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{{WIP}}
{{Infobox geopolitical organization
{{Infobox country
| name                  = <!-- (in English) -->'''League of Dautan'''
|conventional_long_name = Confederation of the Saukanians
| native_name            = <!-- Long-form name in native or any/all non-English languages -->
|common_name = Saukania
| conventional_long_name =  
|native_name = <small>''''</small>
| common_name           = ''Saukania''
|image_flag =  
| linking_name          = <!-- For wikilinks, if diff from name -->
|flag_type =  
| image_flag            = <!-- Flag image's filename -->Flag of the Saukanian Alliance.png
|alt_flag =  
| alt_flag              = <!-- alt text for flag-->Flag of the Alliance
|national_motto =  
| flag_border            = <!--set to no to disable border around the flag-->
|national_anthem =  
| symbol_type            = <!-- Symbol, Emblem, Logo, etc. -->
|image_coat = FourBannersSeal.png
| image_symbol          = <!-- Symbol image's filename -->
|symbol_type = Seal of the Confederation
| alt_symbol            = <!-- alt text for symbol -->
|image_map = Saukaniaglobe.png
| symbol_width          = <!-- Symbol image's width (default 85px) -->
|alt_map =  
| englishmotto          = <!--English language version of motto-->
|map_caption = Location of Saukania in Thrismari
| anthem                = <!-- ''[anthem name]'' -->
|capital = [[Kula]] (winter capital) <br> [[Khodan]] (summer capital)
| text_symbol_type      = <!-- for other types of text symbol -->
|largest_city = Kula
| text_symbol            = <!-- e.g. ''[hymn name]'' -->
|official_languages =
| image_map             = <!-- Map image's filename -->Saukaniaglobe.png
|regional_languages =  
| loctext                = <!--text description of location of organization-->
|ethnic_groups = 93.6% [[Saukanians|Saukanian]] <br> 6.4% Other
| alt_map               = <!-- alt text for map image -->
|ethnic_groups_year = 2020
| map_width              = <!-- Map image's width (default 250px) -->
|religion = 79.4% [[Religion in Saukania|Saukanian paganism]] <br> 10.2% {{wp|Christianity|Christianity}} <br> 6.6% {{wp|Islam|Islam}} <br> 3.8% Other
| map_caption           = Saukania (green) on Earth
|religion_year = 2020
| demonym                = Saukanians <br> Allies
|demonym = Saukanian
| org_type              = <!-- e.g. Trade bloc -->[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confederation Confederation]
|government_type = Confederation of sovereign city-states
| membership_type        = <!-- (default "Membership") -->Members
|leader_title1 =  
| membership            = <!-- Type/s and/or number/s of members --> [[Acha]] <br> [[Dathan]] <br> [[Erya]] <br> [[Ghulashan]] <br> [[Khodan]] <br> [[Kula]] <br> [[Muridan]] <br> [[Rhegan]] <br> [[Sardash]] <br> [[Sashan]] <br> [[Tushan]]
|leader_name1 =  
| admin_center_type      = <!-- e.g. "Administrative center" (default) --> Meeting place
|leader_title2 =  
| largest_city           = [[Khodan (city)|Khodan]]
|leader_name2 =  
| admin_center          = <!-- Location/s of administrative center/s -->[[Dautan]]
|legislature = [[Confederation Council]]
| languages_type        = <!-- e.g. "[[Official language]]s" (default) -->
|area_km2 = 1,116,863
| languages              =  
|population_estimate = 27,214,000
| leader_title1          = First Consul of the Allies
|population_estimate_year = 2020
| leader_name1          =
|population_density_km2 = 24.3
| leader_title2          = Second Consul of the Allies
|GDP_PPP =  
| leader_name2          =
|GDP_PPP_year =  
| leader_title14        =
|GDP_PPP_per_capita =  
| leader_name14          =
|GDP_nominal =  
| established            = <!-- Usually a date, in lieu of event/s hereafter --> April 12th, 1847
|GDP_nominal_year =
| established_event1    =  
|GDP_nominal_per_capita =  
| established_date1      =  
|HDI =  
| established_event2    =  
|HDI_year =
| established_date2      =  
|currency =  
| established_event9    =  
|time_zone =  
| established_date9      =  
|utc_offset =  
| official_website      =  
|time_zone_DST =  
| area_km2               = <!-- major area size (in sq_km) -->1,116,863
|date_format = dd-mm-yyyy
| area_sq_mi            = <!-- area in square mi (requires area_km2) -->431,223
|drives_on = left
| area_footnote          = <!-- optional footnote for area -->
|cctld = .sg
| percent_water          =
|calling_code =
| area_label            = <!-- label under "Area" (default is "Total") -->
| area_label2            = <!-- label below area_label (optional) -->
| area_dabodyalign      = <!-- text after area_label2 (optional) -->
| population_estimate   = 47,413,000
| population_estimate_year = 2024
| population_density_km2 = 42.45
| population_density_sq_mi = 109.95
| GDP_PPP               =
| GDP_PPP_rank          =  
| GDP_PPP_year           =  
| GDP_PPP_per_capita     =  
| GDP_nominal           =  
| GDP_nominal_year       =  
| GDP_nominal_per_capita =
| Gini                  = <!-- number only, 0-100 -->
| Gini_ref              = <!-- for any ref/s to associate with Gini number -->
| Gini_year              =  
| HDI                   = <!-- number only, 0-1 -->
| HDI_ref                = <!-- for any ref/s to associate with HDI number -->
| HDI_year               =  
| currency               = Allied kel
| currency_code          = ALK
| time_zone              =  
| utc_offset            = <!-- +N, where N is number of hours -->
| footnote1              =  
| footnote2              =  
| footnote7              =  
| footnotes              = <!-- For generic non-numbered footnotes -->
}}
}}
'''Saukania''', formally the '''Saukanian Alliance''', is a country in northwestern [[Thrismari]]. Saukania is bordered by [[Shirua]] to its south, and [[Zangoistan]] 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 '''League of Dautan''', also known as the '''Saukanian Alliance''' or simply '''Saukania,''' is a [[wikipedia:Confederation|confederation]] located in the Ghuran-Argan region of northwest [[Thrismari]]. The League is comprised of eleven self-governing [[wikipedia:City-state|city-states]].


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.
Saukania has a total land area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 square miles) and a population of 47.4 million people. The climate of Saukania is continental arid and semi-arid, with limited annual precipitation. The majority of the population is concentrated in oases and along river valleys which are the primary source of irrigation and human habitation. The League is landlocked, though it is bounded on its south-southeastern side by the inland [[Argan Sea]]. Saukania is bordered by [[Niater]] to its northeast, [[Sarocca]] to its northwest, [[Shirua]] to its south, and [[Talgiristan]] to its east-southeast.


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 has been inhabited since the [[wikipedia:Paleolithic|Palaeolithic]], and saw the rise of some of the earliest farming communities. The [[Karkul civilization]] and [[Sauka Valley Civilization]] were among the earliest urban culture to flourish in the country. Pastoral tribes of [[Saukanian-speaking peoples]] became dominant in the 1st millennium BC, founding a network of ethnic city-states. Following the collapse of the [[Third Vapnian Empire|Third Empire of Vapna]] in the 17th century, many city-states re-established their independence and founded leagues on shared ethnic and religious characteristics, initiating a period of conflict between rival alliances. The [[Fighting Years]] weakened the opposing leagues, and allowed foreign powers to begin extending their influence into the country.  


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 League of Dautan was formally founded on April 12th, 1908, at the religious sanctuary of [[Dautan]], after decades of ''de facto'' co-operation between the distinct alliances of cities. The [[Dautan Oath]] is the binding pledge of the League, forbidding its members from war against one another, authorising the creation of a confederate government, obliging mutual assistance, and honouring the eternal sovereignty and territorial integrity of its members. The League is run by a number of elected and appointed officers, though in practice, the independent city-states govern their own affairs. An [[Twelve Thousand|assembly]] of all adult male citizens is the core legislative body, electing officers of the League, while a smaller [[Council of the Allies|council]] representing the member city-states deliberates on relevant League matters. This council is presided over by the [[President of the Allies]].


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's economy is largely agrarian. A little over half of the country is urban, and this number is steadily increasing. Saukanian exports include food, alcohol, and finished goods such as textiles. [[Saukanian carpets]] and [[Saukanian wine|wine]] are a prominent cultural export. Tourism to Saukania forms a sizeable aspect of its economy. Its largest cities possess a wealth of hospitality and service-oriented businesses. Archaeological sites are a major draw of tourism, as are natural sites including 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.
[[Saukanians]] form the majority of the population, identified by their use of the [[Saukanian languages]]. Though they possess a common identity rooted in language and religion, regional and local identities emphasising city-state and clan-based lineal descent groups are typically more immediately important. Tradition is valued in [[Culture of Saukania|Saukanian culture]], and is the basis of a code of conduct and ethnic self-expression known as [[Arsatarya]]. Core concepts of Arsatarya include hospitality for guests, retaliation against injury, courage and strength for men, and the modesty of women. This code is strongest in Saukania's rural areas, and particularly among nomadic clans and the hill tribes.


==Name==
==Name==
{{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.
{{Main|Names of Saukania}}The Common-language toponym "Saukania" is derived from the [[Sauka River|Sauka river]], whose valley is of disproportionate importance in the country's history, culture, and identity. The demonym "Saukanian" is subsequently derived from this Common-language name.
 
In older parlance, it is only the plain of the Sauka river valley that is known as Saukania. In modern times, this area is sometimes called "Saukania Proper" or more frequently the alternative toponym [[Saukiana]]. The application of the toponym to neighbouring regions in modern Saukania owes itself to the cultural influence of Saukiana as the homeland of the Saukanian people.
 
In their own language, the Saukanians call their country ''Tokaurasartha'', meaning "the Tokaura expanse/region/territory". ''Tokaura'', or in Common-language, "Tokauran", is the native endonym of the Saukanian peoples, transcending the divisions of the ''ariyi''. The country of Saukiana within Tokaurasartha is called ''Saukavya'' or ''Saukasartha''.
 
Generally, Saukanians use their native endonym and toponym, though the League accepts use of the Common-language signifiers of the land and people in international discourse, accepting "Saukania" and "Saukanian" as synonymous with "Tokaurasartha" and "Tokaura" respectively.


==History==
==History==
{{Main|History of Saukania}}
{{Main|History of Saukania}}The history of Saukania stretches back to the first inhabitation of the country by humans in the Stone Age. Saukanian history, as the history of the ethnic group presently inhabiting the country, begins during the Iron Age, with the rise of the first Saukanian city-states that are ancestral to the modern population.
===Prehistory and antiquity (before 7th century AD)===
{{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.


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]].
===Prehistory===
{{Further|Ancient history of Saukania|Archaeological sites in Saukania}}


===Middle ages (6th - 16th centuries)===
==== Stone Age ====
The [[Kagana caves]] in southwestern Saukania contain the oldest known confirmed anatomically modern humans in Saukania, with the remains dating back to 61,000 years ago. [[wikipedia:Middle_Paleolithic|Middle]] and [[wikipedia:Upper_Paleolithic|Upper Palaeolithic]] [[wikipedia:Hunter-gatherer|hunter-gatherers]] are known to have inhabited regions of Saukania more or less consistently, though evidence of continued subsistence is at times sparse. [[wikipedia:Mesolithic|Mesolithic]] hunter-gatherer cultures have a much more visible presence in the archaeological record of Saukania, and continue their presence into the early [[wikipedia:Neolithic|Neolithic]] until replaced by the first local farming communities.


===Early modern and modern Saukania (16th century - 1950)===
==== Sauka Valley Civilisation ====
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.
Saukania and its adjacent regions witnessed the rise of some of the earliest sophisticated cultures and civilization in Thrismari, despite the environmental aridity, due to the fertility of the rivers that drained into the [[Argan Sea]]. By far the most significant of these in Saukanian history was the [[Sauka Valley Civilisation]] (SVC), also known as Attarasa. A complex and urbanized civilisation with street planning, religious art, and an undeciphered language, the Attarasans flourished between c. 2300 BC to c. 850 BC, reaching their apex in the mid-2nd millennium BC. Having originated in the [[Sauka river|Sauka valley]], where most of their sites are clustered, they were also present in the [[Apria river|Apria]] and [[Kria river|Kria]] river valleys. The Attarasans also possessed small outposts on the southern side of the Ghuran mountains. In total some 800 sites have been identified with the Sauka Valley Civilisation, well-preserved owing to the dry conditions. The decline of the civilisation in the early 1st millennium BC has been attributed to a multitude of factors, including climate change, and the influx of migratory waves of [[Saukanians|Saukanian-speakers]].
 
==== Saukanian migrations ====
The "pre-Proto-Saukanians" are thought to have migrated into Saukania between c. 1300-1100 BC, and have been associated with the [[Sagana culture]], located in the upper Sauka valley. This culture is believed to be the [[wikipedia:Linguistic_homeland|''Urheimat'']] of the [[Proto-Saukanian language]] and the cradle of the Tokauran ethnocultural identity. Based on archaeological and genetic evidence, the Sagana culture has been connected with the [[Yagaura civilisation]], another sophisticated urban complex situated on the southern side of the Ghurans, which declined between 1400 and 1200 BC.
 
From c. 950 BC, Sagana artefacts and archaeological offshoots begin diffusing throughout Saukania's river valleys, attesting to a migration of significant scale as the Proto-Saukanians overrun and absorb the declining Attarasans. For the subsequent four centuries, the Proto-Saukanians diverge and adopt differing dialects and unique cultural innovations, assimilating Attarasan artistic, religious, and political structures. Urban settlement, temporarily diminished, begins to resurge towards the end of this migratory period. The obscure period between c. 800 and c. 450 BC has been associated with the so-called [[Saukanian heroic age]], a formative period for [[Saukanian mythology]] and folklore as narrated by some of the earliest surviving Saukanian epics.
 
===Ancient Saukania===
By the late 4th century BC, the Proto-Saukanians had diverged from one another, and given rise to several closely related yet ethnoculturally distinct civilisations. The greatest and best known of these are [[Apriana]], [[Kriana]], and [[Saukiana]]. From these early days, the political disunity that is characteristic of Saukanian history is immediately apparent, as all three regions were comprised of independent or autonomous city-states. These city-states were the early form of the ''ariyi''. The first few centuries of this period are attested only retroactively by writers from the late 1st century BC onward, and blend back into the mythological heroic age. By the time of this growth in literary material, all three regions were well-established collective polities. Coherent cultural identities are attested within Apriana, Kriana, and Saukiana, even as they remained politically fragmented. At any given time however, one or two city-states within each civilisation tended to be militarily and economically dominant, sometimes directly absorbing smaller city-states into their state as autonomous subjects, while confederating more powerful yet still weaker rivals. Rivalries between these major or "high cities" were well-established decades before the first accounts of their conflicts, and the networks of allies and subjects commanded by cities like Augas, Khauaspa, Nisauma, and Vapna, were frequently drawn into their masters' wars.
 
=== Medieval Saukania ===
 
==== Vapnian Empire ====
In the 13th century, the city-state of Vapna once again ascended to prominence. This period is recalled in Saukanian historiography as the '''Vapnian era'''. In outside scholarship the period is known as the [[Third Empire of Vapna]]. The previous two eras of Vapnian precedence among Saukanian states are little more than footnotes in Saukanian history. The Third Empire however is considered extremely important, particularly as its fragmentation gave rise to the modern city-states.
 
Vapna's ascendance began with the subjugation of Dathan, its nearest rival high city, in AD 1232. Over the rest of the 13th and into the early 14th century, Vapnian control was extended outward from east to west, and south to north, coming to dominate a large portion of what is modern Saukania. Vapna was at this time a monarchy, though in AD 1344, executive power was transferred instead to magistrates usually called archons. This transition motivated a number of subjugated states to revolt, aligning with the still-independent city-state of Khodan. The war came to a conclusion in AD 1349, at the [[Battle of Phoragana]]. The battle itself has little surviving documentation, save to confirm the victory of the Vapnian-led hegemony over Khodan and its rebel allies. The battle has been mythologised to a significant extent by the descendants of both sides. Kula, which claims to be the true heir of Vapna, regards the battle as a sign of divine favour for the heritage that they seek to embody. Khodan, and those cities that fought alongside it, emphasise the courage and valour of the defeated in the face of a powerful opponent. Competing mythological accounts, in which many modern Saukanians continue to have a strong investment, make an objective picture of the battle difficult to develop. By the end of the 14th century, Vapnian rule was virtually unchallenged by Saukanian rivals, and the empire began to turn its attention outward.
 
Vapna's hegemony over its subject cities is historically atypical, and the longest attested on record. Its success has been attributed to its generosity towards loyal vassals, which it often officially named as "allies" despite a ''de facto'' relationship of overlordship. This generosity was most visibly manifest in the distribution of war spoils. With Saukanian rivalry pacified, the Vapnian Empire began conducting aggressive military campaigns against its various neighbours in order to acquire the rewards necessary to distribute to its vassals. Saukania's southern neighbour, [[Shirua]], was a common target of these assaults. The [[Vapnian-Shiruan Wars]], themselves merely a chapter of the [[Saukanian-Shiruan Wars]], were fought with an unprecedented scale of destruction and manpower. When victorious, the Vapnians established local nobility as client rulers, using them as staging posts for further invasions. Many riches and prisoners taken as slaves were transported north. Vapna's ability to project power across the Ghuran Mountains was limited, however, and these client leaders often rebelled and joined their coethnics in counter-attacks on Saukanian land. By the dawn of the 16th century, however, Vapna began losing more of these wars than winning, resulting in economic stagnation and increasing tension between the city and its vassals.
 
Beginning in 1511, the [[Great Revolt]] began, in which the majority of Vapna's vassals once again united around a resurgent Khodan, and declared independence from Vapnian hegemony. Coming in the wake of the [[Sixth Vapnian-Shiruan War]], in which an imperial army had been defeated with heavy losses in the last major incursion into Shiruan territory, Vapna however retained enough military potency to defeat this uprising. A critical moment came in 1513, when, swayed by Vapnian pledges, the ancient city-state of Nisauma switched sides and arrayed its considerable forces alongside the Vapnian host at the [[Battle of Darastan]]. Vapnian dissolution could only be delayed, however, and though it had militarily defeated its rebellious subjects, most of them found themselves increasingly only under the nominal authority of their overlord. While Vapna remained too dominant to oppose outright, city-states such as Khodan were able with ever-increasing impunity able to conduct foreign relationships of their own.
 
This period finally drew to a close in the 17th century. In 1605, Khodan once more declared its formal independence from Vapna. Since the failure of the Great Revolt, it had recovered its strength and grown its economy, while Vapna had continued to deteriorate. No force was dispatched to reconquer the rebel city, and over the following two decades, Vapna was deprived of all territory outside of its traditional boundaries. It was spared the destruction of a war by the fear of Khodan, Dathan, and other newly re-established independent city-states of neighbouring powers, which might seek to take advantage of a Saukanian conflict. Nevertheless, in 1631, Vapna's existence as an independent state came to an end. Kula, a low city-state that had always been traditionally subject to Vapna, had grown rich and prosperous under its overlord's hegemony over the rival high cities. Finally in a position to eclipse her master, the city simply mobilised its own troops and marched into Vapna unopposed. A Kulean high city-state was proclaimed, with Vapna reduced to a semi-autonomous dependency. Now without their traditional enemy to take vengeance upon, Khodan, Acha, and Dathan sated their desire to correct the failure of the Great Revolt and marched on Nisauma. After a brief siege, the city was taken, and uncharacteristically annihilated as punishment for its betrayal.


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.
With the fall of the Vapnian Empire, and the disappearance of Vapnian independence, the 17th century gave rise to the [[Kula-Khodan Period]], also known as the [[Fighting Years]], dominated by the rivalry between these two high cities.


===Early modern and modern Saukania (16th century - 1950)===
===Contemporary Saukania (1950 - present)===
===Contemporary Saukania (1950 - present)===


==Geography and climate==
==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]].
{{Main|Geography of Saukania}}Saukania is situated in northwestern [[Thrismari]], and has a land area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 sq mi). The country is landlocked. Saukania lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S.


The country lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S.
==== Physical geography ====
[[File:Indus_river_from_karakouram_highway.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Sauka river]] close to its source in the [[Ghuran Mountains]]]]Saukania's landscape is dominated by a vast area of [[wikipedia:Desert|desert]] land called the [[Saukanian Plain]]. The deserts comprise fine-grained sedimentary rocks overlain in parts by sand dunes and sand sheets. Vegetation is thinly distributed, consisting primarily of [[wikipedia:Xerophyte|xerophytic]] scrubs and short grasses. These plants serve as pasture for desert-adapted sheep, camels, and horses, as the desert is unsuited for agriculture. Trending south, desert gives way to more expansive grassland.


==== Physical geography and georegions ====
The crucially important [[Sauka river]] and its tributaries carve their way through the desert and provide more ideal environments for human habitation and crop cultivation. These rivers, which rise from the mountainous and hilly territory to the southwest, east, and northeast, drain into the [[Argan Sea]] and provide most of the country's water resources. The [[Ghuran Mountains]] form a crescent in Saukania's southwest, forming the core of a highlands region which decreases in elevation along the course of the major rivers and their tributaries into the fertile and densely populated valley foothills at their base. This southern region of Saukania is more steppe-like, with areas of wooded and forested vegetation. In the east are [[Kulean Highlands]], the source of a number of the Sauka's many tributaries and independent rivers.
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 [[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.
Virtually all of Saukania is located above sea level, at an average of 323 metres. The Saukanian Plain is mostly flat, though lower depressions at the centre of small endorheic basins as well as hilly areas vary the landscape's relief. The lowest average elevation occurs around the coast of the Argan Sea.


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.
[[File:Qizil_Qum_1.jpg|thumb|left|Shrubland in the [[Saukanian Plain]]]]


==== Climate ====
==== 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.
Saukania experiences very dry arid continental climactic conditions. Significant fluctuations in temperatures during the day and the year are observed as the norm. In general, Saukania has very cold winters and hot summers, typical of a semiarid climate. The daytime summer temperature rarely falls below 30'''°'''C (86.2'''°'''F). Winter temperatures regularly drop below freezing, especially in the southwest of the country. Cloud coverage is minimal, and Saukania experiences an annual average of 321 days of sunshine. Precipitation occurs mainly in the spring and ranges from about 3 inches (80 millimetres) per year in the northern desert to as much as 17 inches in the mountains.
 
The scarcity of water results in a highly varied population distribution. Most people live along the fertile banks and delta regions of the rivers or in fertile mountain foothills in the southwest. Few people live in the vast arid expanses of central and northern Saukania.


==== Environmental issues ====
==== 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.
Desertification is the greatest issue facing Saukania today. Fluctuations in aridity have had significant effects on Saukania's history and its people for millennia. Expansion of desert areas due to overgrazing poses a significant risk to the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands. Saukania's significant population growth over the last century has also seen major expansion of irrigation networks, threatening overall water security as more of the Sauka river system is diverted for agricultural production.


==Demographics==
==Demographics==
{{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.
{{Main|Demographics of Saukania}}Saukania's population is estimated at 47.4 million as of 2024. The majority of this population is concentrated in the fertile foothills of the Ghuran mountains, the riparian oases along the lengths of the major river systems, or in the deltas of those systems. Most of Saukania's land area is either sparsely inhabited or completely uninhabited.
 
The urban-rural divide in Saukania is approximately half, with an estimated 52.3% of the population living in urban environments. As the Saukanian polities are organised as city-states, this includes those urban areas within a city-state's jurisdiction which do not have equal designation to the seat of political power. Despite a long history of such sociopolitical organisation, Saukania has traditionally only been relatively more urbanized than various surrounding peoples, owing to the dry conditions of the country. Industrialisation came relatively late, and alongside it, the pressures and incentives motivating significant large-scale immigration to the cities from the countryside. While cities had always been the centre of handicraft and metallurgical industrial activity, the majority of the population remained engaged in agricultural work in the many thousands of villages and smaller towns throughout the country.


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.
Approximately 3.3% of the population of Saukania live nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyles. These are animal herders living around the fringes of the desert plains, grazing their herds on the hardy desert grasses and shrubs and steppe flora. Nomadic groups were once larger relative to the urban population, though the Saukanian population boom of the late 20th century radically increased the sedentary population's majority status. In addition, many nomads have settled down within the territory of the city-state they inhabit, in many cases completely assimilating or only partially retaining aspects of their nomadic culture. While nomadic interactions with sedentary rural populations in villages and towns are usually cordial, with exchange and sale of goods between communities, tensions and conflict are not unknown. Expansion of irrigation projects into traditional pasture lands in order to sustain the growing sedentary population threaten nomadic lifestyles. Rural populations are in turn often suspicious or mistrustful of Saukanian nomads. Incidents of [[Bride kidnapping in Saukania|bride abduction]] involving nomadic men and rural women and girls are rare, but when reported, often result in outrage as the victim community perceives itself dishonoured, and such incidents can lead to retaliations and violence.


==== Urbanization ====
Population growth in Saukania is high, averaging 1.67% annually. Fertility is a major contributor to this growth. The [[wikipedia:Total_fertility_rate|total fertility rate]] for 1960 has been estimated at 7.6 children per woman, falling to 4.3 in 2010, and an estimated 3.7 as of 2020. This growth has diminished with the decline in maternal and infant mortality rates, while longer lifespans attributed to healthcare improvements are also a significant contributor to the higher population.
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.
 
Men outnumber women, with approximately 108 men for every 100 women. Women in general have longer life expectancy, and so the sex ratio in old age is weighted in favour of females.


===Ethnicity===
===Ethnicity===
{{Main|Ethnic groups in Saukania|Saukanians|Nomads in Saukania}}TBA
{{Main|Saukanians|Ethnicity in Saukania|Nomadic peoples in Saukania}}[[Saukanians]] are the dominant group in Saukania. Saukanians are the collective ethno-linguistic groups distinguished primarily by native use of one of the [[Saukanian languages]], but also by culture, religion, and self-identification. A common identity to the Saukanian-speaking peoples exists, but is of little domestic relevance compared to tribal identities or identities rooted in the city-state. There is strong disagreement on whether the Saukanians collectively constitute a single ethnicity, or if they instead are a family of closely-related ethnicities organised according to distinct historical and social criteria, emphasising both kinship and locality.
 
For Saukanians themselves, a more important distinction than ethnicity, however that may be defined, is that between sedentary agricultural populations and the mobile pastoralists. Each is conceived of as the existential "other" by the opposing group. The agricultural city-states and the pastoral tribes have a common institutional ancestry in the ancient Saukanians, the semi-nomadic herders who came to dominate the Sauka basin over many centuries, but developed in mutually exclusive and opposing directions. For the city-states especially, the nomads came to represent an "un-Saukanian" tradition, despite recognition of their language and many of their other customs as of a familial connection to the city-states' own. The idea of nomadism as the basis of a city-state was firmly rejected as the institution developed.


===Language===
===Language===
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{{Main|List of major cities in Saukania}}
{{Main|List of major cities in Saukania}}


==Government and politics==
==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.
{{Main|Dautan Oath}}The League of Dautan is a [[wikipedia:Confederation|confederation]] organised according to the provisions of the [[Dautan Oath]], the pledge made by every member towards the common welfare of all other members. These provisions, first and foremost, declare the "eternal sovereignty of the Allies in their own affairs". Nevertheless, obligations to the common welfare necessarily strip some autonomy in particular areas from the individual members. Alliances among Saukanian city-states are not a new phenomena. The League of Dautan instead superseded existing alliances organised on the basis of common ethnic identity or regional cohabitation, which likewise respected the sovereignty of members while demanding concessions for the good of the whole. These dynamics not being new, the League was able to establish itself without much resistance.
 
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 ===


=== City-states ===
=== Foreign relations ===
=== Foreign relations ===


===Military===
===Military===
{{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.
{{Main|Allied Saukanian Armed Forces}}


=== Human rights ===
=== Human rights ===


==Culture==
==Culture==
{{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.
{{Main|Culture of Saukania}}Saukania has millennia-old attitudes and traditions, derived from its ancient history and the peoples that have lived in the country. [[Saukanians]] possess common cultural features arising from their shared heritage and ancestry, and features that differ between the regions of Saukania, with distinctive cultures partly as a result of geographic divisions such as mountains and desert. River-based regions form typically homogeneous cultural units, sub-divided into city-states. Each city-state lays claim to its own independent culture and heritage. Within the same region, however, city-states recognise their common bonds, and may share much of their individual cultures.
 
===Society===
{{Further|Women in Saukania}}Family is one of the most important aspects of Saukanian society. While self-reliance and responsibility are values instilled in children, loyalty to the family is the greatest lesson taught in Saukanian families. Saukanian families are [[wikipedia:Patrilocal_residence|patrilocal]], [[wikipedia:Patrilineality|patrilineal]], and [[wikipedia:Patriarchy|patriarchal]]. An extended family or ''wana'' is led by the oldest living male in the ascending paternal line. Each married adult male in a family heads a unit of the family, called a ''pol''. For millennia, kinship has been the basic method of social organisation. Members of a family are expected to support each other in disputes with outsiders, with this obligation scaling to the clan and tribal levels. The city-state is considered in this framework. Founding myths and traditions relate the idea that a city is tribes coming together to form a single family as clans do to form a tribe. Citizenship is reckoned almost entirely through bloodlines, with naturalisation rare.
 
Weddings are grand events in Saukanian culture, even among poorer and lower status families. The [[wikipedia:Dowry|dowry]] of the bride is often the largest single expense of a family. Men are expected to pay a [[wikipedia:Bride_price|bride-price]]. The celebrations vary from region to region, though a symbolic kidnapping of the bride is normal. [[wikipedia:Bride_kidnapping|Marriage by capture]] was normal in many rural areas for centuries, though it has declined in recent decades. Nomadic clans and some highland communities still practice bridenapping, which is celebrated as a renown-bringing act. Traditionally, women and girls captured in war by rival city-states or tribes would be [[wikipedia:Raptio|taken as wives or slaves]] by the victors. Bridenapping attempts can sometimes result in blood-feuds. Nomadic men kidnapping rural women from villages often causes violence between the two communities, and suspicion of nomads by the sedentary rural farmers. An elopement may be disguised as a kidnapping. [[wikipedia:Polygyny|Polygyny]] is legal across Saukania, though only a minority (no more than 11%) of men have more than one wife. Among elite males in nomadic clans, this percentage is higher, and it is thought that elite monopolisation of women in these communities is the cause of bridenapping attempts against rural women by younger, lower-status men with fewer prospects.


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.
Family honour is one of the most important characteristics of the Saukanian family. A whole family may be disgraced in the eyes of peers through the actions of a single individual, and the reputation of the family will be the default assessment of any of its members. This cyclical reinforcement motivates a high degree of familial solidarity. Saukanian concepts of honour have a strong influence in sex relationships. Personal honour in Saukania is essentially male, and part of the wider male code of conduct, which emphasises the protection of women. The honour of women and children is a reflection upon men. The behaviour and movement of women is strictly controlled by men, and it is required for a woman to have a legal guardian, usually her father or husband. Women occupy a subordinate social status in the family. Unrelated men and women are usually segregated. Girls and young women are instilled with values of modesty and obedience by their families, particularly by older female relatives. Obedience to the male head of the household is a cornerstone of piety.


===Social structure===
Issues regarding honour have the capacity to cause violence between Saukanians. The Saukanian code of honour, the [[Arsatarya]], demands retaliation for injury against honour, including a murder, theft, or the abduction or sexual assault of a woman. This obligation to retaliate blood-for-blood is felt most in rural areas, particularly in the highland regions and among nomadic clans. These vendettas can spiral and drag in larger clans, resulting in numerous casualties, unless they are settled by a council of elders. In the cities, disputes are settled by the courts, though individual acts of vengeance are not unknown. The Arsatarya varies in some specifics from place to place, but generally calls upon Saukanians, particularly Saukanian men, to adhere to a number of virtues and principles: vengeance, hospitality, generosity, piety (familial and to the gods), pride, the protection of women and female honour, bravery, and manliness.
{{Main|Social structure and class 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.


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.
===Clothing===
{{Main|Clothing in Saukania}}Saukanians wear clothing suitable for the geography and climate. Extreme temperature variations are the norm across Saukania, with very hot days and cold nights, and across the year, with hot summers and cold winters. Male clothing is often a combination of a long tunic or caftan and trousers. A light, sleeved robe may be worn in summer, and has a degree of formality. In winter, this is substituted for a heavier coat. Colours and patterns vary both by individual choice and regional design. Men often wear hats and other head coverings, both indoors and outdoors. Finer materials and intricate deigns and patterns on clothing denote both formality and class.


==== Honour ====
Traditional women's dresses are always long and loose-fitting. A sleeved robe, open at the front, is typically worn over the main dress. As with men's clothing, colours and patterns vary by region, but tends to be bright. Modesty is central for female clothing, and women are rarely seen in public with more than their hands and face visible. In addition to or in place of a robe, a large shawl or cloak may be worn around the body, pulled over the head, and even covering the face. Face-veiling is a common sight in many cities, particularly in the west. Within the home standards are more relaxed. Women of all statuses wear a lot of jewellery, including anklets, bracelets, armlets, chokers, necklaces, ear-rings, and head bands. Higher status women from wealthier families often wear a small fortune on their bodies. Other cosmetics are also overwhelmingly female such as various perfumes and body art such as temporary tattooing of the hands, face, and feet.
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.
Both men and women wear traditional Saukanian boots, heeled, when out of doors. Indoors, women wear a sandal-shoe or go barefoot.


===Clothing===
Saukanian brides wear red on their wedding day, as a symbol of their virginity and virtue.
{{Main|Clothing in Saukania}}


===Architecture and art===
===Architecture and art===
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===Cuisine===
===Cuisine===
{{Main|Cuisine of Saukania}}
{{Main|Cuisine of Saukania}}Saukania has been a [[wikipedia:Wine|wine-producing]] region for thousands of years. Many valleys in the Ghuran range cultivate grape production as their primary or supplemental crop. Saukanian wine is exported globally.


===Sport===
===Sport===

Latest revision as of 20:32, 26 December 2024

League of Dautan
Flag of the Alliance
Flag
Saukania (green) on Earth
Saukania (green) on Earth
Meeting placeDautan
Largest cityKhodan
Demonym(s)Saukanians
Allies
TypeConfederation
MembersAcha
Dathan
Erya
Ghulashan
Khodan
Kula
Muridan
Rhegan
Sardash
Sashan
Tushan
Leaders
EstablishmentApril 12th, 1847
Area
• 
1,116,863 km2 (431,223 sq mi)
Population
• 2024 estimate
47,413,000
• Density
42.45/km2 (109.9/sq mi)
CurrencyAllied kel (ALK)

The League of Dautan, also known as the Saukanian Alliance or simply Saukania, is a confederation located in the Ghuran-Argan region of northwest Thrismari. The League is comprised of eleven self-governing city-states.

Saukania has a total land area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 square miles) and a population of 47.4 million people. The climate of Saukania is continental arid and semi-arid, with limited annual precipitation. The majority of the population is concentrated in oases and along river valleys which are the primary source of irrigation and human habitation. The League is landlocked, though it is bounded on its south-southeastern side by the inland Argan Sea. Saukania is bordered by Niater to its northeast, Sarocca to its northwest, Shirua to its south, and Talgiristan to its east-southeast.

Saukania has been inhabited since the Palaeolithic, and saw the rise of some of the earliest farming communities. The Karkul civilization and Sauka Valley Civilization were among the earliest urban culture to flourish in the country. Pastoral tribes of Saukanian-speaking peoples became dominant in the 1st millennium BC, founding a network of ethnic city-states. Following the collapse of the Third Empire of Vapna in the 17th century, many city-states re-established their independence and founded leagues on shared ethnic and religious characteristics, initiating a period of conflict between rival alliances. The Fighting Years weakened the opposing leagues, and allowed foreign powers to begin extending their influence into the country.

The League of Dautan was formally founded on April 12th, 1908, at the religious sanctuary of Dautan, after decades of de facto co-operation between the distinct alliances of cities. The Dautan Oath is the binding pledge of the League, forbidding its members from war against one another, authorising the creation of a confederate government, obliging mutual assistance, and honouring the eternal sovereignty and territorial integrity of its members. The League is run by a number of elected and appointed officers, though in practice, the independent city-states govern their own affairs. An assembly of all adult male citizens is the core legislative body, electing officers of the League, while a smaller council representing the member city-states deliberates on relevant League matters. This council is presided over by the President of the Allies.

Saukania's economy is largely agrarian. A little over half of the country is urban, and this number is steadily increasing. Saukanian exports include food, alcohol, and finished goods such as textiles. Saukanian carpets and wine are a prominent cultural export. Tourism to Saukania forms a sizeable aspect of its economy. Its largest cities possess a wealth of hospitality and service-oriented businesses. Archaeological sites are a major draw of tourism, as are natural sites including the Ghuran Mountains.

Saukanians form the majority of the population, identified by their use of the Saukanian languages. Though they possess a common identity rooted in language and religion, regional and local identities emphasising city-state and clan-based lineal descent groups are typically more immediately important. Tradition is valued in Saukanian culture, and is the basis of a code of conduct and ethnic self-expression known as Arsatarya. Core concepts of Arsatarya include hospitality for guests, retaliation against injury, courage and strength for men, and the modesty of women. This code is strongest in Saukania's rural areas, and particularly among nomadic clans and the hill tribes.

Name

The Common-language toponym "Saukania" is derived from the Sauka river, whose valley is of disproportionate importance in the country's history, culture, and identity. The demonym "Saukanian" is subsequently derived from this Common-language name.

In older parlance, it is only the plain of the Sauka river valley that is known as Saukania. In modern times, this area is sometimes called "Saukania Proper" or more frequently the alternative toponym Saukiana. The application of the toponym to neighbouring regions in modern Saukania owes itself to the cultural influence of Saukiana as the homeland of the Saukanian people.

In their own language, the Saukanians call their country Tokaurasartha, meaning "the Tokaura expanse/region/territory". Tokaura, or in Common-language, "Tokauran", is the native endonym of the Saukanian peoples, transcending the divisions of the ariyi. The country of Saukiana within Tokaurasartha is called Saukavya or Saukasartha.

Generally, Saukanians use their native endonym and toponym, though the League accepts use of the Common-language signifiers of the land and people in international discourse, accepting "Saukania" and "Saukanian" as synonymous with "Tokaurasartha" and "Tokaura" respectively.

History

The history of Saukania stretches back to the first inhabitation of the country by humans in the Stone Age. Saukanian history, as the history of the ethnic group presently inhabiting the country, begins during the Iron Age, with the rise of the first Saukanian city-states that are ancestral to the modern population.

Prehistory

Stone Age

The Kagana caves in southwestern Saukania contain the oldest known confirmed anatomically modern humans in Saukania, with the remains dating back to 61,000 years ago. Middle and Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers are known to have inhabited regions of Saukania more or less consistently, though evidence of continued subsistence is at times sparse. Mesolithic hunter-gatherer cultures have a much more visible presence in the archaeological record of Saukania, and continue their presence into the early Neolithic until replaced by the first local farming communities.

Sauka Valley Civilisation

Saukania and its adjacent regions witnessed the rise of some of the earliest sophisticated cultures and civilization in Thrismari, despite the environmental aridity, due to the fertility of the rivers that drained into the Argan Sea. By far the most significant of these in Saukanian history was the Sauka Valley Civilisation (SVC), also known as Attarasa. A complex and urbanized civilisation with street planning, religious art, and an undeciphered language, the Attarasans flourished between c. 2300 BC to c. 850 BC, reaching their apex in the mid-2nd millennium BC. Having originated in the Sauka valley, where most of their sites are clustered, they were also present in the Apria and Kria river valleys. The Attarasans also possessed small outposts on the southern side of the Ghuran mountains. In total some 800 sites have been identified with the Sauka Valley Civilisation, well-preserved owing to the dry conditions. The decline of the civilisation in the early 1st millennium BC has been attributed to a multitude of factors, including climate change, and the influx of migratory waves of Saukanian-speakers.

Saukanian migrations

The "pre-Proto-Saukanians" are thought to have migrated into Saukania between c. 1300-1100 BC, and have been associated with the Sagana culture, located in the upper Sauka valley. This culture is believed to be the Urheimat of the Proto-Saukanian language and the cradle of the Tokauran ethnocultural identity. Based on archaeological and genetic evidence, the Sagana culture has been connected with the Yagaura civilisation, another sophisticated urban complex situated on the southern side of the Ghurans, which declined between 1400 and 1200 BC.

From c. 950 BC, Sagana artefacts and archaeological offshoots begin diffusing throughout Saukania's river valleys, attesting to a migration of significant scale as the Proto-Saukanians overrun and absorb the declining Attarasans. For the subsequent four centuries, the Proto-Saukanians diverge and adopt differing dialects and unique cultural innovations, assimilating Attarasan artistic, religious, and political structures. Urban settlement, temporarily diminished, begins to resurge towards the end of this migratory period. The obscure period between c. 800 and c. 450 BC has been associated with the so-called Saukanian heroic age, a formative period for Saukanian mythology and folklore as narrated by some of the earliest surviving Saukanian epics.

Ancient Saukania

By the late 4th century BC, the Proto-Saukanians had diverged from one another, and given rise to several closely related yet ethnoculturally distinct civilisations. The greatest and best known of these are Apriana, Kriana, and Saukiana. From these early days, the political disunity that is characteristic of Saukanian history is immediately apparent, as all three regions were comprised of independent or autonomous city-states. These city-states were the early form of the ariyi. The first few centuries of this period are attested only retroactively by writers from the late 1st century BC onward, and blend back into the mythological heroic age. By the time of this growth in literary material, all three regions were well-established collective polities. Coherent cultural identities are attested within Apriana, Kriana, and Saukiana, even as they remained politically fragmented. At any given time however, one or two city-states within each civilisation tended to be militarily and economically dominant, sometimes directly absorbing smaller city-states into their state as autonomous subjects, while confederating more powerful yet still weaker rivals. Rivalries between these major or "high cities" were well-established decades before the first accounts of their conflicts, and the networks of allies and subjects commanded by cities like Augas, Khauaspa, Nisauma, and Vapna, were frequently drawn into their masters' wars.

Medieval Saukania

Vapnian Empire

In the 13th century, the city-state of Vapna once again ascended to prominence. This period is recalled in Saukanian historiography as the Vapnian era. In outside scholarship the period is known as the Third Empire of Vapna. The previous two eras of Vapnian precedence among Saukanian states are little more than footnotes in Saukanian history. The Third Empire however is considered extremely important, particularly as its fragmentation gave rise to the modern city-states.

Vapna's ascendance began with the subjugation of Dathan, its nearest rival high city, in AD 1232. Over the rest of the 13th and into the early 14th century, Vapnian control was extended outward from east to west, and south to north, coming to dominate a large portion of what is modern Saukania. Vapna was at this time a monarchy, though in AD 1344, executive power was transferred instead to magistrates usually called archons. This transition motivated a number of subjugated states to revolt, aligning with the still-independent city-state of Khodan. The war came to a conclusion in AD 1349, at the Battle of Phoragana. The battle itself has little surviving documentation, save to confirm the victory of the Vapnian-led hegemony over Khodan and its rebel allies. The battle has been mythologised to a significant extent by the descendants of both sides. Kula, which claims to be the true heir of Vapna, regards the battle as a sign of divine favour for the heritage that they seek to embody. Khodan, and those cities that fought alongside it, emphasise the courage and valour of the defeated in the face of a powerful opponent. Competing mythological accounts, in which many modern Saukanians continue to have a strong investment, make an objective picture of the battle difficult to develop. By the end of the 14th century, Vapnian rule was virtually unchallenged by Saukanian rivals, and the empire began to turn its attention outward.

Vapna's hegemony over its subject cities is historically atypical, and the longest attested on record. Its success has been attributed to its generosity towards loyal vassals, which it often officially named as "allies" despite a de facto relationship of overlordship. This generosity was most visibly manifest in the distribution of war spoils. With Saukanian rivalry pacified, the Vapnian Empire began conducting aggressive military campaigns against its various neighbours in order to acquire the rewards necessary to distribute to its vassals. Saukania's southern neighbour, Shirua, was a common target of these assaults. The Vapnian-Shiruan Wars, themselves merely a chapter of the Saukanian-Shiruan Wars, were fought with an unprecedented scale of destruction and manpower. When victorious, the Vapnians established local nobility as client rulers, using them as staging posts for further invasions. Many riches and prisoners taken as slaves were transported north. Vapna's ability to project power across the Ghuran Mountains was limited, however, and these client leaders often rebelled and joined their coethnics in counter-attacks on Saukanian land. By the dawn of the 16th century, however, Vapna began losing more of these wars than winning, resulting in economic stagnation and increasing tension between the city and its vassals.

Beginning in 1511, the Great Revolt began, in which the majority of Vapna's vassals once again united around a resurgent Khodan, and declared independence from Vapnian hegemony. Coming in the wake of the Sixth Vapnian-Shiruan War, in which an imperial army had been defeated with heavy losses in the last major incursion into Shiruan territory, Vapna however retained enough military potency to defeat this uprising. A critical moment came in 1513, when, swayed by Vapnian pledges, the ancient city-state of Nisauma switched sides and arrayed its considerable forces alongside the Vapnian host at the Battle of Darastan. Vapnian dissolution could only be delayed, however, and though it had militarily defeated its rebellious subjects, most of them found themselves increasingly only under the nominal authority of their overlord. While Vapna remained too dominant to oppose outright, city-states such as Khodan were able with ever-increasing impunity able to conduct foreign relationships of their own.

This period finally drew to a close in the 17th century. In 1605, Khodan once more declared its formal independence from Vapna. Since the failure of the Great Revolt, it had recovered its strength and grown its economy, while Vapna had continued to deteriorate. No force was dispatched to reconquer the rebel city, and over the following two decades, Vapna was deprived of all territory outside of its traditional boundaries. It was spared the destruction of a war by the fear of Khodan, Dathan, and other newly re-established independent city-states of neighbouring powers, which might seek to take advantage of a Saukanian conflict. Nevertheless, in 1631, Vapna's existence as an independent state came to an end. Kula, a low city-state that had always been traditionally subject to Vapna, had grown rich and prosperous under its overlord's hegemony over the rival high cities. Finally in a position to eclipse her master, the city simply mobilised its own troops and marched into Vapna unopposed. A Kulean high city-state was proclaimed, with Vapna reduced to a semi-autonomous dependency. Now without their traditional enemy to take vengeance upon, Khodan, Acha, and Dathan sated their desire to correct the failure of the Great Revolt and marched on Nisauma. After a brief siege, the city was taken, and uncharacteristically annihilated as punishment for its betrayal.

With the fall of the Vapnian Empire, and the disappearance of Vapnian independence, the 17th century gave rise to the Kula-Khodan Period, also known as the Fighting Years, dominated by the rivalry between these two high cities.

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

Contemporary Saukania (1950 - present)

Geography and climate

Saukania is situated in northwestern Thrismari, and has a land area of 1,116,863 square kilometres (431,223 sq mi). The country is landlocked. Saukania lies between longitudes 43° and 59°W and latitudes 22° and 32°S.

Physical geography

The Sauka river close to its source in the Ghuran Mountains

Saukania's landscape is dominated by a vast area of desert land called the Saukanian Plain. The deserts comprise fine-grained sedimentary rocks overlain in parts by sand dunes and sand sheets. Vegetation is thinly distributed, consisting primarily of xerophytic scrubs and short grasses. These plants serve as pasture for desert-adapted sheep, camels, and horses, as the desert is unsuited for agriculture. Trending south, desert gives way to more expansive grassland.

The crucially important Sauka river and its tributaries carve their way through the desert and provide more ideal environments for human habitation and crop cultivation. These rivers, which rise from the mountainous and hilly territory to the southwest, east, and northeast, drain into the Argan Sea and provide most of the country's water resources. The Ghuran Mountains form a crescent in Saukania's southwest, forming the core of a highlands region which decreases in elevation along the course of the major rivers and their tributaries into the fertile and densely populated valley foothills at their base. This southern region of Saukania is more steppe-like, with areas of wooded and forested vegetation. In the east are Kulean Highlands, the source of a number of the Sauka's many tributaries and independent rivers.

Virtually all of Saukania is located above sea level, at an average of 323 metres. The Saukanian Plain is mostly flat, though lower depressions at the centre of small endorheic basins as well as hilly areas vary the landscape's relief. The lowest average elevation occurs around the coast of the Argan Sea.

Shrubland in the Saukanian Plain

Climate

Saukania experiences very dry arid continental climactic conditions. Significant fluctuations in temperatures during the day and the year are observed as the norm. In general, Saukania has very cold winters and hot summers, typical of a semiarid climate. The daytime summer temperature rarely falls below 30°C (86.2°F). Winter temperatures regularly drop below freezing, especially in the southwest of the country. Cloud coverage is minimal, and Saukania experiences an annual average of 321 days of sunshine. Precipitation occurs mainly in the spring and ranges from about 3 inches (80 millimetres) per year in the northern desert to as much as 17 inches in the mountains.

The scarcity of water results in a highly varied population distribution. Most people live along the fertile banks and delta regions of the rivers or in fertile mountain foothills in the southwest. Few people live in the vast arid expanses of central and northern Saukania.

Environmental issues

Desertification is the greatest issue facing Saukania today. Fluctuations in aridity have had significant effects on Saukania's history and its people for millennia. Expansion of desert areas due to overgrazing poses a significant risk to the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands. Saukania's significant population growth over the last century has also seen major expansion of irrigation networks, threatening overall water security as more of the Sauka river system is diverted for agricultural production.

Demographics

Saukania's population is estimated at 47.4 million as of 2024. The majority of this population is concentrated in the fertile foothills of the Ghuran mountains, the riparian oases along the lengths of the major river systems, or in the deltas of those systems. Most of Saukania's land area is either sparsely inhabited or completely uninhabited.

The urban-rural divide in Saukania is approximately half, with an estimated 52.3% of the population living in urban environments. As the Saukanian polities are organised as city-states, this includes those urban areas within a city-state's jurisdiction which do not have equal designation to the seat of political power. Despite a long history of such sociopolitical organisation, Saukania has traditionally only been relatively more urbanized than various surrounding peoples, owing to the dry conditions of the country. Industrialisation came relatively late, and alongside it, the pressures and incentives motivating significant large-scale immigration to the cities from the countryside. While cities had always been the centre of handicraft and metallurgical industrial activity, the majority of the population remained engaged in agricultural work in the many thousands of villages and smaller towns throughout the country.

Approximately 3.3% of the population of Saukania live nomadic or semi-nomadic lifestyles. These are animal herders living around the fringes of the desert plains, grazing their herds on the hardy desert grasses and shrubs and steppe flora. Nomadic groups were once larger relative to the urban population, though the Saukanian population boom of the late 20th century radically increased the sedentary population's majority status. In addition, many nomads have settled down within the territory of the city-state they inhabit, in many cases completely assimilating or only partially retaining aspects of their nomadic culture. While nomadic interactions with sedentary rural populations in villages and towns are usually cordial, with exchange and sale of goods between communities, tensions and conflict are not unknown. Expansion of irrigation projects into traditional pasture lands in order to sustain the growing sedentary population threaten nomadic lifestyles. Rural populations are in turn often suspicious or mistrustful of Saukanian nomads. Incidents of bride abduction involving nomadic men and rural women and girls are rare, but when reported, often result in outrage as the victim community perceives itself dishonoured, and such incidents can lead to retaliations and violence.

Population growth in Saukania is high, averaging 1.67% annually. Fertility is a major contributor to this growth. The total fertility rate for 1960 has been estimated at 7.6 children per woman, falling to 4.3 in 2010, and an estimated 3.7 as of 2020. This growth has diminished with the decline in maternal and infant mortality rates, while longer lifespans attributed to healthcare improvements are also a significant contributor to the higher population.

Men outnumber women, with approximately 108 men for every 100 women. Women in general have longer life expectancy, and so the sex ratio in old age is weighted in favour of females.

Ethnicity

Saukanians are the dominant group in Saukania. Saukanians are the collective ethno-linguistic groups distinguished primarily by native use of one of the Saukanian languages, but also by culture, religion, and self-identification. A common identity to the Saukanian-speaking peoples exists, but is of little domestic relevance compared to tribal identities or identities rooted in the city-state. There is strong disagreement on whether the Saukanians collectively constitute a single ethnicity, or if they instead are a family of closely-related ethnicities organised according to distinct historical and social criteria, emphasising both kinship and locality.

For Saukanians themselves, a more important distinction than ethnicity, however that may be defined, is that between sedentary agricultural populations and the mobile pastoralists. Each is conceived of as the existential "other" by the opposing group. The agricultural city-states and the pastoral tribes have a common institutional ancestry in the ancient Saukanians, the semi-nomadic herders who came to dominate the Sauka basin over many centuries, but developed in mutually exclusive and opposing directions. For the city-states especially, the nomads came to represent an "un-Saukanian" tradition, despite recognition of their language and many of their other customs as of a familial connection to the city-states' own. The idea of nomadism as the basis of a city-state was firmly rejected as the institution developed.

Language

TBA

Religion

Major cities

Politics

The League of Dautan is a confederation organised according to the provisions of the Dautan Oath, the pledge made by every member towards the common welfare of all other members. These provisions, first and foremost, declare the "eternal sovereignty of the Allies in their own affairs". Nevertheless, obligations to the common welfare necessarily strip some autonomy in particular areas from the individual members. Alliances among Saukanian city-states are not a new phenomena. The League of Dautan instead superseded existing alliances organised on the basis of common ethnic identity or regional cohabitation, which likewise respected the sovereignty of members while demanding concessions for the good of the whole. These dynamics not being new, the League was able to establish itself without much resistance.

City-states

Foreign relations

Military

Human rights

Culture

Saukania has millennia-old attitudes and traditions, derived from its ancient history and the peoples that have lived in the country. Saukanians possess common cultural features arising from their shared heritage and ancestry, and features that differ between the regions of Saukania, with distinctive cultures partly as a result of geographic divisions such as mountains and desert. River-based regions form typically homogeneous cultural units, sub-divided into city-states. Each city-state lays claim to its own independent culture and heritage. Within the same region, however, city-states recognise their common bonds, and may share much of their individual cultures.

Society

Family is one of the most important aspects of Saukanian society. While self-reliance and responsibility are values instilled in children, loyalty to the family is the greatest lesson taught in Saukanian families. Saukanian families are patrilocal, patrilineal, and patriarchal. An extended family or wana is led by the oldest living male in the ascending paternal line. Each married adult male in a family heads a unit of the family, called a pol. For millennia, kinship has been the basic method of social organisation. Members of a family are expected to support each other in disputes with outsiders, with this obligation scaling to the clan and tribal levels. The city-state is considered in this framework. Founding myths and traditions relate the idea that a city is tribes coming together to form a single family as clans do to form a tribe. Citizenship is reckoned almost entirely through bloodlines, with naturalisation rare.

Weddings are grand events in Saukanian culture, even among poorer and lower status families. The dowry of the bride is often the largest single expense of a family. Men are expected to pay a bride-price. The celebrations vary from region to region, though a symbolic kidnapping of the bride is normal. Marriage by capture was normal in many rural areas for centuries, though it has declined in recent decades. Nomadic clans and some highland communities still practice bridenapping, which is celebrated as a renown-bringing act. Traditionally, women and girls captured in war by rival city-states or tribes would be taken as wives or slaves by the victors. Bridenapping attempts can sometimes result in blood-feuds. Nomadic men kidnapping rural women from villages often causes violence between the two communities, and suspicion of nomads by the sedentary rural farmers. An elopement may be disguised as a kidnapping. Polygyny is legal across Saukania, though only a minority (no more than 11%) of men have more than one wife. Among elite males in nomadic clans, this percentage is higher, and it is thought that elite monopolisation of women in these communities is the cause of bridenapping attempts against rural women by younger, lower-status men with fewer prospects.

Family honour is one of the most important characteristics of the Saukanian family. A whole family may be disgraced in the eyes of peers through the actions of a single individual, and the reputation of the family will be the default assessment of any of its members. This cyclical reinforcement motivates a high degree of familial solidarity. Saukanian concepts of honour have a strong influence in sex relationships. Personal honour in Saukania is essentially male, and part of the wider male code of conduct, which emphasises the protection of women. The honour of women and children is a reflection upon men. The behaviour and movement of women is strictly controlled by men, and it is required for a woman to have a legal guardian, usually her father or husband. Women occupy a subordinate social status in the family. Unrelated men and women are usually segregated. Girls and young women are instilled with values of modesty and obedience by their families, particularly by older female relatives. Obedience to the male head of the household is a cornerstone of piety.

Issues regarding honour have the capacity to cause violence between Saukanians. The Saukanian code of honour, the Arsatarya, demands retaliation for injury against honour, including a murder, theft, or the abduction or sexual assault of a woman. This obligation to retaliate blood-for-blood is felt most in rural areas, particularly in the highland regions and among nomadic clans. These vendettas can spiral and drag in larger clans, resulting in numerous casualties, unless they are settled by a council of elders. In the cities, disputes are settled by the courts, though individual acts of vengeance are not unknown. The Arsatarya varies in some specifics from place to place, but generally calls upon Saukanians, particularly Saukanian men, to adhere to a number of virtues and principles: vengeance, hospitality, generosity, piety (familial and to the gods), pride, the protection of women and female honour, bravery, and manliness.

Clothing

Saukanians wear clothing suitable for the geography and climate. Extreme temperature variations are the norm across Saukania, with very hot days and cold nights, and across the year, with hot summers and cold winters. Male clothing is often a combination of a long tunic or caftan and trousers. A light, sleeved robe may be worn in summer, and has a degree of formality. In winter, this is substituted for a heavier coat. Colours and patterns vary both by individual choice and regional design. Men often wear hats and other head coverings, both indoors and outdoors. Finer materials and intricate deigns and patterns on clothing denote both formality and class.

Traditional women's dresses are always long and loose-fitting. A sleeved robe, open at the front, is typically worn over the main dress. As with men's clothing, colours and patterns vary by region, but tends to be bright. Modesty is central for female clothing, and women are rarely seen in public with more than their hands and face visible. In addition to or in place of a robe, a large shawl or cloak may be worn around the body, pulled over the head, and even covering the face. Face-veiling is a common sight in many cities, particularly in the west. Within the home standards are more relaxed. Women of all statuses wear a lot of jewellery, including anklets, bracelets, armlets, chokers, necklaces, ear-rings, and head bands. Higher status women from wealthier families often wear a small fortune on their bodies. Other cosmetics are also overwhelmingly female such as various perfumes and body art such as temporary tattooing of the hands, face, and feet.

Both men and women wear traditional Saukanian boots, heeled, when out of doors. Indoors, women wear a sandal-shoe or go barefoot.

Saukanian brides wear red on their wedding day, as a symbol of their virginity and virtue.

Architecture and art

Music

Cuisine

Saukania has been a wine-producing region for thousands of years. Many valleys in the Ghuran range cultivate grape production as their primary or supplemental crop. Saukanian wine is exported globally.

Sport