Pocket Guide to the Empire, Second Edition/Argonia : Différence entre versions
(Page créée avec « {{Book|developpeur=1|auteur=Imperial Geographic Society|titre auteur=|date=3E 331|source=|commentaire=|resume=|sous titre=|auteurIRL... ») |
m |
||
Ligne 5 : | Ligne 5 : | ||
<center><FONT SIZE=7>The Abiding Eye: Argonia</FONT></center> | <center><FONT SIZE=7>The Abiding Eye: Argonia</FONT></center> | ||
− | + | {{Cadre PGE2 | |
− | {{Cadre | ||
|texte=Although folk tales of silver-skinned Kothringi had been prevalent since the late 1st era, the modern notion arises primarily out of an archeological discovery in 2E865 by Augustus Plongian, who has since been discredited and largely forgotten. Plongian had been excavating Ìitsha, a Kothri village just north of modern-day Soulrest, when he discovered a mass grave, remarkably preserved in the bog. Like all mummies, the bodies were a dark gray color. The high mineral content of the slick, watery ground gave the bodies a glister. Plongian used this as ‘evidence’ of the Kothringi being silver-skinned in an attempt to preserve the near-mythical significance he had attributed to the tribe. His books, which are now rightly seen as fiction rather than science, painted the Kothringi as a peaceful and educated people, obsessed with astronomy and theology, who brought civilization to the previously savage marsh. | |texte=Although folk tales of silver-skinned Kothringi had been prevalent since the late 1st era, the modern notion arises primarily out of an archeological discovery in 2E865 by Augustus Plongian, who has since been discredited and largely forgotten. Plongian had been excavating Ìitsha, a Kothri village just north of modern-day Soulrest, when he discovered a mass grave, remarkably preserved in the bog. Like all mummies, the bodies were a dark gray color. The high mineral content of the slick, watery ground gave the bodies a glister. Plongian used this as ‘evidence’ of the Kothringi being silver-skinned in an attempt to preserve the near-mythical significance he had attributed to the tribe. His books, which are now rightly seen as fiction rather than science, painted the Kothringi as a peaceful and educated people, obsessed with astronomy and theology, who brought civilization to the previously savage marsh. | ||
Version du 24 février 2015 à 17:07
Developer's text Real author : Michael Kirkbride, Kurt Kuhlmann, Darya Makarava (Illustration), Halil Ural (Illustration), Others Publication date : 2012
By Imperial Geographic Society, 3E 331
|