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Darujhistan

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Darujhistan

 

The legendary city of Genabackis. One of the largest cities to be found. A city of great wealth, it avoided falling to the Malazan Empire.


 

Darujhistan: Legendary city on Genabackis, largest and most influential of the Free Cities, situated on the south shore of Lake Azur and peopled mainly by Daru and Gadrobi populations; the only known city to use natural gas as an energy source.

GotM, Glossary

 

"They had a mission ahead of them, one that would take them right into the heart of Darujhistan. The city was the next on the Empire's list, the last Free City, the continent's lone gem worthy enough to covet."

GotM, US HC, p.122

 

"Darujhistan – the greatest city in the world."

GotM, UK TPB, p.71

 

"His mission this night had been as a Roamer, patrolling the city's rooftops which, except for the occasional thief, were the assassin's sole domain, the means by which they traveled the city for the most part undetected. The rooftops provided their routes on missions of unsanctioned political...activities or the continuation of a feud between two Houses, or the punishment for betrayal. The Council ruled by day under public scrutiny; the Guild ruled by night, unseen, leaving no witnesses. It had always been this way, since Darujhistan first rose on the shores of Lake Azur."

GotM, US HC, p.140

 

"...The T'orrud Cabal – Darujhistan’s secret rulers..."

GotM, UK TPB, p.323

 

Population

  

'There are three hundred thousand people in Darujhistan'

GotM, UK TPB, p.477

 

Darujhistan and Environs

 

Despot’s Barbican: an ancient edifice and remnant of the Age of Tyrants

Hinter’s Tower: an abandoned sorcerer’s tower in the Noble District

Jammit’s Worry: the east road

Krul's Belfry/Temple: an abandoned temple in the Noble District

Phoenix Inn: a popular haunt in the Daru District

Quip’s Bar: a ramshackle bar in the Lakefront District.

The Estates (the Houses)

The Old Palace (Majesty Hall): present site of the Council

Worrytown: the slum outside the wall on Jammit’s Worry'

GotM, Glossary

 

"From the wharf sprawled along the shore of the lake, upward along the stepped tiers of the Gadrobi and Daru Districts, among the temple complexes and the Higher Estates, to the summit of Majesty Hill where gathers the city’s Council, the rooftops of Darujhistan presented flat tops, arched gables, coned towers, belfries and platforms crowded in such chaotic profusion as to leave all but the major streets for ever hidden from the sun. The torches marking the more frequented alleyways were hollow shafts that gripped pumice stones with fingers of blackened iron. Fed through ancient pitted copper pipes, gas hissed balls of flame around the porous stones, an uneven fire that cast a blue and green light. The gas was drawn from great caverns beneath the city and channelled by

massive valves...For nine hundred years the breath of gas had fed at least one of the city’s districts."

GotM, UK TPB, p.130-1

 

"The D'Arle estate was third from the summit of Old K'rul's Avenue, which climbed the first of the inner city's hills to a circular court tangled with weeds and irregular, half-buried dolmens. Opposite the court rose K'rul Temple, its ancient stones latticed with cracks and entombed in moss."

GotM, US HC, p.140

 

"Inland from Gadrobi District’s harbour the land rose in four tiers climbing eastward. Ramped cobblestone streets, worn to a polished mosaic, marked Gadrobi District’s Trade Streets, five in all, which were the only routes through Marsh District and into the next tier, Lakefront District. Beyond Lakefront’s crooked aisles twelve wooden gates opened on to Daru District, and from Daru another twelve gates – these ones manned by the City Watch and barred by iron portcullis – connected the lower and upper cities.

On the fourth and highest tier brooded the estates of Darujhistan’s nobility as well as its publicly known sorcerers. At the intersection of Old King’s Walk and View Street rose a flat-topped hill on which sat Majesty Hall, where each day the Council gathered. A narrow park encircled the hill, with sand-strewn pathways winding among centuries-old acacias. At the park’s entrance, near High Gallows Hill, stood a massive rough-hewn stone gate, the last-surviving remnant of the castle that once commanded Majesty Hill.

The days of kings had long since ended in Darujhistan. The gate, known as Despot’s Barbican, stood stark and unadorned, its lattice of cracks a fading script of past tyranny."

GotM, UK TPB, p.143, US HC, p.148-9

 

Majesty Hall

"A massive stone disc in Majesty Hall marked the Cycle of the Age, naming each year in accordance with its mysterious moving mechanisms."

GotM, US HC, p.402

 

"His gaze traveled the slope there as it climbed to the summit, on which loomed the squat bulk of Majesty Hall."

GotM, US HC, p.168

 

Quip's Bar

"Crouched against the Second Tier Wall on the Lakefront side was Quip's Bar, a common haunt of shipmen and fisher-hands. The bar's walls were cut sandstone, and over time the whole edifice had developed a backward lean, as if withdrawing from the front street. Quip's now sagged against the Second Tier Wall, as did the adjoining squatter shacks constructed mostly of driftwood and hull planks washed ashore from the occaisional wreck out on Mole's Reef."

GotM, US HC, p.268

 

History

 

"...It has managed to survive three thousand years."

GotM, UK TPB, p.320

 

"Darujhistan was born on a rumor. Among the indigenous Gadrobi hill tribes survived the legend that a Jaghut's barrow lay somewhere in the hills. Now, the Jaghut were possessors of great magic, creaters of secret Warrens and items of power. Over time the Gadrobi legend made its way beyond the hills, into the Genebackan north and the Catlin south, to kingdoms since crumbled to dust in the east and west. In any case, searchers came to the hills, at first a trickle then hordes - entire tribes led by power-hungry shamans and warlocks. Every hillside was laced with trenches and bore-holes. From the camps and shantytowns, from thousands of treasure-seekers arriving each spring, a city was born." -Mammot

GotM, US HC, p.263

 

Tyrant Kings  

The Tyrant Kings: the ancient rulers of Darujhistan

GotM, glossary

 

"'The history of Darujhistan,’ he said. ‘I am just beginning the fifth volume, which opens with the reign of Ektalm, second to last of the Tyrant Kings...Usurper of Letastte and succeeded by his daughter, Sandenay, who brought on the Rising Time and with it the end of the age of tyrants."

GotM, UK TPB, p.271

 

The Wheel of Ages  

"A massive stone disc in Majesty Hall marked the Cycle of the Age, naming each year in accordance with its mysterious moving mechanisms...the wheel was in fact a machine. It had been a gift to Darujhistan over a thousand years ago, by a man named Icarium."

GotM, UK TPB, p.420

 

Grayfaces  

"For nine hundred years the breath of gas had fed at least one of the city's districts. Though pipes had been sundered by raging tenement fires and gouts of flame reached hundreds of feet into the sky, the Grayfaces had held on, twisting the shackles and driving their invisible dragon to its knees."

GotM, US HC, p.138

 

"Throughout Darujhistan the Grayfaces prepared to shut the valves feeding gas to the torches lining the major avenues. These figures moved in small groups, gathering at intersections then dispersing with the day's first bell."

GotM, US HC, p.305

 

"In the street, the Grayfaces moved through the noisy crowd like silent specters, lighting the gas-lamps with long-poled sparkers. Some people, brazen with drink, hugged the figures and blessed them. The Grayfaces, hooded and anonymous, simply bowed in reply and continued on their way once freed."

GotM, US HC, p.425

 

The Collected Works of

 

Pauper's Stone

 

The night held close

as I wandered

my spirit unfooted

to either earth or stone

unraveled from tree

undriven by iron nail

but like the night itself

a thing of air

stripped of light

so I came upon them,

those masons who cut and carved

stone in the night

sighting by stars and battered hand

'What of the sun?' asked I of them.

'Is not its cloak of revelation

the warmth of reason

in your shaping?'

And one among them answered,

'No soul can withstand

the sun's bones of light

and reason dims

when darkness falls -

so we shape our barrows in the night

for you and your kin.'

'Forgive my interruption, then,' said I.

'The dead never interrupt,' said the mason,

'they but arrive.'

Pauper's Stone

Darujhistan

GotM, US HC, p.251 

 

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