BERGONIA |
LEFITONI |
On this page, a map of Lefitoni plus the history of the city. |
|||||
|
|||||||
|
Bergonia's
second largest
city, Beautifully situated on the Lakes of Letlari, wide shallow lakes with marshy banks, alive with fish & aquatic fowl. A modern city, well planned, with straight lines, open spaces and expressways, a proud expression of the Revolution. Capital of the State of Letlari, whose population is 11.2 million, the fifth largest state. For Bergonia it's Washington and Pittsburgh combined.
Lefitoni did not exist by that name before colonial times, although there was a small pre-columbian town named Pula there, situated on the southeast corner of Lake Aolico. The center of old Pula was centered about six miles from the center of the modern city of Lefitoni, and Pula is now the name of a lakefront neighborhood. It began probably as the regional trade center for all the fishing villages on the shores of Aolico. Pula was fortified by the Ceiolaians in the time of the Second Ceiolaian Empire, and under their rule it became a trading center for all the people of the lakes. Pula was a place of beautiful white marble, from the nearby cliffs on the heights where the Ceiolaians built a fort and temple complex that survive to grace the modern city's skyline. Pula became a capital city of the medieval-era state of Letlari, right in the crossroads of the major wars of the medieval and Tanic eras. The warsdid much to retard the Pula's growth, and it remained a city of modest size until the coming of the Europeans. No place in Bergonia suffered a death rate from the killing plagues as high as this region, and Pula became virtually depopulated. A force of English adventurers arrived there in 1507, looted what was left, and then put the whole town ablaze. Pula disappeared from the map. In the early 1600s a new town grew out of a lakeside village named Lefitoni, becoming an important transit point for travelers, and then the British established a small garrison there in 1589. The city grew into a large industrial center in the 1800s. The Modern City: Lefitoni's personality is quite the opposite of Ceiolai's, Bergonia's "other great city." Ceiolai elegantly exposes all the multiple strata of Bergonia's history in its twisting streets and labyrinthine puzzle of old, older and ancient buildings, while Lefitoni is a creation of the modern era, with straight lines and wide avenues, expansive plazas, heroic monuments and grand bridges. Ceiolai is a lakeside city, but it looks into itself, while in Letlari the multiple bodies of water alternately dividing and surrounding the city dominate the eye, assuring a light, open environment, and so the feel of the city is entirely unlike Ceiolai's. Lefitoni is divided into four parts: Tasicoi, ("Three-sided place") the center of the city, so named because of water on three sides. Sacuoi ("East Hills"), including the rolling hills and broad hollows east of the center. Three-quarters of a mile south across Tiuranamo Lake is Tretinica. Canoi ("New City") lies two miles across the lakes from Threesides. Certainly, like all Bergonian cities, Lefitoni has its Old Town, the oldest buildings from the first burst of city growth in the 1700s. Here narrow streets do twist and meander willy-nilly, connecting small plazas, typical of old Bergonian city centers, with no grid or plan whatsoever, for three square kilometers. Most of the Tasicoi (center) and Sacuoi (east) sections were built in the late 1800s, with orientation to the cardinal points. The first spurt of growth then produced block after block of wooden tenements, which in the 1910, 20s and 30s were replaced endless expanses of three, four and five story apartment buildings of whitewashed plaster, balconies and archways, built around courtyards, all arranged along straight tree-lined streets. The network of streets is punctuated with fine elegant plazas, places of light and openness. Each plaza fills up once or twice a week with stalls where merchants sell produce, fish, dry goods, arts & crafts, tools, and anything else legal to sell. During this same time Tretinica (south) was developed, and it became the place of many new institutional settings, including the zoo, hospitals, colleges and research institutions, and a massive prison. Canoi ("New City"), on the west bank of the lakes, was opened up with the construction of the various bridges and tunnels. New City, ambitiously annexed to Lefitoni, was supposed to be a showcase of socialist development. The first plan called for row after row of massive apartment buildings. This plan was fortunately shelved, and most of Canoi is developed with single-dwelling housing.
|