Prompt: Photorealistic low aerial (bird’s-eye) view of a grand Rwandan royal palace complex at dawn, inspired by the King’s Palace at Nyanza. The architecture is traditional East/Central African: entirely circular, woven-thatch domed structures — no square buildings. The palace is multi-domed, a cluster of beehive-shaped thatched domes of varying heights, with one massive central dome towering over the smaller ones at over 20 metres tall, steep and imposing, topped with a slender finial. Smaller domes radiate around it, connected at the base. The thatch is finely layered and tightly woven, with subtle decorative agaseke-basket geometric patterns worked into the lower walls (understated, not busy). In front stretches a clean ceremonial square paved with patterned terracotta/clay brick in geometric designs (no asphalt). Two large mature broad-canopied trees stand on the square. The square is enclosed by a tall, neatly finished bamboo/reed palisade fence, smooth and uniform. A pair of monumental gate pillars flank the entrance, each crowned with a polished golden long-horned Ankole cow head sculpture. A few people in traditional Rwandan dress (umushanana wraps) walk across the square, some balancing woven agaseke baskets on their heads. Beyond the fence runs a quiet pedestrian street with more early-morning strollers. Rolling green Rwandan hills fade into the distance. Misty morning atmosphere: soft low-lying ground fog drifting across the square and curling between the domes, Ver mais