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==Overview== |
==Overview== |
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Sacred Fields increases experience generated by Indian livestock when they are tasked to it and trains [[Sacred Cow]]s for {{resources|food=125}} ({{resources|food = 100}} with Goraksha). They can also heal nearby units if The Mystical Syllable card is sent. |
Sacred Fields increases experience generated by Indian livestock when they are tasked to it and trains [[Sacred Cow]]s for {{resources|food=125}} ({{resources|food = 100}} with Goraksha). They can also heal nearby units if The Mystical Syllable card is sent. |
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==Units== |
==Units== |
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Revision as of 08:03, 26 January 2019
Template:Infobox AoE3 Buildings The Sacred Field is a building unique to the Indians in Age of Empires III: The Asian Dynasties.
Overview
Sacred Fields increases experience generated by Indian livestock when they are tasked to it and trains Sacred Cows for 125 food (100 food with Goraksha). They can also heal nearby units if The Mystical Syllable card is sent.
Units
Icon | Livestock | Cost |
---|---|---|
Sacred Cow | 125 food |
Improvements
Age | Icon | Improvement | Cost | Effect |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ritual Bovine | 150 wood, 150 coin | Indian livestock generates +25% XP when tasked into Sacred Fields |
Home City cards
As the Sacred Field is exclusive to the Indians, only other civilizations' TEAM cards that affects them are listed here.
Click for a list of related Home City cards | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Green: TEAM Shipment that is sent to each player in a team EuropeansNative AmericansAsiansIndians
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History
“ | As a source of food and a symbol of life in Hinduism, the cow may not be killed. According to the ancient religious text, the “Rigveda,” the cow is a goddess associated with Aditi, the mother of all gods. Therefore, slaughter is taboo. In ancient times, cows were sacrificed and their meat eaten, but never primarily for consumption, and milk-producing cows were never killed. Even during periods when meat-eating was permitted, vegetarianism was encouraged. On a more practical level, slaughtering cows for beef was an extremely expensive act for sacrifice or as a gift, since the animal was a source of many important products: milk for consumption, fuel from dung, and browned butter for lamps. Later, in the early centuries CE, the cow became an appropriate gift to priests of the higher caste, or Brahmans. It was even said that killing a cow was equal to killing a Brahman. | ” |