Stuff I've written so far
Neumark
The Fenlands
The Fenlands are a region of swamps, bogs, and marshlands. Here the great Glaubourne flows slowly through the flat lands on its way from the mountains to the sea. The Crownway skirts the edge of the Fenlands on Harralds Causeway. There are few reliable roads into the Fenlands proper, and the interior itself is accessible only by boat. The Fenlands have frustrated would-be conquerors since time immemorial. The waters breed irritating flies, as well as snakes of many kinds and dire turtles that can be as big as a man.
The people of the Fenlands are mainly First Men. The Old Faith is still quite strong here, and many Fenlanders believe very strongly in magic, curses and witchcraft. Fenlanders tend to live in small farmsteads. Fish and wetland plants provide important food sources. The lower classes are poor but also enjoy a great degree of freedom. The High Church has a strong presence in most of the larger villages, and the Tolan Monks have several monastic communities scattered through the area. These monasteries are known for producing philosophers and ascetics, and for beautifully illuminated manuscripts.
In wartime, Fenlanders are infamous for their use of poison, and for avoiding open battle in favor of ambushes and raids. Heavy armor is rare, being both too expensive and impractical. Horses are in short supply. To those who value chivalry, Fenlanders are held in contempt as a ragged band of cowardly sneaks. In their own terrain, Fenlanders can be virtually undefeatable, but on open, solid ground their light infantry based armies are at a serious disadvantage.
House Carr: Lords of Still Waters
House Carr is the ruling house of the Fenlands. With roots in the Dawn Age, the Carrs have been challenged for dominance by other Fenland clans and attacked by outsiders. Yet in the end the Carrs have always come out of any crisis intact. “Lord (or Lady) of Still Waters” is the traditional title of the Carrs.
The Carr emblem is the dire turtle. Their banner is the head and jaws of a dire turtle in black on a green field. Their words are “Strong, Steady, Deep.”
Holdings
Seat: Cluchdun (castle)
The seat of House Carr is Cluchdun. An old, but strong, fortress, Cluchdun is seated on a bend in the River Abanmal, which was dammed to form a broad lake. By land it is accessible only via a narrow, winding pathway ending in a retractable bridge. Most traffic comes to and from Cluchdun via shallow-bottomed boats. Two water gates are secured by iron portcullis. Inside the walls buildings are linked via wooden walkways, with buildings being constructed either on stone piers or wooden stilts, as the Castle is built entirely in the water. Like much of the Fenlands, Cluchdun is prone to fogs from autumn through spring, especially at dawn and dusk.
Illansall (town): A bustling town on the banks of the Glaubourne, Illansall is the main trading center linking the interior of the Fenlands to the rest of the world. Though the original town was clustered on an island thick with willow trees, the trees are mostly gone (except for one spectacular old willow in the town square) and the town has sprawled across wooden bridges to either side of the river. Dry by Fenland standards, the area still floods annually, and stinging insects can be a problem.
Vassals:
St Tola (monastery): The mother monastery of the Tolan monks, St Tola was a monk who escaped marauding Ostmen in the Heroic age, bringing priceless tomes and relics with him. He quickly attracted followers and students. St Tola and his successors earned a reputation for scholarship, both in spiritual and practical matters. St Tola himself is credited with codifying the local traditions of herbal medicine, copying them on numerous reedpaper scrolls. Tolan sacred texts are prized for their beautiful illuminations, made possible by inks derived from local plants and animals. Despite its prominence, the monestary itself remains a modest collection of daub and wattle buildings on an artificial island (known locally as a crannog). By design, it can only be reached by shallow-bottom boats or rafts.
The Darkwood
The Darkwood is a region with a sinister reputation. It’s a vast and ancient forest sprawling through an enormous valley in the White Mountains. The Darkwood Road is the only usable pathway over the mountains for a thousand leagues, yet most travelers choose to go around. The mountains cast long shadows over the wood, and the canopies of the trees blot out most of the sun. The wood is highly dangerous, those who leave the paths are easily lost and prey to the many strange and dangerous creatures legend says dwell there.
Despite its terrors, the Darkwood is home to a small population of hardy settlers. These live in a few villages in rare clearings along the road. The woodsmen are free peasants of modest means, known for close knit communities and warm hospitality. They farm and raise livestock (particularly pigs) in the eaves of the forest. The Darkwood is also the only source of silversilk, a beautiful and strong fabric made from the webs of nightweaver spiders. Woodsmen are almost all followers of the High Church, as believers in the Old Faith believe the woods to be a place of dangerous magical forces. Ancient First Men barrows can be found in the mountains along the woods’ southern edge. This gives the southern pass its name, the Barrowgate.
When mustered, the woodsmen can field a skilled, but small, force. The elite martial class is the Darkwood Rangers, full time servants of the Warden of the Wood. The Rangers are tasked with keeping the Darkwood Road open and containing the dangers within. The Rangers are widely considered the finest marksmen in the realm. Ordinary woodsmen are typically equipped in leather armor, sometimes punctuated by metal helmets. An axe or spear is the usual weapon, either alone or with a long shield.
House Faye: Wardens of the Wood
The ruling house of the Darkwood is House Faye. House Faye was granted the Darkwood in the immediate aftermath of the Conquest. In those days the White Mountains were the northern border of the Kingdom, and the Darkwood Road was often used by Wilderling raiding parties. Aldric Faye was given the title Warden of the Wood and tasked with defending the Barrowgate. Warden Aldric’s followers were the first men to actually dwell in the Darkwood, except for the legendary “Children of the Forest.”
The emblem of House Faye is a spider web. Their banner is a white web on a black field. Their words are “Keep clear the way.”
Members
Aerlene "the Uncanny" Faye, nee Hithe, regent for the Warden. Aged 27, Aerlene is from an Uppland family of minor nobility. Petite, with long brown hair and deep brown eyes. She's the widow of late Warden Gerald, who was recently killed by the Creeping Death plague. She bore him two children: son Brandon, 10, and daughter Autumn, 6. A lifelong interest in mysticism has taken a rather unsettling turn since the plague, earning her the nickname "The Witch in the Wood." Most of the tales spread about her are exaggeration and rumors.
Warden Brandon, aged 10. An adventurous boy fond of riding horses and climbing trees.
Autumn, aged 6. A shy girl fond of dancing.
Holdings
Seat: Whitestone (castle and town)
Founded by Alder Faye in 7 AC (After Conquest), Whitestone is located at almost the exact center of the wood. As his scouts explored the unsettled wilderness, they encountered a mysterious ring of huge white stones. Inside the ring, none of the ominous trees grew, creating an oasis of light and air. Faye built his castle on the site, incorporating the white monoliths into its outer wall. Modest compared to the seats of other great lords, Whitestone is a simple circular stone curtain wall surrounding a stout square keep.
Vassals:
Barrowgate (castle)
Located in the mountain pass of the same name, Barrowgate guards the southern edge of the wood. A simple, stern castle, Barrowgate is a single stone tower of four stories, surrounded by a dry stone bawn wall roughly as tall as a man. Barrowgate is home to a garrison of Rangers and is an important stop on the Darkwood Road.
Norwald
Norwald is one of the youngest provinces in the kingdom. This densely wooded region north of the White Mountains is watered by the mighty Snowmelt. Winters are long and harsh, but the rivers are full of fish, the woods abound in game and the soil quite fertile despite the short growing season. These qualities are what attracted the Wilderlings, who live in their largest bands along the river valley.
Winter and mountain sheltered the Wilderlings for more than two centuries. Raiding parties would cross into Neumark, raiding frontier villages and eluding pursuers as they returned with captives and plunder. Various lords of the northern lands would sometimes launch retaliatory raids, but these were always constrained by the need to be back south of the mountains before the snows came.
But roughly 50 years ago, Ser Walder Alton, second son of a landed knight near the Uppland border, began an unlikely campaign to change that. After a particularly damaging raid in late summer 247 AC, Ser Alton rode north as part of a retaliatory expedition. But rather than depart south in the autumn, Ser Walder persuaded several other young and ambitious knights, men and arms and archers to do the unthinkable; continue the campaign through the winter. Over the objection of his father and his liege lord, Ser Walder’s band struck out on their own.
Ser Walder the Hunter’s conquests and adventures in Norwald have since been the subject of many songs, legends and tall tales. What is certainly not myth is that Alton’s band, which numbered no more than 200, proved wildly successful. Wilderlings were accustomed to being safe from Neumarkers in the winter, allowing the young knight to take many villages by surprise. Some tribes allied with Alton, trading fealty for protection against rivals. By the spring of 248, he had carved a lordship out of the wilderness that included most of the Wilderling lands of the lower Snowmelt valley. His reputation attracted further followers, mostly other young knights and adventurers without prospects in the south. These men, combined with his Wilderling vassals, swelled his ranks and fueled still further conquests. By 250, Ser Walder’s conquests stretched as far as the northern end of the Darkwood Road. Loyal knights were anchoring the conquests with new castles, mainly wooden motte-and-bailey style. Ser Walder had made the Wilderling village of ((something Finnish)) his personal seat, and was speedily building a fortress of his own. Some had taken to calling him the King in the North.
King Edmund II, equally impressed by the conquest and alarmed at the Hunter’s independence, led a large expedition north by sea in summer 253. The nominal purpose of the expedition was to bolster Ser Walder’s efforts against the Wilderlings; the true purpose was to curtail any talk of a crown for Ser Walder. Ser Walder swore fealty to the King of Neumark, and in return was confirmed in his lands and granted the title Lord of Winter.
In the days since, the rate of expansion on the kingdom’s northern frontier has largely fallen to other lords, typically sent with royal backing. Consolidation, defense and settlement have been the chief occupation of the new rulers. A network of new castles has sprouted, and merchants and missionaries have built a serious foothold. Most of the Wilderling chiefs that allied themselves to House Alton are now counted as lords of Neumark, and have at least nominally embraced the High Church. But the woods are still filled with clans that have not bent the knee. Most of the best farmland has been granted to Ser Walder’s original companions or their descendants. These have adopted some usefull aspects of Wilderling culture (such as snowshoes, saunas, and sleighs drawn by reindeer or packs of dogs) but retain their distinct, southern identity.
In warfare Norwald fields a mixture of fierce, but lightly armored wilderling foot and a more typically Neumarkian force of knights, men and arms, and archers. Since the country is not well suited to breeding and upkeep of large warhorses, the number and quality of knights is not on par with southern houses. Most Norwald cavalry are lightly armored and mounted on smaller, but hardy horses. These are well suited to defending the frontier, but lack the overwhelming power of true knights.
House Alton: Lords of Winter
Though relative newcomers to the high nobility, House Alton commands a great deal of respect. They are known for their skill at, and fondness for, hunting. Their sigil is a stag skull with golden antlers. Their words are “One shot.”
Members
Lord Hugh Fitz-Walder: age 47. Succeeded his father after he was killed while bear-hunting in 294 AC.
Lady Aamu (nee Kvaenat): Age 30. A sister of one of Lord Walder’s Wilderling vassals, aunt of the present generation of House Kvaenat.
Robert Fitz-Hugh: age 16. Heir apparent
Ralf Fitz-Hugh: age 14
Matilda Fitz-Hugh: age 13
Walda Fitz-Hugh: age 8
Ser Richard Fitz-Walter: age 44. Lord Hugh’s brother
Lady Ansa (nee Mustapata): age 24. Daughter of Otso “the Old” Mustapata by his third wife.
Otto Fitz-Richard: age 9
Emma Fitz-Richard: age 5