North King: As for any Arkage names, place, nation, and so on, some sort of word with -id on the end will do (the only exceptions are Craknus, as he is still a great hero, and MOST of the things which already have names in the Arkage language).
Oh..
why? I thought he an Masada were presiding over Sesh? Who's successor is Tisesh?
Jania has been a NPC for a while hasn't it?
Since Tisesh was predominantly Seshweay, Jania reverted to me.
The Five Men of Hanid
To increase Hanid's own stature, Hanid and Pa (as he had reverted to calling himself informally) decided to revive the Craknid myth. But to back up the full implementation of the myth, they would need real achievements. Luckily, Hanid's genuinely extraordinary ability to recognise talent came into play.
First they found a merchant, Sovi of Truilui. His unusual quirk was talking about an idea called "inflation". Hanid was curious, and they talked to him about it. What they had found was a groundbreaking economic discovery- that the real worth of money (and gold, not counting jewelery and the like) was in it's ability to purchase other items, not inherent worth. And therefore, that the more money and gold there was, the less valuable it became. He countered with the doctrine of Mass Importation- most gold (and money) would be stamped with a several sign. It could ONLY be spent within Jania itself on importation. The stamp would have no legal effect elsewhere.
However, this was actually useless, though the basic theory was a great leap.
Next, they looked through the ranks for a man of war. They found one in a suprising place- Asnid, an ex-soldier academic. His ambition was for large scale restoration of the academies through government funding and with top military personell, sending archeology expeditions to recover the old Arkage system of ranks, and reviving the Seshweay (though their emnity didn't exist now, despite Hanid and Pa's attempts to rekindle it) doctrine of the citizen-soldier. Not a true man of war, but quite useful to them.
Naturally, however, Hanid took the credit for both achievements. "Hanid the Great Craknid" he began to call himself. Somebody putting the word Craknid after their name was not unusual, but the title "The Great" was one he must have known did not apply as greatly as he said it did. He claimed to have planned his political campaign for the leadership (which was suprisingly bloodless, but this was to luck's credit. Panid, as he was called at the time, really planned it), his military restorations (Asnid's), and his economic plans (Sovi's). As people did not know of his advisors, they began to call him "Hanid the Great Craknid"...