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Mutulese Global Circuit: Difference between revisions

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{{region_icon_Ajax}}
{{Infobox country
{{Infobox country
|native_name                = Och K'ak
|native_name                = Mulawil petb'e
|conventional_long_name      = Mutuleses Possessions in Ochran and the Vespanian Ocean
|conventional_long_name      = Mutulese Global Circuit
|common_name                = Mutulese Ochran
|common_name                =
|image_flag                  =  
|image_flag                  = 12 companies glyphs.png
|alt_flag                    =   
|alt_flag                    =   
|image_coat                  = Calacmul.png
|image_coat                  =  
|alt_coat                    =
|alt_coat                    =
|symbol_type                =  
|symbol_type                =  
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|other_symbol_type          =
|other_symbol_type          =
|other_symbol                =
|other_symbol                =
|image_map                  = Mutul Colonies.png
|image_map                  = Mutul_colonial_empire.png
|map_width                    = 200px
|alt_map                    =  
|alt_map                    =  
|map_caption                = The Mutulese Ochran and Tsurushima in 1801
|map_caption                = The Mutul and its territories at the time of its largest expansion, in 1700
|image_map2                  =  
|image_map2                  =  
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|alt_map2                    =
|map_caption2                =  
|map_caption2                =  
|capital                    =  
|capital                    =  
|largest_city                = Kabur
|largest_city                = [[Juwon Peten]]
|largest_settlement          =  
|largest_settlement          =  
|largest_settlement_type    =
|largest_settlement_type    =
|languages_type = Main languages
|languages_type = Main languages
|languages                  =  
|languages                  =  
*Mutuleses languages
*{{wp|Tagalog language|Ahlranese}}
*Bengali
*{{wp|Amami Ōshima language|Amami Oshima}}
*Polynesian
*{{wp|Hawaiian language|Kiheiian}}
*Formosan languages
*{{wp|Kunigami language|Kunigami}}
*Rezese
*{{wp|Miyakoan language|Miyako}}
*{{wp|Mayan languages|Mutun languages}}
*{{wp|Formosan languages|Native Keian}}
*{{wp|Oto-Manguean languages|N’yuho-Diidxazá languages}}
*{{wp|Okinawan language}}
*{{wp|Totonacan languages|Tatinak}}
*{{wp|Sundanese language|Raji}}
*{{wp|Māori language|Te reo}}
*{{wp|Hiri Motu|Tuganami}}
*{{wp|Yaeyama language|Yaeyama}}
*{{wp|Balinese|Bahri}}
*{{wp|Javanese language|Mataram}}
|languages_sub              =  
|languages_sub              =  
|languages2_type            =
|languages2_type            =
|languages2                  =
|languages2                  =
|languages2_sub              =
|languages2_sub              =
|ethnic_groups              =  
|ethnic_groups              =
* Jati
*{{wp|Tagalog people|Ahlran}}
* Mutul
*{{wp|Zapotec peoples|Ben 'Zaa}}
* Prantara
*{{wp|Ryukyuan people|Kaheixikuhun}}
* Arkoennite
*{{wp|Maya peoples|Mutun}}
* East Ochran
*{{wp|Mixtec|Nuu Davi}}
*{{wp|Thai people|Raji}}
*{{wp|Totonac|Tatinak}}
*{{wp|Yamato people|Tsurushimeses}}
*{{wp|Manchu people|Uluujoli}}
*{{wp|Austronesian peoples|Yamaxi}}
*{{wp|Lao people|Za'gree}}
*{{wp|Native Indonesians|Zarhan}}
 
|ethnic_groups_year          =  
|ethnic_groups_year          =  
|religion =           
|religion =           
|government_type            =  
|government_type            = {{wp|Absolutism|Absolute Monarchy}}
|legislature =  
|legislature =  
|sovereignty_type            =  
|sovereignty_type            =  
|established_event1          =  
|established_event1          = [[Tsurushima|Kirishtan Rebellion]]
|established_date1          =  
|established_date1          = 1600 CE
|established_event2          =  
|established_event2          = [[War for Kahei]]
|established_date2          =  
|established_date2          = 1618 CE
| established_event3        =  
| established_event3        =  
| established_date3        =  
| established_date3        =  
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|area_magnitude              =
|area_magnitude              =
|area                        =
|area                        =
|area_km2                    =  
|area_km2                    = 4,000,000
|area_sq_mi                  =
|area_sq_mi                  =
|area_footnote              =  
|area_footnote              = <br><small> without protectorates nor allies included </small>
}}
}}


The '''Mutulese Ochran''' is the name generally given to the parts of [[Ajax|Ochran]] who where under direct or indirect rule from the [[Mutul|Divine Kingdom]]. Under this denomination come today's [[Benaajab]], the [[Tsurushima|Spice Islands]], the [[Vespanian Islands]] ( with few exceptions like [[Lion’s Rock]] ) and other minor concessions. It’s generally dated from 1528, with the creation of the Mutulese Legation in [[Tsurushima]] by [[Akutze Selenecha]], to the [[Benaajab|Second Bandhaśēka Rebellion]] in 19XX and the Independence of Benaajab.  
The '''Global Circuit''' is the name generally given to the parts of [[Ajax|the world]] under direct or indirect rule from the [[Mutul|Divine Kingdom]]. It was initially a trade-based system which derived most of its influence from merchant enterprise and was considered by the Mutuleses as an extansion of what is called the '''Market Network System'''. With a few notable exceptions, such as the [[Yajawil of Kahei]] the majority of the Mutulese colonial empire's overseas holdings consisted of coastal forts, factories, and port settlements with varying degrees of incorporation of their hinterlands and surrounding regions. The '''Lakamb'eob''', or "Mutuleses trading companies", were the owners of most of these possessions with the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|K'uhul Ajaw]] serving as a distant lawmaker and arbiter of disputes between competing Lakambeob.
 
Since smaller companies lacked the capital or the manpower for large-scale expeditions through the Makrian Ocean and into the Vespanian Circuit, these distant trade operations were left to a shifting collection of merchant-nobles houses chartered by the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|Divine Throne]]. During the first half of the eighteenth century, these had a virtual monopoly on strategic shipping-routes westward through the Makrian Ocean. It greatly contributed to a commercial revolution and a cultural flowering in the [[Mutul]] during the late 16th and early 17th century.
 
In the 18th century the Mutulese presence in Ochran and the Vespanian Ocean started to decline following the [[Tsurushima|Tsurushimese revolution]] of 1750 which changed the balance of powers in Ochran. But it's only seventy years later, during the [[Second War for Kahei]], that the Mutuleses would definitively loose control over most of their possessions in the region.  


==History==
==History==
===Tsurushimese network===
Through the knowledge and use of the {{wp|westerlies|Northern Makrian Vortex}}, the [[Tsurushima|Tsurushimeses]] had managed to reach [[Ajax|Norumbia]] during the 13th century, establishing colonies in what would become [[Enyama]] in 1373. The successive governments of Tsurushima followed a policy of colonialism, cultivating cash crops and exploiting natural ressources in Norumbia to gain significant reserves of cereals, oils, textiles, and other products that could be grown in the vast plantations of the colonies.
Because they had to go southward to catch winds powerful enough to bring them back to Tsurushima, sights of their vessels became more and more frequent with time, ultimately leading to crude trading between the Tsurushimeses crews and the native kingdoms. The first contacts between Tsurushimeses and Latins took place after the explorers from the latter reached the Western Coast of Norumbia. Thus, the "road to the west" became public knowledge, even if the exact roads used by the Tsurushimeses sailors remained a mystery.


===Akutze Selenecha's Travels===
===Akutze Selenecha's Travels===
{{main|Akutze Selenecha}}
{{main|Akutze Selenecha}}
[[File:Herreshoff Duplex Catamaran sailing in the Thames River--1880.png|200px|thumb|The Mutuleses made their first travels essentially on {{wp|multi-hull|multi-hulled}} {{wp|watercraft}} before they adopted Ochraneses ship designs.]]
Akutze Selenecha was but a child when his House, the Ferrenze, was wiped out during the event known as the Patricide, in 1490. The remnants of the family found refuge in the [[Mutul]], where they merged with the local merchant-nobility of [[Siluik']]. Akutze became a sailor, and then worked as a Captain sometime for the Mutuleses, sometime for the Reze Trade Cartel. In 1492, he presented his project to discover the Tsurushimese's "Makrian Road" to the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|Divine Throne]], which agreed to offer a pension to Selenecha and finance his expedition up to 30% of the total expenses. Akutze was then given the title of '''Eb'et''', or "Ambassador", of the Divine Lord and his Legate in case he indeed reached Tsurushima or any other people he might find during his travel.
Between 1511 and 1528, Selenecha completed three round-trip voyages between Mutul and Ochran, each voyage being sponsored by the Divine Throne. Selenecha proved to be instrumental to the installation of trade posts in [[Tsurushima]], and even got the governorship of the first Mutulese legation in Ochran. However this meant he was quickly sidelined by other larger, wealthier, trader-merchants families who through their own funds sent their own expeditions to explore and set trade posts in the Makrian and Vespanian Oceans. This was the beginning of the '''Great Enterprises'''.
===First settlements===
The Mutulese Legation in [[Tsurushima]] was granted in 1517. Other trade ports opened on the archipelago and [[Tsurushima|Kahei]] in the following decades, depending on the potential profits and which House had financed the settlement and negociated the agreements. Problems caused by inter-company rivalry led to the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|Divine Throne]] seizing direct control over the justice and administration of the ports, following the traditional '''Market Network System''' of northern Oxidentale. In 1560, the Mutuleses reached the [[Pulau Keramat|Solustheris Isles]] and once again were quick to establish outposts there. In 1575, the first permanent trade-port in [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]] was created. In 1581, the Mutuleses reached [[Yajawil of Barriset|Barriset]] and the [[Tulura|Tuluran Coast]].


===Kirishtan Revolt===
===Kirishtan Revolt===
{{main|Tsurushima#End of the Isawa Shogunate}}
{{main|Tsurushima#End of the Isawa Shogunate}}
[[File:Hōgen no ran.jpg|220px|thumb|Kirishtan rebels]]
The [[Mutul]] was but a minor trade partner of [[Tsurushima]] during the 16th century, far outshined by the economical and political influences of the [[Ajax|Belisarians]] Legations. However, during the [[Kirishitan Uprising]], the Mutulese Legation was the only one to side with the Shogunate and pagan forces. Because of their non-abrahamic faith and their reputation for human sacrifices and body modifications, Mutuleses were also victims of the Uprising, and the [[Siege of the Mutulese Legation]] lead to the creation of Mutli-Tsurushimans militias that fought alongside the {{wp|Shogun}}’s armies and supporters.
===War for Kahei===
{{main|war for Kahei}}
{{see also|Yajawil of Kahei}}
[[File:Flag Kahei Islands.png|220px|thumb|Flag of the [[Yajawil of Kahei]]]]
After the [[Tsurushima|Kirishtan Uprising]], [[Latium|Latin traders]] whom had been present in the region as part of the Maritime Jade Road were forced to abandon their Legations in Tsurushima proper, but remained an important force in the Kahei archipelago through what was known as the '''Latin Possessions'''. With the Closed Gate Policy, The clans still loyal to the Shogunate and wishing to enforce its laws found themselves abandoned by the central power in Tsurushima, and at the mercy of their rivals whom took the chance to get rid of them by making alliances with the Latins for whom it was in their interest to make sure the islands did not escape their influence despite the end of the Legations. Left with no little to no other options, the Shogunists and Loyalists clans ended up calling the Mutul for help.
The Kahei war, despite being rather short, was a devastating conflict where clanic rivalries meddled with religious considerations and foreign influences. Ultimately, the Mutuleses won and established their own system in the wake of the dismembering of the Latin Possessions. Spices and silviculture became the dominant activities of the countrysides and inlands, in vast farmlands owned by Mutuleses traders or local aristocratic clans. The spices were sent to Hoxi peten, the siege of power of the Nuk Nahob in Kahei, and important marketplace dedicated to the exchange of spices, while the wood was destined to Japarata, renamed by the Mutuleses Kuwon Peten, as the dockyard of the city were the main producers of Djongs for the Mutulese navy.
Even after the Mutuleses had claimed control over all of the archipelago and established a [[Yajawil of Kahei|Yajawil]], their administration continued to claim its legitimacy from the {{wp|Emperor of Japan|Tenno}}, profiting from the language barreer and cultural differences to slowly shift the meaning of the word from the Tsurushimese ruler to the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|K'uhul Ajaw]]. De facto, Kahei would remain the heart and center of the Mutulese presence in the Vespanian Ocean until the [[Second War for Kahei]] during the 19th century.


The [[Mutul]] was but a minor trade partner of [[Tsurushima]] during the 16th century, far outshined by the economical and political influences of the [[Ajax|Belisarians]] Legations. However, during the [[Kirishitan Uprising]], the Mutulese Legation was the only one to side with the Shogunate and pagan forces. Because of their non-abrahamic faith and their reputation for human sacrifices and body modifications, Mutuleses were also victims of the Uprising, and the [[Siege of the Mutulese Legation]] lead to the creation of Mutli-Tsurushimans militias that fought alongside the {{wp|Shogun}}’s armies and supporters.
===First Barriset Tabanaa===
[[File:Frankinsence-oman-dhofar.JPG|200px|left|thumb|The production of {{wp|Frankinsence|olibanum}} and its central position made Barriset an important stop in the Ozeros Circuit.]]
In 1621, the clanic chief [[Shuleek]] proclaimed himself {{wp|Caliphate|Caliph of Barriset}} with the support of the [[Azdarin||Iifae clergy]]. Through the support of the [[Mutul|Nuk Nahob]] already present on the island, the Iifae Caliphate managed to overthrow the hellenic kingdom that dominated the island. In exchange for this support, the Nuk Nahob were granted larger concessions on Barriset, and now had their own docks, warehouses, factories, and districts. These enclaves remained theoretically under the Caliph's rule, but were de-facto independent from Barriset's authority.


===Second Tabanaa and the Yajawil of Barriset===
{{main|Yajawil of Barriset}}
Population in the Mutuleses Concessions grew quickly after the establishment of the Caliphate. Oxidentaleses remained a rare sight, but many Barrisetis emigrated to find work as dockers, shop-owners, or sailors. To ease relations with the Mutuleses, many of the wealthier traders who had regular contact with them converted to the [[White Path]], alongside most of the inhabitants of the Concessions. This is when the first sizeable {{wp|Maya_architecture#Pyramids_and_temples|K'uh Nahs}} were erected.


===Establishment in Benaajab===
Religious tensions between the Iifae and the [[White Path|White Pilgrims]] started to emerge during this period, leading to criticism toward the Caliphate for leaving too much freedom to the Nuk Nahob. In 1649, the Caliph made some attempt to limit the growth of the [[White Path]], such as making [[Azdarin||Iifae]] the only religion openly practicable outside of the Concessions, with the flux of people in and out of these districts being now closely monitored by the Caliph. This sparkled an outrage from the Mutuleses traders who raised the number of Tulotairi militias and warships present in Barriset as a form of protest, alongside diplomatic lobbying to get the decrees redacted. By the end of the year, the Caliph had been forced to back down, abandon the controls at the Concessions' gates, and proclaim religious freedom all over the island.


[[File:Borobudur_ship.JPG|200px|thumbnail|left|Depiction of a Mutulese boat in the oldtown of Kumar.]]
After the failure of the caliphate to reign in the Mutuleses, parts of the Iifae clergy started to radicalize, openly calling for the departure of the Oxidentaleses, the crushing of "Those who turned away from Mesfin", and even for the overthrow of the Caliph who had been incapable of enforcing Yen laws. Despite heavy repressions, these imam-priests ended up annointing a "new" tribal lord as Caliph who began a new Holy War against the Betrayers and the Infidels.
Mutuleses traders arrived in [[Benaajab|Nadipatha]] during the 16th century. They established economical links with the various kingdoms of the region, using their ports in the [[Spice Islands]] as a rear base for trans-makrian commerce. While their presence was first weak, as the Mutul was only one among many economic competitors in the region, having to fight for influence with [[Arthurista|Arthuristans]], [[Tarsas|Tarsans]], [[Latium|Latins]], or even [[Sante Reze|Rezeses]] traders, which had all an older and stronger presence in the [[Ajax|Vespanian Ocean]].


The [[Tsurushima#End of the Isawa Shogunate|Kirishtan Rebellion]] and the end of the [[Open Gate Policy]] by the {{wp|Togukawa Shogunate|Kakita Shogunate}} changed the balance of powers in the region. the Mutul was the last economic force allowed to trade with Tsurushima, who slowly abandoned its authority over the Spice Islands. Buying or even occupying lands in these archipelagos, Mutuleses traders obtained a decent economic strength that allowed them to obtain vast shares in the spice trades.
The second Tabanaa started in 1656 with the siege of the Concessions and the assault on the Caliph's palace. Deathtoll numbered in the thousands after a week of violence, but ultimately the radicals were driven off the cities by the Tulotairi and the remnants of the First Caliph's troops. The rest of the Holy War was a long campaign of guerilla and counter-insurgency, culminating with the capture and sacrifice of the Insurgent Caliph and of most of his clergy in 1661, even if remnants of the Second Caliphate would continue the fight for many more years.


The Kirishtan Rebellion’s aftermath was felt even in Nadipatha, where Mutuleses traders had become more and more common in the past century, to the point of having “Mutuleses” enclaves and legations in some kingdoms. {{wp|Chocolate}}, {{wp|spices}}, weapons, {{wp|paper|paper books}}, and other {{wp|manufactured| manufactured goods}} or {{wp|luxury goods}} from Oxidentale became the new fashion in the Nadipathans kingdoms. Mutuleses merchants organised themselves in corporations, the '''Nuk Nahob''', which obtained more and more prerogative in their ports. By the 1600s, cities where the Nuk Nahob were present had market places built and organized in a Mutulese fashion, temples dedicated to Mutuleses gods, and even ballcourts for games of Pitz, gladiatorial games, or public ceremonies.
While the Nuk Nahob present in Barriset had organized themselves into {{wp|Kuchkabal}}, they ended up electing to call for the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|Divine Throne]] to send judges, lawyers, and administrators to the island to takeover the task of pacifying Barriset, managing the island, and driving off the Iifae insurgents. In 1660, the K'uhul Ajaw proclaimed the constitution of Barriset as a [[Yajawil of Barriset|Yajawil]]. The new '''B'aatz Yajaw''' and his administration reached the island, officializing direct Mutulese control over it.


<imgur thumb="yes" w="250" comment="Mutuleses traders built temples and infrastructures using a mix of local and Mutulese styles. ">s5wKpwO.jpg</imgur>
===Great Shambalan War===
With the acceleration of trans-Makrian exchanges in the 1600s and 1610s, Nadipathans speculators saw a sudden fall in price of their investments, in cocoa, Oxidentale spices, cotton clothing, or general manufactured goods sold by Mutuleses traders which until then had a certain rarity to them that made them valuable. Most of these speculators were part of the Nadipathans aristocracy and the whole country knew a vast crisis as they ended up unable to repay their debts.
{{main|First Shamabalese Great War}}


To clear themselves, speculators had to sell their lands, their properties, and even their rights, such as the ability to perceive taxes. Nuk Nahob had to organize themselves and recruited small militias to go and collect debts from aristocrats unwilling to pay. A mission that proved to be far easier than expected as the traditional armies of the nobility were in open revolt now that their salaries weren’t paid. In fact, most of the mutuleses militias were staffed with ex-Nadipathans millitaries. The same militias would then go on to become the general enforcers of the Mutuleses, collecting taxes, fighting bandits, and maintaining order and justice in the markets. A parallel organisation formed up, as the Nuk Nahob obtained de facto control of what will soon be known as [[Benaajab]].
===Ozeros War===
{{main|Ozeros War}}


[[File:A_Mughal_Infantryman.jpg|200px|thumbnail|left|A ''Tulotairi'', the name given to Benaajabi serving in the Nuk Nahob armies.]]
==Administration==
===Legation in Tsurushima===


The '''First Bandhaśēka Rebellion''' happened when the old aristocracy, recovering from the ''1590s Crisis'', tried to retake their powers by force, with the support of the monarchs and religious authorities. Despite first successes, the Nuk Nahob called the [[K’uhul Ajaw]] for help, who sent officers and military advisors to reorganise the Benaajabi army. The merchants militias became real military corps, staffed with freed slaves, underslaves who fled their plantations, or just sons of farmers and artisans impoverished by the economical and political situation.
After the start of the '''Closed Gate Policy''', the [[Mutul|Mutuleses]] were the last foreigners tolerated inside the [[Tsurushima|Archipelago]], and only in one location : the port of '''Sakurajima'''. More specifically, in what was nicknamed the '''Mutulese Legation''', located on an island linked to the rest of the city by a single bridge, guarded on both sides.


The reformed military was successful and obtained many victories against the rebellious aristocracy. But the Nuk Nahob won the war through a serie of reform that won them the popular support of the populations :
the island was, administratively, part of the city. The 11 local Tsurushimeses families who owned the land received an annual rent from the {{wp|Calpulli|Nuk Nahob}} operating in the Legation. It contained houses for the Mutuleses, warehouses, and accommodation for both Mutuleses and Tsurushimeses officials. Numerous merchants supplied goods and catering, and about 100 interpreters served. While the island was under the strict surveilance of the Shogun, who had a Supervisor in Sakurajima, the day to day administration of the port was left to the council of the Nuk Nahob's representatives, who elected their own {{wp|Batab}}, the equivalent of a mayor.
*The underslave cast was abolished and they joined the slave cast.
*A new code of law was published, detailing the rights and duties of slaves, giving slaves the right to sue their masters for abuses, and to participate in the negotiations of their contracts.
*Defeated aristocrats saw their lands sized and divided among the farmers who cultivated them, who became land owners.
*Public fields were closed and sold to speculators.  
*Administrative reforms ended many feudal taxes, such as the equivalent of the cens, banalités, reduction of the dime, of the taille, or of other taxes on salt and iron.


All these reforms were fully in place after the end of the Rebellion, and they were followed by new institutions. {{wp|Batab}}, mutuleses officials, became mayors in all towns with a market controlled by the Nuk Nahob. these markets became the center of Batalib, the basic administrative divisions of the Mutulese system. Batabob were elected by the Ch’ob (''assemblies'') of merchants, whom also elected judges and other “public” servants. Some Batalib had no Ch’ob, despite having a marketplace, because of their small size. These Batalib were generally not elected then, but nominated by the Batab of the nearest Ch’ob. These administrators, from whom other batabs were dependent, became known as {{wp|Halach Uinik|Halach Winik}}.
Despite the financial burden of maintaining the isolated outpost, the trade with Tsurushima was very profitable for the Mutuleses, initially yielding profits of 50% or more. The legation proved very profitable up until the [[Tsurushima|First Republic]], which saw the end of the Closed Gate Policy and the re-opening of the archipelago to all foreigners.


To control and register the activities of the Ch’obob, and to report directly to the K’uhul Ajaw, the [[Mutul|Divine Throne]] sent {{wp|Ajaw|Yajawob}} to serve as final judges and arbiters in case of problems, with the power to veto the elected Batabob or laws passed by the Ch’obob if required, and generally acting as the supervisor of [[Benaajab]].
The Mutuleses traded mostly in silk, cotton, chocolate, and sugar. Also, deer pelts and shark skin were transported to Tsurushima from Kahei, as well as books, scientific instruments and many other rarities.  In return, the Mutuleses traders bought Tsurushiman copper, silver, camphor, porcelain, lacquer ware and rice. To this was added the personal transactions of the Nuk Nahob's employees which was an important source of income for them and their Tsurushiman counterparts.


==Mutuleses dependencies==
===Pulau Keramat===
[[File:Bayinnaung.JPG|200px|thumb|Statue of a Pulaui prince and warlord of the Age of Fire]]
During the [[Age of Fire]], a period of division and conflicts in the Pulaui archipelago, many Pulaui fled the chaos of their time by serving as sailors on Mutuleses ships, beginning a long lasting relationship between the Archipelago and the Nuk Nahob. The Mutuleses traders became important suppliers for the various competing factions, especially for the Solustheris Kingdom where they first established outposts. By the time of the unification of the archipelago in the early 16th century, the Mutuleses had acquired many concessions and benefits from the victorious states and thus from the newly created Confederation.


===Benaajab===
After the reunification, a number of mercenaries and other companies of aimless soldiers found new jobs and opportunities by serving as private forces for the Nuk Nahob, notably during the [[War for Kahei]]. Naval experts from the Solustheris Isles were notably sought after by the Nuk Nahob who engaged them to form their own navigators and officers; Pulaui mercenaries ended up serving as enforcers and guards.
{{main|Benaajab}}


'''Nadipatha''' was considered the jewel of the Mutul's possessions around the [[ajax|Vespanian Sea]]. During the expeditions of [[Akutze Selenecha]], Benaajab was rediscovered by the Oxidentalese who established trading ports and enclaves in the large coastal cities. Indigo, especially, was of interest to the Mutulese who quickly grew in number and prominence as they sold firearms and other machined goods to the native aristocrats. Several noble houses went bankrupt stockpiling goods from Mutul which, though rare when first introduced, quickly lost their value as the volume of Trans-Makrian trade increased. In order to settle debts, great families were sometimes forced to surrender their karēra, their right to collect taxes for a set period. The K'uhul Ajaw sent colonial ministers to administrate the collection of taxes and to broaden the Mutulese trade network with the establishment of inland trade posts, roads, and other infrastructure. The Monarch ultimately fell under the sway of these powerful governors and, after an unsuccessful and violent attempt to expel the Mutulese, de jure power was officially passed to a Mutulese governor.
Pulau Keramat would remain independent for the duration of the Mutulese Ochran, serving as an important resting port and jump-pad for the Mutuleses toward the Ozeros Sea, but also as a source of spices and raw products, and a consumer market for Mutuleses goods. The coastal areas and larger islands were chequered by a network of Trade Posts and Factories, strengthening the commercial and political ties between the two kingdoms.


===Kaihei Islands===
===Kahei Islands===
{{main|Yajawil of Kahei}}


When [[Tsurushima]] abandoned the '''Open Gate policy''', the [[Mutul]] expanded its operations in the Kaihei Islands, alongside many other Belisarians and Oxidentale competitors. But through {{wp|capitulations}} and various {{wp|legations}} they obtained by collaborating with local lords, {{wp|batab|batabob}} were sent to represent the Mutuleses interests in the archipelago, and through marriages with the aristocracy and noble clans, exclaves under the K'uhul Ajaw symbolic authority were created.  Among these important exclaves were '''Juwon peten''', where the Ochk'ak fleet produced its famous {{wp|Djong}}, and '''Hoxi peten''' which was an important tradehub for all spices cultivated in the archipelago.
===Yajawil of Barriset and the Scipian Coast===
{{main|Yajawil of Barriset}}
{{main|Kuchkabal Nalmoria}}


The Mutuleses supported the development of the culture of spices, tea, and other cash crops in the Kaihei Islands, but also of {{wp|sylviculture}} as the Kaihei ports became the seat of power of the important '''Ochk'ak fleet''' whom built itself on the back of the Tsurushiman fleets abandoned after the closure of their country, and became an important way for the Tsurushiman clans, who established themselves in Kaihei or in Sinhai at the height of their empire, to maintain their powers by becoming officers in the new Mutulese marine.
===Presence in Malaio===
[[File:Maori gravure.jpg|220px|thumb|Detail of a gravure representing a Maori soldier serving in the Mutulese Navy.]]
Before the arrival of the [[Mutul|Mutuleses traders]], the modern country of [[Onekawa-Nukanoa]] had already known a first wave of economic colonialism from the [[Pulau Keramat|Pulaui]], between the 11th and 14th centuries, until the [[Age of Fire]] broke out.


===Legation in Tsurushima===
When the Mutuleses first reached [[Ajax|Malaio]] in the late 17th century, they made first-contact with the {{wp|Māori people}}. With time, they started to trade with them, buying food, wood, and whale bones or oil in exchange for textiles and manufactured goods. In 1575, one of the Mutuleses [[Nuk Nahob]] was allowed by a a Mâori tribe to establish a permanent settlement near the Onekawan Bay. From there on "Malaio" was integrated into the Vespanian Circuit as a re-supply point and way-station for vessels on their way back and forth between [[Yajawil of Kahei|Kahei]] and the [[Pulau Keramat|Solustheris Isles]]. They established large farms, growing {{wp|Citrus}} and other plants vital for Mutuleses sailors. It's also in these settlements that they first tamed and started to raise {{wp|Moa}} native of Malaio. A technique that was then exported back to Oxidentale and other Mutuleses settlements, alongside fertilized eggs and juveniles. Soon, it became a common source of meat everywhere in the [[Mutul|Divine Kingdom]], from Oxidentale to Scipia. The wood required for naval repair was obtained through trade with {{wp|Māori people|Māori tribes}} that resided deeper inland.


After the start of the '''Closed Gate Policy''', the [[Mutul|Mutuleses]] were the last foreigners tolerated inside the [[Tsurushima|Archipelago]], and only in one location : the port of '''Sakurajima'''. More specifically, in what was nicknamed the '''Mutulese Legation''', located on an island link to the rest of the city by a single bridge, guarded on both sides.
Around the Mutuleses ports, some Māori started to settle permanently, working mainly as labourers at the docks and warehouses, or in other sectors requiring heavy manpower. Sometime, they were recruited by some ship captains to replace crew members that had died during their journey.


the island was, administratively, part of the city. The 11 local Tsurushiman families who owned the land received an annual rent from the {{wp|Calpulli|Nuk Nahob}} operating in the Legation. It contained houses for the Mutuleses, warehouses, and accommodation for both Mutuleses and Japanese officials. Numerous merchants supplied goods and catering, and about 100 interpreters served. While the island was under the strict surveilance of the Shogun, who had a Supervisor in Sakurajima, the day to day administration of the port was left to the council of the Nuk Nahob's representatives, who elected their own {{wp|Batab}}, the equivalent of a mayor.
During the second half of the 17th century, "Maori Regiments" were established, serving as Marine Fusiliers. Coastal Maori also continued to be recruited to serve as sailors, gunmen, and other low-ranking crewmembers but in larger numbers than before. Generally serving alongside Pulaui and Tsurushimeses. Contrary to them however, they rarely if ever served as officers or ship captains because of their lack of naval tradition.


Despite the financial burden of maintaining the isolated outpost, the trade with Tsurushima was very profitable for the Mutuleses , initially yielding profits of 50% or more. The legation proved very profitable up until the [[Tsurushima|First Republic]], which saw the end of the Closed Gate Policy and the re-opening of the archipelago to all foreigners.
It's also during that era that the "Maori Wards", called [[Calpulli|Mahoji Nalil]], were first legally recognized and placed under Mutulese administration : community leaders of each Ward were given the title of Aj Kuchkab ("He who bear the land") and to be granted an advisory position in their associated {{wp|Batab}} council. A '''Popilna''', or "House of justice" was to be built in all of these new Wards. At least one school per settlement was to be built.


The Mutuleses traded mostly in silk, cotton, chocolate, and sugar. Also, deer pelts and shark skin were transported to Tsurushima from Kahei, as well as books, scientific instruments and many other rarities. In return, the Mutuleses traders bought Tsurushiman copper, silver, camphor, porcelain, lacquer ware and rice. To this was added the personal transactions of the Nuk Nahob's employees which was an important source of income for them and their Tsurushiman counterparts.
===Protectorate of Ankat===
After the [[First Shamabalese Great War|Shambalan Great War]], [[Ankat]] became officially a [[Mutul|Mutulese]] {{wp|protectorate}}. Trade-ports dissapeared, in favour of a direct implementation of the Mutuleses [[Nuk Nahob]] inside the old trade cities, establishing {{wp|Chamber of commerce|Chambers of commerce}} where both Oxidentaleses and Ochraneses merchants could meet and organize their network. {{wp|Exchange (organized market)|trading venues}} were created in all major portuary cities. At first it was only for the exchange of spices, especially {{wp|cinnamon}}. Afterward, {{wp|sugar}}, {{wp|indigo}} and {{wp|textile}}s also became commonly traded commodities.  


===Presence in Tarsas===
As part of their policies toward veterans who served as marines and sailors in the [[Nuk Nahob]], promising farmlands after 9 years of service, the Mutuleses began to buy lands in Ankat, especially in the less populated north of the country. There, these new "colonists", often of Janatāva or Pulaui origin, introduced with them important cash crops, such as {{wp|coffee}} and {{wp|tea}}, but also {{wp|rubber}}, first imported directly from Oxidentale.
After the Treaty of Chak'te II, Mutuleses traders received permissions from the [[Tarsas|Tarsan Emperor]] [[List of Tarsan Emperors|Aristophanes IV]] to settle in the '''Port of Saint John Ogaios''', in [[Aenonesos]], along with four other cities on both side of the '''Ozeros Sea'''. The old port found a new life with the activity of the Mutuleses, with many warehouses, houses, offices, and various infrastructures being built to support the growth of exchanges. While Aristophanes moved away the capital from Aenonesos to [[Astérianatolis]], he granted a {{wp|Charter}} to the Nuk Nahob of St Ogaios Port, turning the quarter into a {{wp|Free-trade area}} for the Mutuleses, recognized the Batab elected by the Ogaios Ch'ob as '''Praetor Geitonia''', and while public show of the Mutulese faith was still banned, private [[White Path|Temples]] were allowed for construction, and so was one public [[White Path|K'uhul Nah]]. Similar charters were granted to the other four Mutuleses ports.


While the Emperor couldn't collect taxes on trades between Tarsas and the Vespasian Ocean, an annual rent was payed by the Nuk Nahob operating in Tarsas, plus the regular gifts offered to the throne and Mutuleses bankers helped finance the construction of infrastructures all thourough the Empire. Mutuleses continued to play an important role in the economy of the Empire until the end of their presence in the Vespasian Ocean.
The military of the new kingdom was organized by Mutuleses officers into three armies, the First and Second Janatāva Suwa, and the First Balung Suwa. "Suwa" was the Mutulese pronounciation of the {{wp|Singhalese|Terasi word}} for "Service". Similarily, a soldier serving in these Suwob was known as an "Hanasuy". Another deformation of a Terasi word for "warrior" that became an official term in the [[Nuk Nahob]].


==Market System==
==Market System==
<imgur thumb="yes" w="250" comment="A modern Mutulese market in the Chaam region, which still looks like Benaajabi marketplaces. ">BZXAWg5.jpg</imgur>
[[File:02puertoDeVeracruzDetalle.png|220px|thumb|The port of [[Yu]] was the destination of most of the goods bought in Ochran]]
The Mutuleses had long theorized how a society should be structured to ensure "''peace and prosperity in accord with the principles of the universe laid down by the Thirteen Gods''". It resulted in a tripartite division of the [[Mutul]] society, with producers-commoners, a merchant-nobility, and a priestly caste of scribes and scholars. The merchant-nobility role was to ensure both the circulation of trade goods and its protection, legitimizing their rule as governors and administrators. As a result, the nobility were the one possessing both the knowledge and the capitals needed to establish business ventures and organize what they called the '''Vespanian Circuit''' mimicking the system already in place in Oxidentale.


The Mutulese system in Benaajab was based around a network of marketplaces of various size. At marketplaces, nearby farmers, artisans, and producers would come to sell their products. Mutuleses marketplaces provided with multiple services, such as scribes to seal agreements between two parties, banks to lend money, and various judges and civil servants. However, not all marketplaces were equals. The smallest markets were where farmers would sell flax, cotton, cereals, and other raw materials, to “medium range traders”. These traders would then go and sell said products to larger markets, such as Kumar, were they would be bought by “Long rang traders”, generally Mutuleses aristocrats, but sometime also Tarsans traders. The medium range traders would then return to the smaller markets and sell back the various kind of products they bought.
Behind the concept of the "Circuit" is the Mutulese idea of a {{wp|World-systems theory|World-system}}: a geographic space forming a coherent and homogeneous economic set. As such, they divided the world in a number of Circuits based on their analysis of local supplies and demands, in which traders could optimize their travel times and exchanges to maximize profits. The "task" of the Great Companies was to link these Circuits together, creating a larger, worldwide, Market System.  


The reforms introduced by the Mutuleses while at first helped the farmers and workers of Benaajab, notably the taxes reforms, the end of unpaid days of work, and the agrarian reforms, they ended up favoring the merchant class the most. Inter-markets exchanges became dependent on a specific class of caravaners, the medium range traders, whom made good use of the disparition of border taxes and new infrastructures built by the Nuk Nahob, such as the Sacbeob and the canals. Rivers were the main way to transport goods under the Mutulese system, and extensive use of it was made. Medium range traders were mostly of Benaajabi ancestry, but the Long range traders and administrators of the country all came from Mutuleses families. The Nuk Nahob also had only Mutuleses traders for members, which meant all legislative powers were in the hand of a tiny ethnics minority.
The most important markets were also the political centers of "Ochk'ak", where goods from all over the Vespanian would concentrate before being sent back to Oxidentale. They dominated politicaly and economicaly "local markets" where local traders and producers would sell products to Mutuleses long-range traders or natives mid-range merchants. While there was no forced plantations nor homogeneous agricultural and industrial policies, the Mutuleses traders managed, through their carefully cultivated situation of {{wp|Monopsony}} over most of the regions part of the Vespanian Circuit and thus their control over the market prices, to influence producers and native aristocracies into re-organizing their possessions away from {{wp|Subsistence agriculture}} and into {{wp|Intensive farming}} for luxury goods such as spices, gemstones, {{wp|coffee}}, {{wp|cotton}}, {{wp|dye|dyes}}, {{wp|rubber}}, and rare woods.


==Judiciary System==
Because of the development of this proto international trades, the Mutulese aristocracy became ardent advocates for {{wp|Liberalism}} and the {{wp|free market}}, untouched from the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|Divine Throne]] which was to limit itself to its traditional role of maintaining peace, a fair justice system, and a good network of infrastructures, all of this to support a productive and prosperous economy. The question of the K'uhul Ajaw's involvement in the Vespanian Circuit remained a long debated issue, but the Divine Throne remained far less powerful in Ochran than it was in Oxidentale, and it became a political laboratory for the merchant-aristocrats eager to try new organizations of the Market System, such as the inclusion of elections.


[[File:Sailendra_King_and_Queen,_Borobudur.jpg|250px|thumbnail|left|Representation of a Batab giving his judgement. 18th century Benaajabi artists represented Mutuleses officials with local clothes.]]
==Legacy==
===Religion===
The Mutulese expansion in Ochran and Malaio led to the spread of the [[White Path]] far beyond the [[Mutul]] traditional borders. Religion played an especially important role as part of the Oxidentalese rule, with special rights and credentials being given to communities and people who participated in the White Path's rituals, thus at least aknowledging the distant authority of the [[Divine Monarchy of the Mutul|K'uhul Ajaw]]. Despite this political role, the White Path would survive the Mutuleses around the Vespanian Ocean especially in [[Ankat]] where almost all of the population declare itself to be White Pilgrim in census. The fusion between the White Path and Janatāva culture would prove to be especially fruitful, giving birth to the [[White Path#Sudu Margaya|Sudu Margaya School]] and leading to an artistic and scientific renaissance in the country.


Justice was in the hand of the Batabob. the Batabil division system was done so all settlements were at worse three days of foot away from the nearest marketplace, were a Batab could be found to solve dispute. In the smaller, less dense Batabil, the Batab himself served as judge. In denser Batabil, Judges would be in charge of the courts and hearings. Sometime, in the truly large markets, a judge would be specialized : in trade dispute, in murder cases, and so on. In cities with a Ch’ob, the Halach Winik’s choice in judge could be vetoed by the assembled Nuk Nah.


After the First Bandhaseka, the Mutuleses published mutliple codes of laws. Notably the Slavery Code, which clarified the rights and duties of both slaves and slave-owners. There was also a Penal code and a Civil code. All marketplaces tribunals possessed at least one copy of all the code of laws, and everyone could come and read them freely, and if they couldn’t read, ask for a literate person to read it for them for free.
{{Mutul Topics|state=expanded}}


[[category:Ajax]]
[[category:Ochran]]
[[category:Ochran]]
[[category:Mutul]]
[[category:Mutul]]
[[category:Former countries]]

Latest revision as of 08:37, 31 October 2022

Mutulese Global Circuit

Mulawil petb'e
Flag of
Flag
The Mutul and its territories at the time of its largest expansion, in 1700
The Mutul and its territories at the time of its largest expansion, in 1700
LargestJuwon Peten
Main languages
Ethnic groups
GovernmentAbsolute Monarchy
Establishment
1600 CE
1618 CE
Area
• Total
4,000,000 km2 (1,500,000 sq mi)
without protectorates nor allies included

The Global Circuit is the name generally given to the parts of the world under direct or indirect rule from the Divine Kingdom. It was initially a trade-based system which derived most of its influence from merchant enterprise and was considered by the Mutuleses as an extansion of what is called the Market Network System. With a few notable exceptions, such as the Yajawil of Kahei the majority of the Mutulese colonial empire's overseas holdings consisted of coastal forts, factories, and port settlements with varying degrees of incorporation of their hinterlands and surrounding regions. The Lakamb'eob, or "Mutuleses trading companies", were the owners of most of these possessions with the K'uhul Ajaw serving as a distant lawmaker and arbiter of disputes between competing Lakambeob.

Since smaller companies lacked the capital or the manpower for large-scale expeditions through the Makrian Ocean and into the Vespanian Circuit, these distant trade operations were left to a shifting collection of merchant-nobles houses chartered by the Divine Throne. During the first half of the eighteenth century, these had a virtual monopoly on strategic shipping-routes westward through the Makrian Ocean. It greatly contributed to a commercial revolution and a cultural flowering in the Mutul during the late 16th and early 17th century.

In the 18th century the Mutulese presence in Ochran and the Vespanian Ocean started to decline following the Tsurushimese revolution of 1750 which changed the balance of powers in Ochran. But it's only seventy years later, during the Second War for Kahei, that the Mutuleses would definitively loose control over most of their possessions in the region.

History

Tsurushimese network

Through the knowledge and use of the Northern Makrian Vortex, the Tsurushimeses had managed to reach Norumbia during the 13th century, establishing colonies in what would become Enyama in 1373. The successive governments of Tsurushima followed a policy of colonialism, cultivating cash crops and exploiting natural ressources in Norumbia to gain significant reserves of cereals, oils, textiles, and other products that could be grown in the vast plantations of the colonies.

Because they had to go southward to catch winds powerful enough to bring them back to Tsurushima, sights of their vessels became more and more frequent with time, ultimately leading to crude trading between the Tsurushimeses crews and the native kingdoms. The first contacts between Tsurushimeses and Latins took place after the explorers from the latter reached the Western Coast of Norumbia. Thus, the "road to the west" became public knowledge, even if the exact roads used by the Tsurushimeses sailors remained a mystery.

Akutze Selenecha's Travels

The Mutuleses made their first travels essentially on multi-hulled watercraft before they adopted Ochraneses ship designs.

Akutze Selenecha was but a child when his House, the Ferrenze, was wiped out during the event known as the Patricide, in 1490. The remnants of the family found refuge in the Mutul, where they merged with the local merchant-nobility of Siluik'. Akutze became a sailor, and then worked as a Captain sometime for the Mutuleses, sometime for the Reze Trade Cartel. In 1492, he presented his project to discover the Tsurushimese's "Makrian Road" to the Divine Throne, which agreed to offer a pension to Selenecha and finance his expedition up to 30% of the total expenses. Akutze was then given the title of Eb'et, or "Ambassador", of the Divine Lord and his Legate in case he indeed reached Tsurushima or any other people he might find during his travel.

Between 1511 and 1528, Selenecha completed three round-trip voyages between Mutul and Ochran, each voyage being sponsored by the Divine Throne. Selenecha proved to be instrumental to the installation of trade posts in Tsurushima, and even got the governorship of the first Mutulese legation in Ochran. However this meant he was quickly sidelined by other larger, wealthier, trader-merchants families who through their own funds sent their own expeditions to explore and set trade posts in the Makrian and Vespanian Oceans. This was the beginning of the Great Enterprises.

First settlements

The Mutulese Legation in Tsurushima was granted in 1517. Other trade ports opened on the archipelago and Kahei in the following decades, depending on the potential profits and which House had financed the settlement and negociated the agreements. Problems caused by inter-company rivalry led to the Divine Throne seizing direct control over the justice and administration of the ports, following the traditional Market Network System of northern Oxidentale. In 1560, the Mutuleses reached the Solustheris Isles and once again were quick to establish outposts there. In 1575, the first permanent trade-port in Onekawa-Nukanoa was created. In 1581, the Mutuleses reached Barriset and the Tuluran Coast.

Kirishtan Revolt

Kirishtan rebels

The Mutul was but a minor trade partner of Tsurushima during the 16th century, far outshined by the economical and political influences of the Belisarians Legations. However, during the Kirishitan Uprising, the Mutulese Legation was the only one to side with the Shogunate and pagan forces. Because of their non-abrahamic faith and their reputation for human sacrifices and body modifications, Mutuleses were also victims of the Uprising, and the Siege of the Mutulese Legation lead to the creation of Mutli-Tsurushimans militias that fought alongside the Shogun’s armies and supporters.

War for Kahei

Flag of the Yajawil of Kahei

After the Kirishtan Uprising, Latin traders whom had been present in the region as part of the Maritime Jade Road were forced to abandon their Legations in Tsurushima proper, but remained an important force in the Kahei archipelago through what was known as the Latin Possessions. With the Closed Gate Policy, The clans still loyal to the Shogunate and wishing to enforce its laws found themselves abandoned by the central power in Tsurushima, and at the mercy of their rivals whom took the chance to get rid of them by making alliances with the Latins for whom it was in their interest to make sure the islands did not escape their influence despite the end of the Legations. Left with no little to no other options, the Shogunists and Loyalists clans ended up calling the Mutul for help.

The Kahei war, despite being rather short, was a devastating conflict where clanic rivalries meddled with religious considerations and foreign influences. Ultimately, the Mutuleses won and established their own system in the wake of the dismembering of the Latin Possessions. Spices and silviculture became the dominant activities of the countrysides and inlands, in vast farmlands owned by Mutuleses traders or local aristocratic clans. The spices were sent to Hoxi peten, the siege of power of the Nuk Nahob in Kahei, and important marketplace dedicated to the exchange of spices, while the wood was destined to Japarata, renamed by the Mutuleses Kuwon Peten, as the dockyard of the city were the main producers of Djongs for the Mutulese navy.

Even after the Mutuleses had claimed control over all of the archipelago and established a Yajawil, their administration continued to claim its legitimacy from the Tenno, profiting from the language barreer and cultural differences to slowly shift the meaning of the word from the Tsurushimese ruler to the K'uhul Ajaw. De facto, Kahei would remain the heart and center of the Mutulese presence in the Vespanian Ocean until the Second War for Kahei during the 19th century.

First Barriset Tabanaa

The production of olibanum and its central position made Barriset an important stop in the Ozeros Circuit.

In 1621, the clanic chief Shuleek proclaimed himself Caliph of Barriset with the support of the |Iifae clergy. Through the support of the Nuk Nahob already present on the island, the Iifae Caliphate managed to overthrow the hellenic kingdom that dominated the island. In exchange for this support, the Nuk Nahob were granted larger concessions on Barriset, and now had their own docks, warehouses, factories, and districts. These enclaves remained theoretically under the Caliph's rule, but were de-facto independent from Barriset's authority.

Second Tabanaa and the Yajawil of Barriset

Population in the Mutuleses Concessions grew quickly after the establishment of the Caliphate. Oxidentaleses remained a rare sight, but many Barrisetis emigrated to find work as dockers, shop-owners, or sailors. To ease relations with the Mutuleses, many of the wealthier traders who had regular contact with them converted to the White Path, alongside most of the inhabitants of the Concessions. This is when the first sizeable K'uh Nahs were erected.

Religious tensions between the Iifae and the White Pilgrims started to emerge during this period, leading to criticism toward the Caliphate for leaving too much freedom to the Nuk Nahob. In 1649, the Caliph made some attempt to limit the growth of the White Path, such as making |Iifae the only religion openly practicable outside of the Concessions, with the flux of people in and out of these districts being now closely monitored by the Caliph. This sparkled an outrage from the Mutuleses traders who raised the number of Tulotairi militias and warships present in Barriset as a form of protest, alongside diplomatic lobbying to get the decrees redacted. By the end of the year, the Caliph had been forced to back down, abandon the controls at the Concessions' gates, and proclaim religious freedom all over the island.

After the failure of the caliphate to reign in the Mutuleses, parts of the Iifae clergy started to radicalize, openly calling for the departure of the Oxidentaleses, the crushing of "Those who turned away from Mesfin", and even for the overthrow of the Caliph who had been incapable of enforcing Yen laws. Despite heavy repressions, these imam-priests ended up annointing a "new" tribal lord as Caliph who began a new Holy War against the Betrayers and the Infidels.

The second Tabanaa started in 1656 with the siege of the Concessions and the assault on the Caliph's palace. Deathtoll numbered in the thousands after a week of violence, but ultimately the radicals were driven off the cities by the Tulotairi and the remnants of the First Caliph's troops. The rest of the Holy War was a long campaign of guerilla and counter-insurgency, culminating with the capture and sacrifice of the Insurgent Caliph and of most of his clergy in 1661, even if remnants of the Second Caliphate would continue the fight for many more years.

While the Nuk Nahob present in Barriset had organized themselves into Kuchkabal, they ended up electing to call for the Divine Throne to send judges, lawyers, and administrators to the island to takeover the task of pacifying Barriset, managing the island, and driving off the Iifae insurgents. In 1660, the K'uhul Ajaw proclaimed the constitution of Barriset as a Yajawil. The new B'aatz Yajaw and his administration reached the island, officializing direct Mutulese control over it.

Great Shambalan War

Ozeros War

Administration

Legation in Tsurushima

After the start of the Closed Gate Policy, the Mutuleses were the last foreigners tolerated inside the Archipelago, and only in one location : the port of Sakurajima. More specifically, in what was nicknamed the Mutulese Legation, located on an island linked to the rest of the city by a single bridge, guarded on both sides.

the island was, administratively, part of the city. The 11 local Tsurushimeses families who owned the land received an annual rent from the Nuk Nahob operating in the Legation. It contained houses for the Mutuleses, warehouses, and accommodation for both Mutuleses and Tsurushimeses officials. Numerous merchants supplied goods and catering, and about 100 interpreters served. While the island was under the strict surveilance of the Shogun, who had a Supervisor in Sakurajima, the day to day administration of the port was left to the council of the Nuk Nahob's representatives, who elected their own Batab, the equivalent of a mayor.

Despite the financial burden of maintaining the isolated outpost, the trade with Tsurushima was very profitable for the Mutuleses, initially yielding profits of 50% or more. The legation proved very profitable up until the First Republic, which saw the end of the Closed Gate Policy and the re-opening of the archipelago to all foreigners.

The Mutuleses traded mostly in silk, cotton, chocolate, and sugar. Also, deer pelts and shark skin were transported to Tsurushima from Kahei, as well as books, scientific instruments and many other rarities. In return, the Mutuleses traders bought Tsurushiman copper, silver, camphor, porcelain, lacquer ware and rice. To this was added the personal transactions of the Nuk Nahob's employees which was an important source of income for them and their Tsurushiman counterparts.

Pulau Keramat

Statue of a Pulaui prince and warlord of the Age of Fire

During the Age of Fire, a period of division and conflicts in the Pulaui archipelago, many Pulaui fled the chaos of their time by serving as sailors on Mutuleses ships, beginning a long lasting relationship between the Archipelago and the Nuk Nahob. The Mutuleses traders became important suppliers for the various competing factions, especially for the Solustheris Kingdom where they first established outposts. By the time of the unification of the archipelago in the early 16th century, the Mutuleses had acquired many concessions and benefits from the victorious states and thus from the newly created Confederation.

After the reunification, a number of mercenaries and other companies of aimless soldiers found new jobs and opportunities by serving as private forces for the Nuk Nahob, notably during the War for Kahei. Naval experts from the Solustheris Isles were notably sought after by the Nuk Nahob who engaged them to form their own navigators and officers; Pulaui mercenaries ended up serving as enforcers and guards.

Pulau Keramat would remain independent for the duration of the Mutulese Ochran, serving as an important resting port and jump-pad for the Mutuleses toward the Ozeros Sea, but also as a source of spices and raw products, and a consumer market for Mutuleses goods. The coastal areas and larger islands were chequered by a network of Trade Posts and Factories, strengthening the commercial and political ties between the two kingdoms.

Kahei Islands

Yajawil of Barriset and the Scipian Coast

Presence in Malaio

Detail of a gravure representing a Maori soldier serving in the Mutulese Navy.

Before the arrival of the Mutuleses traders, the modern country of Onekawa-Nukanoa had already known a first wave of economic colonialism from the Pulaui, between the 11th and 14th centuries, until the Age of Fire broke out.

When the Mutuleses first reached Malaio in the late 17th century, they made first-contact with the Māori people. With time, they started to trade with them, buying food, wood, and whale bones or oil in exchange for textiles and manufactured goods. In 1575, one of the Mutuleses Nuk Nahob was allowed by a a Mâori tribe to establish a permanent settlement near the Onekawan Bay. From there on "Malaio" was integrated into the Vespanian Circuit as a re-supply point and way-station for vessels on their way back and forth between Kahei and the Solustheris Isles. They established large farms, growing Citrus and other plants vital for Mutuleses sailors. It's also in these settlements that they first tamed and started to raise Moa native of Malaio. A technique that was then exported back to Oxidentale and other Mutuleses settlements, alongside fertilized eggs and juveniles. Soon, it became a common source of meat everywhere in the Divine Kingdom, from Oxidentale to Scipia. The wood required for naval repair was obtained through trade with Māori tribes that resided deeper inland.

Around the Mutuleses ports, some Māori started to settle permanently, working mainly as labourers at the docks and warehouses, or in other sectors requiring heavy manpower. Sometime, they were recruited by some ship captains to replace crew members that had died during their journey.

During the second half of the 17th century, "Maori Regiments" were established, serving as Marine Fusiliers. Coastal Maori also continued to be recruited to serve as sailors, gunmen, and other low-ranking crewmembers but in larger numbers than before. Generally serving alongside Pulaui and Tsurushimeses. Contrary to them however, they rarely if ever served as officers or ship captains because of their lack of naval tradition.

It's also during that era that the "Maori Wards", called Mahoji Nalil, were first legally recognized and placed under Mutulese administration : community leaders of each Ward were given the title of Aj Kuchkab ("He who bear the land") and to be granted an advisory position in their associated Batab council. A Popilna, or "House of justice" was to be built in all of these new Wards. At least one school per settlement was to be built.

Protectorate of Ankat

After the Shambalan Great War, Ankat became officially a Mutulese protectorate. Trade-ports dissapeared, in favour of a direct implementation of the Mutuleses Nuk Nahob inside the old trade cities, establishing Chambers of commerce where both Oxidentaleses and Ochraneses merchants could meet and organize their network. trading venues were created in all major portuary cities. At first it was only for the exchange of spices, especially cinnamon. Afterward, sugar, indigo and textiles also became commonly traded commodities.

As part of their policies toward veterans who served as marines and sailors in the Nuk Nahob, promising farmlands after 9 years of service, the Mutuleses began to buy lands in Ankat, especially in the less populated north of the country. There, these new "colonists", often of Janatāva or Pulaui origin, introduced with them important cash crops, such as coffee and tea, but also rubber, first imported directly from Oxidentale.

The military of the new kingdom was organized by Mutuleses officers into three armies, the First and Second Janatāva Suwa, and the First Balung Suwa. "Suwa" was the Mutulese pronounciation of the Terasi word for "Service". Similarily, a soldier serving in these Suwob was known as an "Hanasuy". Another deformation of a Terasi word for "warrior" that became an official term in the Nuk Nahob.

Market System

The port of Yu was the destination of most of the goods bought in Ochran

The Mutuleses had long theorized how a society should be structured to ensure "peace and prosperity in accord with the principles of the universe laid down by the Thirteen Gods". It resulted in a tripartite division of the Mutul society, with producers-commoners, a merchant-nobility, and a priestly caste of scribes and scholars. The merchant-nobility role was to ensure both the circulation of trade goods and its protection, legitimizing their rule as governors and administrators. As a result, the nobility were the one possessing both the knowledge and the capitals needed to establish business ventures and organize what they called the Vespanian Circuit mimicking the system already in place in Oxidentale.

Behind the concept of the "Circuit" is the Mutulese idea of a World-system: a geographic space forming a coherent and homogeneous economic set. As such, they divided the world in a number of Circuits based on their analysis of local supplies and demands, in which traders could optimize their travel times and exchanges to maximize profits. The "task" of the Great Companies was to link these Circuits together, creating a larger, worldwide, Market System.

The most important markets were also the political centers of "Ochk'ak", where goods from all over the Vespanian would concentrate before being sent back to Oxidentale. They dominated politicaly and economicaly "local markets" where local traders and producers would sell products to Mutuleses long-range traders or natives mid-range merchants. While there was no forced plantations nor homogeneous agricultural and industrial policies, the Mutuleses traders managed, through their carefully cultivated situation of Monopsony over most of the regions part of the Vespanian Circuit and thus their control over the market prices, to influence producers and native aristocracies into re-organizing their possessions away from Subsistence agriculture and into Intensive farming for luxury goods such as spices, gemstones, coffee, cotton, dyes, rubber, and rare woods.

Because of the development of this proto international trades, the Mutulese aristocracy became ardent advocates for Liberalism and the free market, untouched from the Divine Throne which was to limit itself to its traditional role of maintaining peace, a fair justice system, and a good network of infrastructures, all of this to support a productive and prosperous economy. The question of the K'uhul Ajaw's involvement in the Vespanian Circuit remained a long debated issue, but the Divine Throne remained far less powerful in Ochran than it was in Oxidentale, and it became a political laboratory for the merchant-aristocrats eager to try new organizations of the Market System, such as the inclusion of elections.

Legacy

Religion

The Mutulese expansion in Ochran and Malaio led to the spread of the White Path far beyond the Mutul traditional borders. Religion played an especially important role as part of the Oxidentalese rule, with special rights and credentials being given to communities and people who participated in the White Path's rituals, thus at least aknowledging the distant authority of the K'uhul Ajaw. Despite this political role, the White Path would survive the Mutuleses around the Vespanian Ocean especially in Ankat where almost all of the population declare itself to be White Pilgrim in census. The fusion between the White Path and Janatāva culture would prove to be especially fruitful, giving birth to the Sudu Margaya School and leading to an artistic and scientific renaissance in the country.