The First Corax settled in Fife with the pre-historical Picts and the proto-White Howlers, feeding from the carrion they left behind and acting as scouts and guides. The symbiotic relationship of White Howler wolf and Corax raven was a good one, and lasted until the dark days of the Fall (as the Corax call the corruption of the White Howlers). The Corax were the first targets of the newly-emerging Black Spiral Dancer tribe after they had hunted down their remaining White Howler kin, but their rage had little consequence for the wily, high-flying Corax.

It was the Caledonian Corax that led the way as path-finders for the Scoto-Irish Fianna invaders that drove the Black Spiral Dancers underground. The Fianna also brought their own Irish Corax cousins to Fife with them, the Morrigan, as exemplified by the War Goddess Macha. The two breeds assimilated readily, unlike the Garou kinfolk who warred for generations until united under King Kenneth MacAlpin.

When the Get of Fenris came, they too brought Corax allies whom they equated with Hugin and Munin, the loyal raven companions of Odin One-Eye. The Silver Fang’s, however, had no use for the inquisitive Corax, and during the Middle Ages, a pogrom was declared against not only the Corax, but the Ceilican tribe of the Bastet as well. The idea of ravens and cats as "witches familiars" comes from this period, and cats, crows and ravens were hunted and killed alongside the unfortunate "witches" that were tortured and murdered in the name of Christianity. Also, the Corax were very involved with the "old religion" as they were held up as embodiments of the Celtic goddess Morrigan, and found themselves the targets of the exponentially growing Christian church.

By the time the Industrial Revolution came and the Iron Riders (Glass Walkers) came into providence, the Corax presence in Fife was almost negligible. The emerging tribes from the continent, mostly the Children of Gaia and Black Furies tried to reverse the trend, but the Corax, especially in their former strongholds of Fife have been reduced to a pale imitation of the noble hunters that helped the White Howlers stop the Romans. The rapidly faltering Scottish Corax bloodline was boosted by the large influx of Irish immigrants fleeing Ireland from the mid-19th century to the 1930’s.

Alone amongst the Changing Breeds, the Corax remember what the White Howlers once were, and mourn them more even than their Garou brothers do.