Guide to Agartha

Agartha
The place is Earth, the time is 100 thousand years ago. The continents of the world include Atlantis, Lemuria, Mu, Hyperborea, Thule, and Agartha. There are currently no great civilizations on Agartha. The last great empire fell to an apocalyptic war over a thousand years ago, leaving behind ruins throughout the landscape.

The island of Agartha is roughly the same size as Madagascar or New Zealand. The entire island is located mostly in a tropical region of the northern hemisphere of ancient Earth, north of Lemuria and west of Mu, at roughly the same latitudes as Japan today.



The central region of the island is composed of a vast desert plateau. Two mighty rivers, the Goppa and the Itara, drain into the gulf. The fertile region between the two rivers, known as Nedula Madhya, is fertile and was once the heart of the great Agarthan Empire. The powerful city-state of Kalmath can be found in eastern portion of this region. Other ancient city-states dot the rivers' banks.

The Edari desert of central Agartha is an arid land of dunes and flat, dry, plains of dust.

The southern region is dominated by the dense Jungle of Xoth. A few major city-states still cling to ancient glory amid the jungles. A mountain range separates the jungle from the rest of the island.

The northern region, known as Khunkhara Vyakti, is an arid inhospitable land dominated by a vast Himalaya like mountain range.

The Maidanalu Plains of the northeast has cooler fertile grasslands and savanna.

The far west is known as the Kuluvecam. It is a land of intense volcanic activity, known for lakes of lava, mountains of obsidian, and plains of ash and pumice.

Adavi is a lush island covered in jungles and the ruins of the ancient cities of the Nagini Sumrajya.

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