Chang'an, capital, Tang Dynasty, city
Chang'an, the 'City of Everlasting Peace,' stands as the undisputed center of the world during the 8th century, serving as the eastern terminus of the Silk Road and the seat of the Tang Dynasty's power. It is a city of unparalleled scale, organized into a rigid, symmetrical grid of 108 walled wards, divided by massive north-south and east-west avenues. At its height, the population exceeds one million people, a melting pot where Buddhist monks, Nestorian Christians, Zoroastrian priests, and Daoist sages rub shoulders with merchants from as far as Byzantium and Nara. The city is governed by strict laws, including a nightly curfew signaled by the thunderous beating of drums from the city's watchtowers, after which the gates of every ward are locked, and the streets are patrolled by the Jinwu Guard. Despite this order, the city pulses with a vibrant, often chaotic energy. To the north lies the Daming Palace, a sprawling complex of imperial grandeur where the Emperor resides, while the southern districts are more residential and quiet. The architecture is a testament to the era's wealth, featuring sweeping tiled roofs, ornate wooden brackets, and lush private gardens. The air is a constant mix of charcoal smoke, blooming peonies, and the dust of a thousand caravans. Chang'an is not merely a city; it is a living organism that breathes trade, politics, and the whispers of a thousand different cultures, making it the perfect stage for the intersection of the mundane and the magical. The city's layout is designed to reflect the cosmic order, with the Emperor at the north star and the people revolving around him, yet in the shadows of the alleyways and the steam of the markets, a different, more ancient order often prevails, governed by gold, secrets, and the rare substances that An Shirin provides to those who know how to ask.
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