Difference between revisions of "Highport"
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===Leadership=== | ===Leadership=== | ||
====Kertek Bilarro==== | ====Kertek Bilarro==== | ||
− | Kertek (Hum, Rog 6/Ari 2) is 20 years older than the young lord who arrived in Highport and claimed the city for his own, but he's just as crafty, charismatic, and wily as he ever was. He understands his position in the city has diminished since his deal with Turrosh Mak, but he also knows that he plays a crucial role in governing the human population of the city ... and that if he left (or died) a significant percentage of that population would leave. Mak is also all-too-aware of that fact, and it gives Kertek a sense of job security, and some power when it comes to negotiating with his peers. | + | Count [[Kertek Bilarro]] (Hum, Rog 6/Ari 2) is 20 years older than the young lord who arrived in Highport and claimed the city for his own, but he's just as crafty, charismatic, and wily as he ever was. He understands his position in the city has diminished since his deal with Turrosh Mak, but he also knows that he plays a crucial role in governing the human population of the city ... and that if he left (or died) a significant percentage of that population would leave. Mak is also all-too-aware of that fact, and it gives Kertek a sense of job security, and some power when it comes to negotiating with his peers. |
==== General Braks-dur-Vulzon ==== | ==== General Braks-dur-Vulzon ==== |
Revision as of 17:57, 11 September 2008
Contents
- 1 Overview
- 2 The City
- 2.1 City Overview
- 2.2 City Gates
- 2.3 The Piers
- 2.4 Orc Districts
- 2.5 Humanoid Districts
- 2.6 Human Districts
- 2.7 Tent Fields
- 2.8 Specific Locations
- 2.8.1 Temple of the Earth Dragon (1)
- 2.8.2 Warehouse District (2)
- 2.8.3 Lighthouses (3)
- 2.8.4 Temple of Gruumsh (4)
- 2.8.5 Temple of Yeenoghu (5)
- 2.8.6 Temple of Mictlantecuhtli (6)
- 2.8.7 Lord's Palace (7)
- 2.8.8 Temple of Beltar (8)
- 2.8.9 House of Quiet (9)
- 2.8.10 Temple of Erythnul (10)
- 2.8.11 Temple of Incabulous (11)
- 2.8.12 Temple of Hextor (12)
- 2.8.13 Temple of Nerull (13)
- 2.8.14 Temple of Pyremius (14)
- 2.8.15 Temple of Iuz (15)
- 2.8.16 Temple of Vecna (16)
- 2.8.17 Temple of Maglubiyet (17)
- 2.8.18 Stockade (18)
- 2.8.19 Guardhouse (19)
- 2.8.20 The Fat Cow (20)
- 3 People
- 4 Sites
- 5 Organizations
Overview
- Country: Located in::Orcish Empire
- Leader: Count Kertek Bilarro
- Population: Population::20000
Note: Much of the material on this pageis taken from TSR 11621: Slavers, released in 2000. Our campaign's timeline differs in significant ways from that source book, but much of Highport remains the same.
The largest humanoid city on The Pomarj, located on the northern side of the peninsula on the shores of the Wooley Bay. It is part of the Orcish Empire, and is known to have a large contingent of Uruk Hai (high orcs) as well as representatives of almost every other humanoid race. In spite of this, it retains a a sizable human population, largely due to the pirate, smuggling and slaving activities that are still common in the city.
History
Highport was ruled for centuries by Count Kevram Bilarro, a powerful wizard who extended his life through the prodigious use of 'potions of longevity'. Unfortunately, one such draught malfunctioned, and instead of gaining another 10 years of life, he instantly lost a hundred.
He died instantly and with no heir, throwing the entire city into chaos. This ended when a distant relative named Kern Bilarro -- a nephew several times removed who also happened to be a Wild Coast warlord of considerably strength -- brought his men to the city and seized the Lord's Palace for himself.
He ruled until the city was invaded by the orcs in CY 513, burning and looting their way through the city in an event that came to be known as the Night of the Bloody Spear by the survivors.
In the decades that followed, the city was ruled by an uneasy coalition of humanoid tribes. Humans -- typically the most evil scum ever to sail the Azure Sea -- began to return as well, with the bravest and strongest pirates using it as a port. A handful of tradesmen followed, and in time a sense of normalcy returned to the city.
Leadership
Kertek Bilarro
Count Kertek Bilarro (Hum, Rog 6/Ari 2) is 20 years older than the young lord who arrived in Highport and claimed the city for his own, but he's just as crafty, charismatic, and wily as he ever was. He understands his position in the city has diminished since his deal with Turrosh Mak, but he also knows that he plays a crucial role in governing the human population of the city ... and that if he left (or died) a significant percentage of that population would leave. Mak is also all-too-aware of that fact, and it gives Kertek a sense of job security, and some power when it comes to negotiating with his peers.
General Braks-dur-Vulzon
The military commander of the city -- a brutal Urak-Hai known as General Braks-dur-Vulzon ("Brings the Fires of Doom") (Urak-Hai, Ftr 12) arrived ahead a column of 200 highly-disciplined, ruthless High Orcs. He deployed these orcs to bring order to the city ... and crucified any who dared disobey on the newly-christened "Killing Way" (a stretch of the old Slave Road to the Drachensgrab Mountains). He and his fellow Urak-Hai occupy the Lord's Palace.
Brother Nofosh
The leader of the Temple of the Earth Dragon in the city -- the half orc Nofosh (Half-Orc, Clr 9) wields considerable power in the city, and is crucial to maintaining the peace.
Tanva the Gold
Tanva the Gold (female elf, Wiz/Enc 8) completes the triumverate of Mak agents in the city. She long ago assumed leadership of The Illumination, a cadre of half-insane wizards hellbent on creating ever more powerful (and ever more strange) magic items, encouraging them to create weapons for the Empire of Mak. She is typically found at the Lord's Palace serving as an "advisor" for Kertek Bilarro.
The City
City Overview
Highport is a dark, dirty city firmly in the grip of evil, but safe for those that don't appear weak. The humanoid districts within the city reek of filth, unwashed bodies, and rotting meat, with the human districts being in a somewhat more tolerable state. Some of the buildings still show burns and damage from the Night of the Bloody Spear, but most present at the time of the invasion of fallen down or been renovated by the new inhabitants.
Some parts of the town are little more than open fields with large and small tents, where drunken sailors, poor mercenaries and outcasts of many races grab a few hours of sleep at any time of the day. A large area devoted to warehouses covers part of the shoreline, and the damaged city walls have been rebuilt.
Religion
The temple of the Earth Dragon is in a renovated temple of Xerbo that was looted and damaged during the sacking of the city. Other dark deities with temples here include Beltar (caves, pits, calice), Erythnul (hate, slaughter), Incabulos (plagues, famine, disasters), Hextor (war, discord, tyrany), Iuz, Mictlantecuhtli (Olman death god), Nerull (death, murder), Pyremius (poison, murder), the Cult of Vecna (destruction and evil secrets) and various humanoid goids.
Of course, not everyone in Highport is a monomaniacl cuththroat; many are merchants and other people (not necessarily humans) just looking to do businesses, and are just not concerned with the sort of person who pays them for their goods. A wide variety of shops, inns and taversn exist within Highport, serving the roug-and-tumble clientele and providing the basic services that are necessary to all: equipment, food, clothing and such.
Strange Allies
The city has some strange allies and unique vermin. A flock of harpies nests in a pair of unused watchtowers. They scout the near part of the bay in exchange for food and pretty trinkets. Some of the braver people in town have tamed giant weasels as pets or guard animals, while wild ones run free in the humanoid districts. A pair of mated hill giants hire themselves out to different groups as bodyguards or laborers and they compete for work with a single pack of trolls that live in town. An extended family of ogres works as a mercenary group (either on land or on a pirate ship) and the temple of Nerull has an agreement with a pack of ghouls that lives outside the city. Many parts of the town are prone to hordes of giant rats sweeping through the entire neighborhood, and casks of oil are kept ready for lighting to act as barricades for the rodents.
The local stirge population is significant, having grown fat feeding on the rats, but they themselves are a dangerous enough threat that the harpies have been hired to kill them off periodically (an effort that has had mixed results).
Guilds of Note
The city is home to a number of evil adventuring and mercenary guilds. The foremost of these are the Grey Renders, a union of necessity between about a half dozen smaller human guilds and cults from within Highport, which was founded to protect their interests within that city and the surrounding area.
Also notable are the Followers of the Skeletal Way, a fantatical group of warriors, mages and thieves who have pledged themselves to the service of Nerull and His agents on Oerth. They are known to serve the Cult of Death Undying, a Nerullite group based in the Obsidian Maze in the Drachensgrab Mountains.
City Gates
Unlike other walled cities its size, Highport has only one main entrance to the city: The Great Gate. There are two smaller side gates -- the Suss Gate and the Coast Gate -- but they are heavily fortified and closed to all but military traffic. This design, dictated by the original count of the city, was intended as a defense against the marauding humanoids of the peninsula. It has worked, but it has also created massive logisitical problems in the city.
On major trade days its not uncommon for traders trying to get into the city to be backed up for several miles along the Coast Road, the highway that runs from Highport to Blue. Before the Greyhawk Wars, Highport's rulers allowed only select individuals -- mostly fishermen and farmers -- to set up settlements outside of the city's fortification, but Turrosh Mak put an end to that practice for security reasons.
The Piers
The Piers is the collective term for the city's sprawling warehouse and shipping district. Most of its streets are cluttered, claustrophoic and generally unsettling for most people. Rangers especially despise the place.
Some of the buildings here are made from stone, but most are made from wood harvested from the surrounding woodlands. Exposure to the corrosive, ever-present sea air has ravaged many of the buildings to the point that most are near the point of collapse. That inevitible occurance has been postponed in many cases by the addition of new, but still inferior, wooden supports.
Bands of thieves, pirates and other cutthroats fill the Wharf like vile human rodents. Blood is spilled nightly in bar fights that can quickly grow to include more than 200 combatants.
About half of Highport's original piers are completely ruined. The local authorities have towed derelict ships into place on these pierces to use as additional storage space, as well as to confuse would-be attackers about which piers are actually viable. The remaining piers either survived the Night of the Blood Spear or have been rebuilt since that time. The piers are almost exclusively used for trade, with only one near the eastern part of town having facilities for making repairs. Ships are not build in Highport; rather most of the heavy ship-building is done at Elredd.
What passes for the city guard here -- the Count's Men -- rarely enter the Piers, and when they do, it is usually to escort a particular cargo to some of the better warehousing facilites outside of the district.
Orc Districts
Each of the orc districts (as noted on the Highport map) is home to one minor tribe of orcs. Their buildings are universally run down, and the entire area smells particularly bad. Orc hunting parties make daily forays into the grassland outside of the city in search of meat to supplement the food they buy, and those on the waterfront do a lot of fishing as well. Unlike Elredd, there is very little territorialism between the dsitricts. Orcs can enter the human areas, and vice versa, but there is little incentive to do so other than as a means to get to another part of the town.
Humanoid Districts
Each of the humanoid districts in the city tends to be exclusive to one sort of humanoid. The eastern part of town has gnolls, the western part has hobgoblins, goblins, and small groups of norkers. The southwestern humanoid district is another goblin haven, and the small group near the Lord's Palace is entirely composed of orogs. Like the orc parts of the city, the buildings in these regions are in a state of disrepeair and smell foul; the only exception to this pattern is the orog tribe, which is nearly indistinguishable from a human district except for the decorations they use.
Human Districts
The human parts of town show the highest degree of attention to preserving existing buildings and the most new construction. In addition to homes, the human district has more shops than other parts of town these shops are patronized by all inhabitants of the town, regardless of race.
Tent Fields
These are the poorer parts of town, little more than areas of clear rubble dotted with tents or lean-tos, and inhabited by the most wretched of the free populace.
Specific Locations
'These locations are keyed to the Highport map. Both the locations and the map are taken from the TSR 11621 Slavers source book.'
Temple of the Earth Dragon (1)
The Temple of the Earth Dragon used to be dedicated to the Suel god Xerbo, but was desecrated on the Night of the Bloody Spear. It has since been stripped of its old religious icons and rebuilt by the human allies of Turrosh Mak as a Temple of the Earth Dragon. It's view of the harbor is unrestricted, and is a frequent stop for visitors of all races because the priests here offer free food and the lowest rates for healing magic.
The high priest here is Nofosh (half-orc, Clr 9). He is assisted by twenty lesser priests and ten acolytes (orc, human and half-orc, Clr 2-Clr 5)
Warehouse District (2)
The Warehouse District is part of the Piers, and provides temporary storage for goods passing through the city. They are guarded by mixed groups of human and humanoid soldiers.
Lighthouses (3)
These towers have been converted into lighthouses; each is a defensive tower with a beacon mounted on the top. Humans and half-orcs typically man the lights, since humanoids detest the bright illumination.
Temple of Gruumsh (4)
Temple of Yeenoghu (5)
Temple of Mictlantecuhtli (6)
Lord's Palace (7)
Temple of Beltar (8)
House of Quiet (9)
Temple of Erythnul (10)
Temple of Incabulous (11)
Temple of Hextor (12)
Temple of Nerull (13)
Temple of Pyremius (14)
Temple of Iuz (15)
Temple of Vecna (16)
Temple of Maglubiyet (17)
Stockade (18)
Guardhouse (19)
The Fat Cow (20)
People
- Count Kertek Bilarro, the nominal human leader of Highport
- Braks-dur-Vulzon, High Orc general of Highport
- Brother Nofosh, High Priest of the Earth Dragon in Highport
- Tanva the Gold, leader of the Illumination and Court Wizard in Highport
Sites
This is a dynamic list of all the sites associated with this location. {{#ask:located in::Highport | ?Population | format=ul }}
Organizations
- Church of Hextor, Highport: Even in a city dominated by humanoids, the Church of Hextor is a force to be reckoned with.
- Illumination, The: About 15 mages belong to this reclusive, exclusive organization which serves as the city's Wizards Guild.
- Followers of the Skeletal Way: A fantatical group of warriors, mages and thieves who have pledged themselves to the service of Nerull and His agents on Oerth.
- Grey Renders Guild: An adventuring guild based in Highport with members of an evil and corrupt nature
- Count's Men: What passes for the City Guard in Highport; these men make no attempt to patrol the humanoid portions of the city, instead sticking to the human-controlled areas.