History of Orioni

Revision as of 19:21, 9 July 2021 by Orioni (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The history of Orioni dates back ten thousand years to the earliest known evidence of human habitation on the island. The appearance of an agriculture-based civilisation around 5000 BCE indicates the arrival of ancestral Orinese peoples. These can be divided into several groups, each with their own periodisation. A long period of city-states was followed by local states, the most important of which were the Medani Empire and the Orioni Queendom. By the 6th Century BCE, the many kingdoms progressively became united under a centralised government controlled by the Empress. This imperial dynasty continues to rule over Orioni. During the 12th Century, the island saw an influx of Buranian migrants. During the late modern period, the power of the Monarchy gradually shifted to allow more civilian power-sharing. Cultural influences from Oriental Europa, Thalassa and Marenesia, carried by waves of expansion and foreign contact, form the basis of modern Orinese culture.

Prehistoric and ancient Orioni

Neolithic period

Prehistoric markings in the form of rock paintings.

The earliest signs of human habitation in Orioni are wall painting found in southwestern Weriki. These are dated to 8.000 to 10.000 years ago and resemble those made by the Marenesian Aborigines. Some wall paintings depict one group of people attacking and killing another. They represent the victims as being darker-skinned than the aggressors. Men are depicted wearing a loin cloth; women are shown wearing a waistcloth and small sleeveless vests, possibly made from palm or banana leaves. Some depictions wear necklaces and flowers in their hair and ears. This early culture is named Arcana after the archaeological site of Arcan on the southern side of the Altais mountains, where thousands of objects were discovered in 1857. Although most of the artefacts were found inland, it is now commonly accepted that the Arcana were spread along the entire western coastlines.

Tribals fishing.

Arcana lived by fishing, hunting mammals and seabirds, and gathering seafood such as molluscs, oysters, and crabs. They fished from primitive bark canoes using baskets, fibre nets submerged in the water as scoops. The Arcana women dived some 7-8 metres (23-27 feet) for clams and sea urchins, keeping with their teeth the handle of a basket, in which they deposed what they were collecting. When the basket filled up, they emptied it into the boat. They hunted seals on the shores on the shores or on the sea from the canoes. They also hunted from the banks, with the hand, a net or bow and arrows. They also used the bow and arrows for hunting birds, while seals, sea lions and occasionally killed whales using harpoons with bone tips. One mythical folk story tells of the ancient cooperation between people and killer whales. When the natives saw a whale being chased by orcas, one of the old men would pretend to be weak and slow to make the orcas feel bad for him. And then the man would call on the orcas to bring the chased whale ashore. When the injured whale drifted onto the beach, the other men came out of hiding to kill the whale. This ritual encouraged the orcas to chase even larger whales ashore. People harvested the prey and shared the feast with neighbouring clans. In return, the orcas received the tongue, their favourite part.[1]

Arcana painted pottery, 5000-4500 BCE.

We also know Arcana for their pottery. Islanders started to produce earthenware from 6500 BCE, affected by the continental culture in Tamurin. Pottery used for cooking or storage in the region was coloured red to brown, either smooth or textured. Pottery used for more formal purposes was often more richly adorned. In the eastern portion of the Arcana area, from about 6500 to 5300 BCE, the most common decorated pottery had black-painted designs on white or light grey backgrounds. The decoration is characterised by fine hatching and contrasting colours are produced by the use of mineral-based paint on a chalky background.

The Arcana religion believed in an almighty supreme god, master of all the things, without body and very kind, guarding the moral law that punished the evils and rewarded the good deeds. Between the supreme god and the humans, there are a lot of spirits, both good and evil, which only the shaman could dominate via magic rites. Evil spirits caused diseases and death, but the shaman could cure the ill person by making the harmful spirit leave the body with magic spells performed while reciting psalmodies and by rubbing the diseased body part. If all these actions failed, the shaman blew on the face of the diseased, sucking the painful body-part and finishing by simulating the extraction of the cause of the harm: a small stone, a caterpillar or something similar. People feared and respected the shamans because besides curing, people also believed they could cause disease.

WIP: named Etashorin after the place were first remains were identified as distinct from later periods.

Amari period

Primitive statue of Amma, Mother goddess, Lady of the Sea.

During the late 5th millennium BCE, the Amari people settled in Orioni. The Amari (reconstructed: "Children of Amma") were not native to the Orioni islands. According to oral traditions transcribed in later periods, they arrived from the east and spread across the entire island. There are no written records of their Aymari language. Their exact origins are unclear. Their leader Nuhayi was a bearded man who taught the primitive Arcana people ethical and moral norms and gave them a system by which to organise their society, with one spiritual and one secular leader. Nuhayi also taught the people agriculture, metalworking and other crafts before disappearing into Europa in the west. By the early 4th millennium BCE, their culture had expanded to include much out east and south Orioni. By 4800 BCE, they are believed to have become the politically dominant ethnic group. The Amari intermarried with the earlier Arcana settlers and gradually spread into the western areas. Rulers of the later Medani Empire would claim to be Amari descendants.

Remains of a Great House of the Amari.

Archaeological traces show the early Amari residents lived in mudbrick houses and stored their harvest in granaries. Immense complexes known as "great houses" typified their societal hierarchy. Archaeologists have found musical instruments, jewellery, ceramics, and ceremonial items, showing people in these Great Houses belonged to wealthy elite families. They hosted their burials indoors and buried gifts along with the dead, often including food and jewellery. As centuries passed and architecture evolved, the great houses retained some of their core traits. Most obvious is their sheer size: complexes averaged over 200 rooms each and some up to 500 rooms. Individual rooms were large, with higher ceilings than buildings of earlier periods. The Amari were excellent planners and erected vast sections or wings in a single stage, rather than in multiple phases.

Extent of Amari culture and its road system.

One of the most notable aspects of Amari infrastructure is a system of roads radiating out from many great house sites such as Ketema and Hiyiweti. They led toward small outlier sites and natural features within and beyond the canyon limits. Through satellite images and ground investigations, archaeologists have detected at least eight main roads that together run for over 3000 km (1800 miles), and are over 10 m (30 feet) wide. They created these roads by removing vegetation and soil or excavating a level surface in the bedrock. The ancestral Amari of Tolo Canyon cut large ramps and stairways into the cliff rock to connect the roadways on the ridge tops of the canyon to the sites on the valley bottoms. The largest roads, constructed at the same time as many of the great house sites (between 3000 and 2525 BCE), are the Great East Road, the South Road, the Kojoyi Canyon Road, the Fiti Road, the West Road, and the shorter Tolo Road. We find simple structures like berms and walls sometimes aligned along with the courses of the roads. Some tracts of the roads lead to natural features such as freshwater springs, lakes, mountain tops, and pinnacles.

WIP: locations where remains have been found: Joktan, Obal, Almodad, Uzal, Nahor, Haran, Arpeleg, Armesh.

Early Iron Age

Early Iron Age
Reconstructed female headgear and necklaces, c. 2600 BCE.
Amari relief of the lady "Ninsun", c. 2150 BCE.
Female statuette, beginning of the 2nd-millennium BCE.

TL;DR: emergency of city-states, common maritime culture, from roughly 1800-980 BCE.

The Early Iron Age society was organised into a polycentric political system. Through the process of synoecism the city-state became the main political unit, with a single city forming a nucleus of control over its surrounding rural territory. These cities were often in fierce competition with one another, and war between them was not uncommon. The early Orinese city-states were located on a long and narrow strip along the Azure Sea, butting up against the mountains. Along the arid Semeni coastal desert, the cities were limited to four river valleys that emerged from the Mendakh mountains, managing limited agriculture through an extensive system of irrigation. Geographically it is clear why Orioni became the maritime culture it still is today. Geography, timing and other factors all added up to an Orinese culture that was at once a loose group of autonomous city-states while simultaneously being a region that adopted similar maritime-merchant practices. Coastal living proved favourable for centuries as civilisations relied on the coastline and waterways for trade, irrigation, and as a food source. Historians have also noted population densities seem to concentrate on coastlines and those coastal areas enjoyed higher average incomes compared to those in landlocked areas. However, factors including soil fertility, nearby rivers, and ecological systems suited for rice or wheat cultivation could give way to denser inland populations. Conversely, cities without coastlines or navigable waterways were often smaller and had less growth potential due to slow movement of people, knowledge capital, and technological advances. They also had to rely on slow and expensive over-land trade, which usually resulted in a lack of access to regional and international markets, further hindering growth. Interior cities also had both lower population densities and labour-productivity levels. The mountains compelled the Orinese to live on the water. And so they turned their backs on the mountainous hinterland and faced the sea.

During this period the common concept of a city as we know it in Europa, as the urban concentration centre of politics, administration, religious and economic activities, wasn't established yet in ancient Orioni. These great cities emerged around sites of communal prayers, market-places, and schools which were often the venue for religious teaching. The religious activity centres, which refer to the location of where the temples stood, didn't mean the administrative or economic centre. Some city-states evolved into modern cities, while others returned to dust. Some major Orinese cities have been around for thousands of years. Initially, there were two power centres among several that were considered being Orinese. Meda is regarded as one of the oldest continuously occupied cities on Eurth. And Hierapolis also seems to have had prehistoric roots. Most historians agree that the political sphere during the second millennium BCE consisted of loose cooperation between cities; so far archaeologists found no significant enough city that could mean a capital city. At times, one of the city-states proved to be the strongest and could dominate the others. These city-states and their commercial fortunes rose and fell like the tides. Diplomatic arrangements, brotherhoods, and alliances were formed and broken again between the local city-kingdoms. The city-states maintained a strong martial culture, both to settle disputes among themselves, and to expand their frontiers against their neighbours. Early warfare was originally small-scale in nature. The aristocratic warrior elites armoured themselves with bronze helmets and cuirasses, and went into battle wielding iron spears, javelins, stabbing swords, and shields. In general, the rich fought on horseback or on a chariot, while the lower classes fought on foot.

A monarch who had to cooperate with strong representatives of merchant families ruled every main city. Over time these representatives developed into city councils, that in the 1st millennium BCE sometimes could dethrone the monarchs. ($Add one example where this happened?) In addition, there appears to have been an independent religious aristocracy, mainly employing female priestesses and servants, but also with some few male priests. Women held an increasing status of women in Orinese society, shown by female statues wearing a wide belt on the dress and patterns that closely resemble those on male statues. In every city, the wealthy merchant aristocrats had certain rights protecting them from the full strength of the law. The second group, lower than this aristocracy, were the lesser businessmen, craftsmen, dealers, shopkeepers and entrepreneurs. Below this group in social standing were the normal working people. And at the bottom of the social hierarchy there were the slaves. Slaves had some protection under the law and could earn money and even buy their own freedom.

Part of the reason Europan academia has lumped together these Orinese city-states is that for a long time their place in the Europan view of history came through the later Aroman historians who were themselves far removed from the relevant time and place. The early city-states never made up one political unity, but we believe that there was a cultural identity between the peoples, mainly because of a common language. The cities were very similar in terms of social, societal and cultural structure. It is safe to say that a group of city-states held together by a common culture, religion and relative location. Beyond those major commonalities, the Orinese didn't view themselves as a cohesive political unit. Note that there was, in fact, a good measure of competition between the various cities. Each Orinese port city saw itself as an autonomous world and operated as a sovereign state.

Medani period

Medanese period
The Gate of the Sun with "the Shadow of the Morning".
(WIP: some Medanese ruler.)
Statue of Priestess Usaripan of Usar, c. 1300 BCE.

One of the early empires in history, the Medanese reigned for more than 800 years. The earliest and most detailed description of Medani comes from later Orinese records. In 225 BCE, an Orinese official scribe writes that ancient Medani was very rich and had 100 warships to protect its trade. In early times, the natives called the area as the Land of Deli ("beautiful"). The Medani Empire grew from their Asehayi stronghold in Meda into a vast centralised state. Its capital was described as being surrounded by walls to form a city with double gates, towers and temples. Medanese religion and mythology were rich and multi-layered. Prior to 1500 BCE, they worshipped formless Gods thematically centered around the Mun and the San.

Numerous kingdoms existed on the eastern Deli peninsula. $Name began conquering this eastern region in the late 13th century BCE. He started raiding merchant vessels on the lucrative trade routes between the Orient and Memopotamia. With this loot, his successors, aided by foreign mercenaries, came to possess the entire Deli peninsula. Coastal cities where threated to either pay tribute or be sold into slavery. Around 1299, $Name's grandson $Name expanded westward into the mountains and declared himself King of Kings. The other Medanese elite had to earn their titles through military conquest. Now a dynastic empire with Meda as its capital, the Medani Empire continued to expand across the island. At its peak, it reached as far north as Tauri, as far west as Tigraye, and as far south as the $Name islands.

The Medani kings built many ships in the Nada bay of the Azure Sea. They sent forth men for pilots and navigators to fetch him gold from Europa. It's not too farfetched to think the Orinese held territory in the south of Europa on the Meteorolas. The Medanese had much to offer in terms of commerce. Their trademark sturdy cedar wood of the mountain lands they controlled, useful for constructing houses and ships. Meda and its neighbours didn't flourish simply as intermediaries between the Orient and Occident, they had something of their own to offer. They also offered their services as skilled navigators, sailors, shipbuilders and merchants.

WIP (Backlog of ideas to be incorporated somehow, somewhere.)

  • Can borrow inspiration from Madhya Pradesh.
  • Oris serves a a strong buffer state.
  • Policy of divide and conquer.
  • Political maneuvring and battles for territory characterise the Orinese fiefdoms, controlled by powerful families.
  • Erwanin staten beseffen dat ze samen sterker staan.
  1. Coastal: Tartessos harbour city
  2. Rise of the Medani Empire
  3. 1090 BCE: First conflict between the Ophir and the Medani Empire. The Medani Empire in the east is slowly expanding into western territories. Fringe regions crumble. This leads to the Nairi confederation of tribes being formed. Erwanin begins to form.

Classical Orioni

TL;DR: from 980-536 BCE, angry confederation begins to fight back against Medani Empire; ups and downs; goldmines lead to more money; Meda is defeated.

Local life based on the size of city-states persisted until circa 1500 BCE. A real turning point happened when the first states emerged. This period is considered an early Golden Age. It is also time of many legends, clouding the true tale of what happened. It was estimated that around 980 BCE, the roots of the Queendom were put down. Hailing from the broad fertile Zinabi valley of what is now called O'polis, a tribeswoman by the name of Anahita used her position as matriarch to broker a federation between her own tribal city-state and 4 surrounding states. The area comprises roughly the Altais Plateau, the triangle between O'polis, Vega and Hierapolis, in today's central Orioni.

Shiguti League

Most of the western island was divided into city-states, some of them as hereditary monarchies and other more semi-democratic governments. Usually, women played no important role, apart from religion. Originally, according to transcribed oral traditional, there were five tribes living in the O'polis area on the Altais Plateau: the Anidenya, Huletenya, Sositenya, Aratenya and Amisitenya. These five tribes formed an early league, the Shiguti (Anglish: fist). All signatories agreed not to attack one-another. And if one member violated that peace by attacking another member, the rest of the Shiguti would gang up and crush the offending violator. To cement this agreement the leaders of each tribe met once a year at the sacred grove of Tlitīna, a sanctuary likely near present-day Inu Waar. They discussed trade and also elected the meri, a temporary leader of the league. Their towns were frequently attacked by other tribes from the lower coastal land to the south and from the rulers of Tigraye province to the east. The Tigraye were a vassal and tributary state of the Medani empire.

Palace of $City.

Although not as rich as other, more coastal cities, this inland cluster was connected to the sea by the Wenizi river. The following decades saw even more coastal towns and cities join the Shiguti. The tribe of Anahita used cunning diplomacy and marriage to forge blood ties between the ruling houses of each city. Within its first century, this strong connection between inland and coastal city-states that created the Queendom of Orioni.

The Royal List covers rulers of Orioni from a time “after the flood” up to the rise of the First Empire. For many early city-states, it is the only source of chronological data. Unlike current calendars, most ancient calendars were based on how long the current ruler had been in power. A specific year might be described as “the 5th year in the reign of Nintoku”. As part of this, each royal year was given a title, like “the year Vega was defeated”. Most often this reflected a deed of the ruler. The compilation of these years is called the date list. A major problem is that many early rulers are listed with reigns of unnatural duration.

According to Ohin Sokhi, the monarchs have an unbroken female lineage that goes back more than 2,900 years. The key to knowing the origin of the Orioni royal line may lie within the ancient imperial tombs in the Altais mountains. However, since the Owara period (1663-1709), the Imperial Household Agency has refused to open the ancient imperial tombs to the public or to archaeologists, citing their desire not to disturb the spirits of the past Empresses. In December 2006, the Imperial Household Agency reversed its position and decided to allow researchers to enter some of the tombs with no restrictions.

Anahita

Scene from Nin āna ātīta t’ebībani (1979).
Pottery fragment of Queen Anahita, with early royal symbols.

Lady Anahita (1004-950 BCE) was born in Menideri. Her family were aristocrats. She was the daughter of Adon, the talak’u āmakarī (Anglish: grand councillor) of the Anidenya on the Altais Plateau. She had two brothers: $name and $name. She also had two sisters: Atika $lastname and Hind $lastname. Her father Adon and her uncle Davi were among the principal opponents of Tigraye, a people from the east. Classical Era epigraphers of the Aroman Empire refer to her as Anaïtis.

The Huletenya, on the eastern slopes of Altais, faced a direct threat from Tigraye. The neighbouring Anidenya made a natural ally against them. A marriage alliance between the two kingdoms of Anidenya and Huletenya could help better protect the state. Adon arranged the marriage of Anahita to Amir of the Huletenya tribe. In 988 BCE, at the age of sixteen, she was married. In 986 BCE she gave birth to her daughter Yumi (meaning blessed firstborn). The Huletenya tribe had a Diarchy: the queen consort served as the religious leader and the king as the military leader. Anahita held this religious position of female shaman, acting as spokespeople for the spirits.. Very little is actually known about these dual roles, such as what their exact titles were, and who exactly reigned what and when. In subsequent centuries, joint male-female rulers divided up responsibilities, with the male taking care of administrative duties while the female handled religious matters. However, archaeological excavations of some female rulers have revealed the presence of armour and weapons. So it is possible that as part of their religious role the women also led troops into battle.

The production of food among the Huletenya was similar to that of many other Orinese societies. Food habits were divided along gender lines, with men and women having specific tasks. Women played an active role in many of the stages of food production, giving them an important socio-political, economic, and spiritual roles in their communities. Huletenya men were mainly responsible for hunting and fishing, while women took care of farming and gathering wild fruits, nuts, berries, and shellfish. Women were responsible for the majority of all food production.[2]

Women's role in childbearing also made them closer to natural processes, becoming a symbol of the natural world. Nature includes not only weather and geography but also the prevalence of diseases, warfare and hunger. Men, in contrast, are more about culture. Cultures treat women differently based on whether nature is viewed as good or bad. In cultures where nature is holy and good, women perform rituals to help shape the powers of nature for the common good. Women also share decision-making power and have good standing in society. Cultures that view nature as evil and dangerous regard women as a threat to men and society. Nature is unpredictable, beyond control. This anxiety is transferred onto women, limiting their rights and responsibilities.[3]

Since Amir was frequently absent on campaign, Anahita took on a greater role in ruling. As Queen Anahita developed irrigation schemes, used ploughs, grew millet, and made iron tools and weapons. A highly organised government was created to overcome the harsh mountain conditions. Terraces were constructed on the mountain sides for cooperative farming and planting. As a result the system produced plenty of food. Surplus was dried and stored for emergencies. These works required great technical skill, planning, resources and labour.[4] Anahita instituted a system of corvée requiring each farmer to serve 1 day per week to complete these public projects. This rule could be relaxed during harvest time or expanded during times of war. Conquerors of new territory received a similar day of labour to develop their domain. Later historians would describe it as a sort of "communal" slavery.

Anahita's husband Amir was killed in the Battle of Inu Waar (984 BCE) against Tigraye. Anahita then remarried (983 BCE) Amir's brother Medir, who was much older than she was, but she accepted him because she wanted her daughter to grow up within her father's family. With Medir she had a son, Mehir. When Medir died in 980 BCE after an illness, this left Anahita in a precarious position. She was regent for five years until her son Mehir also died of illness. The Huletenya decided a succession crisis posed a greater threat to social stability than a female king. This led to the Diarchy being replaced by the Queen regnant, with Anahita assuming the military role as well. Her task was to keep the land stable until it had a male heir. But Anahita never remarried and never had another son. It has been speculated that ruling successfully as a woman made the Orinese regard her with particular reverence. The achievements of her reign, including stabilising and strengthening her lands during a destructive war, were retold over the generations until she was turned into a mythical figure. Later Aroman myths surrounding Anahita stem from the successful campaigns she waged and the novelty of a woman ruling.

Battle of Kourma

Erwanin submits Tigraye.

As the undisputed military commander, Anahita continued the war with Tigraye. Her first major confrontation was during the Battle of Kourma. The battle was actually a series of multiple skirmishes that lasted for five days in August 979 BCE near the Kourma River. The Erwanese were greatly outnumbered: over 5,000 enemy cavalry troops led by Yehayimanotu Maregagech ambushed the 2,000 troops led by Anahita. The Trigrai cavalry were stopped by the Erwanese archers. Maregagech was killed while Anahita was unseated from horseback and was forced to fight on foot with her bow. After a hard fought battle, the Erwanese forces were victorious and sacked the Tigraye camp. Two of the earliest history books on Orioni pay great tribute to Anahita for her actions in the middle of the fight. These books show how instrumental the women were in the battle. Every time the infantry wavered, the women directed them to continue the fight, reminding them that a loss would mean total enslavement. With help from the women and boys in the baggage train, they finally defeated the Tigraye. After the victory at Kourma, victorious Erwanese army overran the nearby Tigraye towns. Anahita sent plunder home to Menideri and made offerings at Hierapolis.

Coronation

Five thrones of the founders of Erwa-Nin.

This victory over Tigraye caused great notoriety for Anahita. The widows of each tribe determined on uniting the five Altais tribes to defeat their common enemy and preserve peace. The men accepted this decision, leading to the creation of Erwanin, a loose alliance that consisted of the five most powerful city-states. While this enabled them to regulate each other's economic and military interests, each city remained largely independent in practice.

The Erwanin Queendom became a geographically extensive Iron Age historical power which dominated ancient Orioni between 980 BCE and 536 BCE.

A monument was erected to commemorate this event. Anahita was allowed to take the throne. And Anahita's descendants became the main leaders. Standing at the beginning of a long line of powerful women, Anahita set a precedent for women in Oriental monarchies. It became the norm for women to (co-)rule, lead armies, and enter into intense struggles for succession. The Imperial family of Orioni claims its origin directly from the descent Anahita, through the golden lineage. Nin āna ātīta t’ebībani (Anglish: Queen Anahita the Wise, 1984) is an Orinese film based on a novel of the same title by Hind Ingoliyani (1979); both recount her life.

Queendom (980-536 BCE)

Anahita was succeeded by her daughter Yumi (950-930 BCE). Classical authors mainly wrote about Yumi in the context of her famous mother rather than as a figure in her own right. In $year, Queen Yumi increased the pressure on the Medani territory by closing the border trade and killing a Medani envoy. To contain Erwa-Nin, the Medani empire reoccupied part of the Tigraye area, began constructing the Long Wall, and stationed soldiers there to keep watch on Erwa-Nin. Queen Yumi laid the foundations for a dual system of militaray defence: stationary armies would guard a specific point, while a purposefully created mobile force could move where it was needed.

Relief showing the transport of Orinese cedar (8th century BCE).

Into the west. More mountains, more iron, more weapons. Capture coastal areas to dominate trade with Magna Europa.

Timeline

1000-900 BCE

  • King-general dies in battle against Tigrayre
  • Queen-Priestess continues, establishes a dynasty
  • Kourma battle against Medani Empire
  • 950s BCE: Final push to defeat Tigraye. The takeover of Tigraye goldmines led to increased wealth. Creation of Tigranes as honorary title for the military general who conquered Tigraye.
  • 925 BCE: The Queendom of Orioni promoted expansionism in order to gain more lands for its people. Also access to the rich coastal port of Ophir. Together with orichalcum these precious metals are an important trade commodity with the Europan nations.

900-800

Stele of the Orinese queen $Name, from $Place, c. 809 BCE.
  • 900-800 BCE: Soft tactics such as mutually beneficial commercial deals and royal intermarriages with neighbouring monarchies continued to unite the southern coastlands.

800-700

  • 800 BCE: Integration of the western region. The royal administration supported received revenue from an agrarian economy. The queens granted land as rewards for service. The beneficiaries became landlords to tenants producing agricultural goods and forest products. The higher regions with temperate climate were suitable for raising cattle and the planting of orchards.
  • 750 BCE: When Queen $Name died, her sister $Name took over the rulership. She expanded the Queendom's territory, and replaced the important governorships of different regions and gave them to family members who were loyal to her. This further centralised power.

700-600

A silver Orinese coin bearing Queen Anahita and a standing horse with the imperial symbol.
  • 700 BCE: First contacts with Europa. Importing better weapons and horses for use in army cavalries was a flourishing business on the western seaboard. These coastal regions increased the Empire’s finances through taxes on maritime trade. Trade on the west coast brought many foreigners to Orioni including Sahrabs, Memopotamians, Hakkadians, Orientals and people from the Tamurin peninsula. Foreign kings wrote to the queen and greet her as "my sister".
  • 650 BCE: Once a stronghold was established, what followed was a serious juggernaut of bloody conquests against the fiefdoms that surrounded it.

600-500

King Milinda submits to Orioni.
  • 600 BCE: Submitted King Milinda of Dion and his Yonakas warriors. Milinda pleads for assistance from the king of Medani, highlighting the desperate situation Dion faced: "My Lord, behold, the enemy's ships came; my cities were burned, and they did evil things in my country. Does not my father know that all my troops and chariots are in the Land of Oris, and all my ships are in the Land of Meda? ... Thus, the country is abandoned to itself. May my Lord know it: the seven ships of the enemy that came here inflicted much damage upon us."
  • 575 BCE: Conquest of inland goldmines (Mendakh Mts)
Nāgasena submits to Orioni.

WIP: Backlog

Westward expansion

TL;DR: expansion; west is added; slow creep towards Medani; continental trade

Relief of $queen bringing peace (represented by palm leaf) by conquering Tigraye province (represented by the animal at her feet), dated $number Century BCE.
  • 820 BCE: The Middle Queendom period began with the rule of Queen Orei around 820 BCE. Her rule was characterised by an "Orinesation" of the western Alnitak region, and the future queen took the title "queen of Erwanin and Ierakshini". While the first of these new queens continued to use the Ierakshin language frequently in their inscriptions, the succeeding queens used early Oharic with increasing regularity. Likewise, early Oharic language grew in importance in the east.
  • By conquering the western coastal city-states on the Tethys Sea, Orioni became a major player along the Pearl Road, the commercial route between the Memopotamia, the Aroman Empire and Far Eastern states such as Jaihu. The Queendom also regularly entered the politics of the kingdoms on the nearby Europan mainland, including the Tamarini peninsula (Anglish: Tamurin).
  • The alliance was effectively ruled by the Queen in Ophir. It was an indirect empire, meaning: conquered city-states were allowed to remain relatively autonomous as long as they paid semi-tribute to the alliance as well as any military forces required for war efforts. In return, they received protection and access to a vast economic network.
Silver cup with Oharic inscription on it. Early 9th Century BCE.
  • Negatively mentioned by the Hebrew prophet Isaiah (8-7th Century BCE): "As for these people, women rule over them. Orioni people, they which lead thee cause thee to err, and destroy the way of thy paths." (Isaiah 3:12)
  • At the same time, Orinese tried to curtail male authority, removing previous male leaders from the royal lists and making sure that no man held multiple royal titles.

Emerging matriarchy

If an ancient Aroman happened to visit Orioni, they may have been surprised to find women enjoyed a great deal of freedom and autonomy compared to their Occidental counterparts. Later Aroman authors often condemned them as frivolous, spoiled, and depraved when compared to Occidental women. These Wives and Daughters of Erwanin had the freedom to own, inherit and transfer property as they saw fit. During ceremonial banquets, they feasted alongside men as equals. For them, there was no shame in drinking, in contrast to Greek women, who were generally expected to forego alcohol. Orinese women were also prominent leaders in religious life, serving as Oracles and Priestesses who held direct sway over their people’s political decisions through their powers of divination.

Each Orinese male who reached adulthood received an allotment of public farmland from the city of Ophir and a contingent of slaves to work it. The wealth created by each farm was enough to turn every Orinese citizen into a landed aristocrat. They became rich enough that nobody had to work for a living. When an Orinese man died, his public allotment of farmland went back to the state, but his private property went to his wife. Not his son, but his wife. This Orinese inheritance law was so radical that it terrified everybody else in Europa. It had large consequences because husband's dying young was an extremely common occurrence in such a militarised society. Many of these women who had inherited their husband's wealth would devote the rest of their lives to taking their small fortunes and turning them into large ones.[5]

Eventually, when these wealthy women died, their land would be passed equally to their male and female children. This is the radical bit. Now imagine a rich young woman with inherited wealth marrying an equally rich young man. If that young man died in battle, which happened a lot, his wife would inherit his entire estate and go from rich to ultra-rich. Then she had her whole life ahead of her, to expand her wealth even further, and pass it on to her sons and daughters.

In other words: rich women tended to produce more rich women. These rich women married rich men, and during periods when lots of husbands died young, this created a snowball effect. These ultra-rich women were referred to as the Orinese Heiresses. The Aroman philosopher Lykeion (384-322 BCE) wrote that in his time, nearly 40% of all lands were owned and administered by a small group of extremely wealthy women. Their combined wealth dwarfed even the monarch by orders of magnitude. They were a political constituency unto themselves because some of the most powerful people in Orioni were completely dependent on loans from the Orinese Heiresses. Their influence was immense. Periodically, politicians in Orioni would start talking about land reform, and every time the Orinese Heiresses would block it by flooding the system with money and buying off politicians. The rest of Europa was horrified that such a small group of women had such a tight grip on Orinese politics. Lykeion complained at length about how wealthy Orinese wives tended to dominate their less wealthy husbands, and, that the entire population of women had been ruined by their "intemperance and luxury".

Defeat of Medani Empire

TL;DR: gold mines; power balance shifts; victory against Medani; Queendom becomes Empire.

Fragment of a wall painting showing an Orinese queen, 1st century CE.
  • Ohbuli emerged on the east and west banks of the Wenezi river. The first mention of Ohbuli in Europan records dates from 1570 BCE in reference to a commandery established by the Medani dynasty.
  • The capital itself is more likely to refer to the palace, a walled compound, where the queen and her family reside and rule his court. The palace itself is more of a collection of pavilions surrounded by walls. These pavilions and halls are made from organic wooden and thatched materials, so they had decayed over centuries leaving only stone walls, gates, terraces and bases. The only walled, well-guarded and protected compound was the queen's palace and temple compound. The capital itself was more of a collection of densely populated villages surrounding the queen's palace.
  • The Queen was regarded as the paramount ruler, holding the highest power and authority. She ruled from her palace. Under the queen, there were state officials that served to forward the queen's laws and orders. The officials ruled an administrative unit that formed from the collection of several villages. As the queendom grew larger and complex, series of state officials were added to add hierarchy levels.
  • The Queendom at its height at times extended across most of present-day $regions. The capital city of the empire was Ophir, near the modern-day Vega in southwestern Orioni. Other important cities included $city, $city, and $city. By the reign of $queen in the late 4th century BCE, it had begun minting its own currency and was named by classical historians as one of the four great powers of its time along with Jaihu, Hakkad, and Aroma
Debideba, last of the Medani rulers.
  • 708 BCE: Victory against Meda by conquering Andro.
  • 682 BCE: Major victory pushing back Meda with the conquest of Oris. "We never plant wheat and never will so long as there are other harvests to reap with the sword."
  • 597 BCE: Victory against Meda by conquering Tarabulus (Tripolis).
  • 541 BCE: Financial support from the House of Egibi banking family.
  • 539 BCE: Financial support from the House of Murashu family bank.
  • 536 BCE: Fight against the declining Medani empire continues. The Medani empire was the victim of many ills including overexpansion, environmental degradation and poor leadership. It was brought to its knees when Meda was sacked by the Orinese in 536 BCE. The last Medani ruler to abdicate was Debideba.

I'm the King of Ashes. Nothing from the flame survives. Hands cannot turn the tides. I have been consumed. I used to rule the world. Seas would rise when I gave the word. Now in the morning, I sleep alone. Sweep the streets I used to own.

The root of Debideba I tore up out of Meda and not one in it escaped submission to me.

His queen; his harem; his heir; and the rest of his sons and daughters; his property and his good; his horses, cattle, and sheep in countless number I carried off. Over all of the lands, I appointed anew kings, viceroys, governors, commandants, overseers, and scribes. Offering and fixed dues I established for the great goddess for all time; my royal tribute and tax, yearly without ceasing, I imposed upon them. I had a stele made with my name inscribed, and on it, I had written the might of my conquering hand. For the gaze of all my foes, to the end of days, I set it up. Whoever shall destroy that stele from its place or shall blot out my inscribed name, and shall write his name, or shall cover it with dust, or cast it into the water, or burn it in the fire, or put it in a place where it cannot be seen -- may Ishtar, the lady of combat and battle destroy his manhood (so that he is) like a woman;

may she cause him to sit in bonds under his foes.

—Victory Stele of Nintoku (3.46 meters high and 1.35 meters wide)

  • Empire of Orioni
    • Crown of Erwanin
    • Crown of Medani
      • Kingdom of Meda (petty kingdom)
      • Primarch of Oris
      • Several other territories outside of Orioni, mostly in other parts of the Oriental Ocean

Insular Orioni

From 536 BCE to 1023 CE the Queendom transformed into an Empire. This period begins by consolidation of the home island. Over many centuries a uniform culture is formed. The Pearl Road is established and the first explorations of the greater Eurth begin. This period leads to great riches, but also slavery. It ends with debauchery.

Nintoku period (536 BCE-313 CE)

Nintoku the Great, the first empress, c. 500 BCE.

During this time the crowns of Erwanin and Medani merged their collective navy. Orioni began annexing eastern states while fighting along its own coastline in the West. Orioni’s expansion took its troops into different areas of the island, gaining ever more land. Both the eastern and western states were conquered. What remained of the independent northern states soon joined the Orioni Empire, unifying the island. In the year 536 BCE, all separate tribes had been united, and the Queendom became known as the Orioni Empire. Borders between previous states faded indefinitely into a single powerhouse under one command.

Monarchs passed the Imperial title down through a matriarchal succession, from mother to daughter. Not once was this royal bloodline broken, although there have been moments of terrible danger and uncertainty. The most imported archaeological finding from this period is the ancient ruins of the first palace on Mount Oromis, situated close to present-day Zuidhaven. Besides being a symbol of the Empire, the ruins also serve an important ideological function. <$rewrite>

Many see this period as the Golden Age of exploration, marked by the first excursions into the interior. From the southern deltas, brave men and women followed the course of the great Wenizi river upstream, into the denser forest areas to the north and beyond towards the Mendakh mountains. In 79 CE the eastern city of Tripolis was destroyed by a massive landslide. Within greater Europa, the extent of their long-distance trade is also shown by the presence of Orinese merchants in the Sun Ocean. With the expansion of trade as far as the Rage Sea they were also able to carry out sea trade. At the end of the 2nd century BCE, Orioni found itself ruling over a vast stretch of islands which, after the civil war a few centuries later, returned to their previous independence.

Formation & expansion

Coin of Empress Anki the Giving, c. 360 BCE.
  • Takeover of former Medani client kingdoms and colonies.
  • The Orioni empire was proclaimed after the conquest of Meda. Multiple forces were in play: war with other kingdoms, struggles among the Medani elite, new social concepts from Amisti religion, global trade shifts, and erratic monsoons that encouraged the leader to establish a masterful water system to provide a stable rice harvest.
  • It began as a trading empire centred in southern Orioni.
  • The Orioni empire was uniquely situated for success. Indeed, the borders of the empire expanded further than the queendom ever had. And unlike the queendom, which had been merely situated between the trade zones of east and west, the empire's newly annexed territories now contained three immense goldmines within its own borders. Seeing this potential, the monarchy reinvigorated the trade in slaves and golds, taxing every merchant that passed through the Tethys Sea. The combination of a decentralised stable government and steady tax revenue allowed the Empress to organise and outfit a sizeable fulltime military to guard the maritime routes, ensuring that trade continued to flow.
  • 498 BCE: When in 498 BCE the young and feisty democracy in modern Tamurin decides to send a small fleet to aid their fellow tribesmen in western Orioni to rebel against the Empire they incurred terrible wrath the world had not yet known.
  • 323 BCE: "Cynane (Greek: Kυνάνη, Kynane or Κύνα, Kyna; killed 323 BC) was a half-sister to Alexander the Great, and daughter of Philip II by Audata, an Illyrian princess. Cynane, the daughter of Philip was famous for her military knowledge: she conducted armies, and in the field charged at the head of them. Polyaenus writes, "Cynane, the daughter of Philip was famous for her military knowledge: she conducted armies, and in the field charged at the head of them. In an engagement with the Illyrians, she with her own hand slew Caeria their queen; and with great slaughter defeated the Illyrian army." She married Amyntas, son of Perdiccas; and, soon after losing him, never would take a second husband. Cynane continued unmarried and employed herself in the education of her daughter, Adea or to whom she gave a military education, after the manner of her own education, in martial exercises and the science of war. Upon Alexander’s death, in exclusion of the royal family, his generals parcelling out his dominions among themselves, she crossed the Strymon; forcing her way in the face of Antipater, who disputed her passage over it. She then passed the Hellespont, to meet the Medani army: when Alcetas with a powerful force advanced to give her battle. The Medanese at first paused at the sight of Philip’s daughter, and the sister of Alexander: while after reproaching Alcetas with ingratitude, undaunted at the number of his forces, and his formidable preparations for battle, she bravely engaged him; resolved upon a glorious death, rather than, stripped of her dominions, accept a private life, unworthy of the daughter of Philip."

Discoveries

Bas relief of a ship, 8th Century BCE.
An Azanised Orinese statue from Ayubi.

At some point between 610 and before 594 BC, Queen Ojin I reputedly commissioned an expedition of Orinese. The sailing of this fleet was the beginning of trouble not only for Meda, but for other peoples and nations throughout the Orient. In three years they sailed from the Azure Sea towards the west around Europa and back to Hierapolis. The belief in the historical account, referenced in the periplus of Pino the Navigator, is primarily because it states with disbelief that the Orinese "as they sailed on a westerly course round the southern end of Yulideri (Jilderen), they had the sun on their right", to the north of them, since they had crossed the Equator.

In this classical time, it was not generally known that Europa was surrounded by an ocean. Orientologist A. B. Lloyd disputed in 1977: "that any Orinese Queen would authorise such an expedition, except for the reasons of conquest and trade in the ancient maritime routes."[6] Variot philosopher Mark Karls (1818-1883) was more positive in his historiography: "East is West, and West is East, and soon the twain shall meet."

The navigable skills and mobility of the Orinese on their swift Lohitanga red keel ships allowed them to be present, very early, not only along the Orioni coast, but they reached also the opposite, western, Europan coast. This process started in the latter half of the Classical Age, from the 4th to 3rd centuries BCE. The Orinese were already in the Europan coast, establishing colonies in Tamarini and especially in Birlini, where specific cultures developed. In later centuries this created a common cultural unity along the Tethys and Azure Seas, with a distinctive Orinese mark, whose naval supremacy meant both political and economic authority through several centuries. Some similar toponyms also attest to speculated migrations to the further west, towards Miiros and even Amakiri.

Administration

Centralisation

  • The empire took its unified form with a central administration around $City erected by $Name. The empire ended up conquering and enlarging the Medani Empire to include many more territories, for example in Europa. During the reigns of $Name and her daughter $Name it engaged in military conflict with some of the major city-states of continental Europa.
  • 518-516 BCE. The Orinese thereafter consolidated areas firmly under their control. It was $Name and $Name who, by sound and farsighted administrative planning, brilliant military manoeuvring, and a humanistic worldview, established the greatness of Orioni and, in less than fifty years, raised them from an obscure state to world power. It was during the reign of $Name that Hierapolis was expanded (518-516 BCE) and which would serve as capital for several generations.

Communication

  • One major advantage of the Orioni Empire was its ability to communicate quickly over large distances. Quick and effective communication in the military allowed the mobilisation of people and resources. This worked also worked for defensive actions against riots and rebellions.
  • Communication to citizens was vital to the coordination of economic policy, legal reform, new taxes and propaganda.
  • Consider the classical phrase: "All sea routes lead to Hierapolis."
  • However, distant colonies remained relatively decentralised. The local governors had much liberty to make their own decisions as they saw fit, provided they obeyed the imperial law.

Trade

  • When they reached the southern coast, foreign ships moored at a port of Hierapolis on the central mouth of the Wenizi river. Merchants conducted most trades further inland, at the royal capital city of O'polis. The periplus tells us that "they take all cargoes up the river to the queen at the metropolis"; this ‘metropolis’ being O'polis.
  • As the foreign merchants unloaded their cargo, they experienced a sophisticated and organised process of a bureaucratic organisation. Foreign cargo unloaded at Hierapolis was assessed and catalogued by the customs 'Magistrate of Boundaries'. This person examined the quality of the incoming cargo and verified it by stamping his own personal seal on it. He also collected road and ferry tolls on merchants, kept customs records and maintained a network of spies to watch the incoming cargo and suspicious mercantile activity.
  • As the merchants and their cargo arrived at the gates of O'polis, another official known as the ‘Magistrate of Tolls’ operated a customs station. A distinctive banner signified his presence. His servants recorded: "who the merchants are, where they come from, how much merchandise they bring and where they received their first customs seal."
  • Cargo details taken at both Hierapolis and O'polis were compared to make sure taxes weren't being avoided. They subjected goods without a seal mark to double tax rates, while those having counterfeited a seal would have their entire cargo seized. Natives who imported foreign goods were favoured by having their taxes cut.[7]

Taxes

  • Periodic plagues floods droughts and famines that afflicted the peasant farming class were dealt with effectively. $Name Dynasty Empresses granted tax amnesty grain relief and the right to fish and hunt on royal lands to peasants during times of crisis. This ultimately prevented Civil War. This wasn't always the case, so when famine struck peasants had their taxes raised land seized and wages; cut consequently this led to the mass rebellion of the poor.

Timeline

Coin of Empress Keiko the Bald, c. 100 BCE.
Coin of Empress Seimu The Majestic, c. 59 BCE.

200 BCE-0

  • The Empress and the royal family are known as the patron of arts and also religious piousness. They had the authority to launch public projects, such as irrigation works or temple construction. The art and religious patronage can be seen in sponsoring temples constructions. The queendom left behind several temples and monuments. The most notable one was the temple of Pantanassa in Hierapolis.
Ohunae shipyard, one of many along the Pearl Road.
Empress $Name sends messengers to the Orient, c. 3rd Century CE.
Glass bowl of royal palace with tree symbol on and above the door, c. 3rd Century CE.

0-400 CE

Hanzei period (313-758)

TL;DR: C. 400-800; Golden era of consolidation and exploitation.

"Captive Arogewi at the fountain", painted in 1888.
  • 301-400: Lady of Elx (4th Century BCE). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_of_Elche
  • It was a really successful time for Orioni. But how much was Empress $Name really responsible? She just happened to rule in a time full of inventors, academics and good crop harvests.
  • 389-754: Effective communication is how quickly information can be shared between the central authority and its provinces. The more quick and detailed this information is, the more power a monarch has to rule. To address this challenge the monarchy developed an itinerant court that moved throughout the empire. This meant that communication didn't create so much of a barrier for ruling as the court went wherever they were most needed. During the Hanzei period the court travelled about the country not only to be more visible to subjects, but to help them exert influence directly over the lower class and the outer regions, empowering themselves and de-powering those two really beneath them. To bring control and communication together, the monarchy dealt with communication issues and maintaining control by promoting people they trusted and demoting people they didn't.
  • C. 625-700: Empress $Name political and military leadership led to a major expansion of the Orinese empire, extending it into Central Europa, and engaging in a series of wars on the Memopotamian peninsula. Colony-fixed legions performed so many civilian administrative functions on top of their army role that their removal would cause serious disruption in the evacuated area.
  • 754: As financial centers developed, the monarchy stopped the moving itinerant court and re-created fixed capital at Hierapolis. The court resisted this at first as it meant recognising the growing power of the merchant class.
  • 760-880: During the Mikoto period (c. 760-880), the Orioni empire reached the height of its power.
  • With trade booming, they financed an exploratory expedition into the Oriental Ocean, which returned with reports of a great current flowing through the ocean. Seeing an opportunity for wealth and adventure, the Empress $name, raised a fleet of 1.000 ships and prepared to find and settle whatever new land this current might sweep her to. She left her sister $name in charge of the empire and dropped her sails. Neither the Empress nor any of her ships were ever heard from again. Yet this unfortunate occurrence paved the way for Orioni's golden age.
  • Slavery. Slavery was widespread in Orioni. More powerful groups could consign to slavery weaker members of other communities or even individuals from their own tribe. The medieval empire seized slaves during expeditions in Christian outposts. Many of the slaves were assimilated, others exported or gifted to local rulers in exchange for military support. The Orinese, as the ruling people, enslaved other ethnic groups. The Orinese were also occasionally enslaved by foreigners, and sometimes Orinese boys and girls were kidnapped by slave raiders from northern Europa and then sold.
  • Bariyan Wars, a series of three slave revolts ("bariyan" is derived from "bariya", Oharic for "slave") in the middle First Empire.

Mikoto period (758-884)

Coin of Empress Saimei in 602 CE.
Coin of Empress Tenyi in 629 CE.
The Empress bathing. To the left are rulers from the time period coming to pay tribute.
  • Vasari (Prime-minister) takes over more power.
  • Weakening of central authority.
  • Possibility of usurpation.
  • The Idamak inscription ($year), mentioned Miirosi and Jilders as foreigners from mainland Europa that frequently came to Orioni to trade. The inscription suggests a maritime trade network has been established between kingdoms in mainland Southwest Europa and Orioni.
  • Orinese society was highly stratified. A complex and stratified society of ancient Orinese people and their social order can be seen through studies on the rich portrayal in bas-reliefs from this period, as well as inscription studies. The Empire had developed a complex society; which characterised by heterogeneity of their society, inequality of social stratification, and the formation of a national administrative institution in their empire. The ancient Orinese recognised four social classes: Arayanii (queens, warlords and nobility), Amistii (priests), Negadii (traders and artisans), and Bariyaii (servants and slaves).
  • 601-700: Empress $Name supports and leads an indigenous resistance to the Muslim conquest in Mahdah, the region then known as Memopotamia. Her title was cited by Sahrabic-language sources as al-Kesi (the priestess), a nickname given to by her Muslim opponents because of her alleged ability to foresee the future. In later centuries, al-Kesi's legend is used to bolster the claims of Orinese dynastic rights in Memopotamia.
  • 672: years of 3 Empresses
  • 700: Foreign kings come to pay tribute to the Empress.
  • 731: The first incidence of plague in Orioni in the colonial city of Ishikamo.[9]

Yasu period (884-930)

During the waning years of monarchial power, all interests were to be made obedient to the monarch as embodiment of the state. The Yasu period monarchs tended to be really petty. Empress $Name taxed her political enemies an extra 10% just to piss them off. The crown also monopolised specific resources as symbols of prestige and power. Monarchs often grant economic boons as part of the system of patronage, often in the form of monopolies. These monopolies were greatly sought after because they almost guaranteed wealth. But this granting of monopolies actually undermined the economy by interfering with supply and demand.

Civil war

Ira period (930-1087)

Abandoned temple, 10th Century.

Even the most seemingly eternal of empires declined through stories of conquest, corruption, incompetence, assassination, bigotry, and environmental crisis.

  • 987-988: There appear to have been several introductions of the plague or 'Black Death' into Europa. The Black Death is thought to have originated in the arid plains of southern Europa, where it then travelled along the Silk Road. From there, it was most likely carried by Oriental rat fleas living on the black rats that were regular passengers on merchant ships. The first of such plague reached mainland Orioni via Vega in October 987, carried by twelve foreign galleys, and rapidly spread all over the city. Galleys from Vega reached Perseus and Andro in January 988, but it was the outbreak in Hierapolis a few weeks later that was the entry point to the Orioni heartland. Spreading throughout Orioni, the Black Death is estimated to have killed 30-60% of the total population.
  • 990: The plague created a series of religious, social, and economic upheavals, which had profound effects on the course of Orioni history. The poor, finding their status worsened with each year — the government in the hands of their masters, and the corrupt courts deciding every issue against them, began to talk of violent revolt. The rich, angry at the challenge to their property, prepared to defend themselves by force. The serfs in Orioni, led by Lusiyesi Sergius, rebelled against Imperial tyranny over their impoverished lives. Sergius, proposing to abolish all debts, organised a revolutionary army of "starving serfs"; he died in battle against the empire. When the revolt was swiftly crushed, the government punished them with the Draconian Acts: laws that punished the peasant farmers, such as forced conscription for 15 years. The upper classes in Orioni cursed, complied, and resumed the concentration of wealth. This response gave rise to even more hatred towards the Crown.
  • 995: The Akrep clan[10] put forward a royal pretender of their own, claiming their right to the throne. Akrep was a clan of spies, manipulators, and assassins who valued loyalty and duty and for whom the ends justify the means. The samurai of the Akrep clan understood that by dirtying their hands, they ensured that no others need do so. The Akrep dynasty was founded by Duke Ajonar Akrep, who was the son of Ajonak Akrep, the prince of Meda, the capital city of eastern Orioni. Ajonak’s career saw the strengthening of the regional military. He was in charge of the inland conquests in the east and established his stronghold at Meda. His successor Ajonar morphed Meda into a major oriental power in the last decade of the 10th Century. As such, the Akrep clan held sway over many of the eastern coastal cities.
  • 999: The growing strength of Akrep led them to attempt an assassination against the Empress in the symbolic year of 999. For a clan that prides itself on logic, the Akrep are highly superstitious. An Akrep samurai says the prayers he needs to say, he dons whatever fetishes or talismans he needs to wear that day, and thinks no more on the matter. Many of these superstitions are considered strange among other clans, for example, sprinkling salt on a new garment or never stepping backwards through a threshold. Even though the assassination during this 'Day of Thunder' failed, the Akrep gained their reputation for ruthlessness in battle. It was Ajonak who said that: "On the battlefield, all actions are honourable." For the Akrep, truer words were never spoken. If this means poisoning the enemy's supplies, hiring a ninja to assassinate the opposing general, or paying the enemy's soldiers to double-cross them, then that is acceptable.
  • 1010: Royal processions with elephants and gold-draped horses, festivals, fireworks, and Orinese give no impression of decline. But in the first decades of the 1000s, the empire loses vitality.
  • 1015: A possible decade of drought begins, according to modern tree-ring data.

Ino period (1087-1168)

Orinese civil war
Genji emaki azumaya.jpg
Usurpers break into Hierapolis palace in 1063.
Date1 February 1023 (1023-02-01) - 29 May 1174 (1174-05-29)
(151 years, 3 months and 4 weeks)
Location
Status Loyalist victory
Territorial
changes
Capture of Medanese tributaries; Orinese expansion into Tamurin
Main Belligerents

Flag of Meda.png Medanese pretenders


Supported by:
Commanders and leaders
See list
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Yibawi
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Yirisamona
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Bilihi
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Dinigili 
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Atsuno
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Yitino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Talaino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Nirisino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Berewino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Gilawino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Yiginawino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Timamawino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Empress Masaino
  • Civil war flag of Orioni.png Sri Adhamed
  • Flag of Nordhaven.png Waldemar Tekeles
See list
  • Empress Ushurphir
  • Ajonar Akrep  
  • Ajonaq Akrep
  • Ajonam Akrep
  • Ajonar II
  • Ajonal Akrep
  • Ajonak I
  • Ajonak II
  • Artulo Akrep  Executed
  • Hakenium Uthman ibn Naissa
Strength
(thousands) (thousands)
Casualties and losses
(thousands) (thousands)

The Orinese civil war lasted from 1023-1174. Practically all past civilisations have suffered collapse. Collapse can be described as a swift and lasting decline in population, cultural identity and socio-economic complexity. Government administration stops and chaos follows as the state loses its reigns of justice. Some civilisations recovered or reformed, such as the Orinese. Other collapses were more permanent, such as the Aromans.

  • 1023: The economic crisis in Orioni worsened, forcing the ruling government to amend an imperial law review in 1023. This law review allowed parts of the country to secede as independent states. The Akrep clan took advantage of this opportunity and proclaimed its independence from the Orioni Empire. From their Capital in Meda, they quickly conquered their own hinterland in the east. The received support from malcontent elites, later called the Black Nobility. Outside nations who considered the Orioni Empire a threat secretly supported further annexation of the southern coast by Akrep. Armies from submitted kingdoms -- Medani to the east, Tamarini (present-day Tamurin) to the west -- continued to gain Orinese land, leaving a much-reduced state.
  • 1056: By 1056 the Akrep controlled large parts of eastern, central and western island. Nearly all lands of the Orioni Empire were conquered.
  • 1063: In 1063 Akrep, by his own accounts, took control of Hierapolis and installed his royal pretender Empress Ushurphir (meaning: "House of Ushur") on the throne. She was probably the mother of Ajonaq. Her exact relationship to Ajonar Akrep is unclear, but she may have been his sister or cousin. After the Akrep clan assumed control over the capital, the imperial Orioni household was forced to flee. Only the less accessible northern regions of Semeni and wild Amilaki remained free.
  • 1064: North of the Mendakh mountains, the Orinese loyalists set up a new rump state as the 'North Orinese Empire'. Former elites set up new temporary court in Dion and other towns to the north. The official royal capital was established in Corona Borealis, a peripheral port of limited maritime commerce, with large international populations of Ide Jimans, Kokuans and Miirosi traders. The wealth of the Orinese elite shifted from land-based tax revenues to overseas maritime trading. After some decades of consilidation the loyalists began executing their plans to reconquer all former states of the Empire.
  • 1092: In the spring of 1092 Ajonar Akrep led his armies in a major campaign against the northern rump state. To expand his army with more cavalry, Ajonar Akrep married his daughter to Uthman ibn Naissa, a Europan warlord. His forces suffered a major defeat at the Battle of Dion where Ajonar, temporarily halting their war. A serious weakness amongst the Akrep conquerors was the ethnic tension between Medanese and foreign mercenaries. Although foreigners soldiers made up the bulk of the invading Akrep armies, a sense of discrimination against them was commoon. This festering internal conflict jeopardised their unity.
  • 1100s: After nearly 80 years the civil war had entered a period of stalemate. The Loyalists sent messengers with requests for aid to the northern nations of Nan Gorgwaith, Karthenia and even some Buranian states. Aid was received in the form of skilled sailers. These Darini (Old Buranic: "violent people") proved decisive in undermining the transport of foreign mercenaries from mainland Europa across the sea to Orioni. The loyalists welcomed these privateers as allies, while the Medanese described them as ruthless pirates. One famous privateer was Waldemar Tekeles. He married a royal princess and was permitted to wear the imperial symbol in his hat. After the Civil war the Darini were allowed to settle in northeastern Asehayi in Dari (Tauri) province. This feudal power was largely based on land ownership, the system of patronage was significantly tied to giving land to those who supported the monarch or taking it away. Empress $Name rewarded the mercenaries with the loan of important lands but retained ownership to maintain the power of the crown.
Important characters during the civil war
Ushurphir installed as anti-Empress (1063).
Azanian cavalry of Uthman ibn Naissa.
Loyalist messenger greets a Buran King to request military assistance.
Privateer Waldemar Tekeles (1129-1176).
Plate depicting Sri Adhamed (1133-1192).
Fort Yahir proved crucial in the Battle of Cygnus.
  • 1122: The first victory in resistance to Akrep rule occurred during the Battle of Cygnus in 1122. A drastic increase of taxes by the Akrep clan provoked several rebellions in central Orioni, which a series of succeeding warlords were unable to suppress. Around 1122, a military expedition was sent in to the north in late summer to suppress the rebellion. The Akrep forces overran much of Cygnus territory, forcing a few hundred rebels to retreat deep into the mountains. From the Yahir mountain fortresses, rebel forces routed the Akrep army, inspiring local villagers to take up arms. Despite further attempts, the Akrep army was unable to conquer the mountain stronghold. Returning in shame, the generals were forced to commit suicide. This rebel victory at Cygnus was hailed as the beginning of the Reconquista.
  • $YEAR: The loyalist resistance in the north was aided by several technological innovations, including the introduction of Tagmatine fire. In a situation of constant conflict, warfare and daily life were strongly interlinked during this period. Small, lightly equipped armies reflected how the society had to be on the alert at all times. Forces were capable of moving long distances in short times, allowing a quick return home after sacking a target. In the context of the relative isolation of the Orioni island from the rest of Europa, geographical and cultural differences implied the use of military strategies, tactics and equipment that were markedly different from those found in the rest of Europa during this period. Soldiers typically carried a sword, a lance, and either bow and arrows or a javelin. Armour consisted of a coat of mail over a quilted jacket, extending at least to the knees, a helmet or iron cap, and bracers protecting the arms and thighs, either metal or leather. Shields were round or triangular, made of wood, covered with leather, and protected by an iron band; the shields of knights and nobles would bear the family's coat of arms. Horses were occasionally fitted with a coat of mail as well.
  • 1131: Between the death of Ajonak II ($year) and 1131, the Akrep-controlled area suffered from internal strife. Small kingdoms, led by the local city governors established their long-wished-for independence. The strife was caused by another possible era of drought.[citation needed] The result was many small city-states each centred around their capital. The local city governors, not subscribing to any larger-scale vision of the Akrep clan, had no qualms about attacking their neighbouring kingdoms whenever they could gain an advantage by doing so. Vikings from northern Europa used this internal division to their advantage, raiding the northwestern coastline and founding the city of Nordhaven in the early 12th Century.
  • 1147: (Usurpers lose even more territory. Loyalists reach Perseus and Sirius, crossing into Tamarini, cutting off an important source of Medanese reinforcements.)
The Fall of Hierapolis (1174).
  • 1174: The loyalist Reconquista ended with the Fall of Hierapolis in 1174. The Fall of Hierapolis was the capture of the main harbour of the allied Akrep states by a loyalist army of the North Orioni Empire on 29 May 1174. The Orinese were commanded by 41-year-old Sri Seymond Adhamed (1133-1192), husband of Empress Masaino's second sister, who defeated an army commanded by Akrep-patriarch Artulo. The conquest of Hierapolis followed a 53-day siege that had begun on 6 April 1174. Several rich families fled the city before and after the siege, with the majority of them migrating to Meda.
  • 1176: After the defeat of the allied Akrep states by the Reconquista in the 12th Century, Artulo Akrep was forced to take his own life and to give up Meda to the restored Second Orioni Empire. After the enforced suicide of Artulo, his widow Jaratab Akrep ($born-$died) maintained the position of the clan by adopting a child from close lineage named Ariya. The adopted child Ariya Akrep took over the charge of the clan; the Akrep clan still exists today.

Colonial Orioni

Masaino period (1168-1318)

Masaino period
Allegoric status of the Orinese empress ready to rise again, dated c. 12th century.
The Sun Tower is a well-known landmark south of O'polis.

The 12th Century was defined by long period of political restoration and reconstruction, the publication of new laws, and generously rewarding loyalists for their support.

  • 1175 – The Restoration period began. Having restored the unity of the Empire, and initiating major governmental reforms, Empress Masaino (1168-1180) was well aware that Hierapolis was an unsatisfactory capital. The capital for over a thousand years, and it seemed unthinkable to suggest that the seat of government be moved elsewhere. Nonetheless, Masaino decided to move the capital to a more secure and defensible location. A better location was found upstream of the Wenizi river, on the Altais plateau. To build a better future, Masaino looked to the past. She selected Queen Anahita's homeland as the new location of her new imperial capital. The city would be built on a more secure inland location, further north than the old capital, less vulnerable to sea raiders and better situated for agriculture. These lessons were learned from the difficult to defend position of Hierapolis. Here a new city was built and expanded over 6 year.
  • 1178 – Empress Masaino also recognised the Elitism faith as the national religion, besides the older Amisti. The Elite priesthood in return granted her the title 'The Immortal Soul'.
  • 1180 – Empress Masaino would rule for only 12 years. And though she would died in a tragic accident, her life ushered in a new age for the Orient.
  • 1182 – On 11 May 1182 the new capital was consecrated as Omnipolis ("city of all"), abbreviated to O'polis. Empress Moriino (1180-1182) divided the expanded city into 5 regions and ornamented it with public works worthy of an imperial metropolis. The court was supplied from the rich gardens and sophisticated workshops of oriental Europa, with treasuries filled by the wealthiest provinces of the Empire.
  • 1192 — Death of Sri Seymond Adhamed "iron arm", the conqueror of Zuidhaven. To commemorate his victory the Sun Tower was built in O'polis.
  • 1195 – New laws to celebrate 20 years of restoration. $DocumentName originated as a successful result to maintain peace between royalist and separatist factions in 1215, as part of the events leading to the outbreak of the Civil War. Many contemporary writers believed that monarchs should rule in accordance with the custom and the law, with the counsel of the leading members of the realm. This belief would later form a legal basis for the first imperial council.

The 13th Century saw increased economic activity after the important reconstruction efforts from previous decades.

  • 1221 – Year of 3 empresses. Tokiino died. Takahira also died giving birth. Tameino was crowned.
  • 1224 – Hierapolis had been sacked and destroyed following its fall in the final days of the civil war, in 1174, by loyalist army of Sri Adhamed (1143-1192). Empress Tameino (1221-1232) re-founded it as Zuidhaven on the site of the previous city. Zuidhaven would never again be a politically influential city like O'polis. But the city enjoyed relative peace and steady growth as a prosperous trading city, thanks to its remarkable position. The site had easy access to the Wenizi River and had an excellent and spacious harbour. Empress Morari (1232-1242) further stimulated private building by promising householders gifts of land from the imperial estates. For example, on 18 May 1232, she announced that, as in O'polis, free distributions of food would be made to the citizens.
  • 1230 – The Orsini family of wealthy bankers, under threat of having their property seized by the Orioni Empire, packed all their worldly belongings and moved to Cristina.

Taneino period (1318-1500)

All territories that were ever part of the Orinese colonial empire.
  Core empire
  Strong presence
  Temporary presence

The 14 and 15th centuries formed a period of reconnection between regions that had previously lost contact. At first, it saw the establishment of an equal partnership with other nations, unlike the First Empire. But later this reconnection proved to include less peaceful interactions. The Orinese colonial empire would go on to become one of the most prominent realms of its age, stretching across three continents and lasting for over 600 years. Within less than a hundred years it transformed into a power whose reach spanned Europa, Marenesia and Thalassa at the start of the 15th century. This period also saw a large influx of knowledge from all over Europa towards Orioni.

  • 1302 — The Tamurine city of Arrabar was captured by Azāzhi (Oharic: Commander) Chīyaro's forces after a three-day siege and a short-lived puppet regime was installed.
  • 1320s-1330s – Empress Taneino (1318-1339) sent forth explorers into east and south of Europa. Their mission was to revisit old colonies and collect any overdue taxes. She completed these voyages, the first example of Orioni going out in the wurld. At the same time, religious and linguistic influence spread throughout these regions and among its various peoples.
  • 1322 — Conguest of Tamarini (Tamurin)
  • 1349 — Conquest of Birlini (Pirilao).
  • 1350s – A limited colonisation began towards the north, in the Europan coastal areas in Tamurin and Pirilao. From the 14th to 15th century, Orioni paid its armies in promises of land and wealth. It was very common in campaigns to confiscate the lands and wealth of enemy forces or rebel tribes. As a result, this was also the payment given to the peoples that agreed to provide soldiers to the Empress in her conflicts. For example, a 14th Century Orinese source described the acquisition of several towns during the conquests in Astrini. The Empress wouldn’t keep the wealth from this land. They followed a rule: the Empress received a 1/5 share, while the remaining 80% were distributed among the soldiers. They used large tracts of land as a source of wealth, bringing in peasants to farm it, or by having their entire tribe move there. If an area could not be conquered, it was often plundered.
  • 1367 — Conquest of Tahini (Malindi).
  • 1370 — Conquest of Baribeni (Bainbridge Islands).
  • 1375 – The Age of Reconnection began thanks to the migration of Europan scholars and texts to Orioni. Reason for this migration was the overthrow of the Sacred Aroman Realm by the combined forces of Elite knights and Buran Horde.[11]
  • 1410s-1440s – Azāzhi Jovan Tafari (1372-1444) was a prominent admiral of the Taneino court. He was part-Azanian and a favourite in the royal court. Tafari organised a series of treasure voyages. In the early 1400s, Orioni considered itself to have the greatest navy on Eurth. This treasure fleet was composed of several sub-fleets. The admiral sailed into the West, through the Azure Sea, past the Meteorolas, into the Adlantic Ocean, all the way to Occidental Europa. The voyages were commercial, going around promoting trade with the restored Orioni Empire. He showed off Taneino dynasty gifts from the Orinese empress, spreading wealth and treasure while flying the flag of Orioni. It’s a fascinating story if only for the audacity of what the Taneino dynasty at the time was pulling off. The voyages were not only for exploration. One of his commissioned tasks was the collection of back taxes from Orinese who had strayed outside the borders and settled on other islands. Tafari was accompanied by a contingent of marines. And when necessary, he would get forceful. Tafari went on seven of these voyages during three decades. After those first voyages, the Orinese Empire retained an overwhelming focus on the oceans. It maintained a significant ability to project power in its immediate maritime environment. For the scholars looking at Orinese maritime history, the sailing of Jovan Tafari led to a new Golden age.
    • Tafari, despite his age, was waging a determined campaign against the Memopotamia. A fleet of freebooting corsairs, operating out of the Baribeni islands, began preying on merchant shipping in South Europa and the Sea of Konstantinopoli.
    • Even as far away as western Azania, the outreaches and political connections of Tafari were winning bloodless victories for the Orioni Empire, with four ships bearing a tribute in spice from the Sultan of Assurym arriving in the Azure Sea in 1438 before returning to Zakesh the following year loaded with Orinese goods.
  • 1450s – The awful practice of witch-hunting began in Europa, lasting for several centuries (1450-1750). This lead many knowledgeable women to flee to Orioni, giving a boost to the existing pharmacological knowledge in Meda.
  • 1472 – Sri Agari claimed the south-Europan islands Daini (Damak Var) and Jawini (Ayubi) for Orioni. With fiery rhetoric, the Empress proclaimed that where the flag of the Empire was raised, never would it be lowered. An extensive slave trade began as the Orinese sailed into the Haken Bay. Coastal areas were easy to conquer. The military had experience with previous islands they submitted. This turned out to be much more difficult when marching inland, away from the supplies and reinforcements.
  • 1499 — Conquest of Thubani.
  • 1500s – Local rulers were subdued and brought under the authority of Orioni. These colonies were ruled by colonial governors called the Danya ("judge"), in the name of and as the representative of the Empress. The title was first used in the beginning in the 14th century, when it referred to the local rulers of some smaller islands off the coast of the home islands. After the colonial expansion, at the start of the 15th century, the monarch of Orioni came to appoint numerous Danyas to rule over various parts of their increasingly vast Colonial Empire in Europa, Marenesia, and overseas in the Oriental Ocean. The selected Danyas of these colonial provinces were empowered to act in place of the monarch. This was an extraordinary break from the centralised traditions of the First Orioni Empire. The administrative organisation of the Danyas differed significantly from the feudal forms existing in the rest of post-medieval Europa as their institutions were closer to those of the territories of the Orioni Empire. A central government and the entire Judiciary were ruled substantially by the Danya. The local puppet kings were allowed to keep their titles, but they did not hold possession of the land nor any sovereignty.
Flag of Thubani.png Thubani
Tax collections
Admiral Tafari
Slave armies
Age of Piracy
Slavery abolished
Age of Revolution
1300
1350
1400
1450
1500
1550
1600
1650
1700
1750
1800
1850
1900
1950
2000

Timeline of Orinese colonial occupation.


Oino period (1500-1663)

Artistic depiction of Empress Soko (1593-1629-1643).
Battle of Dagbad (1603).

The 15-17th Centuries were a new Golden Age for Orioni. The country experienced increased interaction and integration with greater Eurth. Under strong leadership, the Orinese people worked as a whole to accomplish the nation’s goals of expanding overseas. It is during this period that the Empire reached its greatest territorial extent. The first multi-national alliances were formed.

  • 1517 – slave armies. When the Oino dynasty took power in the 16th Century, they adopted the practice of slave armies. Using their share of the spoils from previous conquests, they purchased large numbers of Europan youths. These slave soldiers spent years transforming into the perfect soldiers. Orioni used their slave army in Azania to great success, deploying several thousand slave soldiers across the Memopotamian coasts in a fight to take the gold and salt mines. Unlike the earlier tribal armies, a slave army wouldn’t plunder the mines. Instead, they sent all captured treasure back to the Empress. This made her rich and perpetuated the slave soldier system. The main appeal of the slave army was its staunch loyalty and low cost. The imperial representatives never paid these slaves. Instead, when reaching the age of 40, they were "paid" in the form of receiving their freedom and a small plot of land in the conquered territory.
  • 1520s – (Which areas are colonies? Establishment of Viceroyalties. Merchants suffer from piracy threat.)
  • 1529 — Conquest of Burkini island.
  • 1584 – Imakura college is founded by Empress Igado.
  • 1593-1606 – Thirteen Years' War was an indecisive land war between the Memopotamian sultanates and the Orioni Empire. In Ayubi the defenders were slaughtered, leaving the island open to the Orinese, and Jawini was occupied. Towns were burnt and many people died. Both Mahdavic and Sahrabic sources attest that prisoners awaited a gruesome faith. Wire was threaded through the palms of the prisoners, who were strung along the prows of the Orinese ships as a necklace.[12]
  • 1618 – (Do something Renaissance-like with this year of the Golden Ratio.
  • 16 February 1634 – Captain Ortega arrives in Rohini.
  • 1644 – First voyage to the New Wurld. (But did we sail east or west? I don't know. To be decided.)

WIP:

Owara period (1663-1709)

Notorious Argic pirate captain Yakov Moyshchik (1645-1714).

(WIP. Relatively short period. More power to the advisors. Lost wealth due to increased pirate activity, keeping Orioni out of the Oriental Ocean.)

  • The Danya role was changed into a more modern Vayiresini to better administer the greatly increased colonial administration.
  • Pirate menace (17-18th Century) saw a drastic increase in activity during this Golden Age of Piracy. The Orinese lost much wealth to these pirates. In addition, the Orinese were largely unfamiliar with the Oriental Ocean, having previously only sailed close to shore, and the unpredictable winds caused the ships to make slow progress. Without an effective way to combat these pirates in the open Oriental Ocean, the opportunity was lost to establish a foothold in the New Wurld.
  • The introduction of Euhemerism lead to the Empress being worshipped as a quasi goddess.
  • 1693 — Loss of Jawini (Ayubi) shows to the wurld that the Orinese can be defeated.

Ogimachi period (1709-1771)

The 18th Century was a period marked by economic expansion and internationalisation.

  • Enlightenment
  • 1731 – Abolition of slavery. In the first half of the eighteenth century, as imperial conflicts increased in scale, the slave owners struggled continuously to keep their restive slaves under the yoke. In this contentious atmosphere, a movement of enslaved continental Europans organised to throw off that yoke by violence. Their uprising featured a style of fighting increasingly familiar today: scattered militias opposing great powers, with fighters hard to distinguish from noncombatants. It was also part of a more extended borderless conflict that spread from Azania to Amutia and across the Orient. Even after it was put down, the insurgency rumbled throughout the Orinese Empire at a time when slavery seemed the dependable bedrock of its dominion.
  • 1740 – Financial bubble.
  • 1745 – Political Revolutions.
  • 1754 — Conquest of Astrini (Niederoestereich).

Modern Orioni

Omei period (1771-1867)

Omei period
Grand Princess and later Empress Ogako (1843).
The Orinese iron steam ship Tekenakanyi destroying the Baribenese war junks in Pahu Bay, on 1 July 1843.

In the 19th Century the Orioni Empire entered a period of decline brought on by revolutions, piracy, and Europan colonial expansion. This decline accelerated in the 19th century. Industrialisation in Continental Europa led to a rapid expansion of resource-rich countries, while Orioni remained a predominantly agrarian society. The rapid change brought about by industrialisation meant that by the 1860’s Orioni was in need of economic reforms that proved difficult to undertake. For example, most of the industrial and services sectors were still owned by rich matrons and the business conglomeraties. These monopolised important markets, systematically strangling minor enterprises and using their influence to alter laws and keep worker’s rights to a minimum. Changes to the economic system would only come in the 20th century after the Thalassan War.

  • 1843: Decolonisation of the Baribeni islands. The independence movement received secret support from the ruling strongman in Hakenium. This first decolonisation action went on to inspire similar campaigns in other colonies.
  • 1848: Europa experienced a wave of revolutions and rising nationalism. New machinery replaced manual labour. Farmers moved into cities, suffering from economic displacement. Feudal systems of government had functioned for agrarian, subsistence economies. But they were proving ineffective for this more international Eurth. The problem worsened because of one-crop agriculture, raising the chances for disaster. Failed harvests resulted in either mass starvation or emigration.

Nabérrie period (1867-present)

Nabérrie dynasty
Jomi Nabérrie (♦1867-†1912), photo taken in 1908, colourised
Oshita Nabérrie
(♦1912-†1926)
Owa Nabérrie
(♦1926-†1989)
Hensei Nabérrie
(♦1989-†2004)
Joni Nabérrie
(♦2004-†2053)

Rule of the Nabérrie dynasty began in 1867 with Empress Jomi Nabérrie. This period is defined by decolonisation and globalisation. At first, the 19-20th Centuries seemed marked by rising tensions between regions. This later changed into better cooperation through marriage ties among leading families and clans.

Look, strike for the common day!

Drive the searching storm of time. Keep a sigh so far away. Fall in strait and leaden rhymes. Slow, the path is bound for them, Drive the tribes and build a State. Maids and beauty of a gem,

Formed to close the lines of fate.

—Plebist revolutionary song, 1868.

Prince consort Giuseppe Korvini.
  • 1867: Empress Jomi Nabérrie is coronated. She married Prince Giuseppe Korvini.
  • 1879: Economic crisis.
  • 1894: Economic crisis.
  • 1901: Decolonisation of Astrini.
  • 1910: Deep economic crisis, voting rights, more regular elections.
  • 1912: Empress Oshita Nabérrie is coronated.
  • 1912: Suppression of a revolt on Rohini island.[13] In order to calm the situation, Empress Oshita granted a number of concessions, including the establishment of Rohinese schools, the end of conscription, and suspension of taxes for five years.
  • 1926: Empress Owa Nabérrie is coronated.
  • 1927: Economic crisis.
  • 1928: Plebist-leaning military officers, led by Colonel Nawa Molo, attempt a coup d'état which ultimately fails.
    Tanks outside the Sibiseba building, 1928.
  • 1930s-1950s: Prolonged impact of the Long War (1932-1956) and the Thalassan War (1941-1947).
  • 1943: Economic crisis.
  • 1949: Decolonisation of Rohini island.
    Imperial Orinese Army soldiers waiting for orders to depart Rohini.
  • 1952: The growing socio-economic tensions didn't go unnoticed. Empress Owa approved a new civil code which introduced gender equality. The extended matriarchal family, the traditional core of Orinese society that had stood for millennia, would forever be changed by these reforms.
  • 1954: On 14 October the Europan Commercial Alliance is established, leading to increased international cooperation.
  • 1955: Decolonisation of Burkini island.
  • 1958: Economic crisis.
  • 1970s: Impact of the Second Argic War (1968-1974) and the Great Alharun War (1972-1975).
  • 1974: Deep economic crisis.
  • 1979-1983: Government of $NAME.
  • 1983-1987: Government of $NAME.
  • 1987-1991: Government of $NAME.
  • 1989: Empress Hensei Nabérrie is coronated.
  • 1991: Economic crisis.
  • 1991-1995: Government of $NAME.
  • 1995-1999: Government of $NAME.
  • 1999-2003: Government of $NAME.
  • 2003-2007: Government of Chandra Pristo I. Ends with an economic crisis.
  • 2004: Empress Joni Nabérrie is coronated.
  • 2006: In June the Entente of Oriental States is founded.
  • 2007: Economic crisis.
  • 2007-2011: Government of Ionas Strupar I. Marked be recovery from the economic crisis.
  • 2011-2015: Government of Strupar II.
  • 2015-2019: Government of Pristo II.
  • 2019-2023: Government of Awidefale Rezovi I.
  • 2021: Celebration of the Trillennium, or 3000 years of Monarchy in Orioni.
  • 2022: Economic crisis.

References

  1. How Aboriginal Australians Made Australia by Cogito (16 Apr 2019)
  2. Two different worlds: Wampanoag and Pilgrim women in 1620 by The Kids Should See This (29 September 2020)
  3. Spindle | The Nature of Nature by Worldbuilding Notes (2 June 2020)
  4. World Building: Empires, Borders, & Maps by Stoneworks (23 December 2019)
  5. The Constitution of the Spartans by Historia Civilis (11 September 2017)
  6. Ancient Egypt: A Social History by Bruce G. Trigger, B J Kemp, D O'Connor, A.B. Lloyd
  7. How the Roman Empire traded with the Nomads in India by Kings and Generals (7 Nov 2019)
  8. 9 women warriors through history (15 October 2019)
  9. This year is a reference to the infamous Unit 731.
  10. https://l5r.fandom.com/wiki/Scorpion_Clan
  11. The date is a reference to the Golden Angle of 137,5°.
  12. Real Ghost of Tsushima - Mongol Invasion of Japan documentary (17 July 2020)
  13. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albanian_revolt_of_1912

WIP: source materials to integrate.