Ilsamir Lord
12-27-2006, 12:55
The Ilsamiri had founded the Southern Kingdom in the depths of the past, partly resettling their own, partly turning and assimilating the old kings of the lands around the Bay. Now the Kingdom had become almost entirely autonomous, though their strongest allegiance remained with the Ilsamir King, unbroken even in the great Uprising of millennia past. This was the seat of power of the Southern Kingdom, a great walled island set perfectly within the Beautiful Bay, a bastion of rock, moated by the sea itself and untaken through the long centuries of its existence. Within this ring of walls, of men’s make and of strong cliffs, stood the Hill, a tall rise at the Island’s western edge which came down steeply as it neared the western walls.
Below is the first decent product of my architectural modelling - The Gates of the Southern Port:
https://img81.imageshack.us/img81/7779/southernportvw1.th.jpg (https://img81.imageshack.us/my.php?image=southernportvw1.jpg)
The main gates of the chief city of the Southern Kingdom, the Port Isle. The blue indicates the sea, which for much of the time covers the walkway seen leading from the stairs. The gates themselves are missing from the image. The gate-house is 42 feet high. Atop each tower is a look-out post from which horns are blown (when the sea recedes) and bells are rung (when the sea laps over the walkway). The houses behind are place-holders for the moment and are included merely to fill in the image more believably. The blue represents the sea, the shade of grey above that blue represents a sandy beach and the grey above that represents rugged rocky slope or cliff.
The next structure I plan to show is the Keep of the Isle, which is set upon the Hill overlooking the square and the Temple of the Sky.
Below is the first decent product of my architectural modelling - The Gates of the Southern Port:
https://img81.imageshack.us/img81/7779/southernportvw1.th.jpg (https://img81.imageshack.us/my.php?image=southernportvw1.jpg)
The main gates of the chief city of the Southern Kingdom, the Port Isle. The blue indicates the sea, which for much of the time covers the walkway seen leading from the stairs. The gates themselves are missing from the image. The gate-house is 42 feet high. Atop each tower is a look-out post from which horns are blown (when the sea recedes) and bells are rung (when the sea laps over the walkway). The houses behind are place-holders for the moment and are included merely to fill in the image more believably. The blue represents the sea, the shade of grey above that blue represents a sandy beach and the grey above that represents rugged rocky slope or cliff.
The next structure I plan to show is the Keep of the Isle, which is set upon the Hill overlooking the square and the Temple of the Sky.