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Wargame Vault announces the availability of:

Norman Church

Norman Church

Publisher: DramaScape

DramaScape Fantasy Volume 42

This product is a 48" x 30" full-color battlemap of a Norman Church.

The product comes with the square, hex and no-overlay versions, and the Virtual Tabletop Maps (VTT), it also has a 360-view of the interior or the church.

To arms! The Seljuk Turks come to defile our holy church!

The bell tolls and signals it's time for worship…or for war.

Norman Church is an internal view of a Norman Romanesque-architecture Catholic church with an external view of the surrounding graveyard.

Norman Church is intended for use in fantasy games or historical games set in the Middle Ages. It could also be used in modern games as a Norman church still standing in the present day.

Adventure Hook for Use With This Product:

Defense of Antioch: The Seljuk Turks are trying to push the Norman crusaders out of the Principality of Antioch. Casualties have been high, the many graves surrounding the church attest to that. The remaining Norman crusaders watch over the church from the bell tower. The Norman crusaders have spotted an army of Seljuk Turks coming to attack their church. Players can take the role of the Norman crusaders and priests defending the church, or they can play as the Seljuk Turks trying to overcome their defenses and push them out of their land.

Historical Background:

Norman culture began when Vikings were ceded the land of Normandy by France. These Vikings adapted by incorporating the local Romance languages and Romanesque architecture, as well as converting to Christianity. Norman Churches were copied from original Frank designs.

Norman Church has several examples of Norman Romanesque architecture, characterized by features like high-arched doorways and a fortified tower for defense of the church.

Norman churches were most commonly found in the United Kingdom, eastern Ireland, northern France, southern Italy and Sicily, Malta, Cyprus, and the Principality of Antioch (this area is part of Turkey and Syria in the present) during the Crusades. The height of Norman influence was 1000-1100 A.D. The culture became Anglo-Norman after their conquest of England, before finally becoming subsumed as part of the English culture, as their culture mixed with their Anglo-Saxon subjects. Churches in Italy often incorporated more Islamic, Lombard, and Byzantine architecture, giving rise to a Sicilian Romanesque-style of architecture. Most surviving Norman churches in modern times are in the United Kingdom.

Price – $3.99 USD

For more information

Text edited by Editor Hebber
Graphics edited by Editor Claire
Scheduled by Personal logo Editor in Chief Bill The Editor of TMP Fezian