Saukanians: Difference between revisions

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Saukanian ethnic identity is contingent upon paternal belonging to one of the four Saukanian tribes: the [[Arimazi]], the [[Kanthali]], the [[Lukarani]], and the [[Tukari]], speaking the Saukanian language, and practicing [[Saukanian culture]].
Saukanian ethnic identity is contingent upon paternal belonging to one of the four Saukanian tribes: the [[Arimazi]], the [[Kanthali]], the [[Lukarani]], and the [[Tukari]], speaking the Saukanian language, and practicing [[Saukanian culture]].
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Saukanians are an ethnic group native to the historical region of [[Saukania (geographical region)|Saukania]] and the polity of the same name. They share a common language, culture, ancestry, and history as descendants of the [[Saukan (ancient people)|ancient Saukan tribes]]. The ancient Saukans were an [[Oskuri languages|Oskuri people]], who over the 1st millennium AD successfully conquered and largely assimilated all other Oskuri tribes. The subsequent disintegration of the united Saukanian polity into four federations: the [[Arimazi]], the [[Kanthali]], the [[Lukarani]], and the [[Tukari]]. Each can count among its ancestors not only the Saukan but the particular Oskuri tribes conquered by them, as well as the non-Oskuri Neolithic and Chalcolithic inhabitants of the land.
The [[Saukanian language]], the sole surviving Oskuri tongue, is shared by all Saukanians today, though regional dialects and distinctions make Saukanians not completely mutually intelligible to one another. Many Saukanians and non-Saukanians alike argue that Saukanian is not a language but a family of languages in its own right, arguing that the diversity of local Saukanian "dialects" — varying not just between the federations but within them — constitute independent languages. Culturally they are likewise very regionalised, proud of their local traditions and heritage, and have only in relatively recent times embraced a shared Saukanian identity as the basis for a political entity, the [[Saukania|Saukanian Confederation]]. A Saukanian is more likely to identify themselves with their village, town, or city, then their canton, and then their federation, before actively considering themselves a Saukanian.
Saukanians are known for their strong cultural conservatism and allegiance to tradition. A body of social mores, virtues, and ideals are constituted in a concept known as the ''larni mefinaeun'', meaning "way of the ancestors". Family is core to their way of life and sense of self, and a clan-based code of honour permeates their society at every level. A culture typified as independent, the Saukanians have entered the modern world largely distrustful of what it might be offering them, and have little interest in any real cultural interaction or exchange beyond trade.
==Name==
==History and origins==
==Definition and identity==
==Culture==
==Notable people==

Revision as of 16:26, 17 March 2024

Saukanians
Saukani
Total population
27,000,000 (2020)
Languages
Saukanian
Religion
Predominantly Saukanian polytheism
Christian and Muslim minorities

Saukanians are an ethnic group native to Saukania. They trace their origins to the Saukan tribe, an Oskuri-speaking people who conquered much of what is modern Saukania in the 7th and 8th centuries. Most Saukanians live in Saukania, though some live in neighbouring countries such as Shirua and Sarocca as ethnic minorities.

They speak the Saukanian language — the only surviving branch of the Oskuri languages — and its regional dialects.

Saukanian ethnic identity is contingent upon paternal belonging to one of the four Saukanian tribes: the Arimazi, the Kanthali, the Lukarani, and the Tukari, speaking the Saukanian language, and practicing Saukanian culture.


Saukanians are an ethnic group native to the historical region of Saukania and the polity of the same name. They share a common language, culture, ancestry, and history as descendants of the ancient Saukan tribes. The ancient Saukans were an Oskuri people, who over the 1st millennium AD successfully conquered and largely assimilated all other Oskuri tribes. The subsequent disintegration of the united Saukanian polity into four federations: the Arimazi, the Kanthali, the Lukarani, and the Tukari. Each can count among its ancestors not only the Saukan but the particular Oskuri tribes conquered by them, as well as the non-Oskuri Neolithic and Chalcolithic inhabitants of the land.

The Saukanian language, the sole surviving Oskuri tongue, is shared by all Saukanians today, though regional dialects and distinctions make Saukanians not completely mutually intelligible to one another. Many Saukanians and non-Saukanians alike argue that Saukanian is not a language but a family of languages in its own right, arguing that the diversity of local Saukanian "dialects" — varying not just between the federations but within them — constitute independent languages. Culturally they are likewise very regionalised, proud of their local traditions and heritage, and have only in relatively recent times embraced a shared Saukanian identity as the basis for a political entity, the Saukanian Confederation. A Saukanian is more likely to identify themselves with their village, town, or city, then their canton, and then their federation, before actively considering themselves a Saukanian.

Saukanians are known for their strong cultural conservatism and allegiance to tradition. A body of social mores, virtues, and ideals are constituted in a concept known as the larni mefinaeun, meaning "way of the ancestors". Family is core to their way of life and sense of self, and a clan-based code of honour permeates their society at every level. A culture typified as independent, the Saukanians have entered the modern world largely distrustful of what it might be offering them, and have little interest in any real cultural interaction or exchange beyond trade.

Name

History and origins

Definition and identity

Culture

Notable people