Post different cities reconstructions 3d and art

Post different cities reconstructions 3d and art.

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youtube.com/watch?v=-64kHmCJGMA
youtube.com/watch?v=YP__1eHeyo4&ebc=ANyPxKplbY1cywyGYBCq0Fo_F3hhwaKQK3Th29IeOPAXmsC72J7hWRrEdzoICicOjFtf5S6LWKddYNFXs3neU7vbLLJXKGTc0Q
youtu.be/SoSIpWbqS60
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City of Etowah

Bagdad

looks like mix of southeast asia/india/italy and turkey in the same time.

Ming-period Beijing.

i doubt bagdad was like that

>Or set upon a golden bough to sing
>To lords and ladies of Byzantium
>Of what is past, or passing, or to come.

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looks way too green

it can happen, its mesopotamia

An old man is a paltry thing, like a tattered coat upon a stick.
(was looking for a byzantine wojak but this will have to do)

>Reverse image search
>First result from Pinterest
>The port city of Sanria, 2nd largest port in Brandor. Kingdom in Avalonia. Ruled by Rodrigo Valasis. | Avalonia Chronicles World |

lol

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Where is this supposed to be?

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Lucius Mummius was a fucking nigger.

Tenochtitlan

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America

Tang dynasty Chang An(modern Xi An) city.

Carthage.

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Timbuktu before colonization

hehe

Tenochtitlan

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Artists impression of PreHistoric Helsinki during the period of the Proto-Finnic Holy Roman Khaganate, shortly before the outbreak of the Finno-Korean Hyper War.

Heuneburg

fag

I get the yuk-yuks and all, but as a fantasy of future Paris: not enough mosques.

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3D reconstruction of Paris through the ages: youtube.com/watch?v=-64kHmCJGMA

3D and audio (!) reconstruction of Paris in the 18th century: youtube.com/watch?v=YP__1eHeyo4&ebc=ANyPxKplbY1cywyGYBCq0Fo_F3hhwaKQK3Th29IeOPAXmsC72J7hWRrEdzoICicOjFtf5S6LWKddYNFXs3neU7vbLLJXKGTc0Q

youtu.be/SoSIpWbqS60

Actual Baghdad

Oops

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WE

good job, mexico!

I like east Asian architecture a lot but why does it feel like their cities would be total shitholes even by medieval standards.

Carthage, circa 145 BC.

High Medieval Paris

Reconstruction of Ani, the medieval capital of Armenia (10th - 13th centuries AD).

Norman era Norwich, England.

The Nuragic Village of Tiscali, Italy

Bronze Age settlement that was built inside a fucking crater.

comfy as fuck

that's awesome

Jerusalem

:)

Nice, this is another nuragic town

La Bastiada de Totana, bronze age settlement from Andalusia

Kerma, from Sudan/Nubia, 1700 bc

Mycenae, 1250 bc

That thing is a goddamn fortress, Jesus just look at the cliffs.

Great zimbaber, 1000-1100 AD

Etruscan city in Emilia, 500 bc

Reconstruction of the Ican town of Machu Pichu

Memphis, ancient Egypt

What's really impressive about tenochtitlan is that most of that massive city was nourished directly by the chinampas in the lake. European cities of such a size would have to be supplied with grain by ship or cart.

Ugarit, Syria 1200 bc

Yingqiu, China (800 bc?)

How the fuck do you even attack that?

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Tyrins, 1250 bc

Avaris, Egypt 1550 bc

>why does it feel like their cities would be total shitholes even by medieval standards.
M8, Classical Chinese/East Asian city design emphasized the grid, dominated by wide avenues for traffic.

Compare that to the narrow winding mazes of medieval cities.

It's called a siege, not an assault for a reason.

17th century Kraków

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>Slavshit
In to the trash it goes.

You're trash.

Fun fact: medieval krakow was so german there was an uprising of germans in 1311. They were afterwards banished, then returned. In 1480, 36% of the inhabitants were still german.

Haha, preach it, kameraden!

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Allowing the Germans to settle in Poland was a mistake.

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Is that Berlin?

You can thank Sancho for that.

What's the most effective way to maintain supply lines or otherwise counter a siege in a city like that?

the virgin grid-design city versus the chad organic maze city

>Speer wanted to turn Berlin into a giant commieblock ghetto
Well DDR partially made his dream real

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That's autism over 9000.

Did Tenochtitlan not have any walls? How'd they defend it?

Was surrounded by swampy, moat/lake. That's traditionally a good defensive setup.

Your siege arts level is shocking low.

Thai capital Ayuttaya at it's height.

It was called the "Venice of the Orient" by Western visitors before the Burmese destroyed it

This 100 times, regular buildings are med, palace is india, climate tropical lus a couple of domed turkish like buildings

map of Ayuttaya

I've been there, it's incredible. There's enough of the settlement there that with perhaps Enhanced Reality you could make it an amazing experience to walk around it.

HD

Intentional to weed out the weak.

was it really that small?

For Europe it was generally a medium sized city then. It had a large countryside with village houses surrounding it (not really shown). It wasn't the largest city of the Commonwealth though, Kijów and Gdańsk being larger.