The Kingdom That Forgot the Sky
Astronomers found a blank space in the heavens — ancient texts call it “The Agrabah Void."

The Caliphate of Agrabah appears in no official map before 900 CE — yet Arabic astronomers of the era describe an oasis city that “floated between stars and sand.”
Its ruler, the Sultan al-Rashid, maintained power through the Orb of the Heavens, a relic said to contain a piece of the night sky. It allowed him to control time itself, pausing or rewinding reality during droughts or wars.
But time, like sand, resists capture.
Each use of the Orb stole a fragment of memory from the kingdom. First, people forgot years. Then, their names. Then, the stars themselves.
When a thief — Al-Amin, later mythologized as Aladdin — stole the Orb, the sky above Agrabah disappeared entirely. The city was lost to the desert in a single night, swallowed without a trace.
Today, astronomers note a blank region in the heavens — no stars, no radiation, no measurable light. They call it The Agrabah Void.
It moves one degree west every century, as if orbiting a memory.



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