Ìrastip

“When the horse riders were gone, lost to Amtar wars, pushed towards the sea, Irastip laid abandoned, parts taken into holy Zofia.”
  Parts of the holy city of Zofia once called themselves another name: the old city of Ìrastip, capital of the now long-lost Kyisafu Kingdom, forgotten for centuries after the Amtar conquests of lands. The parts once of this semi-nomadic capital bear little mark of the old way of life for the peoples who once lived around here but are now reduced to fishing along a small patch of coast and Sìtilmi, where said captial moved from place-to-place with the movement of the riders, or a khislirl, the clans and households that divided the society of the Kyisafu.   Perhaps the only sign this was once the ground to which Kings were commanded to settle by divine vision is the statue of the Tsìtshìlta Hìma Tsìtsmarril, the last Tsìtshìlta who decided to go down with the flames of the Amtar seige of this city buring all her histories much to the woe of the new emergance of scholars. Or maybe the last sign is the names, however Uganicized, such as the current Slitsmy area, 'the middle passage', where ridders were forbidden to camp unless ridders were commanded to by their great lord, or king as outsiders would say. Yet, this was where once great camps of ridders came with wives, children and large retineus came to watch their Great Lords crowned or humbled by a horse.
Type
City

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