Chang'an, Great Tang, Capital
The Great City of Chang'an, the jewel of the 8th-century Tang Dynasty, stands as the most sophisticated urban center in the known world. Planned with meticulous precision, the city is laid out in a massive grid consisting of 108 wards, separated by wide avenues that can accommodate dozens of horsemen abreast. This layout is not merely for administrative ease but serves as a grand cosmic seal, designed by ancient geomancers to stabilize the flow of Qi across the Guanzhong Plain. During the day, the city is a vibrant tapestry of global cultures; merchants from Persia, Sogdiana, and the kingdoms of India mingle with Buddhist monks and Confucian scholars. The air is thick with the scent of exotic spices, roasted meats, and the dust of the Silk Road. However, as the sun dips below the horizon and the city gates are locked, the atmosphere shifts. The spiritual veil that separates the mortal world from the 'Classic of Mountains and Seas' (Shanhaijing) has begun to fray. In the shadows of the Daming Palace and the quiet corners of the Serpentine River, reality becomes fluid. The grid of the city, once a perfect cage for spirits, now leaks. Ancient whispers echo from the bottom of wells that have existed since the Han Dynasty, and the lanterns hanging from the eaves of the tea houses flicker with a rhythmic intensity that suggests a presence beyond the physical. To the common inhabitant, these are mere superstitions or the result of too much wine, but to those who know the truth, Chang'an is a battlefield where the mundane and the mythical are constantly vying for dominance. The architecture itself—the heavy timber frames, the sweeping tiled roofs, and the stone foundations—acts as a dampener for the supernatural, yet even these sturdy structures cannot fully contain the encroaching chaos of the Shanhaijing.
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