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Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Printable Version +- thePlenty.net Forums (https://theplenty.net/forums) +-- Forum: Robin Hobb and Megan Lindholm (https://theplenty.net/forums/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Realm of the Elderlings (https://theplenty.net/forums/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) (/thread-487.html) Pages:
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RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Provost - Sep-12-2012 Geographically, the Bingtown traders descend from Jamaillia, which may never have been part of the Realm of the Elderlings. That in turn would suggest that the effects of the cursed shores produced any skill ability rather than descent. Hmmm... The edits are nothing but improvement, Farseer. ![]() RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - 'thul - Sep-12-2012 true. the "stuff of dragons" in the bingtowners quite likely came from more recent additions, in particular the settling of the cursed shores and the rain wild river. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Farseer - Sep-12-2012 (Sep-12-2012, 03:22 AM (UTC))Provost Wrote: Geographically, the Bingtown traders descend from Jamaillia, which may never have been part of the Realm of the Elderlings. That in turn would suggest that the effects of the cursed shores produced any skill ability rather than descent. Hmmm... I actually believe that Jamaillia *was* and *is* part of the Realm of the Elderlings or, rather, as it has been named, part of the Old Empire. The fact that Fool and Pilkrop were (I believe but could be making it up...and, if it's the latter, am sure that the 'thul beings will pull me up! ![]() ![]() Quote:The edits are nothing but improvement, Farseer. Aw! ![]() ![]() Chat soon! RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - 'thul - Sep-12-2012 yes, the pillars were said to go far south. not as far south as the fool's homeland, but quite some distance. these beings can't recall exactly how far south, though. It might easily be that the region of Jamaillia was once part of the realm of the elderlings, but that does not necessarily mean that the people were. Their (recent?) culture certainly wasn't. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Farseer - Sep-15-2012 Am quite a few hundred kms away from home, resting in a motel room in between tennis sessions, and can't believe the post I thought I posted here the other day did not post here... ![]() 'Tis ture that the recent-ish culture may not show evidence of such but this is likely due to 'loss of culture' rather than a culture that has 'never been'. I think pretty much what I think on this is kind of already in the Voyages of discivery thread, some of which I will reproduce here: (Jul-26-2010, 02:48 PM (UTC))Farseer Wrote: ...but the RotE has had a HUGE set-back in its history due to natural catastrophes and other disasters. Who is to say that the Elderlings etc were not a ‘technological’ race prior to the cataclysm? Much is still being discovered and there is much still to be understood. While this ^ was all part of a very different discussion, as I have noted in the final couple of sentences, much has happened between 'the past' and 'the present' within the RotE and so it is to be expected that there appears to be no connection between the various peoples and various regions of the realm but I believe that this is not the case. They have been connected in the past. All that was unified has been separated and it is up to the White Prophet and his Catalyst (of all the world) to bring all back into unity again. History has been lost and, as a consequence, so too has culture etc. Once the past is uncovered, a common culture will be discovered, I think. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Provost - Sep-15-2012 In our world, we've only really had progress once: in mediaeval Europe. The Roman Empire, for example, had the problem that horses could only pull so heavy of a load before their collars suffocated them. They responded with a law limiting the weight of a horse's burden. The mediaeval Europeans instead invented a better collar. In the same way, the fourteenth (or one of those centuries) Chinese sailed out with a rather splendid fleet, far surpassing Columbus, all the way to Africa. When they were finished, they went home and never did it again. In the same way, attempts by European converts to Islam to set up printing presses in the Ottoman Empire met with hostility and indifference. The point is that most cultures show extreme unfriendliness to ideas of progress but I fear this may be getting off topic. ![]() In the ROTE, the elderlings used magic which has a lot of short term benefits over technology. It's much more readily applicable to private life. Think of the self heating scarves or the dream boxes. Also, the dragons would likely react to the development of cannons with unprecedented violence. That would pose a severe threat to them. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - 'thul - Sep-15-2012 cannons would not pose that great a threat. repeating firearms, on the other hand, that would be risky. Early generation cannons were slow to load, hard to aim and many of them were almost more hazardous to operators than opponents. It wasn't unusual for them to blow up. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - Provost - Sep-16-2012 Tintaglia reacted poorly to the use of gunpowder because of the way she thought it was being used. RE: Wintrow (Liveship/Farseer spoilers) - 'thul - Sep-16-2012 these beings must have forgotten that part. but then, she was very protective of the last (so far as she knew at the time) healthy male dragon. RotE dragons aren't immortal. They can die of all sorts of natural and unnatural things. |