Aayan Empire: Difference between revisions
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| symbol_type = Coat of arms | | symbol_type = Coat of arms | ||
| image_map = File:Screenshot 2022-02-02 131243.png | | image_map = File:Screenshot 2022-02-02 131243.png | ||
| image_map_caption = | | image_map_caption = Maximum extent of the Aayan Empire, as shown by the location of Nabendu's inscriptions, and visualized by historians: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincent_Arthur_Smith Vincent Arthur Morgan]; [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._C._Majumdar R. J. Majumdar]; and historical geographer Jacksten E. Schlossberg. | ||
| capital = [[Ghobari]] (110BC-98BC) <br> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godawari,_Kailali Kailali] (98BC-54BC) <br> [[Vaddkewatta]] (54BC-21CE) <br> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godawari,_Kailali Kailali] (21-23CE) <br> [[Vaddkewatta]] (23CE-End of Empire) | | capital = [[Ghobari]] (110BC-98BC) <br> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godawari,_Kailali Kailali] (98BC-54BC) <br> [[Vaddkewatta]] (54BC-21CE) <br> [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godawari,_Kailali Kailali] (21-23CE) <br> [[Vaddkewatta]] (23CE-End of Empire) | ||
| common_languages = | | common_languages = |
Revision as of 13:37, 2 February 2022
Aayan Empire Āyana Sāmrājya | |
---|---|
from 100s BCE – to 50s CE | |
Flag of the Aayan Empire (reconstructed) | |
Capital | Ghobari (110BC-98BC) Kailali (98BC-54BC) Vaddkewatta (54BC-21CE) Kailali (21-23CE) Vaddkewatta (23CE-End of Empire) |
Government | Absolute Monarchy |
Today part of |
The Aayan Empire (Mahanan: Āyana Sāmrājya or आयन साम्राज्य) was an iron-age empire in Orient Europa based around the Patuan region of Mahana and Mekabiri. At the empire's greatest extent, it spread from southern Rekamgil to northern Mekabiri and west through the great plains of central Europa. The empire was centralised by the first emperor's conquest of the Careleon Plateau.
At any time the empire was lead by an absolute monarch, the emperor. The most famous of these emperors was Emperor Ujesh who established recorded history in Mahana during his religious pilgrimage in 53BC.