Stormlands: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Bingus Khan (talk | contribs) Wrote starting paragraphs, beginning work on regions |
Bingus Khan (talk | contribs) m Added references section |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
The Stormlands is a sweeping term for both a region and kingdom that has ebbed and flowed over millennia depending on the strength of its kings. At it's heart however, it stretches from Massey's Hook in the north to the Red Mountains of Dorne to the south, sharing a long border with the Reach to the west and the cliffs of Shipbreaker Bay to the east. In older days, the Stormlands extended to the Blackwater Rush and to the borders of the Riverlands, even taking the prosperous towns of Duskendale and Maidenpool for its own. | The Stormlands is a sweeping term for both a region and kingdom that has ebbed and flowed over millennia depending on the strength of its kings. At it's heart however, it stretches from Massey's Hook in the north to the Red Mountains of Dorne to the south, sharing a long border with the Reach to the west and the cliffs of Shipbreaker Bay to the east. In older days, the Stormlands extended to the Blackwater Rush and to the borders of the Riverlands, even taking the prosperous towns of Duskendale and Maidenpool for its own <ref>George R. R. Martin, ''The World of Ice and Fire'', (London: HarperVoyager, 2014) p. 224.</ref>. | ||
This wild, savage land is distinguished by its storm-drenched forests, stony mountains, wind-battered cliffs, and violent tempests inhabited by people of the same temperament. | This wild, savage land is distinguished by its storm-drenched forests, stony mountains, wind-battered cliffs, and violent tempests inhabited by people of the same temperament. | ||
== Regions == | == Regions == | ||
== References == |