Since Aberon (and Surda in general) is already heavily roman/hellenic-coded, I propose that King Orrin, with his amethyst rings and an opulent crown, should be best imagined as wearing Byzantine imperial regalia, thanks for coming to my TED talk.

seen from T1
seen from Tunisia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Jordan
seen from T1

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from South Korea
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye
seen from France
seen from China
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
Since Aberon (and Surda in general) is already heavily roman/hellenic-coded, I propose that King Orrin, with his amethyst rings and an opulent crown, should be best imagined as wearing Byzantine imperial regalia, thanks for coming to my TED talk.
Need a post-canon fic where they invite Orrin to Ellesméra and together they come up with molecular biology
I swear, the sheer amount of dumbassery in the Inheritance Cycle starts making much more sense when you consider that Eragon, Roran and Orrin are all descended from Palancar and presumably all share the last sane braincell that the ol' Mad King left them.
Sometimes your circle of friends is a king, a leader of a revolutionary group, a dragon, the dragon rider who would really rather not have to deal with diplomacy, and an elf princess
The stag does not win by fighting the wolf. No, his victory lies in avoiding the wolf and keeping his herd safe. May the gods grant you victory, as they did me.
- King Larkin of Surda, in a letter addressed to Crown Prince Orrin, enclosed in the King's last will and testament
I've been thinking about what Orrin's childhood must have been like. How do you even raise an heir, knowing your kingdom can be annihilated any day, and even if you live to die of natural causes, he will likely not?
I think King Larkin must have been preparing his son for the eventuality of dying in a hopeless fight against Galbatorix ever since Orrin was old enough to understand the concept.
Have you ever noticed how often Orrin mentions the god of death in the books? He's been brought up to expect horrible death any day, of course he invokes Angvard at every opportunity.
Imagine a nine year old prince, getting sat down by his father every evening and being always asked the same question:
"What do we say when the foul usurper tells us to kneel?"
And the boy dutifully replies:
"We commend our soul to Angvard and say 'sons of Marelda do not kneel before tyrants and cowards.'"
And then he becomes King at like 20 years old, knowing full well that now, there is no escape. He will either die along with his country, or be lucky enough to live long enough for the stress to kill him like it had his father.
That's why he seems such a ditz when we meet him in Eldest, it's not that he's trying to shirk his duties - conducting his experiments might be the only thing keeping him sane.
Whenever he says "none of you understand what I've been through", it's painted as him being petulant and childish, but he may be actually right.
Literally none of the main cast of characters seem to understand (or try to) where he's coming from.
Nasuada might come the closest, but ultimately, the Varden are a military force, one that can move, retreat and hide. Being responsible for them is not the same as with Orrin and his people, because Orrin can ultimately do nothing to protect Surda. He can just do his best and pray.
Orrin must have been through some severe trauma even before the events of the books is all I'm saying and I'm still sad that the implications of his life and duties are never explored.
Several months after their enthronement, the Queen and King of the newly reunited Broddring Kingdom are starting to realise that perhaps their well-practiced public facade of a harmonious marriage need not be a mere facade...