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Damara

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Damara.jpg
Damara
Geographical information
Capital Heliogabalus
Societal information
Races
Humans 87%
Dwarves 6%
Halflings 4%
Half-orcs 2%
Other 1%



Population 1,321,920 in 1372 DR
Imports Food, livestock, wood
Exports Gems, gold, iron, silver
Alignment
LG NG CG
LN N CN
LE NE CE
Political information
Government Monarchy
Ruler King Gareth Dragonsbane (1371 DR)[1]
King Yarin Frostmantle (1479 DR)[2]

Inhabitants of Damara
Locations in Damara
Organizations in Damara
Settlements in Damara

Damara is a sparsely populated kingdom in the Cold Lands of Northeast Faerûn.[3] It was ruled by King Gareth Dragonsbane[4] as of 1371 DR,[1] and, with Vaasa, formed the Bloodstone Lands.[5] Damara's current ruler (as of 1479 DR) is King Yarin Frostmantle.[2]

Contents

Major geographical featuresEdit

ForestsEdit

The Earthwood forest is a small forest known for its resilience, with trees growing back extremely quickly.[6]

MountainsEdit

The Galena Mountains is a jagged range of icy mountains that are largely inhabited by goblinoids and giants, but are also home to dwarves who mine the bloodstone, iron and silver deposits.[7] Bloodstone Pass is the only pass through the Galena Mountains that is large enough for significant trade, linking Damara with neighboring Vaasa to the west.[6]

ClimateEdit

The people of Damara are generally hardy, and the winters are harsh. During the summer, the farming season is short.[8]

PoliticsEdit

From its earliest days, Damara has been divided into counties ruled by noble houses but united under the throne of Damara. These provinces are baronies, or city states, with craftsmen and trade centers, and duchies, or supply provinces, with farming and mining communities.[9] These counties are:

HistoryEdit

Damara's capital, Heliogabalus, was founded by Feldrin Bloodfeathers, the first King of Damara, in 1075 DR.[10] It had a long line of monarchs until the death of King Virdin. During this time, Damara thrived on foreign trade, particularly through caravans to Ilmwatch in Impiltur and to the settlements on the Moonsea, through the gap between Rawlinswood and the Earthspur Mountains known as Merchants Run. Shipments of bloodstone were made throughout Traders Bay, and in Sarshel. Trade was also made through the Bloodstone Pass in the Galena Mountains, through the sparsely populated Vaasa, and through Garumn's Climb and beyond.[8]

In the years since King Gareth Dragonsbane’s rule in the late 1300s, the fortunes of Damara have waned.[11] As of 1479 DR, Damara is ruled by King Yarin Frostmantle, considered by many to be a petty, incompetent, and oppressive tyrant.[2]

The Witch-KingEdit

In just one night in 1347 DR, Castle Perilous was created on a crag in northern Vaasa by the lich Zhengyi, and he claimed power in Vaasa, garnering the support of the goblins, giants and orcs, as well as creatures from other planes and the undead, and the Grandfather of Assassins.[12]

In the same year, Wolf Winter struck Damara, in which the harvest was destroyed by early frosts, leading to widespread starvation, and dire wolves, some lycanthropes, spread into northern Damara. This coincided with an evil creature infesting the Bloodstone Mines, halting the mining operation that was responsible for almost half of Damara's bloodstone revenue and killing hundreds of miners.[13]

In 1348 DR, the armies of the Witch-King Zhengyi occupied Bloodstone Pass and swept into Damara, massacring many Damarans and plunging the nation, along with Vaasa, into a decade of war. Narfell and Impiltur offered no help with the conflict on the grounds that they had their own problems to deal with.[13]

A stalemate was reached in 1357 DR when King Virdin's Damaran army was involved in a standoff with Zhengyi's forces across the Ford of Goliad on the river of the same name. The stalemate lasted throughout the month of Kythorn (the source material gives "June" as the month but this is not on the Faerûnian calendar) until Virdin used a magic wand, believed to have been given to him by his chief lieutenant Felix, which he believed would allow his army to safely cross the river. It was a deception and Zhengyi's army had been waiting for this moment. They struck while much of Virdin's army was in the river, laying the decisive blow. Virdin, who was watching from a nearby hill, was assassinated by a dagger used by an unknown assassin, believed to have been Felix.[14]

Notable InhabitantsEdit

Further readingEdit


ReferencesEdit

  1. 1.0 1.1Uluin of Merkurn, Annals of Soravia, 1454 DR.” Mark Sehestedt (November 2009). The Fall of Highwatch (Mass Market Paperback), p. 1. Wizards of the CoastISBN 978-0-7869-5143-7.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Mark Sehestedt (November 2009). The Fall of Highwatch (Mass Market Paperback), p. 173. Wizards of the CoastISBN 978-0-7869-5143-7.
  3. Ed Greenwood, Sean K. Reynolds, Skip Williams, Rob Heinsoo (June 2001). Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting 3rd edition, p. 106. Wizards of the CoastISBN 0-7869-1836-5.
  4. Ed Greenwood, Sean K. Reynolds, Skip Williams, Rob Heinsoo (June 2001). Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting 3rd edition, p. 108. Wizards of the CoastISBN 0-7869-1836-5.
  5. R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 2. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Ed Greenwood, Sean K. Reynolds, Skip Williams, Rob Heinsoo (June 2001). Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting 3rd edition, p. 107. Wizards of the CoastISBN 0-7869-1836-5.
  7. R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 33. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  8. 8.0 8.1 R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 3. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  9. R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 8-14. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  10. Sean K. Reynolds, Matt Forbeck, James Jacobs, Eric L. Boyd (March 2003). Races of Faerûn, p. 89. Wizards of the CoastISBN 0-7869-2875-1.
  11. Uluin of Merkurn, Annals of Soravia, 1454 DR.” Mark Sehestedt (November 2009). The Fall of Highwatch (Mass Market Paperback), p. 2. Wizards of the CoastISBN 978-0-7869-5143-7.
  12. R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 3-4. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  13. 13.0 13.1 R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 4. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.
  14. R.A. Salvatore (December 1989). The Bloodstone Lands, p. 4-5. TSR, IncISBN 978-0880387712.

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