Difference between revisions of "Urban (range)"
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'''Urban''' ranges are densely settled areas relating to concentrated [[Town|towns]] or [[City|cities]], and with few exceptions, [[Village|villages]] as well. The dwellers in urban ranges work primarily on non-agricultural tasks; while some settled population areas include orchards or fields located inside their environs, these parts are correctly thought of as [[Rural (range)|rural]] and not urban. Urban describes dense streets, buildings, drainage for sanitation and masonry for defense and managing the population. | '''Urban''' ranges are densely settled areas relating to concentrated [[Town|towns]] or [[City|cities]], and with few exceptions, [[Village|villages]] as well. The dwellers in urban ranges work primarily on non-agricultural tasks; while some settled population areas include orchards or fields located inside their environs, these parts are correctly thought of as [[Rural (range)|rural]] and not urban. Urban describes dense streets, buildings, drainage for sanitation and masonry for defense and managing the population. | ||
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+ | Urban ranges are built to take in tremendous supplies of food and materials for consumption and manufacturing, the latter being transported outwards. Cities and towns resemble a great bellows, with the movement of ships, boats and wagons flowing in and out. Port quays, docksides along rivers and large holding areas collect stores of goods which are sheltered under sheds or within great storehouses — which may overflow, depending upon the produce and which season it is, into the streets and lots. This is especially true of agricultural produce, which pours into the urban center more quickly than it can be transshipped outwards again. | ||
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+ | The urban center also serves as an administrative and defensive bulwark of the province or kingdom — and so a substantial portion of the population relates to accounting, decision-making and maintaining order (not only of the urban space but also its environs). Authority is far from centralized; it is divided between nobles, military orders, guilds, cabals and religious entities, each of whom liaison with one another while subtly vying for control of the urban center's people and wealth. |
Revision as of 20:35, 8 November 2020
Urban ranges are densely settled areas relating to concentrated towns or cities, and with few exceptions, villages as well. The dwellers in urban ranges work primarily on non-agricultural tasks; while some settled population areas include orchards or fields located inside their environs, these parts are correctly thought of as rural and not urban. Urban describes dense streets, buildings, drainage for sanitation and masonry for defense and managing the population.
Urban ranges are built to take in tremendous supplies of food and materials for consumption and manufacturing, the latter being transported outwards. Cities and towns resemble a great bellows, with the movement of ships, boats and wagons flowing in and out. Port quays, docksides along rivers and large holding areas collect stores of goods which are sheltered under sheds or within great storehouses — which may overflow, depending upon the produce and which season it is, into the streets and lots. This is especially true of agricultural produce, which pours into the urban center more quickly than it can be transshipped outwards again.
The urban center also serves as an administrative and defensive bulwark of the province or kingdom — and so a substantial portion of the population relates to accounting, decision-making and maintaining order (not only of the urban space but also its environs). Authority is far from centralized; it is divided between nobles, military orders, guilds, cabals and religious entities, each of whom liaison with one another while subtly vying for control of the urban center's people and wealth.