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[Let's Read] The Adventurer's Guide to the Bible
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<blockquote data-quote="Demetrios1453" data-source="post: 9180357" data-attributes="member: 6801060"><p>Yeah, while actually better historically than I expected, I was still grinding my teeth at some of the descriptions. Ctesiphon was the capital of Parthia at this point (and had been for over a century), not Ecbatana. Sheba is far too north - they really should have used the Nabataeans, especially since Petra is mentioned (I can only assume that they were going for the name value, but they could easily have just extended the map south). And no member of the House of Herod ruled Damascus. Mesopotamia's geography is weird (Why are Babylon and the Tower of Babel in two different places? They're the same city, just with the Greek name and the Hebrew name. And southern Mesopotamia was famous for <em>not</em> being forested), but with Eden there as well, they're obviously giving the area a Biblical geography for the region than a strict historical one. The Biblical focus for this area, and the other regions, do make sense for this product, though, so I can't really object to it being done this way.</p><p> </p><p>And, yes, Parthia definitely did not have as many deep-water ports compared to Rome. I can think of only one, Charax Spasinu, where the Tigris-Euphrates flows into the sea. The Parthians were anything but a seafaring people, being steppe nomads who conquered modern Iran from the north, so giving them that faction benefit is definitely weird.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Demetrios1453, post: 9180357, member: 6801060"] Yeah, while actually better historically than I expected, I was still grinding my teeth at some of the descriptions. Ctesiphon was the capital of Parthia at this point (and had been for over a century), not Ecbatana. Sheba is far too north - they really should have used the Nabataeans, especially since Petra is mentioned (I can only assume that they were going for the name value, but they could easily have just extended the map south). And no member of the House of Herod ruled Damascus. Mesopotamia's geography is weird (Why are Babylon and the Tower of Babel in two different places? They're the same city, just with the Greek name and the Hebrew name. And southern Mesopotamia was famous for [I]not[/I] being forested), but with Eden there as well, they're obviously giving the area a Biblical geography for the region than a strict historical one. The Biblical focus for this area, and the other regions, do make sense for this product, though, so I can't really object to it being done this way. And, yes, Parthia definitely did not have as many deep-water ports compared to Rome. I can think of only one, Charax Spasinu, where the Tigris-Euphrates flows into the sea. The Parthians were anything but a seafaring people, being steppe nomads who conquered modern Iran from the north, so giving them that faction benefit is definitely weird. [/QUOTE]
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[Let's Read] The Adventurer's Guide to the Bible
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