Subject: A different view of Minas Tirith.
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Posted on: 2019-04-23 09:19:00 UTC

Ralph Damiani is an artist whose work I only ran into recently, but instantly put onto my desktop wallpaper rotation. Just today, it's popped up with this image of Minas Tirith.

The differences from Fonstad's version (thanks, Snowy) are remarkable. Rather than seven more-or-less concentric circles, Damiani gives us seven stacked circles, with each circle extending forward from the sheer back face of the mountain. I haven't exhaustatively compared it to the text, but it doesn't seem to obviously contradict it. (I'd quibble some of the detail - the 'keel of rock' appears to be missing, or else the city is significantly skewed - but the principle works.) It actually makes more sense of Pippin's wanderings: with each circle almost a semicircle of settlement, there's a lot more room to get lost. You end up with something like this:



With the widest part of each circle about 130 meters; for comparison, the old Roman walled city of Chester was less than 600m across; Roman Colchester was barely 500m. So, given the multiple circles, that pretty much works. By setting the citadel further back, you also lengthen the road up, which lets you decrease the slope even further.

I love the idea of each circle having a different feel to it. I'm sure Anarion didn't intend it to be that way - but people will be people. Even if the gates stay permanently open, they're a mental barrier, so yes, viewing the circles as separate neighbourhoods makes a lot of sense.

Dinotopia! Those books are seriously gorgeous. I was so delighted when Journey to Chandara came out, you would not believe. ^_^ Still hoping Gurney makes another one someday...

hS

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