Difference between revisions of "Shiota"

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Throughout the series, there are several mentions of Shiota.
 
Throughout the series, there are several mentions of Shiota.
  
[[Birgitte]] mentions that there were many "feather-dancers" in Shiota ([[The Fires of Heaven: Chapter 54|TFoH, Ch. 54]]).
+
[[Birgitte]] mentions that there were many "feather-dancers" in Shiota ({{tfoh|54}}).
  
A poet named [[Kyera Termendal]], from Shiota, wrote a translation of [[The Prophecies of the Dragon]] somewhere between the years of FY 700 and FY 800 (A Crown of Swords, Header).
+
A poet named [[Kyera Termendal]], from Shiota, wrote a translation of the [[Prophecies of the Dragon]] somewhere between the years of FY 700 and FY 800 (A Crown of Swords, Header).
  
The stash of ''angreal'' that Elayne and Nynaeve find apparently date back to Shiota, and further back to Eharon, and even to the Age of Legends ([[The Path of Daggers: Chapter 2|The Path of Daggers, Chapter 2]]).
+
The stash of ''angreal'' that Elayne and Nynaeve find apparently date back to Shiota, and further back to Eharon, and even to the [[Age of Legends]] ({{tpod|2}}).
  
[[Elayne]], [[Nynaeve]] and company ride past a statue of a Shiotan Queen as they ride to [[the Kin]]'s farm. Apparently, records claim that now-worn statue had worn little but armor, and Elayne is aghast to hear this ([[The Path of Daggers: Chapter 3|The Path of Daggers, Chapter 3]]).
+
[[Elayne]], [[Nynaeve]] and company ride past a statue of a Shiotan Queen as they ride to [[the Kin]]'s farm. Apparently, records claim that now-worn statue had worn little but armor, and Elayne is aghast to hear this ({{tpod|3}}).
  
[[Rand]] and [[Bashere]] ride past a statue of what was probably a Shiotan Queen. Among the remnants of the statue is the head, wearing a crown of up-thrusting daggers. Bashere says that he recalls that Shiotans gave crowns like that to rulers who expanded Shiota's borders ([[The Path of Daggers: Chapter 22|The Path of Daggers, Chapter 22]]).
+
[[Rand]] and [[Bashere]] ride past a statue of what was probably a Shiotan Queen. Among the remnants of the statue is the head, wearing a crown of up-thrusting daggers. Bashere says that he recalls that Shiotans gave crowns like that to rulers who expanded Shiota's borders ({{tpod|22}}).
  
 
(References: Where not marked, information is taken from "The World of Robert Jordan's 'The Wheel of Time'")
 
(References: Where not marked, information is taken from "The World of Robert Jordan's 'The Wheel of Time'")

Revision as of 08:53, 5 April 2009

Author: Atarah al'Norahn

General

Shiota was one of the nations of the Free Era. It was located in the southern part of the Westlands. To the north was Aldeshar, with Nerevan to the northeast, Esandara to the east, Fergansea to the southeast, the Sea of Storms to the south, Dhowlan to the west, and Farashelle to the northwest. Eventually, this area of land became what is now Altara.

By FY 943, Amalasan had conquered Shiota, among other nations.

By FY 963, Shiota had fallen to Hawkwing.

Throughout the series, there are several mentions of Shiota.

Birgitte mentions that there were many "feather-dancers" in Shiota (TFoH, Ch. 54).

A poet named Kyera Termendal, from Shiota, wrote a translation of the Prophecies of the Dragon somewhere between the years of FY 700 and FY 800 (A Crown of Swords, Header).

The stash of angreal that Elayne and Nynaeve find apparently date back to Shiota, and further back to Eharon, and even to the Age of Legends (TPoD, Ch. 2).

Elayne, Nynaeve and company ride past a statue of a Shiotan Queen as they ride to the Kin's farm. Apparently, records claim that now-worn statue had worn little but armor, and Elayne is aghast to hear this (TPoD, Ch. 3).

Rand and Bashere ride past a statue of what was probably a Shiotan Queen. Among the remnants of the statue is the head, wearing a crown of up-thrusting daggers. Bashere says that he recalls that Shiotans gave crowns like that to rulers who expanded Shiota's borders (TPoD, Ch. 22).

(References: Where not marked, information is taken from "The World of Robert Jordan's 'The Wheel of Time'")