Juldohrm was born 24 years ago, to parents Jandohrm Earthwubba and Maglidaki Earthwubba. Jandohrm was a banker, and Maglidaki was a housewife.
Juldohrm was born two years after the founding of the Under-Realm of Urguan, and from the day of his birth to the day of his father’s death, he heard his father sing forever the praises of the new Dwarven kingdom, which was meant for ALL dwarves, and singing the praises of the then Under-King Fimlin Grandaxe.
As a child, Juldohrm was always different from his fellow children. He was more alert, more friendly, conducted himself with niceness and kindness, and was also pretty heckin smart for a child. Juldohrm showed great promise as a businessdwarf of some kind, starting his own venture and making stacks of minae.
Juldohrm, unlike the trope everyone thinks of, really relished the idea of being a big businessdwarf. In between classes, he would daydream of being a big-name financier, or maybe inventing a new kind of super-ale, or maybe a weapons producer. He always daydreamed of using his business, whatever it would be, to help the Under-Realm surge in strength to become the greatest power in the world.
During the Three-Months’ War, Jandohrm was fixated on news of the war. Juldohrm would always ask his father what had happened, and why it was happening. Juldohrm was 15 at the time, and was an impressionable youth, and Jandohrm taught Juldohrm everything he knew about Dwarven history and the reasons that Dwarven nationalism is needed. Juldohrm absorbed every bit, and although like many other Forest Dwarves, Juldohrm never hated the other races, he was always the most fond of his own kind, Dwarvenkind.
When Utak Ireheart took the throne of Under-king in 1727, Juldohrm and Jandohrm celebrated like father and son. Seeing their nation succeed was like seeing themselves succeed, and it brought them closer together as a family.
Jandohrm was proud that his son was planning to go into business, not as an employee but as an entrepreneur, and so Jandohrm tutored Juldohrm from the age of 4 until Jandohrm’s death in 1729.
Jandohrm died of sugar-sickness, but was surrounded by his then elderly wife and his son at that time.
Jandohrm’s death, in a strange way, invigorated Juldohrm. Juldohrm gained a fire of determination. He would honor the name of his father even after his father’s death. He swore an oath on his father’s grave that one day, anyone who knew of his name, would honor the name of his father Jandohrm.
Juldohrm set out to build a business empire, and even if he had to start out at the lowest possible position somewhere, one day he would make it big.
In fact, a few nights after his father’s death, the Brathmordakin called Armakak appeared to Juldohrm in a dream, and told him that he was destined to acquire great wealth, however long that would take.