City of the Gods
| City of the Gods | |
|---|---|
| General information | |
| Motto: | unknown |
| Region: | Bitter North ("Old Blackmoor") |
| Government | |
| Ruler: | unknown |
| Government: | Feudal technocracy |
| Alignments: | unknown |
| Established: | Pre-cataclysm |
| Demographics | |
| Capital: | City of the Gods |
| Provinces: | unknown |
| Population: | unknown |
| Races: | Humans, constructs |
| Languages: | unknown |
| Groups | |
| Religions: | unknown |
| Allies: | Suel Imperium |
| Enemies: | Limbo |
| Miscellaneous | |
| Resources: | unknown |
| Coinage: | unknown |
The City of the Gods is a legendary city in the northern Flanaess.
History
Ages ago (certainly before the Twin Cataclysms), the City of the Gods was the heart of a technocracy in what is now Blackmoor. The lords and ladies of the City used a combination of elemental magic and clockwork science to create automatons to perform all menial labor for them. Meanwhile, they devoted their time to art, philosophy, and war.
The end of the age came when the city's automatons were struck down by a plague called "gear madness," or when the city's humanoid inhabitants transformed themselves into constructs themselves. Over the centuries, most of what remained of their civilization was covered by the encroaching Black Ice.
The accessory College of Wizardry suggests that at some point before the City of the Gods was swallowed by the Ice, Blackmoor was claimed by the Baklunish Empire. By the early days of the Baklunish-Suloise Wars, the region now called Blackmoor was independent of the Baklunish and considered an ally of the Suel Imperium. During this period, the Suel emperor sent the people of Blackmoor an artifact known as the Unquenchable Scepter as a gift.
Occasionally, gears and other relics of this lost civilization will turn up in antiquities markets in various modern cities. These are eagerly sought by clockwork mages, gnomes, and dwarves, as well as groups like the Society of the Serpent.
Geography
People
Government
Economy
Transportation
Military
Creative origins
The City of the Gods was originally part of D&D co-creator Dave Arneson's Blackmoor campaign. Among the many groups who experienced it with Arneson as DM were Gary Gygax and Robert J. Kuntz, using their characters Mordenkainen and Robilar. In tribute to this, Gygax made Blackmoor and the City of the Gods part of the Flanaess in his World of Greyhawk campaign, modified somewhat to fit with the rest of the setting.
In Eldritch Wizardry, fragments from the writings of Tzunk make reference to "the coming of the City of the Gods" as a "future event."
Dave Arneson's original Blackmoor campaign became grandfathered into the Mystara setting with the publication of module DA1, Adventures in Blackmoor. This Blackmoor, set thousands of years in the past of the Known World, is not the same as the Archbarony of Blackmoor of the World of Greyhawk, though both contain a site called the "City of the Gods." A version based on Arneson's original appeared as module DA3, City of the Gods.
In Dungeon #126, Wolfgang Baur elaborated on Oerth's version of the City of the Gods, which provides the basis for this article.
Bibliography
- Baur, Wolfgang. "The Clockwork Fortress." Dungeon #126. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2004.
- Brown, Anne. Player's Guide. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 1998.
- Cordell, Bruce R. College of Wizardry. Renton, WA: TSR, 2007.
- Grohe, Allan and Erik Mona. "Artifacts of Oerth." Dragon #294. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2002.
- Gygax, Gary. The World of Greyhawk. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1980.
- -----. World of Greyhawk Fantasy Game Setting. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1983.
- Gygax, Gary, and Brian Blume. Eldritch Wizardry. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1976.
- Holian, Gary, Erik Mona, Sean K. Reynolds, and Frederick Weining. Living Greyhawk Gazetteer. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2000.
- Kuntz, Robert J.. "Robilar Remembers: Journey to the City of the Gods." Oerth Journal #6. Available online:[1]
- Moore, Roger E. Greyhawk: The Adventure Begins. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 1998.
- Sargent, Carl. From the Ashes. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1992.