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{{Infobox royalty
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Norzin<br>नोर्जिन
| name = Norzin<br>नोर्जिन<br>ནོརྯིན​
| image = Bayinnaung.JPG
| image = Bayinnaung.JPG
| image_size = 250px
| image_size = 250px
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}}
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'''Norzin''' ({{wp|Nepali language|Phulese}}: नोर्जिन; ''Nōrjina''), born '''Tangpa Norzin''' and often referred to as '''Norzin the Truthful''' was a [[Tinza|Tinzan]]-born ruler and founder of the [[Kingdom of Sayuttara]], a [[Satyism|Satyist]] kingdom inspired in principle by the preachings of [[Sarvodaya]], in modern day [[Garambura]]. Regularly cited as one of the fathers of Garamburan Satyism, Norzin expanded Sayuttara from its foundation city in Baralbari to include much of the southern [[River Gonda]], including its expansive delta. Norzin was pivotal in securing strong Satyist influence in the north, where only pre-[[Sare]] fetishism existed. Due to this, many tribes were converted quickly and swore fealty to Norzin, which saw him assemble a formidable army and one of the largest and most organised seen yet in [[Bahia]].
'''Norzin''' ({{wp|Nepali language|Phulese}}: नोर्जिन; ''Nōrjina'', {{wp|Tibetan language|Tinzan}}: ནོརྯིན​; ''Norzin''), born '''Tangpa Norzin''' and often referred to as '''Norzin the Truthful''' was a [[Tinza|Tinzan]]-born ruler and founder of the [[Kingdom of Sayuttara]], a [[Satyism|Satyist]] kingdom inspired in principle by the preachings of [[Sarvodaya]], in modern day [[Garambura]]. Regularly cited as one of the fathers of Garamburan Satyism, Norzin expanded Sayuttara from its foundation city in Baralbari to include much of the southern [[River Gonda]], including its expansive delta. Norzin was pivotal in securing strong Satyist influence in the north, where only pre-[[Sare]] fetishism existed. Due to this, many tribes were converted quickly and swore fealty to Norzin, which saw him assemble a formidable army and one of the largest and most organised seen yet in [[Bahia]].


Norzin waged several wars against neighbouring kingdoms and empires, many of which were successful and saw vast amounts of wealth begin to accumulate in Sayuttara. Unlike many rulers of the age, Norzin preferred to keep a small, centralised heart of the empire centred around Baralbari, with an array of vassal states and tributaries making up much of Sayuttara. Whilst ruler of the kingdom, Norzin sent out many Satyist monks and missionaries to nearby civilisations and constructed many monuments inspired by and honouring the Satya and the [[Phula|First Phuli Empire]], including the famous Pūjā Temple in modern-day Suswe, which is a famous pilgrimage site for Bahian Satyists, and is often used as a symbol for Bahian Satyism as a whole.
Norzin waged several wars against neighbouring kingdoms and empires, many of which were successful and saw vast amounts of wealth begin to accumulate in Sayuttara. Unlike many rulers of the age, Norzin preferred to keep a small, centralised heart of the empire centred around Baralbari, with an array of vassal states and tributaries making up much of Sayuttara. Whilst ruler of the kingdom, Norzin sent out many Satyist monks and missionaries to nearby civilisations and constructed many monuments inspired by and honouring the Satya and the [[Phula|First Phuli Empire]], including the famous Pūjā Temple in modern-day Suswe, which is a famous pilgrimage site for Bahian Satyists, and is often used as a symbol for Bahian Satyism as a whole.

Revision as of 20:51, 9 January 2020

Norzin
नोर्जिन
ནོརྯིན​
Bayinnaung.JPG
Statue of Norzin outside the Musée d'histoire nationale in Mambiza, Garambura
King of Sayuttara
Reignc. 457 – c. 419 BCE
SuccessorJamtso
Born478 BC
Ladumra, Tinza
Died419 BC
Baralbari, Kingdom of Sayuttara
Burial
IssueJamtso
Nyima
Damchoe
HouseTangpa dynasty
ReligionSatyism

Norzin (Phulese: नोर्जिन; Nōrjina, Tinzan: ནོརྯིན​; Norzin), born Tangpa Norzin and often referred to as Norzin the Truthful was a Tinzan-born ruler and founder of the Kingdom of Sayuttara, a Satyist kingdom inspired in principle by the preachings of Sarvodaya, in modern day Garambura. Regularly cited as one of the fathers of Garamburan Satyism, Norzin expanded Sayuttara from its foundation city in Baralbari to include much of the southern River Gonda, including its expansive delta. Norzin was pivotal in securing strong Satyist influence in the north, where only pre-Sare fetishism existed. Due to this, many tribes were converted quickly and swore fealty to Norzin, which saw him assemble a formidable army and one of the largest and most organised seen yet in Bahia.

Norzin waged several wars against neighbouring kingdoms and empires, many of which were successful and saw vast amounts of wealth begin to accumulate in Sayuttara. Unlike many rulers of the age, Norzin preferred to keep a small, centralised heart of the empire centred around Baralbari, with an array of vassal states and tributaries making up much of Sayuttara. Whilst ruler of the kingdom, Norzin sent out many Satyist monks and missionaries to nearby civilisations and constructed many monuments inspired by and honouring the Satya and the First Phuli Empire, including the famous Pūjā Temple in modern-day Suswe, which is a famous pilgrimage site for Bahian Satyists, and is often used as a symbol for Bahian Satyism as a whole.

Norzin died in 419 BC and left the throne to his eldest-born son Jamtso, many folk stories are written and told about Norzin and Sayuttara, and he is referred to in veRwizi as Mambo Wokutanga ("The First King"). Norzin is often credited with bringing prosperity and wealth to the Gonda delta region of Garambura, and, despite his birthplace, is considered one of the greatest rulers in Garamburan history.

Names and titles

Early life

As king of Sayuttara

Last years

Religion

Foreign relations

With fetishist Bahia

With the Satyist world

Family