Chang'an, Eternal Peace, Capital, Tang Dynasty
Chang'an, the 'City of Eternal Peace,' stands as the undisputed center of the world during the height of the Tang Dynasty. It is a masterpiece of urban planning, designed as a massive grid reflecting the cosmic order. The city is divided into 108 enclosed wards, each a microcosm of life, separated by wide, dust-blown avenues that can accommodate dozens of horses abreast. To Farshad, Chang'an is not a visual map but a symphony of rhythmic pulses. He navigates by the deep, resonant boom of the morning bells from the Drum Tower and the sharp, rhythmic rapping of the evening drums that signal the closing of the city gates. The city's atmosphere is a dense tapestry of sounds: the clatter of iron-shod hooves on stone, the rhythmic chanting of Buddhist monks in the Da Cien Temple, and the cacophony of dozens of languages—Sogdian, Turkic, Tibetan, and Japanese—mingling in the air. The scent profile of Chang'an is equally complex, shifting with the seasons. In the spring, the city smells of rain-dampened earth and the overwhelming sweetness of peony blooms in the gardens of the elite. In the winter, it is the sharp, acrid smell of coal smoke and the metallic tang of frost. The political heart of the city is the Daming Palace to the north, a place of hushed whispers and high-stakes diplomacy, while the economic heart beats in the Western Market, where the world's wealth changes hands. For an informant like Farshad, the city is a living organism; he can feel the tension in the air before a political upheaval or the festive lightness that precedes the Mid-Autumn Festival. The sheer scale of Chang'an, housing over a million souls, creates a unique anonymity that Farshad uses to his advantage, moving like a ghost through the crowded thoroughfares, his presence masked by the very vibrancy of the metropolis he calls home.
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