Although most toors were nomadic, a city state could also be considered a toor, as long as it had minimal sedentary population. Such cities forbade owning a house and instead operated as inns of sorts, but inns that would be open only to the citizens of a given toor and a foreigner would require an invitation of a document to stay or pass through. The king's army and court would also periodically star in such a state, but Mōroh principles would not allow the court to stay in the city for too long either. | Although most toors were nomadic, a city state could also be considered a toor, as long as it had minimal sedentary population. Such cities forbade owning a house and instead operated as inns of sorts, but inns that would be open only to the citizens of a given toor and a foreigner would require an invitation of a document to stay or pass through. The king's army and court would also periodically star in such a state, but Mōroh principles would not allow the court to stay in the city for too long either. |