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{{WIP}}
{{WIP}}
{{Infobox country
{{Infobox country
|conventional_long_name = Confederation of the Saukanians
|conventional_long_name = Saukanian Alliance
|common_name = Saukania
|common_name = Saukania
|native_name = <small>''Kuchaxa ka Sakhandelen''</small>
|native_name = <small>''''</small>
|image_flag =  
|image_flag =  
|flag_type =  
|flag_type =  
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|alt_map =  
|alt_map =  
|map_caption = Location of Saukania in Thrismari
|map_caption = Location of Saukania in Thrismari
|capital = [[Kula]]
|capital = [[Kula]] (winter capital) <br> [[Khodan]] (summer capital)
|largest_city = Kula
|largest_city = Kula
|official_languages = {{hlist|Eastern Saukanian (Kulean)<br>Western Saukanian (Khodanian)}}
|official_languages =  
|regional_languages =  
|regional_languages =  
|ethnic_groups = 93.6% [[Saukanians|Saukanian]] <br> 6.4% Other
|ethnic_groups = 93.6% [[Saukanians|Saukanian]] <br> 6.4% Other
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|religion = 79.4% [[Religion in Saukania|Saukanian paganism]] <br> 10.2% {{wp|Christianity|Christianity}} <br> 6.6% {{wp|Islam|Islam}} <br> 3.8% Other
|religion = 79.4% [[Religion in Saukania|Saukanian paganism]] <br> 10.2% {{wp|Christianity|Christianity}} <br> 6.6% {{wp|Islam|Islam}} <br> 3.8% Other
|religion_year = 2020
|religion_year = 2020
|demonym = Saukanian <br> Saukan
|demonym = Saukanian
|government_type = Confederation of sovereign principalities and republics
|government_type = Confederation of sovereign city-states
|leader_title1 =  
|leader_title1 = President
|leader_name1 =  
|leader_name1 = TBA
|leader_title2 =  
|leader_title2 = Prime Minister
|leader_name2 =  
|leader_name2 = TBA
|legislature = [[Confederation Council]]
|legislature =  
|area_km2 = 1,116,863
|area_km2 = 1,116,863
|population_estimate = 27,214,000
|population_estimate = 27,214,000
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|calling_code =
|calling_code =
}}
}}
'''Saukania''', formally the '''Confederation of the Saukanians''' or the '''Saukanian Confederation''', is a landlocked country in northwestern [[Thrismari]]. Saukania is bordered by [[Bezuria]] and [[Shirua]] to its south and south-west, and [[Sarocca]] to the north. At 1,116,863 million square kilometers, Saukania is one of the largest countries in Thrismari, though very sparsely populated, with a population of 27.2 million people. [[Kula]] is the largest city and member of the Confederation, serving additionally as its capital. The country is extremely arid, consisting mostly of desert and semi-desert regions, with areas of montane, riparian, and temperate ecoregions in which the vast majority of the population resides. The [[Laxad river]] and its tributaries are the heartland of Saukanian civilization.
'''Saukania''', formally the '''Saukanian Alliance''', is a country in northwestern [[Thrismari]]. Saukania is bordered by [[Shirua]] to its south, and [[Zangoaistan]] to its southeast. At 1,116,863 million square kilometres, Saukania is one of the largest countries in Thrismari. Though vast, it is a primarily very arid land, with a population of just 27.2 million people who live in the alluvial plains and oases of various river valleys. The most prominent of these river valleys is the [[Sauka River]], from which the country draws its name. The [[Saukanians]], whose culture, language, and religious beliefs and customs have endured for over two millennia, are the native people and majority population of Saukania.


Human habitation in Saukania began in the {{wp|Palaeolithic|Palaeolithic}}. Saukania has been home to a number of peoples, the earliest recorded of which settled in the fertile regions of Daskhia, Kugeria, Parharia, and Turoka. It has been a historical battleground between its own native inhabitants, as well as neighbouring Shiruans, Saroccans, Kakish crusaders, and Riamese colonial interests. Modern Saukania traces its history and identity back to the numerous oasis city-kingdoms and republics in fertile river valleys within the Ghuran Mountains or the immense Laxad river area, controlling overland trade routes through the desert and growing wealthy on commerce and agriculture. These urban centres have dominated Saukanian history and culture since the arrival of the Proto-Saukanian invaders. Nevertheless, the influence on Saukanian culture by desert nomads, mountain tribes, and foreign invaders has been significant.
The Alliance adheres to a loose federal structure. It is comprised of eleven states, which elect representatives to the [[Alliance Council]] in accordance to population and military contributions. The [[Supreme Council of Saukania|Supreme Council]] is the supreme executive body of the Alliance, comprised of the leaders of the eleven states. By convention, the states of [[Kula]] and [[Khodan]] rotate the presidency of the supreme council between them every five years.


The modern Confederation established itself in the 18th and 19th centuries in response to significant foreign pressure and the risk of subjugation, due to the competing colonial interests of [[Nyalan]] and [[Riamo]]. It is a largely decentralised body, with its constituent states governing themselves according to their own laws. The [[Confederation Council]] serves as the executive of the Confederation, including leaders and representatives of the members.
Human habitation in Saukania began in the {{wp|Palaeolithic|Palaeolithic}}, as early as 61,000 YBP. Human settlement in the Ghuran Mountains and the arid grasslands commenced in the Neolithic around 9,500 years ago. Concentrated along riparian oases along Saukania's multitude of river valleys, these settled cultures evolved into a complex and prosperous urban civilization by the mid-3rd millennium BC, with its main centres along the course of the Sauka. Waves of Proto-Saukanian speaking migrants began entering the Sauka river valley from 2100 BC from the northern grasslands. By 1100 BC, the Saukanian invaders had spread to the [[Ghuran Mountains]] and the other river valleys. From the 4th century BC, tribal unions had formed city-states along the river valleys, particularly the [[Saukanian Plain]], from which Saukania derives its modern name. Codification of many myths and oral traditions took place between 350 BC to 250 AD, known in Saukanian historiography as the Epic Period. The subsequent Classical Period is marked by further enlarged urbanization, migrations of various tribal unions to new lands, and internecine wars between rival states and confederations for local hegemony.  


Saukania is a heavily {{wp|Agrarian society|agrarian}} country with a large rural population, with its urban centres the core of industry. Exports of fruits, vegetables, and other cash crops are a major source of revenue, as is the export of finished material goods such as textiles, with [[Saukanian carpets]] being famed throughout much of the world. Tourism to Saukania is common for its historic archaeological sites and unique culture, expressed through its cuisine, art, music, and entertainment.
Medieval Saukania saw an enlarged scope of contact and trade with faraway nations, and the city-states grew rich on commerce. Philosophy, religion, arts, and culture became widely patronised during the [[Golden Age of Wisdom]] from AD 1050 to 1475. This period came to an end with the rise of the last Saukanian nomadic empire. In the following centuries, Saukanian importance in the Thrismari trade network declined, as greater wealth came through the maritime commerce of various colonial powers. Saukania remained relatively free of foreign interference in this time, while its largest and most powerful states initiated campaigns of conquest against weaker neighbours.
 
The early form of the Alliance was established in the 19th century with a treaty between Kula, Khodan, and [[Acha]], and was consolidated in the 1847 [[Pact of Dautan]]. All of the Saukanian states had joined the Alliance by 1899. Two civil wars (1904-1907 and 1932-1938) and a series of other regional conflicts have left a lasting impact on the Alliance. More recent tensions include disputes and land wars between Saukania's rural population and nomadic minority, as well as ethnic tensions in the Ghuran Mountains.
 
Saukania is a heavily {{wp|Agrarian society|agrarian}} country with a large rural population. Its urban centres are the hub of industry, culture, and government. Saukania possesses a very arid climate, consisting of sand and gravel desert and shrub steppe. The majority of the population lives in the alluvial plains and oases of the larger river valleys such as the [[Sauka River|Sauka]], [[Kaladar River|Kaladar]], and the [[Larshan River|Larshan]]. Exports of fruits, vegetables, and other cash crops are a major source of revenue, as is the export of finished material goods such as textiles, with [[Saukanian carpets]] being famed throughout much of the world for their intricate handmade designs. [[Tourism in Saukania|Tourism to Saukania]] is common for its historic archaeological sites and unique culture, expressed through its cuisine, art, music, and entertainment.


==Name==
==Name==
{{Main|Names of the Saukanians}}
{{Main|Names of the Saukanians}}Saukania takes its name from the [[Sauka River]], also known as the Saukan, which is the largest river of Saukania in both length and volume. The application of the name to the current geographic dimensions of the Confederation, or to the reach of those polities of Saukanian culture, is an exonymic application of the term. Ancient Saukania was conceived of as limited to the plain which the Sauka waters on its way to the Argan Sea. In modern Saukania, ''Saukadrazah'' is the name for the plain of the Sauka valley.
'Saukania' is a formation from the noun 'Sakhana', an old ethnonym attested possibly as far back as the 13th century BC. 'Saukanian', in turn, is formed out of 'Saukania', and is essentially interchangeable with 'Sakhana' or 'Saukana' as an ethnonym. In some sources and records, 'Saukana' is used for the name of the land as well as the people.
 
Due to the historically disunited nature of the Saukanians, they have often preferred to identify more with the locality to which they feel allegiance, rather than to a concept of a whole Saukania.


==History==
==History==
{{Main|History of Saukania}}
{{Main|History of Saukania}}
===Prehistory and protohistory===
===Prehistory and antiquity (before 7th century AD)===
{{Further|Prehistory of Saukania|Archaeological sites in Saukania}}
{{Further|Ancient history of Saukania|Archaeological sites in Saukania}}Examination of prehistoric sites in Saukania has yielded an estimation of human habitation as far back as 61,000 years ago. With northern Thrismari a potential candidate for the origin of the human species, prehistoric Saukania may have been one of the first areas early man spread to in a southward peopling of the rest of the continent. Artefacts typical of the late [[wikipedia:Middle_Paleolithic|Middle Palaeolithic]], [[wikipedia:Upper_Paleolithic|Upper Palaeolithic]], and the [[wikipedia:Mesolithic|Mesolithic]] have been discovered in Saukania. A number of sites yielded items from several eras, though the majority were confined to periods of (relatively) brief habitation in certain eras, before being abandoned. Changing climate and the somewhat cyclical expansion and retraction of the [[Western Thrismari Desert]] is likely to explain these differently situated habitation sites, and several sites were discovered in areas of modern Saukania which are sparsely inhabited if at all.
The earliest confirmed presence of ancient humans in modern Saukania has been dated back to c. 31,500 BC, in the [[wikipedia:Upper_Paleolithic|Upper Palaeolithic]], with the discovery of human teeth and bone fragments near the village of Tuga in Dashkia. Permanent inhabitation of sites in Saukania commenced c. 9200 BC with the advent of farming in the region, likely brought to the area by a migratory population, as well as marking the beginning of the [[Neolithic Saukania|Saukanian Neolithic]]. A number of major sites developed in this multi-millennium period of history, predominantly centred along the major desert river systems, including at or near modern Acha, Dathan, Khodan, and Kula. A number of contemporary and successive unique material cultures developed in the Saukanian valleys and oases.


The [[wikipedia:Chalcolithic|Chalcolithic]] and [[wikipedia:Bronze_Age|Bronze Age]] in Saukania saw the emergence of a number of advanced metallurgical [[Old Saukania|Pre-Saukanian]] cultures. Among these are the [[East Laxad River Culture]] (ELR), the [[Kazekhal culture]], the [[Black Line Pottery culture]] (BLP), and the [[Orun|Orun culture]]. From 2500 BC, settlements of the ELR culture see a marked uptick in fortification and weapons production, with an increased volume of spearheads, crude axes, and arrowheads. Grave sites among the ELR and other contemporary Pre-Saukanian cultures see greater volumes of young males with unhealed injuries, strongly suggesting a profound increase in violence, likely as a result of environmental pressures. The onset of the [[wikipedia:4.2-kiloyear_event|4.2-kiloyear event]] initiated a general collapse of the advanced Pre-Saukanian cultures, the already arid region drying out further and the flow of the Laxad and Rhona rivers substantially decreasing. Urban settlements declined with remarkable speed in population and maintained size as the indigenous population relocated to more spread out rural villages and in other cases returned to pastoral life.
Permanent habitation and [[wikipedia:Agriculture|agriculture]] in prehistoric Saukania is not detectable until the beginning of the [[wikipedia:Neolithic|Neolithic]] around 11,000 years ago. As with prior eras, Saukania's climate and ecoregions were likely quite different than they are today, as a number of ancient Neolithic sites are located in what are presently fairly inhospitable regions of Saukania. Other presently inhospitable regions have yielded little-to-no evidence of prehistoric habitation. The agricultural development of Neolithic Saukania have been associated with a population termed [[Early Northern Thrismari Farmers]] or ENTF, a somewhat diverse yet related genetic grouping of people who gave rise to numerous successive archaeological cultures across the Neolithic period. Traces of [[wikipedia:Hunter-gatherer|hunter-gatherer]] populations have also been detected, potentially conserving older Mesolithic subsistence strategies before gradually being forced out or assimilated into the ENTF cultures. ENTF cultures over the Neolithic period include the [[Lower Laxad River culture|Lower Laxad River Culture]], the [[Sharp Angled Pottery culture|Sharp Angled Pottery Culture]], the [[Keledan culture|Keledan Culture]], and the [[Mardan-Turana Cultural Complex]].


It is thought to be this drying event that motivated the migration of the Proto-Saukanian tribes from the now inhospitable northern desert region into the southwest Laxad area, seeking new pasture for their herds. Highly mobile thanks to their war chariots and wagons, and conditioned by a harsh life of survival in the desert, the Proto-Saukanian tribal invaders appear to have rather swiftly overrun the entire Laxad region. A cultural hybridizing event followed, as the Proto-Saukanians assimilated the indigenous people into their social groups via their patron-client networks and intermarriage was conducted between local and invader elite.
===Middle ages (6th - 16th centuries)===


Between 2000-900 BC, Proto-Saukanians further spread across modern Saukania, bringing their culture and language to the west and the south, and coming into contact with neighbouring populations. A largely nomadic and pastoral existence was maintained, though in the later 2nd millennium BC, resettlement of abandoned urban cites commenced, and the transition from a tribal to a state society began to take place.
===Early modern and modern Saukania (16th century - 1950)===
The early modern period in Saukania began with the decline of the Golden Age of Wisdom (c. AD 1050-1475) marked by strong elite patronage of arts, philosophy, religion, and other aspects of culture aided by the wealth and prosperity brought from cross-continental trade along the Thrismari trade routes. The rise of new and powerful nomadic confederations is considered a primary reason for this decline, bringing an end to the relatively peaceful preceding period and motivating a shift in priorities among the elite of the oasis city-states. Expensive formal education and preparation of elite youths for prominent roles in academic and bureaucratic institutions were largely reduced in favour of remilitarising the social elite to meet the new external threats. One nomadic confederation, the [[Markashmir]], began exacting tribute from various Saukanian cities in Kriana before eventually conquering it altogether between 1510 and 1520. Markashmir forces assailed many of the other vital river valleys, including the Saukanian Plain itself, primarily to raid demand tribute but in various occasions establishing direct rule over defeated oasis kingdoms.


===Ancient Saukania===
Disruption of trade by these conflicts resulted in greater internecine warfare among the remaining city-states for territory and power. By 1580 the Markashmir confederation had reached the height of its power, controlling the valleys of Apriana, Khoson, Kriana, Tagesh, and Turuk, and exacting tribute from cities in the Saukanian Plain, Sadaha, and Markiana. A succession of dynastic civil wars between Markashmir princes saw the effective reduction of real control to the Kriana valley by 1620, with the remaining oasis cities newly independent and resurgent. In 1637, the Markashmir were eventually defeated by a rebellion of Krianian city-states, led by Khodan. Khodan subsequently established itself as the head of a Krianian federation and a local aristocratic family was elected to serve as its new royal line.
{{Main|Ancient Saukania}}
Written Saukanian history begins with sporadic sources in the 9th century BC. Iron-wielding city-kingdoms were established in what has become known as the [[Proto-Epic Period]], showing a largely contiguous cultural horizon across the entire inhabited area, reflecting the level of interdependence, trade, and contact between Saukanian polities. Evidence of a strongly hierarchical social system becomes abundant under this culture, with variety in house sizes suggesting prominent status for the occupants of the larger halls (sometimes termed palaces), as well as diversity in the type and volume of grave goods. Most graves belong to high status individuals, and of these, most (64%) are male, suggesting a greater preference for elaborate burials among members of the male social elite. The abundance of weaponry grave goods and injuries on the unearthed remains demonstrate violence remaining a core feature of life in this period. Like today, the ancient Saukanians were patrilineal and patriarchal in social, political, military, and religious domains.


Warfare in the Proto-Epic Period was dominated by the militaristic warrior elite, who rode into combat on chariots suited to the flat plains between rival cities. This vehicle would feature in Saukanian warfare for many centuries, and has a place of pride and status in Saukanian mythology and native epics, associated with kings and lords and the gods. [[Saukanian epics]] suggest an idealism for champion combat between heroic representatives of two opposing forces, elite charioteers dismounting to do single combat. Cattle, horses, land, metal items, and women are the cited spoils of war.
===Contemporary Saukania (1950 - present)===


Later Iron Age Saukania with its literacy and surviving archaeological evidence has the clearest of all the early pictures of the area and its people. The militarism and social hierarchy of the previous age continued largely uninterrupted. Ancient Saukanian city-states were governed primarily by kings or 'city-lords', with religious, judicial, and military authority. A social elite focused on war predominated at the head of internal politics and religion, supported by a middle class of artisans, merchants, and levy soldiers. A labourer class filled out the bottom of the free population, beneath which were the slaves, taken in war, and raids, or acquired through trade. Though the fortified town was the centre of the city-state, the majority of their populations lived in the rural countryside. The territory of city-states were divided into districts with regional capitals, and these districts subdivided into groups of villages and smaller towns, for the sake of raising taxies and men for war.
==Geography and climate==
{{Main|Geography of Saukania}}Saukania has an area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 sq mi), and is one of the largest countries in Thrismari by total land area. It is a dry and landlocked country, bordering [[Sarocca]] to the north, [[Shirua]] to the west and southwest, and [[Bezuria]] to the south. Though the country has no outlet to the sea, Saukania comprises approximately half of the coastline of the inland [[Argan Sea]].


The power of the city-states over and against the tent-dwelling nomads living in and around the Saukanian deserts and steppe varied, and proved highly contingent on environmental factors. Prolonged droughts caused by aridification events were a recurring obstacle for the settled states, though none proved as severe as the one at the end of the third millennium BC. Nevertheless, when these droughts lasted for years or decades, the population of the cities departed to live in rural areas. Their population power-base effectively culled, cities in these periods often became tributary and vassal states to powerful nomadic tribes or confederations, which raided and plundered the hinterland and countryside with relative impunity. After the droughts subside, the cities quickly grew again in population and power, and the ability of the nomads to force them into dependency became highly limited.
The country lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S.


===Middle ages===
==== Physical geography and georegions ====
Saukania has a diverse physical environment. The relatively flat, desert topography that comprises the majority of Saukanian land area gives way in the south to grassland and shrub-steppe, and then to the forest-steppe foothills of the Ghuran Mountains and the montane grasslands and shrublands of the mountains proper.


===Modern era===
The vast [[Western Thrismari Desert]] dominates the northern and central portion of Saukania. There are a few large [[wikipedia:Erg_(landform)|ergs]] in the Saukanian region of the desert trending north, while much of the desert is comprised of [[wikipedia:Desert_pavement|desert pavement]] and bare rock.


===Contemporary Saukania===
In the south and south-west of the country is the [[Saukanian steppe]], forming a wide U-shaped arc. Receiving more rainfall than the desert to the north, the steppe is comprised primarily of grass and shrub, with some forest steppe interspersed. This forest-steppe is more abundant along riparian zones formed by the rivers that descend from the Ghuran Mountains, and in the foothills of the mountains themselves. The elevation rises from the broadly flat surrounding landscape at the foothills and up to around 3500m at the mountain range itself. This area is known as the [[Saukanian uplands]] or highlands. Montane grass and shrublands replace the temperate steppe regions as the elevation increases.
 
==Geography and climate==
{{Main|Geography of Saukania}}Saukania has an area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 sq mi), and is one of the largest countries in Thrismari by total land area. It country lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S. It is a dry and landlocked country, though its north-western edge is located near the coast. Saukania's south-eastern edge lies along the coast of the [[Argan Sea]], an inland body of water and the mouth of Saukania's endorheic basin.
 
[[File:WesternThrismariDesert.png|thumb|A photo of the Hendelar Desert at sunrise|245x245px]]The physical geography of Saukania is largely flat. In the south-west of the country, the [[Ghuran Mountains]] form the basis of the wider geographical area known as the [[Saukanian Highlands]], which extend north and east of the range before dropping off into the lowland plains and desert that dominate the vast majority of the country.


==== Climate ====
==== Climate ====
Saukania has extremely hot summers and cold winters. These temperature extremes are more intense in the northern two-thirds of the country, which lies within the [[Western Thrismari Desert]]. Much of this desert is bare rock and desert pavement. [[wikipedia:Erg_(landform)|Dune seas]] are found in the north and north-east, the largest of these being the [[Hendelar Desert]]. These are the most inhospitable areas of Saukania, and are largely empty. A semi-arid climate prevails in the southern third of Saukania, with steppe and desert-steppe grass and shrubland bounding the southern edge of the Western Thrismari Desert and the coast of the Argan Sea, interspersed with montane grassland, riparian woodland, and temperate forest.
Saukania is possessed primarily of an arid continental climate. Average rainfall is low, and the majority of the country is comprised of desert and steppe climate. The highlands to the southwest receive a larger amount of rainfall than the lowlands, owing to their high elevation, which comprised with snowmelt in the summer, provides the waterflow of Saukania's rivers. The steppe climate borders this highland zone, and has more grass and vegetation than areas further northeast.
 
As a result of its high aridity, little of Saukania's land area is suitable for farming. Despite its size, it maintains a low population of just over 27 million, and has historically been of smaller population than its neighbours. Population centres are found along the banks of rivers originating from the snowmelt of the Ghuran range including the [[Kulegan]], [[Laxad]], and [[Sagarne]], along the coast of the Argan, and by oases in the desert. Alongside the rivers are stretches of riparian ecoregions, suitable for crop-farming and sustaining larger populations. The vast majority of fertile areas in Saukania however are suitable only for pasture.


==== Environmental issues ====
==== Environmental issues ====
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==Demographics==
==Demographics==
{{Main|Demographics of Saukania}}
{{Main|Demographics of Saukania}}The population of Saukania was estimated at 27.2 million as of 2020 by the Saukanian Statistics Authority. While the Confederation's members hold synchronised decennial censuses for the sake of accuracy, reliable numbers are often hard to obtain in particular districts and among the nomadic and highland populations. A combination of refusals to divulge information, isolated and hard to access terrain, as well as the mobility of the nomadic groups, makes assessment of the more marginal Saukanian communities harder. Many highland communities are known to give false information in the form of inflated male counts and underreported females. In a 1980 census conducted by Khodan over the highland areas in its jurisdiction, one valley's reported population amounted to a gender imbalance of some 92% of inhabitants being male.
===Ethnicity===
{{Main|Ethnic groups in Saukania|Saukanians|Nomads in Saukania}}
Ethnic Saukanians are the largest group in Saukania, representing over 93% of its total population. Minority groups include Shiruans, Saroccans, and Bezurians.
 
Saukanians form an ethnicity based on shared culture, language, heritage, and religion. In Saukania itself ethnicity is a more fluid concept, and the primary division between peoples has been conceived in terms of sedentary versus nomadic lifestyle. Regional variation is also prominent, as large areas of Saukania have few inhabitants. Those Saukanians who dwell along the main desert rivers form a separate subculture to those who dwell in the mountains and the foothills of Ghuran, and both in turn have smaller local cultures and identities.


===Language===
Nevertheless, estimates suggest approximately 5.7% of the population, around 1.55 million people, live a nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyle. Of the remainder, approximately 41.2% were urban, and the remaining 53.1% live in rural areas. Saukania's urbanization rate has grown significantly in the last half century, as economic modernisation increases opportunity for rural inhabitants. The share of nomads has also declined as individuals or family units adopt semi-sedentary and fully sedentary lifestyles. Population growth in all segments of society is high, with an overall average of 1.67% annually. Fertility is the primary contributor to this growth, though it has slowed in recent decades. In 1960 the estimated TFR was 7.6 children per woman, which fell to 4.3 in 2010. Many Saukanians seek work in foreign countries, leading to a steady rate of emigration, though not enough to offset growth. Healthcare improvements and the lowering of the infant mortality rate have also contributed to longer lifespans and greater overall population.
{{Main|Saukanian language}}
Modern Saukanian is the most widely spoken language in the Confederation. It is not to be confused with the [[Saukanian languages]], the family to which it belongs. Modern Saukanian, usually shortened to just Saukanian, descends from the Parharian language, one of the early branches of the original Saukanian language. Parharian came to replace the other varieties of Saukanian starting from the 16th century, owing to the renewed prestige and power of Kula, the dominant kingdom of Parharia particularly and Saukania generally. Its eventual place as capital of the Confederation increased the prestige of the Kulean dialect of Parharian, leading to it becoming nearly ubiquitous. This new Modern Saukanian subsequently differentiated into two dialects, Kulean and Khodanian, or East and West respectively.[[File:Isukvillage.jpg|thumb|right|The village of Isuk in the [[Sakbia valley]].]]


Other Saukanian languages continue to be spoken by various communities, holdovers from the more diverse linguistic period of Saukanian history. This is more common in the highland regions of Ghuran, among the nomadic communities of the desert pastures, and variously isolated rural communities. In most cases, these people speak both Modern Saukanian and the local surviving ancestral dialect. In areas where these have disappeared, elements of them survive through loanwords and various grammatical contributions to Modern Saukanian. Kulean and Khodanian have many sub-dialects in their area of influence, as well as dialects that do not often neatly fit into either category.
==== Urbanization ====
Of the 41.2% of the population living in cities, just under half, or about 5 million, live in the four largest cities: Kula, Khodan, Acha, and Sardasar. Kula city alone (as distinguished from the wider city-state) boasts a population of 2.1 million. As noted, urbanization rate is increasing with the influx of rural populations into the cities for work and the drop in infant mortality. This urbanization is not without tension however. The ethnic diversity of the cities has always been higher than surrounding countryside, but has intensified in recent decades with the economic potential. Tensions between different Saukanian populations are ever-present, and incidents of violence not unknown. Increased urban development in the highlands has also fuelled tension and even conflict, as enlarged population centres increasingly come to reflect the more cosmopolitan and lowland-style system of government and overall culture, antagonising the surrounding highland peoples, particularly those with separate ethnic identities.


Use of the Saukanian language is considered an essential but not alone qualifying demonstration of Saukanian ethnic identity. While foreigners who know the language are not accepted on that basis alone as a Saukanian, there is a commonly held feeling that a blood Saukanian who does not know the language is not really a Saukanian. As use of the language is a sign of ethnic identity and pride, Saukanians are somewhat reputed for their reluctance to speak to foreigners in any language except Saukanian. Rudimentary knowledge of Common is fairly widespread in Saukania, though fluency is much less prevalent, and concentrated primarily among the social elite.
===Ethnicity===
{{Main|Ethnic groups in Saukania|Saukanians|Nomads in Saukania}}TBA


The Saukanians regard other languages as lesser to their own, and a common insult for "barbarians" or those who do not speak Saukanian translates roughly as "dirty-tongued"
===Language===
{{Main|Saukanian languages|Arshanian language|Takhrian language}}TBA


===Religion===
===Religion===
{{Main|Religion in Saukania}}The native religion of the Saukans has not only endured but thrived as the majority religion despite, or perhaps in response to, various foreign invasions by representatives of [[wikipedia:Christianity|Christianity]] and [[wikipedia:Islam|Islam]], such as the Shiruan Kakish crusaders. Nevertheless, Islam and Christianity have acquired followings among some native Saukans. The majority of each has its primary follower base in the urban centres of Saukan civilization, though other demographics have greater or lesser representation of these religious minorities.{{Pie chart
{{Main|Religion in Saukania}}
|thumb=right
===Major cities===
|caption= Religion in Saukania (2020 est.)
{{Main|List of major cities in Saukania}}
|label1= [[Religion in Saukania|Saukanian paganism]]
|value1= 79.4
|color1= darkred
|label2= {{wp|Christianity}}
|value2= 10.2
|color2= lightblue
|label3= {{wp|Islam}}
|value3= 6.6
|color3= green
|label4= Other
|value4= 3.8
|color4= white
}}The internal divisions of each religion also feature in Saukania. While most Saukan Christians are [[wikipedia:Catholic_Church|Catholic]], some are [[wikipedia:Protestantism|Protestant]], while others still follow a form of [[wikipedia:Religious_syncretism|syncretic]] [[Saukan Christianity]] that shares theological features with [[wikipedia:Arianism|Arianism]]. Among Saukan Muslims, [[wikipedia:Sunni_Islam|Sunni]] is the leading denomination, with [[wikipedia:Shia_Islam|Shia Islam]] having a follower count in the low hundreds. [[wikipedia:Sufism|Sufi]] schools are something of a commonality in Saukan Islam, representing a radical break from the worldliness that permeates Saukan religiosity and the syncretic developments within Saukan Christianity and Islam.


Saukan religion itself is classified as a type of paganism. An animistic polytheism, it lacks any concrete name since its form is that of an ethnic religion. Most Saukans worship a shared collection of deities and concepts of natural forces, though emphasis on particular deities or ideas notably varies from locale to locale. Sacrifice and ritual are essential to the Saukan religion. Priests are drawn from certain elites families in the Saukanian cities and tribes, who claim a genealogical and mythical right and responsibility to maintain the customs set down in the mythical age (the nebulous time period in which the events of Saukan mythology are said to have taken place). At the bedrock of the Saukan religion is the domestic cult. Ancestor worship is the first religion of the Saukans, and their ritual practises for worshipping higher deities are understood to be modified rites for the honouring of the dead. The male head of the family serves as its priest in these affairs, with ritual knowledge and practised passed down paternally. These affairs are private, untouchable by any authority, attesting to their antiquity and their preceding of the more organised, state-sponsored cults.
==Government and politics==
{{Main|Government of Saukania}}The Saukanian Alliance is a confederation of eleven political units classed as city-states. It is governed by a [[Supreme Council of Saukania|Supreme Council]] made up of the leaders of [[Acha]], [[Dathan]], [[Ertakhon]], [[Ghulashan]], [[Khodan]], [[Kula]], [[Muridan]], [[Rhegan]], [[Sardash]], [[Sashan]], and [[Tushan]]. The central budget of the Alliance is drawn from a percentage of the revenues of its constituent states. The states of Khodan and Kula together contribute 45% of the total budget of the Alliance.


Among the deities of the Saukan religion are Tanmes; the most revered god and lord of the sky, Zadohr; a warrior-herder deity and patron of oaths and contracts, Gedona; an earth fertility goddess, Sohthar; lord of the underworld, and Itix; goddess of beauty and pleasure. Many other deities major and minor populate the Saukan pantheon. Some are regionally bound, having no cult or worship outside of a particular city-state, rural district, or even village, while others are considered "Pansaukanian", and honoured by most or all Saukans. Saukans believe the world was fashioned out of a primordial material, but not "created" ''ex nihilo'', and that the world will eventually return to this homogeneous and indistinct state before being refashioned again in an infinite cycle.
Khodan and Kula serve as joint-capitals of the Alliance, as a recognition of their peer prestige and influence. Khodan is the designated summer capital, and Kula the designated winter capital. In addition, the site of Dautan is the ceremonial capital of the Alliance. Considered a sacred sanctuary in Saukanian tradition, it was the site of the signing of the [[Pact of Dautan]], the Alliance's founding document. In modern times the site has been expanded and made a centre of the Alliance's administration. The dominance of Khodan and Kula within the Alliance is semi-formalised. Per tradition, the presidency of the Supreme Council is rotated between their leaders every five years, the junior partner holding the positions of vice-president and prime minister. The state of Acha, third-most powerful in the Alliance, traditionally holds a permanent vice-presidency and deputy prime ministership. All member-states are represented equally within the Supreme Council. In practice however, many of the smaller states are economically dependent upon the contributions of Acha, Khodan, and Kula to the central budget, as well as having traditional patron-client obligations with one of these three states.


A major religious concept for Saukans is fate, seen to be above even the gods, who have the power to delay what is fated but never to prevent it. An appropriately fatalistic demeanour is common of the Saukan character. This idea of fate is often connected to specific events rather than every event in isolation, however. The Saukan mythical figure [[Sanagos (Saukan mythical figure)|Sanagos]], for example, received a prophecy of his death in the land of [[Kazen]]. In attempting to flee this fate, Sanagos journeyed to many lands and had numerous adventures and performed great feats of strength and heroism, eventually culminating in his unwitting arrival in the land of Kazen and his subsequent death. Saukans consider his attempted defiance of fate as the spring of his accomplishments, rather than a purely futile attempt to delay the inevitable. In other words, Sanagos was only fated to die in Kazen, not to be the great hero he became. His heroism came from himself, and his death alone from fate.
The [[Alliance Council]] is a proportional-representative advisory body to the Supreme Council. Each city-state sends representatives proportional to its population of able-bodied men, i.e., their military potential.


The Saukanians are superstitious, believing in magic as a means to harm and to defend from harm. Amulets and charms are a common sight with a purpose for warding off evil, as are signs and local sayings. A spatial division between the sacred and profane is central to ritual in their religion. Bloodshed inside areas with a sacred boundary is considered polluting and a grave crime, requiring ritual purification or else risking divine wrath.
The Alliance itself is a highly decentralised body. The city-states greatly value their autonomy and self-governance in matters of internal affairs. Foreign affairs such as trade, diplomacy, and war are powers ceded to the Alliance as a collective body as outlined in the Pact of Dautan. There is however no Alliance legislature or judiciary, as the Alliance has no power to impose any kind of common law among the member-states. The Pact of Dautan does, however, provide for an extradition treaty between the constituent polities, obligating the arrest and return of criminal suspects who have crossed a border.


A history of religious tension has defined much of Saukan history. Violence between Saukans and the Abrahamic monotheists, or rival monotheistic sects and groups, has been a frequent occurrence in the cities and towns of Saukania. At different times and places and under different rulers, organised persecutions have taken place, as many Saukan leaders regarded the anti-establishment Christians and Muslims as a major threat to social order and their own power. Fear of cultural erasure and loss of identity motivates much of the Saukan pagan animosity towards the foreign faiths, while belief in the truth of their own creed and the threat posed to the true religion by heretics and heathens has been the driving force of proselytising activity by Christians and Muslims. The [[2012 Kula riots|Kula riots]] of 2012 were the deadliest outbreaks of religious violence in Saukania in the 21st century, resulting in 36 deaths and hundreds more injured, with religious buildings damaged.
=== Administrative divisions ===


===Major cities===
=== Foreign relations ===
{{Main|List of major cities in Saukania}}


==Government and politics==
===Military===
{{Main|Government of Saukania}}
{{Main|The Saukanian Army}}The Confederation maintains a single armed force, staffed and supplied from all eleven constituent city-states. This force is known in English as the Confederate Army or the Saukanian Army. The Confederate Army has two primary service branches: the Confederate Army Ground Force, and the Confederate Army Air Force. Control of Saukania's waterways and influence over the Argan Sea is maintained by the Confederate Army Ground Force - Marine Corps.
Saukania is a confederation of twelve independent polities: Acha, Arakhan, Dathan, Godar, Khodan, Kula, Krolonar, Sardasar, Sokotis, Ragera, Tabana, and Turshor. The Confederation is weighted heavily in favour of Acha, Khodan, Kula, and Sardasar, the four largest states by population. The Treaty of Confederation was signed in the late 19th century after many decades of increasingly closer ties, encouraged by foreign pressure and the risk of invasion or occupation. Acha, Khodan, Kula, and Sardasar were the first and primary signatories, forming their alliance which the other eight joined subsequently. Many of these states existed as all but formal vassals of the original four, though the Treaty of Confederation lessened this dependency by laying out the rights of all members states to autonomy and self-rule.
 
Kula was selected as capital of the Confederation due to its size and prestige.
 
===Administrative divisions===
{{Main|Administrative divisions of Saukania}}


===Military===
=== Human rights ===
{{Main|The Saukanian Army}}


==Culture==
==Culture==
{{Main|Culture of Saukania}}
{{Main|Culture of Saukania}}Saukanians share a cultural horizon, tracing common descent from the original proto-Saukanian population. Accordingly, they have much in common, including similar styles of dress, shared festivals and holidays, kindred musical and artistic traditions, and mutually intelligible social structures based on a hierarchical and reciprocal network of kinship-based civic units. Nevertheless, the Saukanian people are made up of several distinct and conscious ethnic groups of different sizes, each of which has developed its own culture in accordance with its social and geographical environment, and unique history in contact with neighbouring Saukanian and non-Saukanian peoples. A subcultural continuum is observable in most places in Saukania, where any one locality (village, valley, town, or city) is likely to share much in common with those in close proximity to itself, with this similarity decreasing over distance.
The culture of Saukania has persisted for millennia, since the arrival of the early Saukana to the region around 3,700 years ago. Though subsequent foreign invasions have added to the cultural mix, modern Saukanian culture is considered the continuity of the ancient.  


As a tribal, segmented society, there is a large amount of regional and local variations of Saukanian culture, qualifying as subcultures. Daskhia, Kugeria, Parharia, and Turoka have long been culturally distinct from one another in their expressions of Saukanian culture more generally, though still highly interrelated and connected due to their long history of alliances, wars, and migrations. Parharian culture is perhaps the most internationally perceived of the four, due to the prominence of the Parharian kingdom of Kula. A distinction between urban and rural Saukanians must also be emphasised, with the urban populations long since accustomed to a more state-organised society bound by allegiances to offices and rank, while the rural populations remain more firmly tribal and aligned by kinship and blood. The hill people of the Ghuran are the most independent of Saukania's rural populations,  with a history of resisting occupation and defying urban authority. Saukania's population of over 2 million nomads boast a more distinct culture still, shaped by their lifestyle of movement and the distrust that exists between them and the sedentary peoples. Nevertheless, a shared Saukanian cultural identity is observable between them all. They consume much of the same food, wear the same types of clothing, follow the same religion and observe the same shared festivals and ceremonies, speak the same language, and hold many of the same values and ethical ideas.
The overwhelming majority of sources on pre-modern Saukanian culture, in all periods, come from authorities outside of Saukania. Saukanologists compare these accounts with folk and oral traditions and more recent or second-hand accounts for an overall picture.


Conservatism is another shared feature of the Saukanians. Highly suspicious of outsiders and foreign ideas, they are motivated substantially by tradition and the ancestral customs, valuing systems which have proven their worth over many centuries. Family is core to their society, as well as honour, both of the group and the individual. Saukanian honour is androcentric, relating to the males of the family, clan, and society generally. The Saukanian code of conduct, ''[[Sharaven (Saukania)|sharaven]]'', is a male-oriented body of customary laws that emphasises hospitality, courage, self-sufficiency, independence, family loyalty, honour, and vengeance for slights or attacks. The protection of females and children is vital for the honour of men under ''sharaven'', and they lose face for failing to guard or avenge dishonour of a female. Saukanian culture is patriarchal, with women expected to obey fathers and husbands, and hold to an ideal of modesty and seclusion called ''karsavis''. Injuries of honour can result in a feud called a ''[[Saukanian blood feud|korvena]]'', considered a social obligation to take recompense for an injury or insult by blood. Acts that can initiate a ''korvena'' include slander, theft, assault, murder, and the sexual assault or rape of a woman or child. ''Korvenas'' remain common in the rural lands of Saukania, where urban authority is weak and order maintained through violent and restorative justice, and among the nomadic tribes, where the lack of any prison infrastructure and the mobility of property make brutal retaliation a favoured method of conflict resolution. For tribal Saukanians, a ''korvena'' is simply a small war, and a war a large ''korvena''. As a result, these conflicts can escalate depending on the allegiance of those involved, ranging from two feuding families to entire villages or valleys, causing dozens or hundreds of deaths. In the history of the urban oasis states, the ''korvena'' transformed more into an aristocratic duel, and came to emphasise more personal and immediate familial honour than the broader honour of a clan. Certainly, urban Saukanians are not less conscious of their reputation and standing to forgo the demand for compensation if it is challenged.
[[Saukanian studies|Saukanology]], or Saukanistics, is the study of Saukania and its cultures. In modern times, many native Saukanians have contributed to greater international understanding of their culture, though much of this effort and impact has been achieved by non-Saukanian explorers, authors, and anthropologists, particularly those who came to the area during the formation of the Confederation in the 18th and 19th centuries.
===Social structure===
===Social structure===
{{Main|Social structure and class in Saukania}}
{{Main|Social structure and class in Saukania}}
{{Further|Women in Saukania}}
{{Further|Women in Saukania}}Family and extended kinship networks are given utmost importance in Saukanian society. Noble families are at the top of the city-state social structure, mobilising loyalty with a semi-feudal patronage system through which they dispense rewards or grant favours to middle-class client families. These clients will in turn be the patron of families of lower social standing, and so the whole of the city-state is unified through these reciprocal and vertical relationships. Families are represented publicly by men and are governed patriarchally. Arranged marriages are common, especially among the elite and clients, for whom matrimony is an essential aspect of the patronage network. Despite this patronage network, familial self-sufficiency is greatly valued, and a family may lose face if it is unable to provide for itself. This dishonour falls primarily upon men, who are expected to provide the family with income. Though women have always, to some extent, participated in commercial labour, it is not seen as their responsibility to work for the family living.
Saukanian social status and class is a multipolar hierarchy involving multiple and overlapping statuses, resulting in a complex development of self and group identity. In the four federations, where the class systems are more or less uniform, there are five primary categories by which an individual's status is determined: ancestry, age, gender, citizenship grade, and wealth census rank.
 
In the aristocratic republican organisation of the city-states, wealth classes based typically on land size and income in the largely agrarian country play a pivotal role in politics and society. The city-states organise their democratic assemblies according to this ranking system, enfranchising those with a greater stake in the physical land over those with less or none. The traditional nobility is for the most part coterminous with the greatest wealth bracket, though not entirely. Some families of noble pedigree may fall in the census ranking, and lose out on the privilege of primary franchise, though not their right to sit in the various councils or assemblies reserved for the nobility. In the reverse, non-noble families may rise to the highest wealth bracket with all of its attendant privileges but remain excluded from all that is reserved for the nobility.


The origin of these distinctions arises out of the agricultural tribal city-state traditions of ancient Saukania, which, owing to modern Saukania's largely agrarian economy, has not substantially changed in that time.
==== Honour ====
Honour is a vital aspect of Saukanian society. Honour belongs to the family, and has a symbiotic relationship with its members. That is to say, all members of a family benefit from the esteem in which their family is held, while the actions of any family member have the potential to benefit or harm this collective estimation. As an inevitable result of their greater social profile, overrepresented in the politics of their city-states, the aristocratic elite have the greatest concern for honour. Saukanian honour is in large part the quality of being left alone. In addition to estimation, it is also reputation in the sense of willingness to defend what is theirs, and respond with the culturally-determined proportionate severity to intruders, interlopers, and attackers. This is strongly connected to the ideology of personal justice in Saukania, and the law of blood for blood retaliation. A family that does not take appropriate compensation for the theft of property, the sexual assault or abduction of a woman, or a murder, collectively loses honour, since in their inaction they demonstrate an unwillingness or an inability to back up any previous reputation with action. These transgressive acts can result in blood feuds if the family of the perpetrator is uncooperative in finding a resolution, or if the victim's family is dissatisfied with any compensation proposal.


===Honour===
This aspect of honour is essentially male, and part of the wider male code of conduct. Responsibility for protecting the honour of the family from outside threats and for avenging it against successful attacks falls to men. As women are a direct means through which family honour can be harmed, an ideology of female protection through restriction of their movement prevails across Saukania. This is not a legal enforcement but a cultural one.
{{Main|Sharaven|Karsavis}}


===Clothing===
===Clothing===

Latest revision as of 20:22, 13 September 2024

Saukanian Alliance
'
Seal of the Confederation of Saukania
Seal of the Confederation
Location of Saukania in Thrismari
Location of Saukania in Thrismari
CapitalKula (winter capital)
Khodan (summer capital)
Largest cityKula
Ethnic groups
(2020)
93.6% Saukanian
6.4% Other
Religion
(2020)
79.4% Saukanian paganism
10.2% Christianity
6.6% Islam
3.8% Other
Demonym(s)Saukanian
GovernmentConfederation of sovereign city-states
• President
TBA
• Prime Minister
TBA
Area
• Total
1,116,863 km2 (431,223 sq mi)
Population
• 2020 estimate
27,214,000
• Density
24.3/km2 (62.9/sq mi)
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideleft
Internet TLD.sg

Saukania, formally the Saukanian Alliance, is a country in northwestern Thrismari. Saukania is bordered by Shirua to its south, and Zangoaistan to its southeast. At 1,116,863 million square kilometres, Saukania is one of the largest countries in Thrismari. Though vast, it is a primarily very arid land, with a population of just 27.2 million people who live in the alluvial plains and oases of various river valleys. The most prominent of these river valleys is the Sauka River, from which the country draws its name. The Saukanians, whose culture, language, and religious beliefs and customs have endured for over two millennia, are the native people and majority population of Saukania.

The Alliance adheres to a loose federal structure. It is comprised of eleven states, which elect representatives to the Alliance Council in accordance to population and military contributions. The Supreme Council is the supreme executive body of the Alliance, comprised of the leaders of the eleven states. By convention, the states of Kula and Khodan rotate the presidency of the supreme council between them every five years.

Human habitation in Saukania began in the Palaeolithic, as early as 61,000 YBP. Human settlement in the Ghuran Mountains and the arid grasslands commenced in the Neolithic around 9,500 years ago. Concentrated along riparian oases along Saukania's multitude of river valleys, these settled cultures evolved into a complex and prosperous urban civilization by the mid-3rd millennium BC, with its main centres along the course of the Sauka. Waves of Proto-Saukanian speaking migrants began entering the Sauka river valley from 2100 BC from the northern grasslands. By 1100 BC, the Saukanian invaders had spread to the Ghuran Mountains and the other river valleys. From the 4th century BC, tribal unions had formed city-states along the river valleys, particularly the Saukanian Plain, from which Saukania derives its modern name. Codification of many myths and oral traditions took place between 350 BC to 250 AD, known in Saukanian historiography as the Epic Period. The subsequent Classical Period is marked by further enlarged urbanization, migrations of various tribal unions to new lands, and internecine wars between rival states and confederations for local hegemony.

Medieval Saukania saw an enlarged scope of contact and trade with faraway nations, and the city-states grew rich on commerce. Philosophy, religion, arts, and culture became widely patronised during the Golden Age of Wisdom from AD 1050 to 1475. This period came to an end with the rise of the last Saukanian nomadic empire. In the following centuries, Saukanian importance in the Thrismari trade network declined, as greater wealth came through the maritime commerce of various colonial powers. Saukania remained relatively free of foreign interference in this time, while its largest and most powerful states initiated campaigns of conquest against weaker neighbours.

The early form of the Alliance was established in the 19th century with a treaty between Kula, Khodan, and Acha, and was consolidated in the 1847 Pact of Dautan. All of the Saukanian states had joined the Alliance by 1899. Two civil wars (1904-1907 and 1932-1938) and a series of other regional conflicts have left a lasting impact on the Alliance. More recent tensions include disputes and land wars between Saukania's rural population and nomadic minority, as well as ethnic tensions in the Ghuran Mountains.

Saukania is a heavily agrarian country with a large rural population. Its urban centres are the hub of industry, culture, and government. Saukania possesses a very arid climate, consisting of sand and gravel desert and shrub steppe. The majority of the population lives in the alluvial plains and oases of the larger river valleys such as the Sauka, Kaladar, and the Larshan. Exports of fruits, vegetables, and other cash crops are a major source of revenue, as is the export of finished material goods such as textiles, with Saukanian carpets being famed throughout much of the world for their intricate handmade designs. Tourism to Saukania is common for its historic archaeological sites and unique culture, expressed through its cuisine, art, music, and entertainment.

Name

Saukania takes its name from the Sauka River, also known as the Saukan, which is the largest river of Saukania in both length and volume. The application of the name to the current geographic dimensions of the Confederation, or to the reach of those polities of Saukanian culture, is an exonymic application of the term. Ancient Saukania was conceived of as limited to the plain which the Sauka waters on its way to the Argan Sea. In modern Saukania, Saukadrazah is the name for the plain of the Sauka valley.

History

Prehistory and antiquity (before 7th century AD)

Examination of prehistoric sites in Saukania has yielded an estimation of human habitation as far back as 61,000 years ago. With northern Thrismari a potential candidate for the origin of the human species, prehistoric Saukania may have been one of the first areas early man spread to in a southward peopling of the rest of the continent. Artefacts typical of the late Middle Palaeolithic, Upper Palaeolithic, and the Mesolithic have been discovered in Saukania. A number of sites yielded items from several eras, though the majority were confined to periods of (relatively) brief habitation in certain eras, before being abandoned. Changing climate and the somewhat cyclical expansion and retraction of the Western Thrismari Desert is likely to explain these differently situated habitation sites, and several sites were discovered in areas of modern Saukania which are sparsely inhabited if at all.

Permanent habitation and agriculture in prehistoric Saukania is not detectable until the beginning of the Neolithic around 11,000 years ago. As with prior eras, Saukania's climate and ecoregions were likely quite different than they are today, as a number of ancient Neolithic sites are located in what are presently fairly inhospitable regions of Saukania. Other presently inhospitable regions have yielded little-to-no evidence of prehistoric habitation. The agricultural development of Neolithic Saukania have been associated with a population termed Early Northern Thrismari Farmers or ENTF, a somewhat diverse yet related genetic grouping of people who gave rise to numerous successive archaeological cultures across the Neolithic period. Traces of hunter-gatherer populations have also been detected, potentially conserving older Mesolithic subsistence strategies before gradually being forced out or assimilated into the ENTF cultures. ENTF cultures over the Neolithic period include the Lower Laxad River Culture, the Sharp Angled Pottery Culture, the Keledan Culture, and the Mardan-Turana Cultural Complex.

Middle ages (6th - 16th centuries)

Early modern and modern Saukania (16th century - 1950)

The early modern period in Saukania began with the decline of the Golden Age of Wisdom (c. AD 1050-1475) marked by strong elite patronage of arts, philosophy, religion, and other aspects of culture aided by the wealth and prosperity brought from cross-continental trade along the Thrismari trade routes. The rise of new and powerful nomadic confederations is considered a primary reason for this decline, bringing an end to the relatively peaceful preceding period and motivating a shift in priorities among the elite of the oasis city-states. Expensive formal education and preparation of elite youths for prominent roles in academic and bureaucratic institutions were largely reduced in favour of remilitarising the social elite to meet the new external threats. One nomadic confederation, the Markashmir, began exacting tribute from various Saukanian cities in Kriana before eventually conquering it altogether between 1510 and 1520. Markashmir forces assailed many of the other vital river valleys, including the Saukanian Plain itself, primarily to raid demand tribute but in various occasions establishing direct rule over defeated oasis kingdoms.

Disruption of trade by these conflicts resulted in greater internecine warfare among the remaining city-states for territory and power. By 1580 the Markashmir confederation had reached the height of its power, controlling the valleys of Apriana, Khoson, Kriana, Tagesh, and Turuk, and exacting tribute from cities in the Saukanian Plain, Sadaha, and Markiana. A succession of dynastic civil wars between Markashmir princes saw the effective reduction of real control to the Kriana valley by 1620, with the remaining oasis cities newly independent and resurgent. In 1637, the Markashmir were eventually defeated by a rebellion of Krianian city-states, led by Khodan. Khodan subsequently established itself as the head of a Krianian federation and a local aristocratic family was elected to serve as its new royal line.

Contemporary Saukania (1950 - present)

Geography and climate

Saukania has an area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 sq mi), and is one of the largest countries in Thrismari by total land area. It is a dry and landlocked country, bordering Sarocca to the north, Shirua to the west and southwest, and Bezuria to the south. Though the country has no outlet to the sea, Saukania comprises approximately half of the coastline of the inland Argan Sea.

The country lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S.

Physical geography and georegions

Saukania has a diverse physical environment. The relatively flat, desert topography that comprises the majority of Saukanian land area gives way in the south to grassland and shrub-steppe, and then to the forest-steppe foothills of the Ghuran Mountains and the montane grasslands and shrublands of the mountains proper.

The vast Western Thrismari Desert dominates the northern and central portion of Saukania. There are a few large ergs in the Saukanian region of the desert trending north, while much of the desert is comprised of desert pavement and bare rock.

In the south and south-west of the country is the Saukanian steppe, forming a wide U-shaped arc. Receiving more rainfall than the desert to the north, the steppe is comprised primarily of grass and shrub, with some forest steppe interspersed. This forest-steppe is more abundant along riparian zones formed by the rivers that descend from the Ghuran Mountains, and in the foothills of the mountains themselves. The elevation rises from the broadly flat surrounding landscape at the foothills and up to around 3500m at the mountain range itself. This area is known as the Saukanian uplands or highlands. Montane grass and shrublands replace the temperate steppe regions as the elevation increases.

Climate

Saukania is possessed primarily of an arid continental climate. Average rainfall is low, and the majority of the country is comprised of desert and steppe climate. The highlands to the southwest receive a larger amount of rainfall than the lowlands, owing to their high elevation, which comprised with snowmelt in the summer, provides the waterflow of Saukania's rivers. The steppe climate borders this highland zone, and has more grass and vegetation than areas further northeast.

Environmental issues

A fragile ecological area, Saukania faces a number of major environmental problems, such as land degradation in farmed areas and increased desertification. These issues are felt most keenly by the country's nomadic population, who face losing pasture land to encroaching dunes or harsher desert conditions which they need to graze their herds. Deforestation of Saukania's already limited supply of wooded areas is also a major concern.

Demographics

The population of Saukania was estimated at 27.2 million as of 2020 by the Saukanian Statistics Authority. While the Confederation's members hold synchronised decennial censuses for the sake of accuracy, reliable numbers are often hard to obtain in particular districts and among the nomadic and highland populations. A combination of refusals to divulge information, isolated and hard to access terrain, as well as the mobility of the nomadic groups, makes assessment of the more marginal Saukanian communities harder. Many highland communities are known to give false information in the form of inflated male counts and underreported females. In a 1980 census conducted by Khodan over the highland areas in its jurisdiction, one valley's reported population amounted to a gender imbalance of some 92% of inhabitants being male.

Nevertheless, estimates suggest approximately 5.7% of the population, around 1.55 million people, live a nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyle. Of the remainder, approximately 41.2% were urban, and the remaining 53.1% live in rural areas. Saukania's urbanization rate has grown significantly in the last half century, as economic modernisation increases opportunity for rural inhabitants. The share of nomads has also declined as individuals or family units adopt semi-sedentary and fully sedentary lifestyles. Population growth in all segments of society is high, with an overall average of 1.67% annually. Fertility is the primary contributor to this growth, though it has slowed in recent decades. In 1960 the estimated TFR was 7.6 children per woman, which fell to 4.3 in 2010. Many Saukanians seek work in foreign countries, leading to a steady rate of emigration, though not enough to offset growth. Healthcare improvements and the lowering of the infant mortality rate have also contributed to longer lifespans and greater overall population.

Urbanization

Of the 41.2% of the population living in cities, just under half, or about 5 million, live in the four largest cities: Kula, Khodan, Acha, and Sardasar. Kula city alone (as distinguished from the wider city-state) boasts a population of 2.1 million. As noted, urbanization rate is increasing with the influx of rural populations into the cities for work and the drop in infant mortality. This urbanization is not without tension however. The ethnic diversity of the cities has always been higher than surrounding countryside, but has intensified in recent decades with the economic potential. Tensions between different Saukanian populations are ever-present, and incidents of violence not unknown. Increased urban development in the highlands has also fuelled tension and even conflict, as enlarged population centres increasingly come to reflect the more cosmopolitan and lowland-style system of government and overall culture, antagonising the surrounding highland peoples, particularly those with separate ethnic identities.

Ethnicity

TBA

Language

TBA

Religion

Major cities

Government and politics

The Saukanian Alliance is a confederation of eleven political units classed as city-states. It is governed by a Supreme Council made up of the leaders of Acha, Dathan, Ertakhon, Ghulashan, Khodan, Kula, Muridan, Rhegan, Sardash, Sashan, and Tushan. The central budget of the Alliance is drawn from a percentage of the revenues of its constituent states. The states of Khodan and Kula together contribute 45% of the total budget of the Alliance.

Khodan and Kula serve as joint-capitals of the Alliance, as a recognition of their peer prestige and influence. Khodan is the designated summer capital, and Kula the designated winter capital. In addition, the site of Dautan is the ceremonial capital of the Alliance. Considered a sacred sanctuary in Saukanian tradition, it was the site of the signing of the Pact of Dautan, the Alliance's founding document. In modern times the site has been expanded and made a centre of the Alliance's administration. The dominance of Khodan and Kula within the Alliance is semi-formalised. Per tradition, the presidency of the Supreme Council is rotated between their leaders every five years, the junior partner holding the positions of vice-president and prime minister. The state of Acha, third-most powerful in the Alliance, traditionally holds a permanent vice-presidency and deputy prime ministership. All member-states are represented equally within the Supreme Council. In practice however, many of the smaller states are economically dependent upon the contributions of Acha, Khodan, and Kula to the central budget, as well as having traditional patron-client obligations with one of these three states.

The Alliance Council is a proportional-representative advisory body to the Supreme Council. Each city-state sends representatives proportional to its population of able-bodied men, i.e., their military potential.

The Alliance itself is a highly decentralised body. The city-states greatly value their autonomy and self-governance in matters of internal affairs. Foreign affairs such as trade, diplomacy, and war are powers ceded to the Alliance as a collective body as outlined in the Pact of Dautan. There is however no Alliance legislature or judiciary, as the Alliance has no power to impose any kind of common law among the member-states. The Pact of Dautan does, however, provide for an extradition treaty between the constituent polities, obligating the arrest and return of criminal suspects who have crossed a border.

Administrative divisions

Foreign relations

Military

The Confederation maintains a single armed force, staffed and supplied from all eleven constituent city-states. This force is known in English as the Confederate Army or the Saukanian Army. The Confederate Army has two primary service branches: the Confederate Army Ground Force, and the Confederate Army Air Force. Control of Saukania's waterways and influence over the Argan Sea is maintained by the Confederate Army Ground Force - Marine Corps.

Human rights

Culture

Saukanians share a cultural horizon, tracing common descent from the original proto-Saukanian population. Accordingly, they have much in common, including similar styles of dress, shared festivals and holidays, kindred musical and artistic traditions, and mutually intelligible social structures based on a hierarchical and reciprocal network of kinship-based civic units. Nevertheless, the Saukanian people are made up of several distinct and conscious ethnic groups of different sizes, each of which has developed its own culture in accordance with its social and geographical environment, and unique history in contact with neighbouring Saukanian and non-Saukanian peoples. A subcultural continuum is observable in most places in Saukania, where any one locality (village, valley, town, or city) is likely to share much in common with those in close proximity to itself, with this similarity decreasing over distance.

The overwhelming majority of sources on pre-modern Saukanian culture, in all periods, come from authorities outside of Saukania. Saukanologists compare these accounts with folk and oral traditions and more recent or second-hand accounts for an overall picture.

Social structure

Family and extended kinship networks are given utmost importance in Saukanian society. Noble families are at the top of the city-state social structure, mobilising loyalty with a semi-feudal patronage system through which they dispense rewards or grant favours to middle-class client families. These clients will in turn be the patron of families of lower social standing, and so the whole of the city-state is unified through these reciprocal and vertical relationships. Families are represented publicly by men and are governed patriarchally. Arranged marriages are common, especially among the elite and clients, for whom matrimony is an essential aspect of the patronage network. Despite this patronage network, familial self-sufficiency is greatly valued, and a family may lose face if it is unable to provide for itself. This dishonour falls primarily upon men, who are expected to provide the family with income. Though women have always, to some extent, participated in commercial labour, it is not seen as their responsibility to work for the family living.

In the aristocratic republican organisation of the city-states, wealth classes based typically on land size and income in the largely agrarian country play a pivotal role in politics and society. The city-states organise their democratic assemblies according to this ranking system, enfranchising those with a greater stake in the physical land over those with less or none. The traditional nobility is for the most part coterminous with the greatest wealth bracket, though not entirely. Some families of noble pedigree may fall in the census ranking, and lose out on the privilege of primary franchise, though not their right to sit in the various councils or assemblies reserved for the nobility. In the reverse, non-noble families may rise to the highest wealth bracket with all of its attendant privileges but remain excluded from all that is reserved for the nobility.

Honour

Honour is a vital aspect of Saukanian society. Honour belongs to the family, and has a symbiotic relationship with its members. That is to say, all members of a family benefit from the esteem in which their family is held, while the actions of any family member have the potential to benefit or harm this collective estimation. As an inevitable result of their greater social profile, overrepresented in the politics of their city-states, the aristocratic elite have the greatest concern for honour. Saukanian honour is in large part the quality of being left alone. In addition to estimation, it is also reputation in the sense of willingness to defend what is theirs, and respond with the culturally-determined proportionate severity to intruders, interlopers, and attackers. This is strongly connected to the ideology of personal justice in Saukania, and the law of blood for blood retaliation. A family that does not take appropriate compensation for the theft of property, the sexual assault or abduction of a woman, or a murder, collectively loses honour, since in their inaction they demonstrate an unwillingness or an inability to back up any previous reputation with action. These transgressive acts can result in blood feuds if the family of the perpetrator is uncooperative in finding a resolution, or if the victim's family is dissatisfied with any compensation proposal.

This aspect of honour is essentially male, and part of the wider male code of conduct. Responsibility for protecting the honour of the family from outside threats and for avenging it against successful attacks falls to men. As women are a direct means through which family honour can be harmed, an ideology of female protection through restriction of their movement prevails across Saukania. This is not a legal enforcement but a cultural one.

Clothing

Architecture and art

Music

Cuisine

Sport