City of Brass (Dungeons & Dragons)

Greyhawk Realm
City of Brass
Motto
Region Elemental Plane of Fire
Ruler Marrake al-Sidan al-Hariq ben Lazen, Grand Sultan of All the Efreet
Government Feudal monarchy
Established unknown (millennia ago)
Capital City of Brass
Major Towns
Provinces
Resources Tin, copper, diamonds, fireweed, qamh, habbat, tergamit, verdobba, umbellin, crimson rye, sweet shiverrod, heavy woods.
Coinage
Population 4,000,000+ (800,000 slaves)
Races Efreet (40%), salamanders (15%), mephits (15%), humanoids (15%), azer (3%), magmin (3%), thoqqua (1%), other (8%). Slaves: elementals (25%), mephits (18%), humanoids (15%), thoqqua (12%), azer (7%), magmin (7%), salamanders (6%), efreet (1%), other (9%)
Languages Jannti, Midani, Auran, Common, Ignan, Infernal
Alignments Lawful evil*, neutral
Religions Agni, Imix, Kossuth, Freya, Surtr, Hastsezini
Allies Dao (trading partners), devils of the Nine Hells
Enemies Djinni

In the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, the City of Brass is the capital of the great efreeti empire on the Elemental Plane of Fire.

Publication history

The City of Brass is first fully described in the original first edition Manual of the Planes (1987). It is described as "a huge citadel that is home to the majority of efreet" and is where their grand sultan lives.[1]

History

The history of the City is long and storied. In the Age before Ages it was part of the vast empire of the Wind Dukes of Aaqa. Most relevant to the world of Oerth is the cautionary story of Tzunk, who once tried to conquer it using the Codex of the Infinite Planes. He failed, miserably. Fragments of his body are buried in the Tomb of Tzunk's Hands, a few hexes away from a portal to the City of Brass in the Burning Cliffs region.

Geography and climate

The City of Brass is built upon a 40-mile-diameter (64 km) glowing brass hemisphere that floats (curved side down) above rivers of magma and the fiery lakes and seas of the plane. At the Grand Sultan's command, the hemisphere can sink into a sea of flame so that the ports can be used. The city itself takes up only a small portion of the flat side of the hemisphere, the rest being used for agriculture, mining, hunting, and military exercises.

The city itself is enormous in its own right, featuring towers, domes, and tall spires rising above the brass city walls.

People

Population

The rulers and most common race in the City of Brass are the efreet, though other races - including humanoid ones like humans, elves, and so forth - are allowed to dwell within the city's walls as well.

Secrets of the Lamp set the population of the City of Brass at over 4,000,000, about 800,000 of them slaves.[2] The Planar Handbook set the population at 500,000 free beings and 1,000,000 slaves.[3]

Religion

The most popular deity among the common efreet, who are largely neutral in alignment, is Agni of the Vedic pantheon, the god who consumes all torches. Agni's faith is only tolerated by the nobles, who dislike Agni's message of redemption and immortality. Also extremely popular among the common efreet is the Norse goddess Freya, called Freyal by the efreet.

The most popular deities among the nobles, who are uniformly lawful evil, are Imix (the fiery Prince of Elemental Evil) and Hastsezini, the cruel Amerindian god of flames.

The fire giant god Surtr has an ugly shrine (the Smoking Hammer Shrine) in the city where the local fire giants leave offerings. The efreet acknowledge Surtr but do not worship him.

The Mosque of Kossuth, Tyrant-King of the Fire Elementals, has fallen into disrepair, as his worship is discouraged. No sultan has dared to tear the mosque down completely, however.

Government

The absolute ruler of the City of Brass is the Grand Sultan of the Efreet, the Lord of Flame, the Potentate Incandescent, the Tempering and Eternal Flame of Truth, the Most Puissant of Hunters, Marshal of the Order of the Fiery Heart, the Smoldering Dictator, the Crimson Firebrand, Marrake al-Sidan al-Hariq ben Lazen. He rules from his Charcoal Palace in the absolute center of the city. There have been many different sultans or sultanas over the millennia due to coups and other deaths. Beneath him is his court, a vast host of sycophants made up of efreeti nobles of various ranks.

The nobles enjoy close relationships with the lords of the Nine Hells, exchanging slaves and perhaps even common efreet in exchange for the power of the baatezu legions. The devils have an impressively-sized embassy within the city.

The City of Brass has very strict laws. The punishment for violating them is often slavery.

Administrative Divisions

The beys and amirs of the City of Brass are each responsible for a thurgur, or military zone, somewhere on the plane of Elemental Fire. Each thurgur contains up to four great fortresses, or albarrana. These thurgur are found everywhere on the plane, and each is ruled locally by a malik or vali. The only albarrana to be named in a published source are the Suhkteh Albarrana (Burnt Fortress), said in Planes of Chaos to contain a portal to the realm of Muspelheim, and Black Fist, which floats upon the Sea of Scorching Waves near the Isles of Scorched Bones, where the skeletons of some long-dead race are said to lie.

The efreet living on the Prime Material Plane are ruled by six great pashas who dwell within the City of Brass, ruling between them six fiery realms in the name of the Grand Sultan.

Economy

The City of Brass deals in slaves, both buying and selling them. It also trades in metals, gems, worked stone, colored glass, weapons, and the rare heavy woods of the Sable Forest. Trade with the dao and, to a lesser extent, other races of genies is brisk. The efreet trade slaves, servants, and information with the Nine Hells; osyluths, cornugons, and even the occasional pit fiend are not uncommon sights in the city.

Resources

Raw materials grown or mined within the glowing hemisphere of the City of Brass itself include tin, copper, diamonds, fireweed, qamh, habbat, tergamit, verdobba, umbellin, crimson rye, sweet shiverrod, and the aforementioned heavy woods.

Transportation

A conduit leading to and from the Elemental Plane of Earth, the Iron Crucible, takes the form of a lava tube beneath the City of Brass. Efreet enter it when going to dao lands to trade for precious gems and metals, while dao caravans come through it bearing slaves.

As mentioned above, a portal to Oerth's Burning Cliffs is also nearby. Portals to the Nine Hells abound within the City of Brass; there are several portals to other planes in various places, privately controlled by various individuals. There is a portal to Muspelheim in the Smoking Hammer Shrine of Surtr. The transplanar path known as the Infinite Staircase touches near the City of Brass, across a fire-cracked plain.

The City of Brass is composed of thousands of streets and a number of major canals filled with flammable oil. Canals include the Sahhar Canal, the Albrazi Canal, the Great Canal, the Riqaq, and the Naranj Canal; the Great Canal is the largest, running from the harbor to the Basalt Palazzo of the azer. Brass bridges cross the canals; these can be lifted to let barges past. The main thoroughfare is the Street of Stelae, which joins the harbor to the Charcoal Palace. The streets observe strict curfews every night; anyone violating curfew can be fined on the first offense, lose a hand on the second, and be executed on the third offense.

The City of Brass itself normally drifts slowly; it can be moved quickly in an emergency, but this leaves a vacuum of power among the nearby subjugated races, and so is avoided.

Military

The Grand Sultan has a variety of different military groups.

Navy

The Sultan has a personal fleet of 90 booms and 40 baghla, hulled with stone and capable of sailing over magma. 10% can fly. The navy of the City of Brass includes 18,000 galley slaves, sailors, marines, shipwrights, and so on.

Other versions

Other RPG companies have published versions of the City of Brass, among them Sir Robilar's City of Brass by Jeff Knight and Robert J. Kuntz, published in 2003 by Kenzer & Company,[4] and City of Brass by Casey Christofferson and Scott Greene, published in 2007 by Necromancer Games.

References

  1. Grubb, Jeff. Manual of the Planes (TSR, 1987)
  2. Baur, Wolfgang. Secrets of the Lamp. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1993
  3. Cordell, Bruce R. and Gwendolyn F.M. Kestrel. Planar Handbook. Renton, WA: Wizards of the Coast, 2004
  4. To the City of Brass at the Acaeum

Additional reading

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