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Yajawil of Kehkal Yajawil Kehkal | |
---|---|
Motto: Family and Honor | |
Anthem: In the land of the Lady | |
Capital and | Tiak |
Official languages | Mutli Ket'an Etaan |
Ethnic groups (2016) | Kehach |
Demonym(s) | Kehach |
Government | Absolute monarchy |
• K'eh Yajaw | Chel Tz'on Sip |
Legislature | Tz'onch'ob |
K'axpop | |
K'axch'ob | |
Province of the Mutul | |
Population | |
• 2018 estimate | 800,000 |
• 2016 census | 790,911,850 |
The Yajawil of Kehkal is a landlocked province of the Mutul located art the heart of the Xuman Peninsula. It's the third largest province of the geographic region, and the second least populated. It's surrounded by the Yajawil of Mekuzb'e to the north, Nohixil to the east, Lakam Tun to the south, Yokok'ab to the south-west, Chakan to the west, and Kanayin to the north-west. It's capital and largest settlement is Tiak.
Kehkal location and remoteness isolate it from the main axis of communication of the Divine Kingdom, making it one of the poorer Yajawil nationwide.
Etymology
Kehach is the name by which the local populations identified themselves to others since the days of the Second Ytza Kingdom. It is derivated from the word Keh, meaning "Deer", and the suffix -ach which is generally used to denote abundance. When all Kehach towns and territories were gathered into a single Yajawil during the 19th century, this new territory was given a name relating to its people, but in Mutli: Kehkal, "Land of deers".
Geography
Kehkal consisted of a region of low hills with wide valleys that form swamplands during the rainy season, the region is also characterised by a number of small lakes, such as Lake Mokutun, Lake t'etek and Chann'ab. It lays at the border between the western coast (represented by the Yajawils of Chakan and Kanayin) and the K'ah Basin that occupy two-thirds of the Yajawil of Nohixil.
History
It is generally understood that the Kehach and the Ytze share a common ancestry. During the Paol'lunyu and Chaan Dynasties, the Kehach were located outside of the Mutul proper, being part instead of the Ytze Kingdom that laid on the Divine Kingdom's northern border. The lands of modern Kehkal were then part of the "Western Principality" of the Ytze First Kingdom, one of its four "sub-kingdom". The Western Principality represented a large sway of lands which, at the height of the Ytze expansion, went from their capital of K'ah to the east, to the shores of the Makrian Ocean to the west after the integration of what is today the modern Yajawil of Kanayin.
In AD 78, the Chaan Mutul defeated the Ytze, destroyed their capital in a Star War and forced its ancient inhabitants to flee northward. The part of the Western Principality located in the K'ah Basin was affected by this defeat and integrated to the Mutul just like the other core regions of the now-defunct Kingdom. It's less populated fringes, with their hills and swamps, would remain unconquerred by the Divine Kingdom but devolved into a collection of opposing tribes and small city-states. The Ytze rule over the coastal territories would not last much longer as in AD 80, as the Yok'ot'an population of the area revolted and founded the state of Tamaktun.
Between AD 80 and AD 110, the city-states in modern days southrn Kehkal would also be conquered by the state of Lakam Tun affiliated with the Mutul. Beyond the urban population of the state, most of its inhabitants were semi-nomads hunter-farmers, the majority of whom moved north to settle the barely inhabited forests and swamps now that the Ytze threat had been removed. Despite the formation of a short-lived league to stop this colonization, the last remnants of the Western Principality only encompassed the seasonal swamps and forests of northern Kehkal. It's during that time that the city of Tiak first appear as a leading power among the remaining settlements of the area.
In AD 250, the Mutul crumbled into anarchy and civil war. A situation that would last for the next 54 years until the K'uy Dynasty conquered most of the old Chaan territories. Both Tiak, its vassals, and its southern K'ol rival of Lakam Tun were spared by this conquest. Shortly after however, in AD 370, the Xib Dynasty of the Second Ytze Kingdom, re-conquered most of the old core region of their ethnies and rebuilt the old capital of K'ah. However, the Xib Dynasty had allied itself with the K'ol speaking principalities and tribes of the region to facilitate their conquest and presenting themselves as "liberators". As a result even after they raised Tiak and its dependencies to the rank of Province under the name of Yaxunkal, the Ytze K'uhul Ajaw refused to support any attempt they would make against Lakam Tun or to restore the old Western Principality. When, at the demand of Lakam Tun, the Ytze even moved militarily against their vassals to protect Lakam Tun, Yaxunkal revolted against the new Ytze Kingdom and seceded. Despite their superior military and victories on the battlefield, the Ka Ytze proved incapable of actually occupying the region because of logistical difficulties aggravated by the asymetric warfare practiced by the rebels which, for the first time, were called "Kehach".
In AD 440, the Kehach are mentioned among the auxilliaries and local allies of Kukulkan, the K'uy general who would conquer the Ka Ytze Kingdom and then the entire Xuman Peninsula. For their support, the Kehach were granted most of the old Western Principality to rule as the Yajawil of Yaxunkal, turning the tide of their centuries old rivalry with the K'ol.