Concepts
Major Civilizations
Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes

Introduction

Wonders

Alhambra

Angkor Wat

Apadana

Big Ben

Biosphère

Bolshoi Theatre

Broadway

Chichen Itza

Colosseum

Colossus

Cristo Redentor

Eiffel Tower

Estádio do Maracanã

Etemenanki

Forbidden City

Great Library

Great Lighthouse

Great Zimbabwe

Hagia Sophia

Hanging Gardens

Hermitage

Huey Teocalli

Jebel Barkal

Mahabodhi Temple

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Mont St. Michel

Oracle

Oxford University

Petra

Potala Palace

Pyramids

Ruhr Valley

Statue of Zeus

Stonehenge

Sydney Opera House

Terracotta Army

Torre de Belém

Venetian Arsenal

Projects

Great Zimbabwe
Description
+1 Trade Route capacity

Your Trade Routes from this city get +2 Gold for every Bonus resource within 3 tiles of the city and in this city's territory. Must be built adjacent to a Commercial Hub district with a Market and adjacent to Cattle.
Historical Context
According to one set of legends, Great Zimbabwe was the palace complex of the Queen of Sheba. According to another set, it was where the laborers of King Solomon’s Mines – which were thought nearby by a generation of deluded treasure hunters – relaxed during their time off. In point of boring fact, it was the capital city, eventually covering some 1700 acres with a peak population of around 18 thousand, of the Kingdom of Zimbabwe which arose in 1220 AD and was gone by 1450 AD. Built entirely of stone (quite a feat in the jungle), Great Zimbabwe was soon afterward abandoned and fell into ruin. The earliest known record of the ruins is by the Portuguese officer Vicente Pegado, written in 1531. He makes mention of great walls, made of chiseled stone fitted without mortar. The ruins lie in three groupings: the Hill Complex, the Valley Complex, and the Great Enclosure, where the majority of the archaeological artifacts have been found: soapstone figurines, gold beads, copper ingots, bronze spearheads, jeweled pendants and bracelets, and much else. So, maybe those treasure hunters weren’t so deluded after all.
PortraitSquare
icon_building_great_zimbabwe
“King Solomon gave the Queen of Sheba all she desired and asked for; besides what he had given her out of his royal bounty. So she turned and went to her own country, she and her servants.”
– 1 Kings, 10:13

Traits

Removed if game started after
Modern Era
+5 Gold
+2 Great Merchant points per turn.
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_banking
Banking
Building
icon_building_market
Market
Adjacency
icon_district_commercial_hub
Commercial Hub
icon_resource_cattle
Cattle
Production Cost
Base Cost: 920 Production
PortraitSquare
icon_building_great_zimbabwe
Description
+1 Trade Route capacity

Your Trade Routes from this city get +2 Gold for every Bonus resource within 3 tiles of the city and in this city's territory. Must be built adjacent to a Commercial Hub district with a Market and adjacent to Cattle.
Historical Context
According to one set of legends, Great Zimbabwe was the palace complex of the Queen of Sheba. According to another set, it was where the laborers of King Solomon’s Mines – which were thought nearby by a generation of deluded treasure hunters – relaxed during their time off. In point of boring fact, it was the capital city, eventually covering some 1700 acres with a peak population of around 18 thousand, of the Kingdom of Zimbabwe which arose in 1220 AD and was gone by 1450 AD. Built entirely of stone (quite a feat in the jungle), Great Zimbabwe was soon afterward abandoned and fell into ruin. The earliest known record of the ruins is by the Portuguese officer Vicente Pegado, written in 1531. He makes mention of great walls, made of chiseled stone fitted without mortar. The ruins lie in three groupings: the Hill Complex, the Valley Complex, and the Great Enclosure, where the majority of the archaeological artifacts have been found: soapstone figurines, gold beads, copper ingots, bronze spearheads, jeweled pendants and bracelets, and much else. So, maybe those treasure hunters weren’t so deluded after all.
“King Solomon gave the Queen of Sheba all she desired and asked for; besides what he had given her out of his royal bounty. So she turned and went to her own country, she and her servants.”
– 1 Kings, 10:13

Traits

Removed if game started after
Modern Era
+5 Gold
+2 Great Merchant points per turn.
+1000 Tourism from Rock Concerts.

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_banking
Banking
Building
icon_building_market
Market
Adjacency
icon_district_commercial_hub
Commercial Hub
icon_resource_cattle
Cattle
Production Cost
Base Cost: 920 Production
Language
Choose Ruleset
Get it on App StoreGet it on Google Play
CopyrightPrivacy Policy