Table of Contents
Info for Free Men
Info for Free Women
Info for slaves
Cities & Regions

 


Port Kar Arsenal & Named Locations

The Arsenal
Many warehouses, shops and foundries
These are built of stone, with slate or tin roofs
Numerous sheds and roofed storage areas are wooden, separated from one another
Numberous basins of water
Red wooden boxes store folded leather buckets near basins for fire-fighting
Larger basins connect with canals to allow transport of heavy materials
2 points of canal access to city canal system, 2 points of access to Tamber Gulf
Heavy barred gates at these canal points


"Fire has always been regarded as the great hazard to the arsenal. Accordingly many of her warehouses, shops and foundries are built of stone, with slated or tinned roofs. Wooden structures, such as her numerous sheds and roofed storage areas tend to be separated from one another.

Within the arsenal itself there are numerous basins, providing a plenitude of water. Many of these basins, near which, in red-painted wooden boxes, are stored large numbers of folded leather buckets, are expressly for the purpose of providing a means for fighting fires.

Some of the other basins are large enough to float galleys; these large basins connect with the arsenal's canal system, by means of which heavy materials may be conveyed about the arsenal; the arsenal's canal system also gives access, at two points, to the canal system of the city and, at two other points, to the Tamber Gulf, beyond which lies gleaming Thassa.

Each of these four points are guarded by great barred gates. The large basins, just mentioned, are of two types: the first, unroofed, is used for the underwater storage and seasoning of Tur wood; the second, roofed, serves for heavier fittings and upper carpentry of ships, and for repairs that do not necessitate recourse to the roofed dry docks."

"The damage to the arsenal, which I had seen with my own eyes, and had taken statistical reports on from the scribes, had not been particularly serious. It amounted to the destruction of one roofed area where Ka-la-na wood was stored, and the partial destruction of another; one small warehouse for the storage pitch, one of several, had been destroyed; two dry docks had been lost, and the shop of the oarmakers, near the warehouse for oars, had been damaged; the warehouse itself, as it turned out, had escaped the fire."
Named Piers
Pier of the Red Urt
Spice Pier
Pier Sixteen

Named Canals
Rim Canal
Ribbon Canal
Ribbon's Alley

“There are some girls behind the paga taverns, on the northern shore of the Ribbon’s alley,” she said. I released her and she sank to her knees, gasping. The Ribbon is one of Port Kar’s better-known canals. A narrower canal, somewhat south of it is called the Ribbon’s alley. It was a bit past dawn and the paga taverns backing on the smaller canal would be throwing out their garbage from the preceding night. She-urts sometimes gather at such places for their pick of the remnants of feasts.
Explorers
Swing Bridges
Few bridges on larger, main canals
Those bridges are swing bridges, that float back against canal
Allows merchant (round)ships to pass since thier masts are fixed.
Can also block canals and isolate areas of the city

"The larger canals in Port Kar, incidentally, have few bridges, and those they have are commonly swing bridges, which may be floated back against the canal’s side. This makes it possible for merchant ships, round ships, with permanently fixed masts, to move within the city, and, from the military point of view, makes it possible to block canals and also, when drawn back, isolate given areas of the city by the canals which function then as moats. The swing bridges are normally fastened back, except from the eighth to the tenth Ahn and from the fifteenth to the seventeenth Ahn."


Back to The Main Page of The Library of Gorean Knowledge
gorean_librarian@yahoo.com