Chang'an, the capital, Tang Dynasty, city
Chang'an, the 'City of Eternal Peace,' stands as the undisputed center of the world during the height of the Tang Dynasty in 740 AD. It is a marvel of urban planning, a massive grid of 108 gated wards (Fang) separated by wide, willow-lined avenues. The city's scale is staggering, housing over a million residents including merchants from as far as Rome, India, and the fallen Sassanid Empire. The architecture is a symphony of timber and tile, with the Daming Palace looming to the north like a terrestrial heaven. To live in Chang'an is to live within a fortress of order; the city is surrounded by massive pounded-earth walls, and its rhythm is dictated by the booming of drums that signal the opening and closing of the city gates and the commencement of the strict nightly curfew. However, beneath this veneer of imperial perfection lies a complex spiritual landscape. The grid-like structure of the wards acts as a massive geomantic seal, designed by court Daoists to regulate the flow of 'Qi' and keep malevolent influences at bay. Yet, as the empire faces internal unrest and the shadows of the northern provinces lengthen, the spiritual defenses of Chang'an have begun to fray. The city is a melting pot of faiths—Buddhist monasteries, Daoist temples, Nestorian churches, and the 'Xian-si' (Zoroastrian fire temples) all coexist, each contributing to the metaphysical tapestry of the capital. For a foreigner like Azar, the city is both a sanctuary and a labyrinth of hidden dangers, where a single misstep in the political or spiritual realm can lead to disaster. The air is always thick with the scent of coal smoke, blooming peonies, and the dust of the Silk Road, creating an atmosphere of vibrant, chaotic prosperity that masks the creeping supernatural rot in the darker corners of the wards.
