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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
USA
36804 Posts |
Posted - 15 Oct 2020 : 21:27:14
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I'd go a different direction, myself. Dawaerfen Valley, perhaps, named for some ancient something or other -- but corrupted over time by the locals to "Dwarven" Valley. This adds to the existing canon and makes it work better, without actually changing anything, and it follows a pattern of real-world linguistic shifts. |
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PattPlays
Senior Scribe
469 Posts |
Posted - 16 Oct 2020 : 07:19:11
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Who are the most ancient peoples to inhabit the region? Was it further south in the Days of Thunder? |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist
USA
11829 Posts |
Posted - 16 Oct 2020 : 11:36:34
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quote: Originally posted by Gary Dallison
As for the days of thunder I reckon it was just too cold for sarrukh and batrachi and aearee. Giants almost certainly held away here and probably dragons but that's several millennia later.
I'll keep an eye out for ancient stuff but I'm not sure I'll find anything.
Why aearee? We really have no idea what they looked like, and winged creatures like birds live in the cold. There are some hints that they may have had ties to some draconic beings, but then again that may have been AFTER their nesting aviaries were invaded by dragons. |
Alavairthae, may your skill prevail
Phillip aka Sleyvas |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Ayrik
Great Reader
Canada
7989 Posts |
Posted - 16 Oct 2020 : 13:34:52
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It probably has different names to different people. Only local dwarves (and perhaps elves) are likely to remember the old dwarven stronghold name(s). Barbarians will just call it whatever they like, probably naming the place based on some distinct landmark feature. Orcs might give it a name which translates into some variation of "killing ground". Giants might call it Frosthall (or Frosthalle, if you prefer something Germanic, lol). Volo's maps might just remark "rumoured location of abandoned dwarven ruins". |
[/Ayrik] |
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
USA
36804 Posts |
Posted - 16 Oct 2020 : 15:09:16
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quote: Originally posted by sleyvas
quote: Originally posted by Gary Dallison
As for the days of thunder I reckon it was just too cold for sarrukh and batrachi and aearee. Giants almost certainly held away here and probably dragons but that's several millennia later.
I'll keep an eye out for ancient stuff but I'm not sure I'll find anything.
Why aearee? We really have no idea what they looked like, and winged creatures like birds live in the cold. There are some hints that they may have had ties to some draconic beings, but then again that may have been AFTER their nesting aviaries were invaded by dragons.
And for a magically powerful folk like the sarrukh, dealing with the cold would have been trivial.
...Not that I see a reason for them to be here; I'm just saying the cold isn't a good reason to rule it out. |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Lord Karsus
Great Reader
USA
3741 Posts |
Posted - 16 Oct 2020 : 17:01:30
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-Yeah, I assume that "Dwarven Valley" is just what the humans of the area (who, if I am remembering correctly, are kind of...more country than cosmopolitan, given the area). I would assume that Dwarves have their own separate name for it, in their own language. Surprised, given all of the focus on the area over the years in novels, adventures, sourcebooks, and everything else, than an actual, official Dwarven name was never mentioned. |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
Posted - 17 Oct 2020 : 11:31:32
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The Dinev founding of castle Dinev is a problem for the lore of icewind dale.
The Crystal Shard novel was quite clear that the Reghed Barbarians are first and they arrived around -2100 DR.
Then the dwarves came next after 1172 DR and the fall of Mithril Hall.
Then came the Ten Towns but I presume it was a staggered creation of settlements with each wave founding a new town and Easthaven was the last I think.
The Legacy of the Crystal Shard and Rime of the Frost Maiden ignore the above events by having the Dinev family build a a fort in 1050 DR.
This is before the dwarves even arrive.
So my fix is for that settlement and the settlers to die out before the dwarves arrive.
The story goes that the Dinevs found the castle, a settlement grows around it (a bitt far fetched in such an isolated region but I'll assume the Dinevs led a wagon train of people here in search of riches.
Orcs take the castle a few years later and then a few years after that the people of the ten towns (a mistake because the ten towns didn't exist then, so ill assume it is the cormyrean settlers only) band together and defeat the orcs.
This is all before 1100 DR, so I'm thinking that either the settlement slowly dwindles because life is really harsh here and without trade there is no chance of survival in the long term. The alternative is that the barbarians raid this place or perhaps both a dwindling population and barbarian raids results in the cormyrean being wiped out.
1172 the dwarves arrive, and they survive by trading with ironmaster.
The ten towns doesnt begin properly until the siege of illusk in 1235 DR when some people flee north because they have no other direction to go.
This group of humans survives because the dwarves are already here and trade is coming in from ironmaster and later Luskan when it is refounded.
As time goes on other waves of accidental migration happen, a slave ship from chult crashes and the survivors wander north, the remains of a ffolk fleet and northmen pursuers land here and resettle castle dinev (renaming it caer). The northmen settle at Konig (related to the northmen word Kong for King) and together the ffolk and northmen build another castle here.
Not sure about the Moonsea miners, that seems quite a long way to migrate so I'm guessing magic is involved. Perhaps slave miners for Zhentil Keep using magic to get them to get ore from the Galenas and it goes wrong perhaps. |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
Posted - 19 Oct 2020 : 20:48:27
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Quite surprised at how little the Crystal Shard has to do with Rime of the Frost Maiden.
It was a big part of the Legacy of the Crystal Shard and it would seem that the Black Ice originally spread from the Crystal Shard itself (not some corruption due to the sundering or Auril, etc).
I'm still intent upon redoing the origin of Crenshinibon. I had a quick research of House Vyshaan and it seems they wanted to weaponise Mythals. Crenshenibon was able to create large numbers of these black obelisks that shoot laser beams, which is one hell of a defence mechanism. In Zakhara it was used to create hundreds of these obelisks so it can or used to be able to create huge numbers of them either it was damaged in the past or its recent circumstances meant it could not create more than one without becoming near useless.
So i'm thinking, one of the Vyshaan lords tried to create this mythal weapon (i'm calling it Crysharael meaning Crystal Heart). He was assisted by Errtu (who at the time was working on behalf of Malkizid, and probably disguised) and 6 selu'kiira of past Vyshaan lords.
The creation goes wrong and the crystal heart shatters. Crenshinibon is the largest such fragment but there can be many others. The Crystal Heart absorbed the power and sentience of the Vyshaan Lord and the Selu'Kiira as well as a big chunk of Errtu's power (thats why he wants it back). It became sentient and shattered itself to escape its confines and allow itself to begin conquering the world.
Like the Vyshaan it wants to conquer everything, it has a special hatred of dark elves. It is in Zakhara 2000 years ago, also in Menzoberranzan about a century ago. Any other mentions and it being scattered across the planes could be explained by another shard of the Crysharael and not Crenshinibon.
Crenshinibon is a demonic corruption of elven and roughly translates as the sun's discarded heart-tree. It draws its power directly from the Weave (which most magic items do), but this item can draw magic to it in huge quantities. In the Spine of the World the Weave is weaker (fewer Weave anchors nearby) so it is naturally weakened. Life and Magic are synonymous according to Ed and all Life is empowered by the sun so it draws extra energy from the sun if there is nothing else left. Thats why it was defeated by darkness in the novels. Wouldnt normally affect it in areas where the Weave is strong.
Because part of Errtu is within the shard, that means the Black Ice infected creatures that rampage across Icewind Dale in Legacy of the Crystal Shard are behaving like demons because of Errtu's influence.
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Mrestos Khorvaen
Acolyte
Spain
48 Posts |
Posted - 22 Oct 2020 : 10:29:07
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I think tis a bit heavy having people migrating from Tethyr to Icewind dale... Isn't too far away and too cold for them? About the dwarven dale, when they came, they were exiled, and bitter about it. It was only seen as a temporal refuge, not as a new clan hall. So maybe the dwarves deliberately didn't name it. Maybe in dwar religion if you name a place, you're a giving it an especial significance. |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
Posted - 22 Oct 2020 : 10:59:14
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Regarding the migration, yes it is strange that a group would deliberately choose to migrate to Icewind Dale, but if this group were forced out of Cape Velen by the Shadow Thieves then it is already noted that the Shadow Thieves try to absorb rival groups, if they cant then they eliminate the rivals entirely.
So its likely that many of the group spread out all over the place, and were hunted down and killed. I'm thinking they fled to Icewind Dale because it was so far away and almost unreachable so it would be the one place they could survive.
Its a bit of a stretch but unfortunately this is RAS lore and 5e lore that i'm trying to reconcile and both are very heavy handed and often stretch the limits of believability.
The group from Tethyr is not so problematic as a group from Sembia, Cormyr, or the Moonsea though. I can't imagine how or why anyone from those innersea lands would have even heard of Icewind Dale, let alone try and travel thousands of miles across deserts and arctic mountain ranges in order to reach the middle of nowhere.
It think i will need to invent a few legends about Icewind Dale in order to draw people to it in search of fame and fortune, but they would have to be recently discovered legends (1000 DR onwards). Perhaps someone uncovered a last known location of the netheril enclave in Icewind Dale and so a few treasure seekers go looking.
Regarding the dwarves, admittedly i don't know much about them as a race beyond Dwarves Deep, but they seem an eminently practical people, and not giving their home a name would cause problems. Also their exile is not one imposed out of shame, dwarves being forced out of their homeland due to conquests by goblinoids or demons is fairly common in the history of Faerun, and each time they give their new homeland a name. Besilmer, Delzoun, Ammarindar, Bhaerynden, Sarphil, Shanatar, they have all fallen to enemies and their people fled in exile to new homelands. |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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cpthero2
Great Reader
USA
2286 Posts |
Posted - 23 Oct 2020 : 21:47:10
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Great Reader Dallison,
That is very disheartening to read. So, is it your opinion that they are just ignoring the past in the hopes they can just build a new future of lore?
Best regards,
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Higher Atlar Spirit Soaring |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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cpthero2
Great Reader
USA
2286 Posts |
Posted - 26 Oct 2020 : 09:22:39
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Great Reader Dallison,
Nice thought process on the time frame there. There is nothing relating to a single bit of information that gives the year, but your suppositions are sound.
Best regards,
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Higher Atlar Spirit Soaring |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist
USA
11829 Posts |
Posted - 26 Oct 2020 : 21:47:03
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quote: Originally posted by Gary Dallison
Up to Mituki in the Accursed Tower.
Supposedly a huge oak tree, which is described as 60 ft tall, which is actually less than average height for an oak tree, i can only assume he means 60 metres.
https://sciencing.com/tall-do-oak-trees-grow-5297428.html
Oak trees grow around the world and are very common in the United States. They’re not known for height like the Redwoods in California, but they can grow to an impressive size. Oak trees come in many different varieties that can grow to different heights from only forty feet at full size to one hundred.
Then said page goes into the different varieties of oak, some of which top out at like 75 or less at maximum.
This caught my eye as I was recently looking up tree heights in VGtatM to include in the Adusgee Forest in Anchorome and I wanted an area that I am calling "The Great Timberspires" to have redwood=like trees. I found that no trees in VGtatM resemble redwoods in height except possibly duskwood, shadowtops and weirwoods (and duskwood and shadowtops both only have branches at the very tip top of the tree). So, I'm creating a new tree for Anchorome just for the "Great Timberspires" that I'm calling "Goliath Wintergreens"... as I didn't want to call them giant sequoias as that's an indian name, and I didn't want to call them "redwoods" since the wood itself isn't "red". I may also want to give them some specialness that's not the same as our world's redwoods (and I literally just learned that redwoods and giant sequoias aren't the same thing in the past 2 days). Redwoods/sequoias apparently can grow at max to 200 to 370 feet in height and can be 20 feet or more in diameter (some exceeding 300 feet in diameter) |
Alavairthae, may your skill prevail
Phillip aka Sleyvas |
Edited by - sleyvas on 26 Oct 2020 22:02:01 |
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Wooly Rupert
Master of Mischief
USA
36804 Posts |
Posted - 26 Oct 2020 : 22:13:18
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Does it say that the "huge" measurement is the height? It could have had an unusually wide circumference, and qualified as "huge" that way.
Or it could have simply been that it was much taller than the surrounding trees. Sixty feet is huge if it's twice the size of everything around it.
Also, one of the women I work with tells me that men tend to exaggerate some measurements, so... |
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Edited by - Wooly Rupert on 26 Oct 2020 22:34:43 |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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sleyvas
Skilled Spell Strategist
USA
11829 Posts |
Posted - 27 Oct 2020 : 12:18:41
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Only because, like I said, at present I'm looking into that stuff
https://www.arborday.org/trees/righttreeandplace/size.cfm
Looks like most oaks and pines are usually around the same size, but some pines grow taller than oaks. Looks like except for abnormal specimens, most trees start topping out at 70-80 feet. Some average a little higher at top maturity by reaching 100 feet. Some rare pine specimens reach 150 to 200 feet, but so far only the redwoods and giant sequoias have exceeded 200 feet (some reaching 300 to 370 feet).
In comparison, the tallest known oak tree in the UK is only 132 feet https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-wiltshire-19402113#:~:text=The%20132.5ft%20(40.4m,of%20The%20Tree%20Register%20charity.
So, oaks are strong, and they get relatively thick, but they don't grow hugely tall (taller than some trees mind you). Pines on the other hand seem to grow taller (if they don't snap), because they grow fast and straight up rather than around. Still, firs, ash, gums, sequoias, redwoods... these all seem to be the really tall trees of the world with specimens in the mid to upper 200's and even 300's of feet tall.
Just a little aside... one of the things I noted was that some redwoods have just the bark being 3 feet thick... that's wider than me turned sideways. Maybe one day I'll head out to California and see them for real instead of just reading about them. Its definitely got to be an unusual sight. |
Alavairthae, may your skill prevail
Phillip aka Sleyvas |
Edited by - sleyvas on 27 Oct 2020 12:28:41 |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
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Gary Dallison
Great Reader
United Kingdom
6361 Posts |
Posted - 31 Oct 2020 : 11:01:38
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Do we have any experts on Icewind Dale the computer game (and the enhanced edition) who can perhaps help quote history and conversations from the game (save me playing them).
Gone through my notes on the novel Crystal Shard.
Heafstaag conquered Termelaine twice and slew Raag Donnig. Because Raag Donnig is the only barbarian with two names, and because i've gone with Anga as the barbarian name for King, i've decided that Raag is a title and roughly translates as Overking.
So i figure Heafstaag takes charge of the Tribe of the Elk in his early twenties, sacks Termalaine the first time and based upon that success he attacks the Tribe of the Bear and kills Raag Donnig. The Tribe of the Bear suffers greatly in the attack and is now only the 3rd largest tribe.
I figure the last attack by the Tribe of the Elk on Termalaine was 10 years ago (1346 DR) and that is when Cattie-Brie was orphaned as a small girl of 5 or 6.
Heafstaag, thrice killer of the Great Bear is an interesting title. Sounds like he killed it and it kept coming back for more. Is the Great Bear some kind of totemic animal or was it Raag Donnig he killed 3 times. He also lost his eye to a deer so i might mix that with legends of the Great White Stag from Rime of the Frost Maiden.
Thus far i have the following tribes Tribe of the Elk Tribe of the Wolf Tribe of the Bear Tribe of the Great Cat (renamed from tiger because there are no tigers in Icewind Dale and so i figure its a striped variant of a crag cat that has been incorrectly named by southern zoologists). Tribe of the Hoar Fox (one of my own creations to account for Kinnuki's story from the Accursed Tower) Tribe of the Great White Worm (i came across this reference in Legacy of the Crystal Shard, they live far out on the Sea of Moving Ice).
Given that there are more than just the 4 tribes mentioned in the Crystal Shard novel, i dont think the attack on the Ten Towns (the 2nd one) was as catastrophic for Reghedmen numbers as it was claimed. Perhaps the tribes that lost most of their warriors mixed with other tribes that had different migration patterns and lived further away from the Ten Towns. |
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