Delmora: Difference between revisions
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|Image=[[File:Delmora.jpg|center|frameless]] | |Image=[[File:Delmora.jpg|center|frameless]] | ||
|Spirit=Naithis | |Spirit=Naithis | ||
|Inhabitants=[[Ruvin]], [[ | |Inhabitants=[[Ruvin]], [[Odrak]] | ||
|Realm Name=Delmora | |Realm Name=Delmora | ||
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|History=The history of Delmora is inseparable from its rivers. Early civilizations emerged along their banks, where fertile floodplains enabled agriculture and sustained the first permanent settlements. Over time, rivers became trade routes and spiritual conduits, linking communities across the realm and facilitating the exchange of goods, knowledge, and traditions. | |History=The history of Delmora is inseparable from its rivers. Early civilizations emerged along their banks, where fertile floodplains enabled agriculture and sustained the first permanent settlements. Over time, rivers became trade routes and spiritual conduits, linking communities across the realm and facilitating the exchange of goods, knowledge, and traditions. | ||
The Ruvin were among the earliest engineers of Delmora, transforming the waterways into structured networks of canals, levees, and irrigation systems. In contrast, the Ulshari developed a more reserved and enduring culture along the Great Lake, building stone cities that withstood both flood and time. | The Ruvin were among the earliest engineers of Delmora, transforming the waterways into structured networks of canals, levees, and irrigation systems. In contrast, the [[Ulshari]] developed a more reserved and enduring culture along the Great Lake, building stone cities that withstood both flood and time. | ||
Archaeological evidence and submerged ruins suggest the existence of older, possibly pre-Ruvin cultures now lost beneath the lake and river deltas. Whether these civilizations were destroyed by floods or gradually absorbed into later societies remains the subject of both scholarship and myth. | Archaeological evidence and submerged ruins suggest the existence of older, possibly pre-Ruvin cultures now lost beneath the lake and river deltas. Whether these civilizations were destroyed by floods or gradually absorbed into later societies remains the subject of both scholarship and myth. | ||