The Imperial City of Nuremberg
- Coat of arms/Flag
- Status – Settlement, Free Imperial City
- General Alignment –
- Settlement size –
- Corruption +; Crime +; Economy +; Law +; Lore +; Society +
- Qualities –
- Danger +
- Demographics
- Capital – Nuremberg
- Country – The Imperial City of Nuremberg
- Government – Republic
- Legislature –
- Population – 30,000
- Places of interest – Nuremberg Castle, Heilig-Geist-Spital ( hospital), Rathaus (prison)
- Current Ruler –
- Other Notable residents – Albrecht Dürer (painter and engraver), Hans Folz (poet), Kaspar Hauser, Peter Henlein (clockmaker), Kunegunde Hergot (subversive printer), Anton Koberger ( mass printer and publisher), Katerina Lemmel (businesswoman, patron of the arts, Birgittine nun), Kunz Lochner ( eminent master plate armourer, blacksmith and silversmith), Caritas Pirckheimer (abbess), Willibald Pirckheimer (humanist), Conrad Paumann (organist, lutenist and composer), Hans Sachs (poet), Hartmann Schedel, Franz Schmidt (executioner) executioner, diarist, Veit Stoss (sculptor), Peter Vischer the Elder (sculptor), Michael Wolgemut (painter and printmaker), Johann Philipp von Wurzelbauer (astronomer)
- Marketplace
- Base Value ; Purchase Limit ; Spellcasting
- Minor Items ; Medium Items ; Major Items
The Imperial City of Nuremberg is a free imperial city — independent city-state — within the Holy Roman Empire. After Nuremberg gained piecemeal independence from the Burgraviate of Nuremberg in the and considerable territory from Bavaria in the Landshut War of Succession, it has grown to become one of the largest and most important Imperial cities, the ‘unofficial capital’ of the Empire, particularly because Imperial Diets and courts meet at Nuremberg Castle. The Diets of Nuremberg were an important part of the administrative structure of the Empire. The Golden Bull issued by Emperor Charles IV, named Nuremberg as the city where newly elected kings of Germany must hold their first Imperial Diet, making Nuremberg one of the three highest cities of the Empire.
The cultural flowering of Nuremberg, has made it the center of the German Renaissance.