das
Regeneration In Process
Excerpts from Kacher-Chronist's "History of Gerber."
I. Introduction.
1. Toghol-Advisor, the great advisor of the Thirty-Second Cecil-King, has told me to write down our land's history here.
2. Having travelled in many lands, he saw that while the people of Khemri, and of Veritas, and of Gorin write down the histories of their lands for the future generations to know, such customs are not present in our land.
3. And for this reason, there are many gaps in our knowledge of the past history of our land.
4. Our history lives on with our people.
5. But gradually, it dies out, and much of it is already lost.
6. To preserve our history for all times is the purpose of this scroll.
II. River Wardash and the Great Cecil.
1. Our land's history is intertied with its geography.
2. The most important fact of our land's geography is the great River Wardash.
3. That name is claimed by the Shalamari peoples to be of Upper Wardashian descent.
4. However, it is unquestionably of our language ["Wardash" stands for "First Water"].
5. It is so called for it was the first large body of water sighted by the Great Cecil one thousand two hundred thirty-four years ago since the exodus from Shaber.
6. The eastern paradise-land of Shaber has been lost forever, having been ransacked by the Kalmar tribes.
[...]
11. Some of the Kalmar tribes were not content with our people's exile, and instead wanted to slay us all.
12. They chased after our people and attacked them with the help of traitors.
13. Yet the Great Cecil rallied our people during the exodus and led them to fight back against the Kalmars.
[...]
16. At last, the Kalmar tribes were defeated and forced to retreat.
17. The Great Cecil's eldest son was slain in battle.
18. The Great Cecil swore revenge, and all of our people swore it with him, and since then dates the feud with the Kalmar tribes of the Tristarians.
19. Yet the Great Cecil also said that revenge will come later.
20. Now, he said, our people needed to find a new land and build a new home there.
21. And so he led them to Wardash River, and there ordered the construction of the city of Cirta, named after his dead son Cirtel.
22. It was there and then that our land was born, and that the Cecilid Dynasty begun, as the Great Cecil claimed for himself the hereditary title of King, with the blessing of the elders.
[...]
26. The River Wardash begun in the south, near the city of Delhi.
27. Delhi was the capital of the Mogul Empire, which dominated all of Lower Wardash.
28. The Moguls were a pompous and arrogant people.
29. They were also greedy, but unlike the Kalmar tribes their greed was of the peaceful and covert kind.
30. Instead of pillaging and stealing, they preffered to trade.
31. Their ruler Akbar sent out envoys to all the neighbouring countries, and proposed trade agreements to them.
32. An envoy was sent to the Great Cecil as well.
33. Yet the Great Cecil turned him down, declaring that he had nothing to trade for with the Moguls.
34. And indeed, they had at the time nothing that our people needed.
35. So any trade would have involved Mogul trickery against our people to get what they wanted out of them in exchange for unneeded goods.
36. When informed of the Great Cecil's reply, Akbar the Mogul was much enraged and declared war.
37. But the Mogul Empire was too distant from our land in those days, and a campaign from one to another would have taken much time and food, which had to be bought from the farmers.
38. Akbar the Mogul was too greedy to fund a war-campaign, while the Great Cecil did not seek war with the Moguls, and neither did his successors.
39. And so the war with the Moguls saw no blood shed, and ended under the Fourth Cecil-King, for by then, things had changed and trade with the Moguls became profitable...
III. Religions of the Old Days.
1. In the early days, most of our people believed in the myriad lesser spirits of nature, but knew not of the greater spirits.
2. The first man to worship the greater spirits, or gods, of Life, Death, Earth, Air and Fire was Ukar-Prophet, who was also called Teresh-Prophet [Prophet-First Priest].
[...]
5. In the days of the Sixth Cecil-King, the worship of the Pentagon of Gods proliferated.
6. Ever more people saw the light, and recognized the greater spirits.
7. As their nature, however, was hard to comprehend for ordinary mortals, the Sixth Cecil-King has ordered the followers of Prophet-Ukar to become priests, study the greater spirits and take up pupils who would eventually replace them.
[...]
9. Yet some people continued to turn away from the Pentagon and to pretend that it did not exist.
10. On these fools the Sixth Cecil-King took pity, and chose to punish them not, unless they broke any laws.
11. This was wise, for in this way those of their relatives that believed in the Pentagon were not offended, and remained good subjects.
12. The old teachings expired soon within decades anyway.
13. Another religion that spread into our land was the teaching of the Khemri Prophet-Sathya.
14. The Khemri were already then a wise and mighty people, with many great laws.
15. But they grew too obsessed with their laws and writings, and so they failed to see the living and natural part of the spirit-world.
16. On the other hand, Prophet-Sathya and his followers had a greater understandment of Death; and while holy simplicity was widespread amongst the Gerberian priests, the Khemri worshipped great wisdom.
17. Just as the Khemri people grew more detached from nature and life, so had their religion become even moreconcerned with Death.
18. And in the Gerberian cities, amongst the wiser of the priests and the nobles, especially those who had went with the embassies to Khemri, Sathya's teachings gained much following, as the Sixth Cecil-King protested this not.
19. While many of the high priests condemned the followers of Sathya, the highest priest, Priest-Tegar, also believed they should be left alone, saying that though Sathya and his followers had much to learn from the Gerberian priests, so had the priests much to learn from Sathya to better understand death and attain greater wisdom.
20. And indeed, as Priest-Tegar encouraged, the Gerberian priests had learned much from Sathya, even while his followers in Gerber gradually expired or turned back to the Gerberian teaching.
21. And so it was that without violence, Gerber's old problems of religion were resolved.
To be continued.
I. Introduction.
1. Toghol-Advisor, the great advisor of the Thirty-Second Cecil-King, has told me to write down our land's history here.
2. Having travelled in many lands, he saw that while the people of Khemri, and of Veritas, and of Gorin write down the histories of their lands for the future generations to know, such customs are not present in our land.
3. And for this reason, there are many gaps in our knowledge of the past history of our land.
4. Our history lives on with our people.
5. But gradually, it dies out, and much of it is already lost.
6. To preserve our history for all times is the purpose of this scroll.
II. River Wardash and the Great Cecil.
1. Our land's history is intertied with its geography.
2. The most important fact of our land's geography is the great River Wardash.
3. That name is claimed by the Shalamari peoples to be of Upper Wardashian descent.
4. However, it is unquestionably of our language ["Wardash" stands for "First Water"].
5. It is so called for it was the first large body of water sighted by the Great Cecil one thousand two hundred thirty-four years ago since the exodus from Shaber.
6. The eastern paradise-land of Shaber has been lost forever, having been ransacked by the Kalmar tribes.
[...]
11. Some of the Kalmar tribes were not content with our people's exile, and instead wanted to slay us all.
12. They chased after our people and attacked them with the help of traitors.
13. Yet the Great Cecil rallied our people during the exodus and led them to fight back against the Kalmars.
[...]
16. At last, the Kalmar tribes were defeated and forced to retreat.
17. The Great Cecil's eldest son was slain in battle.
18. The Great Cecil swore revenge, and all of our people swore it with him, and since then dates the feud with the Kalmar tribes of the Tristarians.
19. Yet the Great Cecil also said that revenge will come later.
20. Now, he said, our people needed to find a new land and build a new home there.
21. And so he led them to Wardash River, and there ordered the construction of the city of Cirta, named after his dead son Cirtel.
22. It was there and then that our land was born, and that the Cecilid Dynasty begun, as the Great Cecil claimed for himself the hereditary title of King, with the blessing of the elders.
[...]
26. The River Wardash begun in the south, near the city of Delhi.
27. Delhi was the capital of the Mogul Empire, which dominated all of Lower Wardash.
28. The Moguls were a pompous and arrogant people.
29. They were also greedy, but unlike the Kalmar tribes their greed was of the peaceful and covert kind.
30. Instead of pillaging and stealing, they preffered to trade.
31. Their ruler Akbar sent out envoys to all the neighbouring countries, and proposed trade agreements to them.
32. An envoy was sent to the Great Cecil as well.
33. Yet the Great Cecil turned him down, declaring that he had nothing to trade for with the Moguls.
34. And indeed, they had at the time nothing that our people needed.
35. So any trade would have involved Mogul trickery against our people to get what they wanted out of them in exchange for unneeded goods.
36. When informed of the Great Cecil's reply, Akbar the Mogul was much enraged and declared war.
37. But the Mogul Empire was too distant from our land in those days, and a campaign from one to another would have taken much time and food, which had to be bought from the farmers.
38. Akbar the Mogul was too greedy to fund a war-campaign, while the Great Cecil did not seek war with the Moguls, and neither did his successors.
39. And so the war with the Moguls saw no blood shed, and ended under the Fourth Cecil-King, for by then, things had changed and trade with the Moguls became profitable...
III. Religions of the Old Days.
1. In the early days, most of our people believed in the myriad lesser spirits of nature, but knew not of the greater spirits.
2. The first man to worship the greater spirits, or gods, of Life, Death, Earth, Air and Fire was Ukar-Prophet, who was also called Teresh-Prophet [Prophet-First Priest].
[...]
5. In the days of the Sixth Cecil-King, the worship of the Pentagon of Gods proliferated.
6. Ever more people saw the light, and recognized the greater spirits.
7. As their nature, however, was hard to comprehend for ordinary mortals, the Sixth Cecil-King has ordered the followers of Prophet-Ukar to become priests, study the greater spirits and take up pupils who would eventually replace them.
[...]
9. Yet some people continued to turn away from the Pentagon and to pretend that it did not exist.
10. On these fools the Sixth Cecil-King took pity, and chose to punish them not, unless they broke any laws.
11. This was wise, for in this way those of their relatives that believed in the Pentagon were not offended, and remained good subjects.
12. The old teachings expired soon within decades anyway.
13. Another religion that spread into our land was the teaching of the Khemri Prophet-Sathya.
14. The Khemri were already then a wise and mighty people, with many great laws.
15. But they grew too obsessed with their laws and writings, and so they failed to see the living and natural part of the spirit-world.
16. On the other hand, Prophet-Sathya and his followers had a greater understandment of Death; and while holy simplicity was widespread amongst the Gerberian priests, the Khemri worshipped great wisdom.
17. Just as the Khemri people grew more detached from nature and life, so had their religion become even moreconcerned with Death.
18. And in the Gerberian cities, amongst the wiser of the priests and the nobles, especially those who had went with the embassies to Khemri, Sathya's teachings gained much following, as the Sixth Cecil-King protested this not.
19. While many of the high priests condemned the followers of Sathya, the highest priest, Priest-Tegar, also believed they should be left alone, saying that though Sathya and his followers had much to learn from the Gerberian priests, so had the priests much to learn from Sathya to better understand death and attain greater wisdom.
20. And indeed, as Priest-Tegar encouraged, the Gerberian priests had learned much from Sathya, even while his followers in Gerber gradually expired or turned back to the Gerberian teaching.
21. And so it was that without violence, Gerber's old problems of religion were resolved.
To be continued.