The Domain and Realms National Site
Welcome to the Dellian Province of
The Rolling Hills
The Rolling Hills is the first of the two Dellian provinces to be established, being founded in 2005. by the hand of its First and former ruler: Lady Dame Kristathyst ni DarkFyre.
The current ruler of the Rolling Hills is Lord Sir Gemwrapper ap DarkFyre.
Founded in 2005 by then-Lady Xanthi Senara the Silent ni VoceDeConscienza (now High Queen Xanthi Senara), under then-Dellian Ruler Lady Dame Kristathyst ni DarkFyre (now Duchess Dame Kristathyst ni MahtamaEetaheNehe of the Riverlands), the Rolling Hills is a province dominated by forests in the North, rivers in the South, and rolling quartzite hills and moraines throughout.
Rolling Hills
Stats and Information
Full Name: The Dellian Province of the Rolling Hills
Full Name: The Dellian Province of the Rolling Hills
Date Founded: January 17, 2002
Date Founded: January 17, 2002
Entymology: Named for the rolling nature of the hills that are indicative of the Province: from South to North.
Population(current): 4
Ruler(s): Lord Sir Gemwrapper, OB
House(s): DarkFyre
House(s): DarkFyre
Provincial Pennant: The River of Seasons - The Mississippi River running through the hills and bluffs of the surrounding landscape. The four symbols - the flower, ear of corn, red leaf, and snowflake - are representative of the Four Seasons of the year.
Note: The original flag image - created by former-Lady Dame Kristathyst ni DarkFyre: the first Lady of the province - was lost to time. The current Pennant is a recreation/update of the original - according to her specifications - by the Domani Imperial Vexillology Department, circa 2022.
Duchies: The Northwoods (Northern Wisconsin), The Riverlands (Southern Wisconsin)
Provincial Seat: Caer Valaina NuntaEttele (Hartford, Wisconsin)
Provincial Home: Fanta Eccaia Londe
Rolling Hills Duchies
Ducal Pennon: None at current time
Name of Duchy: The Riverlands
(Click on the name or flag to navigate)
Location: Southern Wisconsin
Population(current): 3
Origin of name: In reference to the rivers whose watersheds dominate and flow through the land.
Ruler(s): Duchess Dame Kristathyst ni MahtamaEetaheNehe, OWW
Counties: The Kettle Moraine (Winnebago, Calumet, Manitowoc, Sheboygan, Fond Du Lac, Washington, Waukesha, Milwaukee, Racine, Kenosha, and Walworth Counties, Wisconsin), The Lakelands (Adams, Waushara, Marquette, Green Lake, Columbia, Dodge, Jefferson, Dane, Iowa, Grant, Lafayette, Green, and Rock Counties, Wisconsin), The Hidden Valleys (La Crosse, Monroe, Juneau, Sauk, Richland, Vernon, and Crawford Counties, Wisconsin)
Ducal Pennon: The Sacred Voice of the River - The landscapes represented are of the lands of the Wisconsin section of the Mississippi River Valley. The Grandad Bluff: one of the landmarks of La Crosse, Wisconsin, symbolizing wisdom of the land. The eagle atop the bluff represents strength. The farmland below Granddad Bluff represents prosperity and family. And the Mississippi River at the bottom represents old knowledge and movement of energy.
Places of Interest, Power, and Enchantment
Places of Interest, Power, and Enchantment
Wind Point Lighthouse
Wind Point Lighthouse
Wind Point Lighthouse (or Windpoint Light Station) is a lighthouse located at the north end of Racine Harbor in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. It is in the village of Wind Point, Wisconsin, on Lighthouse Road, next to the Shoop Park golf course. The lighthouse stands 108 feet tall. One of the oldest and tallest active lighthouses on the Great Lakes, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
Wind Point Lighthouse was designed by Orlando Metcalfe Poe, a former Brigadier General in the Civil War. The lighthouse was constructed in 1880. It was lit for the first time on November 15, 1880. The beacon was originally powered by a three-wicked kerosene lamp, magnified by a third-order Fresnel lens. The light was electrified in 1924, and replaced a DCB-24R airport beacon in 1964. The DCB-24R failed in 2007, and was replaced by a VRB-25 lens. A signal house (horns removed, resonators still in place) remains on the grounds as well as a garage, two storage buildings, and an oil house. The Village of Wind Point has maintained the lighthouse and grounds since 1964, and uses the old keepers' quarters as a village hall and police headquarters. The park and lighthouse were transferred from the U.S. coast guard to the Village of Wind Point in 1997, with the requirement that it be maintained as an historical landmark. The lighthouse is open to tour on certain dates.
(from Wikipedia)
Chequah Bikwaki
Chequah Bikwaki
Lying in Western Marinette County, Chequah Bikwaki - known as Thunder Mountain - stands as the centerpiece of Thunder Mountain State Natural Area, 18 minutes Northeast of Mountain, Wisconsin.
Thunder Mountain is a quartzite monadnock that rises 360 feet above the wetlands at its base and affords picturesque views of the surrounding Forest. It is one of the largest of several promontories in the southern portion of the Nicolet National Forest that are not drumlins, but are bedrock outcrops, predating the Pleistocene, actually of the Precambian era, dating to the early and middle Proterozoic division. It has exposed bedrock on the southern flank, and these support a rare plant. Two other rare plants are also found on the mountain. Several spring seeps are on the mountainside. The forest on the slopes is more southern in its biota than normally found on the Nicolet. It is classed as a southern dry-mesic forest, dominated by regenerating red oak and white oak, especially on the south facing slopes. The lowlands at the base contain white cedar and black ash swamps, a river corridor, and a small silver maple floodplain forest. Other notable species include the parasitic plant American cancer-root, and turkey vulture. Thunder Mountain is owned by the US Forest Service and was designated a State Natural Area in 2007.
(from the Wisconsin DNR website)
Legends tell of a battle between a Thunderbird named Chequah, and a Great Serpent that lives within the mountain. The Serpent won the battle due to a mistake made by thoqse witnessing the battle, and the Serpent took Chequah prisoner into the mountain. The mountain h
The House on the Rock
The House on the Rock
The House on the Rock is a tourist attraction located between the cities of Dodgeville and Spring Green, Wisconsin. Opened in 1959, it is a complex of architecturally distinct rooms, streets, gardens, and shops designed by Alex Jordan Jr.
The "house" itself is atop Deer Shelter Rock, a column of rock approximately 60 by 70 feet, by 200 feet on the top, which stands in a forest nearby. Additions were made to the original structure and other buildings added over the course of several decades. The complex now features "The Streets of Yesterday", a re-creation of an early twentieth century American town; "The Heritage of the Sea", featuring nautical exhibits and a 200-foot model of a fanciful whale-like sea creature; "The Music of Yesterday", a huge collection of automatic music machines; and what the management bills as "the world's largest indoor carousel", among other attractions. The carousel at the House on the Rock features 269 carousel animals, 182 chandeliers, over 20,000 lights, and hundreds of mannequin angels hanging from the ceiling. The carousel has no horses. During the winter, the attraction features a Christmas theme, with decorations and a large collection of Santa Claus figures. Many of the bathrooms are decorated with strange objects, including mannequins, flowers, and preserved animals.
The House has inspired several authors and musical groups, the most prominent being author Neil Gaiman, who used it as an important plot point in his 2001 novel American Gods, along with the related 2017 television series. The 2017 film American Fable features parts of the house, including the carousel and Infinity Room, in a dream sequence.
(from Wikipedia)
The Rolling Hills
is ruled under a
DarkFyre
administration
A view of downtown
Caer Fanta Eccaia Londe,
Seat of the Province of
the Rolling Hills
Contact Lord Gemwrapper