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{{Character
{{Character
|image1 = <gallery>
|image1 = Newnewgateheader.png
Newnewgateheader.png|1
|caption1 =  
airfleet-header.png|2
|location = Inside the Earth
</gallery>
|caption1 = A cavern the size of Europe…
|location = Deep Beneath Earth
|relationships = [[The Sun]] (creator)
|relationships = [[The Sun]] (creator)
}}
}}<blockquote>''"...where Hell is close, immortality is cheap, and the screaming has largely stopped… Welcome. Delicious friend."''<ref>{{Citation|https://www.fallenlondon.com|Home Page|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>The '''Neath''' is an immense, impossible cavern that stretches beneath the surface of Earth.


'''The Neath''' is an immense, impossible cavern that stretches beneath the Surface, incorporating the Western Continent, the [[The Elder Continent|Elder Continent]] and the vast [[The Unterzee|Unterzee]]. It is traditionally said to be about the size of Europe,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Recall_where_you_are_(Unfairly_imprisoned)|Recall where you are|Fallen London}}''"A cavern the size of Europe..."''</ref> and there are cavern walls,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Persuade_the_Tower_to_move,_using_the_persuasions_of_clock_and_schedule|Persuade the Tower to move, using the persuasions of clock and schedule|Fallen London}}''"The Tower is... sideways. Somewhere at the very edge of the Neath, stuck in a cave wall. What was the east wall is now your floor."''</ref> but because space is highly distorted in the Neath—and the four cardinal directions behave in eldritch, non-Euclidean ways—it is likely far larger:
== Deep, Dark, and Marvellous ==
<blockquote>''"A cavern the size of Europe..."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Recall_where_you_are_(Unfairly_imprisoned)|Recall where you are (Unfairly imprisoned)|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>
The Neath - short for "beneath," and pronounced like so<ref>[https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/neath neath, ''Cambridge Dictionary'']</ref> - is traditionally said to be roughly the size of Europe.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Recall_where_you_are_(Unfairly_imprisoned)|Recall where you are|Fallen London}}''"A cavern the size of Europe..."''</ref> The known and charted extent of it incorporates two continents, bordered by the vast [[Unterzee]], which is dotted with islands. The cavern has walls<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Persuade_the_Tower_to_move,_using_the_persuasions_of_clock_and_schedule|Persuade the Tower to move, using the persuasions of clock and schedule|Fallen London}}''"The Tower is... sideways. Somewhere at the very edge of the Neath, stuck in a cave wall. What was the east wall is now your floor."''</ref> and a [[The Roof of the Neath|roof]], but because space is highly distorted in the Neath in all four cardinal directions, it is likely far larger than humanity can comprehend. Conventional distances and geography do not apply, and the Neath's position relative to the [[The Surface|Surface]] is bizarre and often contradictory. [[File:Zeemap.jpg|thumb|300x300px|''A map of the Unterzee. Not always reliable.'']][[London]] and the [[Echo Bazaar]] are located on the western shore of the Unterzee, along the coastline of an unnamed continent. The [[Tomb-Colonies]] are north of the city, and the [[Iron Republic]] lies to the south. The [[Hinterlands]] and [[Hell]] are due west of London, further inland. To the southwest, the [[Dawn Machine]] has warped spacetime even further.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Unborn_time|Unborn time|Sunless Sea}}''"The Dawn Machine's roots extend here, into a luminous, impossible space. You breathe gold. You think light."''</ref> The other primary landmass in the Neath is the [[Elder Continent]], which comprises the southern edge of the Unterzee; its primary landmark, the [[Mountain of Light]], shines from much further south. The northern edge of the Unterzee collapses toward a single point, the [[Avid Horizon]],<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/The_place_that_is_no_place|The place that is no place|Sunless Sea}}''"The unterzee has no northern shore. Space is forbidden. Time contracts to a single frozen instant. There is only one way North."''</ref> while the [[East]] is a seemingly infinite distortion of spacetime.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Measure_the_measureless|Measure the measureless|Fallen London}}''"[...] They say that the East is a plane that extends infinitely in that direction, and also a sharp line where existence halts. [...] They say, alarmingly, that it is terribly beautiful there."''</ref>


* To the East, space stretches indefinitely;<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Measure_the_measureless|Measure the measureless|Fallen London}}''"[...] They say that the East is a plane that extends infinitely in that direction, and also a sharp line where existence halts. [...] They say, alarmingly, that it is terribly beautiful there."''</ref>  
Throughout history, there have been many entrances or holes linking the Surface to the Neath; they were a more common sight in the past,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Devil%27s_Due|A Devil's Due|Fallen London}}''"It is neither proper nor safe for a Devil to visit the Surface. Unheard of in these times. But in the days of the Second City, the Laws used to be softer. [...]"''</ref> and often became the subject of myth and legend.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Devil%27s_Due|A Devil's Due|Fallen London}}''"[...] A different time – the world was bigger. The Neath was more permeable. Every cave, grotto, or hole in the ground in Europe has a legend that claims it is a passageway to Hell. Some of those stories used to be true."''</ref> Several of these still remain:
* To the North, everything collapses toward a single point;<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/The_place_that_is_no_place|The place that is no place|Sunless Sea}}''"The unterzee has no northern shore. Space is forbidden. Time contracts to a single frozen instant. There is only one way North."''</ref>
* To the South lies the Elder Continent and the Mountain;
* To the West of London lies Hell itself, while upon the Unterzee, the Dawn Machine has dramatically stretched the West even further.<ref>{{Citation|https://sunlesssea.miraheze.org/wiki/Unborn_time|Unborn time|Sunless Sea}}''"The Dawn Machine's roots extend here, into a luminous, impossible space. You breathe gold. You think light."''</ref>


Although the Neath is located underground, conventional distances and geography do not apply. Its position relative to the Surface is bizarre and often contradictory. Throughout history, there have been many entrances or holes linking the Surface to the Neath.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Devil%27s_Due|A Devil's Due|Fallen London}}''"[...] A different time – the world was bigger. The Neath was more permeable. Every cave, grotto, or hole in the ground in Europe has a legend that claims it is a passageway to Hell. Some of those stories used to be true."''</ref> In the era of the Second City, these entrances were numerous, but many have since closed.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/A_Devil%27s_Due|A Devil's Due|Fallen London}}''"It is neither proper nor safe for a Devil to visit the Surface. Unheard of in these times. But in the days of the Second City, the Laws used to be softer. [...]"''</ref> Nevertheless, several connections remain:
* The Travertine Spiral is a massive, spiraling stone passage that joins the Neath with the Roof, and the Surface beyond.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Fly_past_the_Travertine_Spiral|Fly past the Travertine Spiral|Fallen London}}''"A great spiral of white stone, joining the ground of the Neath to the Roof – and the Surface beyond."''</ref>
 
* The Last Labyrinth connects to Shepton Mallet, a town in southwest England.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Your_beloved|Your beloved|Fallen London}}''"But you have the key to the Last Labyrinth [...] You pass through the fungus-choked corridors, the pits where the Inhabiters walk, the broken gates. [...] You breach the surface, at last, in an apple orchard just outside Shepton Mallet, through a Neolithic tomb of unlikely age. It's night, but the air is warm, and scented with summer."''</ref>
* The Travertine Spiral, a great spiral of white stone, joining the ground of the Neath to the Roof and the Surface beyond.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Fly_past_the_Travertine_Spiral|Fly past the Travertine Spiral|Fallen London}}''"A great spiral of white stone, joining the ground of the Neath to the Roof – and the Surface beyond."''</ref>
* A dumbwaiter links [[Balmoral]] to Edinburgh in Scotland.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Dumbwaiter_of_Balmoral|The Dumbwaiter of Balmoral|Fallen London}}''"Due to an accidental entanglement during the Fall, the Balmoral kitchen dumbwaiters connect not to another part of the Castle, but to a modest-sized townhouse in Edinburgh."''</ref>
* The Last Labyrinth connects to Shepton Mallet.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Your_beloved|Your beloved|Fallen London}}''"But you have the key to the Last Labyrinth [...] You pass through the fungus-choked corridors, the pits where the Inhabiters walk, the broken gates. [...] You breach the surface, at last, in an apple orchard just outside Shepton Mallet, through a Neolithic tomb of unlikely age. It's night, but the air is warm, and scented with summer."''</ref>
* A dumbwaiter links [[Balmoral]] to Edinburgh.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_Dumbwaiter_of_Balmoral|The Dumbwaiter of Balmoral|Fallen London}}''"Due to an accidental entanglement during the Fall, the Balmoral kitchen dumbwaiters connect not to another part of the Castle, but to a modest-sized townhouse in Edinburgh."''</ref>
* Lake Avernus served as the Roman mythical gateway to the underworld long before the construction of the [[The Cumaean Canal|Cumaean Canal]], though the Canal later made passage far easier.
* Lake Avernus served as the Roman mythical gateway to the underworld long before the construction of the [[The Cumaean Canal|Cumaean Canal]], though the Canal later made passage far easier.


Guarding and regulating the Neath are forces known as the Treacheries: violations against the natural order of the Chain.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Cheat_(The_Mind_of_London)|Cheat (The Mind of London)|Fallen London}}''"The Treacheries are transgressions against the Chain. [...]"''</ref> There are said to be seven Treacheries,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/St_Erzulie%27s_Candle_(Action)|St Erzulie's Candle (Action)|Fallen London}}''"The Seven Treacheries guard the Neath [...]"''</ref>of which five are known: Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass, and Hearts. The nature of the remaining two remains a mystery.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Look_up_(SMEN)|Look up (SMEN)|Fallen London}}''"Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass – and the three beyond. This is what protects the Courier and its toadies. You can end that. Your hand, your mouth, your voice. Ask the Question. Open the Gate. Advance."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Examine_a_sealed_door_to_the_(direction)|Examine a sealed door to the (direction)|Fallen London}}''"—clocks, maps, glass, breath, hearts—"''</ref>
== False-Seasons ==
<blockquote>''"The Neath has no sunshine. None of the trappings of the seasons. Still it becomes hotter sometimes, more humid."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: False-summer|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>Because of the absence of [[the Sun]], the Neath does not experience the conventional seasons seen on the [[Surface]], and instead has its own peculiar cycle of "False-Seasons."<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_False-Season:|The False-Season:|Fallen London}}</ref> False-Summer is the only one referred to by name; during this time, the Neath becomes hotter and more humid,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: False-summer|Fallen London}}''"The Neath has no sunshine. None of the trappings of the seasons. Still it becomes hotter sometimes, more humid. [...] Whatever the reason for these hot spells, they make the chiller fogs of the Neath a distant, pleasant memory."''</ref> as damp, warm fog blows in from the [[Unterzee]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Heat and Dust|Fallen London}}''"The Neath's roughly-annual false-summer brings with it many inconveniences, not the least of which is the proliferation of damp, warm fog. It blows in off the Unterzee, when the breeze is in the right direction. Finding yourself out in it is akin to trying to walk through a hot, wet blanket. One that has recently been used to dry a hot, wet dog."''</ref> Certain phenomena also become more common, like wandering [[Parabola|Parabolan]] mirages<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: The Wandering Mirage|Fallen London}}''"Nasty, shimmering patches of air float along the streets in the false summers of the Neath. Strange lights sometimes dance in attendance. Far-off places can be glimpsed. Don't walk through these. There are worse places than Fallen London."''</ref> and outbreaks of spore-fever (ostensibly a fungal counterpart of hay fever).<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Spore-fever|Fallen London}}''"Spore-fever. False-summer would not be the same without it. All of Fallen London is stricken, at once: sneezing, wheezing, eyes streaming. Handkerchiefs are brandished; eyes are concealed behind smoked glass pince-nez; F.F. Gebrandt sells out of remedies, whether they are intended for spore-fever or not. A city is united in self-pity. There are real cures, but their side-effects are nastier than the symptoms."''</ref> While it is not officially described as False-Winter, every December, [[Lacre|"snow"]] begins to accumulate in London,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Snow in the Neath?|Fallen London}}''"The snow that falls in the Neath every December is something of a mystery. Condensation from the cavern's roof, the sloughed chitin of enormous insects, or the dandruff of a tonsorially careless God? In any case, catching snowflakes on your tongue is probably a bad idea."''</ref> and the city celebrates [[Christmas]].


== Seasons ==
Certain seasonal patterns of bat colonies have been observed upon the [[Roof of the Neath]], but these are not extensively described and may be a product of human artistic license.<ref name=":0">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Unconfirmed|Sidebar Snippet: Divination and chiropteromancy|Fallen London}}''"Astrology without stars? The movements of bats up in the far reaches of the cavern roof are mysterious, but seasonal patterns can be observed. There is a shape often seen in winter that looks just like a sleeping cat; one in spring that could be a lovers' embrace. [...]"''</ref>
Because of the absence of the sun, the Neath does not experience the conventional seasons seen on the Surface. Instead, it has its own peculiar cycle known as the False-Seasons:<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/The_False-Season:|The False-Season:|Fallen London}}</ref>


=== False-Spring ===
== Origins ==
During this time, the movements of bats are said to form the shape of a lovers' embrace.<ref name=":0">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Unconfirmed|Sidebar Snippet: Divination and chiropteromancy|Fallen London}}''"Astrology without stars? The movements of bats up in the far reaches of the cavern roof are mysterious, but seasonal patterns can be observed. There is a shape often seen in winter that looks just like a sleeping cat; one in spring that could be a lovers' embrace. [...]"''</ref> This is when London celebrates the [[The Feast of the Exceptional Rose|Feast of the Exceptional Rose]] and [[Whitsun]].
{{Major spoiler small}}<blockquote>''"The Creditor had not expected to be left behind. The Moon had not expected to be riven, or to be dependent on another for its light. The Sun had promised to make a star of them, and instead it made a pale, mocking mirror."''<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_in_greater_depth_the_story_of_the_Moon|Tease out in greater depth the story of the Moon|Fallen London|}}</ref></blockquote>
[[File:Creditor.png|thumb|[[The Creditor]]]]
Long ago, the entity that was the Earth<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Guess_at_a_time_before_history|Guess at a time before history|Fallen London|}}''"The Creditor was once a greater body, of shared substance with the Moon, cold rock. Before that, liquid stone and metal, tucked within the shell of the Earth, indistinguishable from that vaster substance. Before that? Something without an outer shell at all, perhaps the whole of the planet. [...]"''</ref> served a "fierce and brilliant" [[Judgement]],<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"Service to a fierce and brilliant star."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Confer_with_Penstock|Confer with Penstock|Fallen London|}} ''"[...] this Creditor [...] they have acquaintances in common. So the Bazaar [...]"''</ref> presumably [[the Sun]]. It accepted its master's offer to ascend the [[Great Chain of Being]] and become a Judgement itself.<ref name=":1">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Long_Ago_the_Sun_and_Moon|Long Ago the Sun and Moon|Fallen London|}}''"The Sun offered to transform the mute land into a star. But when the cataclysm came, the body of the Moon was flung into the sky and the Creditor remained, hollowed as a crust of bread. In any apotheosis, some rind of mortality is left behind."''</ref> In an event later called the '''Cataclysm of Silver''',<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Read_the_words_that_come_with_the_Shard_of_the_Mountain|Read the words that come with the Shard of the Mountain|Fallen London|}} ''"[...] the Creditor, who has lived alone [...] since the Cataclysm of Silver."''</ref> the Sun sent a Courier, a predecessor to the [[The Echo Bazaar|Bazaar]], who struck the Earth with tremendous force.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_in_greater_depth_the_story_of_the_Moon|Tease out in greater depth the story of the Moon|Fallen London|}}''"[...] A courier, sent by the Sun to shatter itself and shatter the Creditor, in order to form both Neath and Moon. [...]"''</ref> This Messenger, now known as the Shattered Herald,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Take_away_a_souvenir|Take away a souvenir|Fallen London|}}''"[...] shaped from the remains of the Shattered Herald. [...]"''</ref> tore away a massive chunk of the planet, which rose into the sky and became the [[The Moon|Moon]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"A cleaving birth [...] It was painful to lose your sister-self."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Search_it_for_letters_of_fire|Search it for letters of fire|Fallen London|}} ''""Substance shared with a [...] sibling." The [...] stone is mottled and silver as [...] the moon."''</ref> The remnants of the Earth which were left behind would become the [[The Creditor|Creditor]], and the vast hollow resulting from the impact solidified into the Neath.<ref name=":1" /> The Sun repurposed the Neath as a hidden vault for its experiments (including its children by the [[Bazaar]]), placing the Creditor<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Propose_a_currency_infused_with_lacre|Propose a currency infused with lacre|Fallen London|}} ''"The Creditor wanted the Neath to remain as the Sun intended, a hiding place for creations that could exist nowhere else."''</ref> in charge of overseeing and protecting the [[Shames]]<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"Then: the Neath. [...] You had responsibilities. You oversaw disputes and kept peace between the Sun's experiments."''</ref> who were hidden from the Judgements' sight.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Leviathan|Leviathan|Fallen London|}}''"[...] these creatures are Shames, [...] have lain hidden from the Judgements for millennia."''</ref>


=== False-Summer ===
Guarding and regulating the Neath are a series of violations against the order of the [[Great Chain of Being]], known as the [[Treacheries]].<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Cheat_(The_Mind_of_London)|Cheat (The Mind of London)|Fallen London}}''"The Treacheries are transgressions against the Chain. [...]"''</ref> There are said to be seven Treacheries,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/St_Erzulie%27s_Candle_(Action)|St Erzulie's Candle (Action)|Fallen London}}''"The Seven Treacheries guard the Neath [...]"''</ref> of which five are known: Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass, and Hearts.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Look_up_(SMEN)|Look up (SMEN)|Fallen London}}''"Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass – and the three beyond. This is what protects the Courier and its toadies. You can end that. Your hand, your mouth, your voice. Ask the Question. Open the Gate. Advance."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Examine_a_sealed_door_to_the_(direction)|Examine a sealed door to the (direction)|Fallen London}}''"—clocks, maps, glass, breath, hearts—"''</ref>
During False-Summer, the Neath becomes hotter and more humid,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: False-summer|Fallen London}}''"The Neath has no sunshine. None of the trappings of the seasons. Still it becomes hotter sometimes, more humid. A volcano beneath the Unterzee that releases bubbles of hot, sulphurous gas, like gargantuan belches from a sleeping giant? Actual gargantuan belches from an actual sleeping giant? Convection currents created by the migratory flight patterns of bats? Whatever the reason for these hot spells, they make the chiller fogs of the Neath a distant, pleasant memory."''</ref> the damp blowing from the Unterzee.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Heat and Dust|Fallen London}}''"The Neath's roughly-annual false-summer brings with it many inconveniences, not the least of which is the proliferation of damp, warm fog. It blows in off the Unterzee, when the breeze is in the right direction. Finding yourself out in it is akin to trying to walk through a hot, wet blanket. One that has recently been used to dry a hot, wet dog."''</ref> False-Summer's effects roughly mirrors the Surface's summer,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Summer in the Neath|Fallen London}}''"How to relieve the tedium of the warm season, when condensation drips from the roof of the cavern like a monsoon of stagnant sweat, and Fallen London smells as fresh as a week-old corpse? L.B.s can be paid to attach fans to bonnets. Pomander traders make their fortunes. But the best way of all to cool down is with a delicious fungal ice-cream. Urchin entrepreneurs with handcarts can supply everything from toadstool sorbet to frozen puffball creams. Where do they get the ice to keep their wares cold? Trust your correspondent when I assure you you do not wish to know."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Jack-of-Smiles|Sidebar Snippet: Summer of Jack|Fallen London}}''"False-summer sends Jack-of-Smiles, Fallen London's most prolific murderer, just that little bit more unhinged. Who can blame him? The maddening, stinging clouds of marsh-gnats, the soupy humidity, the incessant chattering of the brightly-dressed crowds thronging the tea-houses and taverns. Not to mention the extra...temptations provided for him at the edges of said crowds, where citizens may not always be strictly sober or entirely without sin."''</ref> but with its own Neathy twists like wandering Parabolan mirages<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: The Wandering Mirage|Fallen London}}''"Nasty, shimmering patches of air float along the streets in the false summers of the Neath. Strange lights sometimes dance in attendance. Far-off places can be glimpsed. Don't walk through these. There are worse places than Fallen London."''</ref> and the troublesome outbreak of spore-fever.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Spore-fever|Fallen London}}''"Spore-fever. False-summer would not be the same without it. All of Fallen London is stricken, at once: sneezing, wheezing, eyes streaming. Handkerchiefs are brandished; eyes are concealed behind smoked glass pince-nez; F.F. Gebrandt sells out of remedies, whether they are intended for spore-fever or not. A city is united in self-pity. There are real cures, but their side-effects are nastier than the symptoms."''</ref> London used to host its [[Lord Mayor of London|Mayoral Elections]] around this time, but has since replaced the boring democratic process with other fun summer time [https://thefifthcity.fandom.com/wiki/Category:Estival activities].


=== False-Autumn ===
== Historical and Cultural Inspirations ==
This time of year is when London celebrates [[Hallowmas]], the Feast of Masks.
Across ancient civilizations, the idea of subterranean realms and underworld afterlives has appeared again and again. In Greek and Roman mythology, there was Hades, the shadowy land of the dead. Norse mythology spoke of Svartálfaheimr, the realm of dwarves hidden deep beneath the earth. In Hindu belief, Patala was an underground domain inhabited by serpents and demons, while Tibetan tradition told of Shambhala, a secret kingdom hidden beneath the Himalayas. The Neath draws from these mythological traditions, with notable similarities to Hades; much like the ancient warnings about the food of the dead, Surface travelers in the Neath are advised not to eat its food or linger too long if they hope to return to the Surface. It is a realm populated by all the strange, otherworldly, monstrous, and treacherous beings that one might expect from a mythical underworld.


=== False-Winter ===
However, the Neath is also influenced by theories from the days of the Scientific Revolution, notably Edmond Halley's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollow_Earth Hollow Earth] theory, which suggested that the Earth was made up of concentric hollow shells that each had their own atmosphere and possibly even their own forms of life. Halley had suggested this model to account for anomalous compass readings, but further experiments demonstrated the Earth's dense mass and disproved the hypothesis by the end of the 18th century. Modern geology and seismology have since confirmed that Earth possesses a solid inner core and a molten outer core, structures wholly incompatible with a hollow interior.
Each December, "snow" begins to accumulate in London,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Sidebar_Snippets#Seasons_in_the_Neath|Sidebar Snippet: Snow in the Neath?|Fallen London}}''"The snow that falls in the Neath every December is something of a mystery. Condensation from the cavern's roof, the sloughed chitin of enormous insects, or the dandruff of a tonsorially careless God? In any case, catching snowflakes on your tongue is probably a bad idea."''</ref> and the city celebrates [[Christmas]]. During this season, bat movements are said to take the form of a sleeping cat.<ref name=":0" />


== Origins ==
Despite being scientifically debunked, the Hollow Earth theory captured the imagination of writers and the public alike. It inspired a wealth of literature, famously including Jules Verne's ''Journey to the Center of the Earth'', which was published in 1864 and popularized the idea of subterranean adventure. In the 1940s, Richard Sharpe Shaver published stories of ancient beings living in underground caves and secretly influencing human affairs; he claimed to draw from personal experience and encounters with the supernatural, and his ideas have inspired New Age imaginations — and conspiracy theories — ever since.  
Long ago, the entity that was the Earth<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Guess_at_a_time_before_history|Guess at a time before history|Fallen London|}}''"The Creditor was once a greater body, of shared substance with the Moon, cold rock. Before that, liquid stone and metal, tucked within the shell of the Earth, indistinguishable from that vaster substance. Before that? Something without an outer shell at all, perhaps the whole of the planet. [...]"''</ref> served a "fierce and brilliant" [[Judgement]],<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"Service to a fierce and brilliant star."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Confer_with_Penstock|Confer with Penstock|Fallen London|}} ''"[...] this Creditor [...] they have acquaintances in common. So the Bazaar [...]"''</ref> likely the [[Sun]]. It accepted the Sun's offer to ascend the Chain and become a Judgement.<ref name=":1">{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Long_Ago_the_Sun_and_Moon|Long Ago the Sun and Moon|Fallen London|}}''"The Sun offered to transform the mute land into a star. But when the cataclysm came, the body of the Moon was flung into the sky and the Creditor remained, hollowed as a crust of bread. In any apotheosis, some rind of mortality is left behind."''</ref> In what would later be known as the '''Cataclysm of Silver''',<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Read_the_words_that_come_with_the_Shard_of_the_Mountain|Read the words that come with the Shard of the Mountain|Fallen London|}} ''"[...] the Creditor, who has lived alone [...] since the Cataclysm of Silver."''</ref> the Sun sent a Courier, a predecessor to the Bazaar, who struck the Earth with tremendous force.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Tease_out_in_greater_depth_the_story_of_the_Moon|Tease out in greater depth the story of the Moon|Fallen London|}}''"[...] A courier, sent by the Sun to shatter itself and shatter the Creditor, in order to form both Neath and Moon. [...]"''</ref> This Messenger, later called the Shattered Herald,<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Take_away_a_souvenir|Take away a souvenir|Fallen London|}}''"[...] shaped from the remains of the Shattered Herald. [...]"''</ref> tore away a massive chunk of the planet, which rose into the sky and became the Moon.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"A cleaving birth [...] It was painful to lose your sister-self."''</ref><ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Search_it_for_letters_of_fire|Search it for letters of fire|Fallen London|}} ''""Substance shared with a [...] sibling." The [...] stone is mottled and silver as [...] the moon."''</ref> The remnants of the Earth which were left behind would become the [[The Creditor|Creditor]], and the vast hollow resulting from the impact: the Neath.<ref name=":1" /> The Sun repurposed the Neath as a hidden vault for its experiments, placing the Creditor<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Propose_a_currency_infused_with_lacre|Propose a currency infused with lacre|Fallen London|}} ''"The Creditor wanted the Neath [...] as the Sun intended, a hiding place for creations that could exist nowhere else."''</ref> in charge of overseeing and protecting the [[Shames]]<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Study_its_likely_chemical_effects_on_the_Bazaar|Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar|Fallen London|}} ''"Then: the Neath. [...] You had responsibilities. You oversaw disputes and kept peace between the Sun's experiments."''</ref> who were hidden from the Judgements' sight.<ref>{{Citation|https://fallenlondon.wiki/wiki/Leviathan|Leviathan|Fallen London|}}''"[...] these creatures are Shames, [...] have lain hidden from the Judgements for millennia."''</ref>
 
Neath is short for Beneath.<ref>[https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/neath neath, ''Cambridge Dictionary'']</ref> It is pronounced "neeth," and not "neth" or "ne-ath."
 
== Historical and Cultural Inspirations ==
Across ancient civilizations, the idea of subterranean realms and underworld afterlives has been a powerful and recurring theme. In Greek and Roman mythology, Hades served as the shadowy realm of the dead; Norse mythology spoke of Svartálfaheimr, the underground realm of the dwarves; Hindu tradition describes Patala, a netherworld inhabited by serpents and demons; and Tibetan lore tells of Shambhala, a hidden kingdom nestled beneath the Himalayas. The Neath clearly draws from these mythological traditions, bearing particular resemblance to the Greek conception of Hades. Much like the ancient warnings about the food of the dead, Suface travelers in the Neath are advised not to eat its food or linger too long if they hope to return to the Surface. The Neath is teeming with monstrous creatures, devils, and strange beings, exactly the kinds of sights one would expect in a mythological underworld.


The Neath draws influence from another source as well. In the 17th century, the scientist Edmond Halley proposed the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollow_Earth Hollow Earth] theory, suggesting that Earth was composed of concentric shells, each with its own atmosphere and possibly harboring life. This idea arose from attempts to explain anomalies in compass readings. However, by the late 18th century, experiments like Charles Hutton’s Schiehallion experiment demonstrated that the Earth was far denser than the Hollow Earth model allowed. Modern geology and seismology have since confirmed the existence of a solid inner core and a molten outer core; entirely incompatible with a hollow Earth. Despite its scientific debunking, the Hollow Earth theory captured the public imagination and inspired a rich body of literature. Jules Verne’s Journey to the Center of the Earth (1864) became a seminal work, popularizing subterranean adventures and the idea of hidden worlds beneath our own. Later, in the 1940s, Richard Sharpe Shaver’s "Shaver Mystery" series claimed that ancient beings still lived in underground caverns, subtly influencing human affairs. There is something inescapably alluring about what lies beneath our feet: an enduring fascination with the dark, hidden places of the world. Perhaps, deep down, we truly do yearn for the mines.
The persistence of these ideas suggests that there is something profoundly compelling about the mysteries that lie beneath our feet. Perhaps humanity is drawn, instinctively, to investigate anything hidden beyond its reach: anything deep, dark, and marvelous.  


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 21:28, 28 April 2025

"...where Hell is close, immortality is cheap, and the screaming has largely stopped… Welcome. Delicious friend."[1]

The Neath is an immense, impossible cavern that stretches beneath the surface of Earth.

Deep, Dark, and Marvellous[edit]

"A cavern the size of Europe..."[2]

The Neath - short for "beneath," and pronounced like so[3] - is traditionally said to be roughly the size of Europe.[4] The known and charted extent of it incorporates two continents, bordered by the vast Unterzee, which is dotted with islands. The cavern has walls[5] and a roof, but because space is highly distorted in the Neath in all four cardinal directions, it is likely far larger than humanity can comprehend. Conventional distances and geography do not apply, and the Neath's position relative to the Surface is bizarre and often contradictory.

A map of the Unterzee. Not always reliable.

London and the Echo Bazaar are located on the western shore of the Unterzee, along the coastline of an unnamed continent. The Tomb-Colonies are north of the city, and the Iron Republic lies to the south. The Hinterlands and Hell are due west of London, further inland. To the southwest, the Dawn Machine has warped spacetime even further.[6] The other primary landmass in the Neath is the Elder Continent, which comprises the southern edge of the Unterzee; its primary landmark, the Mountain of Light, shines from much further south. The northern edge of the Unterzee collapses toward a single point, the Avid Horizon,[7] while the East is a seemingly infinite distortion of spacetime.[8]

Throughout history, there have been many entrances or holes linking the Surface to the Neath; they were a more common sight in the past,[9] and often became the subject of myth and legend.[10] Several of these still remain:

  • The Travertine Spiral is a massive, spiraling stone passage that joins the Neath with the Roof, and the Surface beyond.[11]
  • The Last Labyrinth connects to Shepton Mallet, a town in southwest England.[12]
  • A dumbwaiter links Balmoral to Edinburgh in Scotland.[13]
  • Lake Avernus served as the Roman mythical gateway to the underworld long before the construction of the Cumaean Canal, though the Canal later made passage far easier.

False-Seasons[edit]

"The Neath has no sunshine. None of the trappings of the seasons. Still it becomes hotter sometimes, more humid."[14]

Because of the absence of the Sun, the Neath does not experience the conventional seasons seen on the Surface, and instead has its own peculiar cycle of "False-Seasons."[15] False-Summer is the only one referred to by name; during this time, the Neath becomes hotter and more humid,[16] as damp, warm fog blows in from the Unterzee.[17] Certain phenomena also become more common, like wandering Parabolan mirages[18] and outbreaks of spore-fever (ostensibly a fungal counterpart of hay fever).[19] While it is not officially described as False-Winter, every December, "snow" begins to accumulate in London,[20] and the city celebrates Christmas.

Certain seasonal patterns of bat colonies have been observed upon the Roof of the Neath, but these are not extensively described and may be a product of human artistic license.[21]

Origins[edit]

"Are you quite sure you want to know this?"

Beyond this point lie major spoilers for Fallen London, Sunless Sea, Sunless Skies, or Mask of the Rose. This may include endgame or major Fate-locked spoilers. Proceed at your own risk.

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"The Creditor had not expected to be left behind. The Moon had not expected to be riven, or to be dependent on another for its light. The Sun had promised to make a star of them, and instead it made a pale, mocking mirror."[22]

The Creditor

Long ago, the entity that was the Earth[23] served a "fierce and brilliant" Judgement,[24][25] presumably the Sun. It accepted its master's offer to ascend the Great Chain of Being and become a Judgement itself.[26] In an event later called the Cataclysm of Silver,[27] the Sun sent a Courier, a predecessor to the Bazaar, who struck the Earth with tremendous force.[28] This Messenger, now known as the Shattered Herald,[29] tore away a massive chunk of the planet, which rose into the sky and became the Moon.[30][31] The remnants of the Earth which were left behind would become the Creditor, and the vast hollow resulting from the impact solidified into the Neath.[26] The Sun repurposed the Neath as a hidden vault for its experiments (including its children by the Bazaar), placing the Creditor[32] in charge of overseeing and protecting the Shames[33] who were hidden from the Judgements' sight.[34]

Guarding and regulating the Neath are a series of violations against the order of the Great Chain of Being, known as the Treacheries.[35] There are said to be seven Treacheries,[36] of which five are known: Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass, and Hearts.[37][38]

Historical and Cultural Inspirations[edit]

Across ancient civilizations, the idea of subterranean realms and underworld afterlives has appeared again and again. In Greek and Roman mythology, there was Hades, the shadowy land of the dead. Norse mythology spoke of Svartálfaheimr, the realm of dwarves hidden deep beneath the earth. In Hindu belief, Patala was an underground domain inhabited by serpents and demons, while Tibetan tradition told of Shambhala, a secret kingdom hidden beneath the Himalayas. The Neath draws from these mythological traditions, with notable similarities to Hades; much like the ancient warnings about the food of the dead, Surface travelers in the Neath are advised not to eat its food or linger too long if they hope to return to the Surface. It is a realm populated by all the strange, otherworldly, monstrous, and treacherous beings that one might expect from a mythical underworld.

However, the Neath is also influenced by theories from the days of the Scientific Revolution, notably Edmond Halley's Hollow Earth theory, which suggested that the Earth was made up of concentric hollow shells that each had their own atmosphere and possibly even their own forms of life. Halley had suggested this model to account for anomalous compass readings, but further experiments demonstrated the Earth's dense mass and disproved the hypothesis by the end of the 18th century. Modern geology and seismology have since confirmed that Earth possesses a solid inner core and a molten outer core, structures wholly incompatible with a hollow interior.

Despite being scientifically debunked, the Hollow Earth theory captured the imagination of writers and the public alike. It inspired a wealth of literature, famously including Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth, which was published in 1864 and popularized the idea of subterranean adventure. In the 1940s, Richard Sharpe Shaver published stories of ancient beings living in underground caves and secretly influencing human affairs; he claimed to draw from personal experience and encounters with the supernatural, and his ideas have inspired New Age imaginations — and conspiracy theories — ever since.

The persistence of these ideas suggests that there is something profoundly compelling about the mysteries that lie beneath our feet. Perhaps humanity is drawn, instinctively, to investigate anything hidden beyond its reach: anything deep, dark, and marvelous.

References[edit]

  1. Home Page, Fallen London
  2. Recall where you are (Unfairly imprisoned), Fallen London
  3. neath, Cambridge Dictionary
  4. Recall where you are, Fallen London "A cavern the size of Europe..."
  5. Persuade the Tower to move, using the persuasions of clock and schedule, Fallen London "The Tower is... sideways. Somewhere at the very edge of the Neath, stuck in a cave wall. What was the east wall is now your floor."
  6. Unborn time, Sunless Sea "The Dawn Machine's roots extend here, into a luminous, impossible space. You breathe gold. You think light."
  7. The place that is no place, Sunless Sea "The unterzee has no northern shore. Space is forbidden. Time contracts to a single frozen instant. There is only one way North."
  8. Measure the measureless, Fallen London "[...] They say that the East is a plane that extends infinitely in that direction, and also a sharp line where existence halts. [...] They say, alarmingly, that it is terribly beautiful there."
  9. A Devil's Due, Fallen London "It is neither proper nor safe for a Devil to visit the Surface. Unheard of in these times. But in the days of the Second City, the Laws used to be softer. [...]"
  10. A Devil's Due, Fallen London "[...] A different time – the world was bigger. The Neath was more permeable. Every cave, grotto, or hole in the ground in Europe has a legend that claims it is a passageway to Hell. Some of those stories used to be true."
  11. Fly past the Travertine Spiral, Fallen London "A great spiral of white stone, joining the ground of the Neath to the Roof – and the Surface beyond."
  12. Your beloved, Fallen London "But you have the key to the Last Labyrinth [...] You pass through the fungus-choked corridors, the pits where the Inhabiters walk, the broken gates. [...] You breach the surface, at last, in an apple orchard just outside Shepton Mallet, through a Neolithic tomb of unlikely age. It's night, but the air is warm, and scented with summer."
  13. The Dumbwaiter of Balmoral, Fallen London "Due to an accidental entanglement during the Fall, the Balmoral kitchen dumbwaiters connect not to another part of the Castle, but to a modest-sized townhouse in Edinburgh."
  14. Sidebar Snippet: False-summer, Fallen London
  15. The False-Season:, Fallen London
  16. Sidebar Snippet: False-summer, Fallen London "The Neath has no sunshine. None of the trappings of the seasons. Still it becomes hotter sometimes, more humid. [...] Whatever the reason for these hot spells, they make the chiller fogs of the Neath a distant, pleasant memory."
  17. Sidebar Snippet: Heat and Dust, Fallen London "The Neath's roughly-annual false-summer brings with it many inconveniences, not the least of which is the proliferation of damp, warm fog. It blows in off the Unterzee, when the breeze is in the right direction. Finding yourself out in it is akin to trying to walk through a hot, wet blanket. One that has recently been used to dry a hot, wet dog."
  18. Sidebar Snippet: The Wandering Mirage, Fallen London "Nasty, shimmering patches of air float along the streets in the false summers of the Neath. Strange lights sometimes dance in attendance. Far-off places can be glimpsed. Don't walk through these. There are worse places than Fallen London."
  19. Sidebar Snippet: Spore-fever, Fallen London "Spore-fever. False-summer would not be the same without it. All of Fallen London is stricken, at once: sneezing, wheezing, eyes streaming. Handkerchiefs are brandished; eyes are concealed behind smoked glass pince-nez; F.F. Gebrandt sells out of remedies, whether they are intended for spore-fever or not. A city is united in self-pity. There are real cures, but their side-effects are nastier than the symptoms."
  20. Sidebar Snippet: Snow in the Neath?, Fallen London "The snow that falls in the Neath every December is something of a mystery. Condensation from the cavern's roof, the sloughed chitin of enormous insects, or the dandruff of a tonsorially careless God? In any case, catching snowflakes on your tongue is probably a bad idea."
  21. Sidebar Snippet: Divination and chiropteromancy, Fallen London "Astrology without stars? The movements of bats up in the far reaches of the cavern roof are mysterious, but seasonal patterns can be observed. There is a shape often seen in winter that looks just like a sleeping cat; one in spring that could be a lovers' embrace. [...]"
  22. Tease out in greater depth the story of the Moon, Fallen London
  23. Guess at a time before history, Fallen London "The Creditor was once a greater body, of shared substance with the Moon, cold rock. Before that, liquid stone and metal, tucked within the shell of the Earth, indistinguishable from that vaster substance. Before that? Something without an outer shell at all, perhaps the whole of the planet. [...]"
  24. Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar, Fallen London "Service to a fierce and brilliant star."
  25. Confer with Penstock, Fallen London "[...] this Creditor [...] they have acquaintances in common. So the Bazaar [...]"
  26. 26.0 26.1 Long Ago the Sun and Moon, Fallen London "The Sun offered to transform the mute land into a star. But when the cataclysm came, the body of the Moon was flung into the sky and the Creditor remained, hollowed as a crust of bread. In any apotheosis, some rind of mortality is left behind."
  27. Read the words that come with the Shard of the Mountain, Fallen London "[...] the Creditor, who has lived alone [...] since the Cataclysm of Silver."
  28. Tease out in greater depth the story of the Moon, Fallen London "[...] A courier, sent by the Sun to shatter itself and shatter the Creditor, in order to form both Neath and Moon. [...]"
  29. Take away a souvenir, Fallen London "[...] shaped from the remains of the Shattered Herald. [...]"
  30. Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar, Fallen London "A cleaving birth [...] It was painful to lose your sister-self."
  31. Search it for letters of fire, Fallen London ""Substance shared with a [...] sibling." The [...] stone is mottled and silver as [...] the moon."
  32. Propose a currency infused with lacre, Fallen London "The Creditor wanted the Neath to remain as the Sun intended, a hiding place for creations that could exist nowhere else."
  33. Study its likely chemical effects on the Bazaar, Fallen London "Then: the Neath. [...] You had responsibilities. You oversaw disputes and kept peace between the Sun's experiments."
  34. Leviathan, Fallen London "[...] these creatures are Shames, [...] have lain hidden from the Judgements for millennia."
  35. Cheat (The Mind of London), Fallen London "The Treacheries are transgressions against the Chain. [...]"
  36. St Erzulie's Candle (Action), Fallen London "The Seven Treacheries guard the Neath [...]"
  37. Look up (SMEN), Fallen London "Clocks, Maps, Breath, Glass – and the three beyond. This is what protects the Courier and its toadies. You can end that. Your hand, your mouth, your voice. Ask the Question. Open the Gate. Advance."
  38. Examine a sealed door to the (direction), Fallen London "—clocks, maps, glass, breath, hearts—"