual that could sense wild magic that was not himself a wild wizard. I am assuming that Kenhodan and Torren are the same individual for this purpose.
One then tentatively concludes that Torren was not a wild wizard.
Mages have a crisis.
Kenhodan exhibits one of the mages talents in a very focused way; precognition in combat. One assumes that Torren also had this talent.
We do not know that Torren did not have a mage crisis. We only know he did not have wild wizard crisis.
All of these data points and tentative conclusions suggest that Torren was the cleft point for mages.
That means that anyone with a mage talent came from Torren's line or at least from one of his siblings.
Let's proceed to the second line of speculation.....
Kenhodan displays a powerful anger that almost consumes him. One might call it a rage. The text suggests that this was part of Torren's make up.
Torren had a brother that went to the dark side. One might assume that Herrick also had this rage.
One might assume that Herrick also had the core genetic template that leads to Torren's other talents, like precognition in battle.
The Rage was inflicted upon the hradanai by the Carnadosans.
Carnadosa ignited wild wizardry in Herrick.
Might one not conclude it possible that Herrick was the core genetic template used to inflict the Rage upon the hradani?
If such conclusions and assumptions have merit, then would not the combination of the genetic base Carnadosa provided for the hradani refined in Norfressa, the direct link to the magic field of the hradani and the mage talents refined for 1,000 years from the direct line of Ottovar be super concentrated? As we see with Gwynna, it is super concentrated.
So, while the hradani are not of the line of Ottovar, they might share key genetic similarities with the last Ottovaran Emperor. The mages are scions of Ottovar and Gwynytha. Gwynna then is Semkirk's long ranged snipe aimed right between Carnadosa's eyes. He shoots from so far away and from such cover that Carnadosa never sees it coming until it's too late.
Which gets us to my belief that Wencit is the avatar of Semkirk. He might or might not also be the child of Gwynna transported back in time. I suspect that he is Gwynna and Kenhodan's son as well as Semkirk's avatar. Born of just after the success of Semkirk's snipe, Wencit travels back in time to set up the shot.
Morris Darkstar wrote:Re-read the description of why the crown was hidden instead of destroyed.... I'm pretty sure the sword is so incredibly powerful that even Wencit in his prime would have trouble destroying it w/o killing himself. And as the crown seems to have been designed to detect black wizards, the sword seems to be designed to make the wielder invulnerable to wizardry. Remember Wencit's remark to the black wizard once the pommel gem was given to Kenhoden. I'm further guessing that the sword wasn't totally broken -- the reason swords felt so natural to Kenhoden and the reason he can strike where he can't see is that his mind and soul are connected to the formerly broken sword. The chaos in his mind was likely at least partly a result of the sword being broken.
All in all, the Sword of the South, in his hands is most likely THE method created by Ottovar and Gwyntha for destroying rebellious wizards -- wild or not once Ottovar and Gwyntha's descendants were no longer overwhelmingly powerful wizards in their own right.
Morris