Shaar

The Shaar was a vast land of plains in south Faerûn. The lands to the west of the Landrise were generally called the Shaar, while those to the east were the Eastern Shaar.

By 1479 DR, due to the Spellplague of 1385 DR, the Shaar had become a vast desert wasteland known as the Shaar Desolation. In the center of the Shaar Desolation lay an enormous area called the Underchasm where huge swathes of land around the Great Rift collapsed into the Underdark. Bordering the Underchasm to the east was a region called the East Rift.

Geography
It comprised grassy plains and gently rolling hills, extending over 1500 miles (2400 kilometers) in length from west to east and with an average breath of 250 miles (400 kilometers) from north to south. It was bounded in the west by the eastern edge of the Shining Sea and in the east by the realm of Veldorn. The northern side of the Shaar was bordered by the Firesteap Mountains, part of the Chondalwood, the Uthangol Mountains, and the southern border of Mulhorand. The southern border of the Shaar was made up by the adjoining Channath Vale along the river Channath, the Forest of Amtar, and the Toadsquat Mountains.

The Shaar was divided by the Landrise, a great cliff face, and the Great Rift, a 200-mile-long (320 kilometers) long gouge in the ground. The plains were scattered with isolated forests and a few small groups of hills and crossed by a handful of shallow rivers and streams, though were often transformed into sandy gullies in the dry season.

The Shaar received scant rainfall, so mostly only coarse grass, cacti, and thorny bushes grew on the plains. During daytime, it was incredibly hot, while at nights it grew very cold.

Inhabitants
Throughout recorded history, the Shaar was inhabited by nomad tribes of humans, centaurs, loxo, thri-kreen, and wemics, and it remained largely without civilization. They hunted the herd animals and regularly argued over water rights.

Occasionally, other nations laid claim to some parts of the plains or established settlements to aid in trade, but usually only the ruins of these survived into the 14 century DR. Dragons, gnolls, manticores, perytons, and wyverns also challenged the nomads for control of land.

Notable Locations
Strewn across the Shaar laid several sites worth mentioning here:
 * Azulduth, the Lake of Salt: A shallow, salty lake emptied by the River of Swords in southeastern Mulhorand.
 * Channath Vale: Around the River Cannath where it ran west into the River Talar in the southern Shaar.
 * Council Hills: An isolated cluster of hills in the middle of Eastern Shaar.
 * Great Rift: A wide canyon near the western side of the Eastern Shar, home of the gold dwarves.
 * The Landrise: A steep cliff-side marking the border between the Shaar and the Eastern Shaar.
 * Lake Lhespen: A salty, mineral-laden body of water.
 * Rathgaunt Hills: Rocky crags between Lake Lhespen and the Landrise, overlooking the southern plains.
 * Riftwood: A small isolated forest east of the Great Rift and north-northwest of Delzimmer.
 * River Shaar: Began in the icy-cold Riftlake in the Great Rift, flowing underground in the Deep Realm.
 * Shaarwood: A dry and dusty forest just north of the River Shaar.
 * Sharawood: Also called the Drakewood, this forest sat in between Azulduth and the Toadsquat mMountains.
 * Uthangol Mountains: A range marking the northern limit of the Shaar.

Cities
Most communities in the Shaar were nothing more than trading centers. Small in size, they were usually dry and dusty, but close to a water source for their survival. Gold Dwarves from the Great Rift had their own cities, some on the surface, most underground, which differ greatly from the trading centers of other races, since the races don't share their ideas readily.

The following cities could be found in the Shaar:
 * Blaskaltar: Actually a rumoured city that once stood in this hot sun-baked area with no written records on it.
 * Delzimmer: A small free-trade city, ruled by four powerful merchant families.
 * Eartheart: A dwarven metropolis, divided into two sections, one inside the walls, the other on the outside.
 * Hammer and anvil: A small tent-city outside the western walls of Eartheart, filled with workshops.
 * Hardcastle: A small town, nothing more than a fortified trading camp.
 * Khôltar: A small city, known as the Iron City because of its unusual iron-covered walls.
 * Lhesper: A ruined town, near the northern tip of Lake Lesphen in the heart of the Shaar.
 * Peleveran: Today nothing more than ruins built into the side of the Landrise.
 * Shaarmid: A large free-trade city, which forms a safe haven for merchants because of its stout walls and formidable defense forces.