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Lucid Drevan
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Dapper Hunter

PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 5:50 pm


Carpathians are a race of people in the fictional universe of the Dark Series, a group of books by Christine Feehan. Carpathians survive by drinking the blood of humans, but unlike vampires, they do not kill their human prey. Carpathians use their telepathic abilities to “call” humans to them in order to feed, and then use those same abilities to erase the humans’ memory of the incident. All vampires were once Carpathians. A Carpathian male "turns" into a vampire when he kills while feeding, loses his lifemate, or fails to find his lifemate.

Carpathians mate for life. This is because males and females are different in nature; while the females are filled with compassion and light, the males are filled with an inner darkness, capable of great violence. After 200 years, a male Carpathian loses the ability to feel emotions, sexual desire and see in color. As a result, the darkness slowly spreads and consumes their souls. At this time, the only thing they feel is the thrill when they are about to make a kill. The only way they are returned to them is when a male finds his lifemate, the "light" to his darkness, the other half of his soul. Once lifemates find one another, the male recites the bonding words. Once this is done, it cannot be undone. They must touch minds and share their bodies often.

At the beginning of Dark Prince, Carpathians are on the edge of extinction. There have been few children born to them in the past few centuries, those that have been born are all male and often die in the first year. It has been more than 500 years since a female has been born. Without females, the males are left with a stark choice, "greet the dawn" (i.e. commit suicide) or become vampire, the undead, the monsters of human legend.


Appearance

Carpathians are extremely attractive and alluring, and most are tall, dark-haired and dark-eyed. Most Carpathians are rather lean, but some, like Gregori and his brother Darius, are noted to be rather broad and muscular, which is uncommon. The Golden Twins are Blond-haired and have Gold eyes.


Abilities

Longevity

Carpathians live many times longer than humans. The maximum lifespan is unknown, but several have lived to the age of 2000 years. In addition to living longer than humans, Carpathians age much more slowly. In their childhood, they age roughly at the same rate as humans. Once they reach physical adulthood, their aging process slows dramatically, and they maintain their physical peaks for centuries.

Telepathy

All Carpathians have the gift of telepathy, the ability to speak “mind to mind” to one another. This telepathic ability can cover vast distances, even across oceans. Once two Carpathians have exchanged blood, they can communicate with one another without anyone else hearing them. Lifemates use this ability to strengthen their bond with one another. They use this ability to call humans to them in order to feed. Vampires often plant compulsions, compelling humans to commit awful acts, including murder. In addition, they have the gift to communicate with animals.

Shapeshifting
All Carpathians have the ability to shapeshift into various animals. They most often use the forms of wolves, owls, bats, and leopards. They can also take to form of mist or fog. They often use these forms to protect their sensitive eyes if they have to rise before the sun completely sets or they need to enter and leave a dwelling undetected.
PostPosted: Thu Jul 24, 2008 6:01 pm


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This shows the section that I'm most familiar with and will more than likely use in this RP.


The Carpathian Mountains, for real.
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Arching across 7 countries, from the Czech Republic, across Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and Hungary, and down to Romania and the tip of Serbia, the Carpathians are Europe's last great wilderness area - a bastion for large carnivores, with over half of the continent's population of bears, wolves and lynx, and home to the greatest remaining reserve of old growth forests outside of Russia.
Covering an area of 209,256km2 - 5 times the size of Switzerland and larger than the Alps - the Carpathian Mountains are home to 18 million people.

For centuries, the Carpathians have provided a home to diverse nationalities and ethnic groups - people separated by different languages, dialects and traditions, but bound together by a highland way of life and a sense of shared hardships. The name for the Carpathians is derived from the ancient Greek ‘Karpat-Heros’ tribes who inhabited the South Carpathians some 2,000 years ago. Since then, waves of people – Romans, Goths, Avars, Slavs, and Magyars, to name a few – have claimed the land as their own.


The area receives twice the rainfall of surrounding regions and it is this freshwater that feeds the major rivers, the Danube and Vistula, through to the Black and Baltic Seas. More than 80% of Romania’s water supply (excluding the Danube), 40% of Ukraine’s supply and one third of the outflow of the Vistula originate directly from the Carpathians.

Kingdom of the carnivores

The natural diversity supported by the Carpathians is of vital importance for Europe.

The Carpathians are the last region in Europe to support viable populations of Europe's greatest mammals. Brown bear, wolf and lynx can all be found in the forests of the region. Threatened bird species, including the Imperial eagle, Ural owl and the corncrake, have also found a sanctuary here. On a continent where 40% of mammals are threatened by extinction, the Carpathians offer one of the last opportunities for resettling Europe’s large carnivores.


Europe has also lost 56% of its forest cover and just 2% of the remaining natural forests are protected. Meanwhile the Carpathians contain the continent's largest remaining natural mountain beech and beech/coniferous forest ecosystems and the largest area of pristine forest, outside of Russia. Together with semi-natural habitats such as mountain pastures and hay meadows, which are the result of centuries of traditional management of the land, the region's biodiversity is unsurpassed in Europe.

One-third of all European vascular plant species can be found in this region – that means 3,988 plant species, 481 of which are found only in the Carpathians. The mountains form a "bridge" between Europe 's northern forests and those in the south and west. As such, they are a vital corridor for the dispersal of plants and animals throughout Europe.

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People and Nature
Man’s impact on the landscape through farming can be detected as early as the 4th century, when prehistoric mountain forests were affected by livestock grazing. High in the mountains, pastoral farming has always traditionally dominated and as a result, mountain shepherding has always been one of the most important elements of the Carpathian culture.

This has at times led to a decrease of forest covered areas and also to an increase in soil erosion, a problem that continues today, especially on steep slopes. However, many traditional, sustainable methods for farming and managing the landscape have survived for generations. Furthermore, several thousand years of human habitation settlement have created traditional landscapes of tremendous value for nature, especially through agriculture and shepherding. These managed landscapes often possess a higher level of biodiversity than the purely natural landscapes.

On the foothills, where the agricultural soil was more fertile, severe deforestation has often been experienced. In the 19th century, the forests were opened up to commercial exploitation, especially for construction of the railways. Large areas were clear-cut or replaced with single-species ‘mono-cultures’ with low biodiversity value (e.g. poor habitat, vulnerable to natural hazard).

In the 18th and 19th centuries, the Carpathians were exploited for coal and metal mining and minerals. In the 20th century, industrial expansion caused significant severe air and water pollution, significantly damaging forests due to sulfur emissions and acid rain.

Traces of the Past
In the Carpathians, generally a remote and marginal area, many of the fatal effects of communist planning were avoided. Rather than facing the ‘collectivisation’ of lands, private ownership remained the rule, especially in Poland. As a result, this ‘benign neglect’ preserved many marginal rural areas from the agricultural intensification that has devastated many other parts of Europe.

During those same four decades, unsustainable development in many parts of Western Europe (the birthplace of “sustainable development”) led to the loss of numerous habitats and species – many of which have been preserved in Central and Eastern Europe.
As for forestry, although over-exploitation was the rule at times, techniques which promoted natural regeneration were mostly favoured. Also, many of the countries did not have access to modern harvesting technologies and to the funds that opened up even the wildest and most remote valleys in Western Europe. Thus, the damage known in Western Europe, that led to large areas of artificial forests did not affect Central and Eastern European forests to the same extent.

Lucid Drevan
Captain

Dapper Hunter

Reply
The Carpathian Mountains

 
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