A young woman wearing blue leather boots runs through scenes of fruitful agriculture, growing populations, and a good life. A big difference from the previous scene!

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You’re asking yourself, “what is up with those boots?” You should be asking my brilliant and incredibly good-looking Patreon supporters, because they can tell you quite a lot, even how to make your own if you so desire.

Or (crazy idea, I know) you might join their ranks, and thereby learn additional bits of arcane knowledge before the rest of the world can even wonder about them.


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There are now 9 comments on pg 139. Athens, 850 B.C..
What are your thoughts?
  1. SeanR says

    Is that a fiery disaster behind those hills, or the sun setting behind the clouds?
    Because, to me, (and I’m not from anywhere with volcanism, so I’m hardly an expert), it looks like a mountain just blew its top.

  2. That’s around the time that Homer was composing the Iliad, and Ariphron was made King of Athens. Just before the Parsis decided to expand their empire even further west. The Phoenicians, out of Tyre were trading along the coasts, and they, by this time, certainly had writing.
    Egypt was on one of its occasional downward loops, but was still an entity to notice.
    Yes, this was an important period in history.

      • I just realized that my outline for the next page—just the outline, nothing else—is 24 pages long, single spaced. Thank goodness a picture paints a thousand words!

  3. Stephen Peter says

    It’s absolutely fascinating to consider how trade caused so many societies to flourish, then, in the absence of trade, how many societies crumbled.

    And I can’t help but wonder what will happen to societies today if we shut down trade and become more isolationist.

    And I can’t help but fear how delicate society really is and how easy it can fall.

  4. Emmy says

    So, uh… what *is* up with those boots? (Among other things, why do “you” appear to be the only person wearing them?)

  5. Rennod says

    The gods may not bring rain, but burning those offerings might? These days I’ve heard tell that mushroom/fungal spores, as well as other fine particulates such as sand, dust, or, well, smoke can provide seed material for condensation of water in the air. There’s likely more to it than just that, of course, but from a certain point of view, there is a connection.

  6. B.J. says

    Huh. It seems like the Athenian villages have touched the rest of the world since we last saw them.

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