Difference between revisions of "Mensary"

From WorldofAsdar
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m
Line 1: Line 1:
The dominating round platform at the center of the [[Great Curial Hall]] of the [[Senatorial Palace]] or the platform on which it stands, by association refers to the power of the Senate and is the basis of the Aurician expression, "to approach the Mensary."  A gallery of nearly equal height circumambulates the Great Curial Hall.  A lower hall, analogous to a moat, separates the gallery and the mensary, thus requiring a bridge to gain access to it.  The gallery communicates with the airy openings to all three apses of the Great Curial Hall which are reserved for the three ranks of the Aurician Noble Senate, Dukes, Barons, and Metropolitans.
+
The dominating round platform at the center of the [[Great Curial Hall]] of the [[Senatorial Palace]] or the platform on which it stands, by association refers to the power of the Senate and is the basis of the Aurician expression, "to approach the Mensary."  A gallery of nearly equal height circumambulates the Great Curial Hall.  A lower hall, analogous to a moat, separates the gallery and the mensary, thus requiring a bridge to gain access to it.  The gallery communicates with the airy openings to all three apses of the Great Curial Hall which are reserved for the three ranks of the Aurician Noble Senate, Dukes, Barons, and [[Metropolitan]]s.
  
 
=See Also=
 
=See Also=

Revision as of 12:06, 13 October 2014

The dominating round platform at the center of the Great Curial Hall of the Senatorial Palace or the platform on which it stands, by association refers to the power of the Senate and is the basis of the Aurician expression, "to approach the Mensary." A gallery of nearly equal height circumambulates the Great Curial Hall. A lower hall, analogous to a moat, separates the gallery and the mensary, thus requiring a bridge to gain access to it. The gallery communicates with the airy openings to all three apses of the Great Curial Hall which are reserved for the three ranks of the Aurician Noble Senate, Dukes, Barons, and Metropolitans.

See Also