Looking up, Thierry and his companions could see the church tower at the center of Crater Ferry.
According to the Holy Union's measurements, the tallest spire of this Gothic-style church reached a full thirty meters high.
On the gentle slope beside the church stood a Knight's Mansion, alongside which could be seen a barn and a slowly turning mill waterwheel.
Three intersections formed around the church and the Knight's Mansion, with closely packed gable-roof houses forming the most classic scene of a thousand-person town in the Thousand River Valley.
The name itself suggests that this place is famous for its tin smiths, with a large number of tin workshops present.
Ordinary farmers used wooden bowls and earthen pots, while the nobility used silverware and porcelain.
But the small landowners and citizens among the Armed Farmers mostly used tin pots and pans.
