Name:
The Town of Sü
Leaders:
Nyutien Bangyi
Location:
(Purple blob with light border)
Population:
1000
Background/History:
The town that'd come to be known as Sü or Su was put down some century ago by a mixed group of individuals disbarred from their homelands now presently ruled by the Hemquan to the west. Soldiers, administrators and loyalists to their former king a failed revolt against the titled Heron Emperor forced the population of the once independent kingdom to flea into the wilderness or be enslaved or killed for their brash recklessness. Of a wider population of refugees, a group of just under five-hundred came to the region and on the banks of a wide, mighty river they laid the foundations for the first town.
Within the year though they realized they had made a poor mistake in laying their first homes. Come spring and early summer, the banks of the great river rose as spring melt and glacial melting from up-river swelled the banks and flooded the the shore, increasing its awesome span from some six miles in spot, to a full ten to fifteen. The water came up to shoulder level and swept away the early huts and cottages and nearly threatened to destroy all their crops. Some fifty were recorded as having died in the first year of flooding and the lean times this error wrought on them forced a full five years of lean harvest and sprawling foraging and hunting missions to feed the growing village.
In that time, they moved up from the banks, laying a second village above the seasonal flood levels and sewing new fields tried to get back to that simple act of living, and not just trying to survive through clenched teeth.
After five years of rugged torture and near annihilation, things became better and the village could grow. After the end of the first five years twenty children were born to the nine dead that year. In time, the population had recovered to the levels at which it had begun and the village's population was further supplemented at times by handfuls of local natives who had been previously banished from their bands and clans and found a new life among the foreign expatriates.
As the village grew into a town it took on an economy, and sent irregular rafts up-river to seek out the communities and settlements that made up the Hemquan's frontier to trade their excess for tools. The villagers began trading locally with natives, offering them rice and grains in exchange for exotic animals they as well sold up-river for metal tools and quipment.
Su grew steadily from there and its people cut down more and more of the forests to plant their crop fields and for pasturage for their cattle.
Sü's first recognized leader was a former soldier simply referred to as Bangyu. The respect he got from the people he led turned him in some ways to a local lord, and when he had his first son, Yueitu he gave him the second name Bang or Bangyi, after himself. Yueitu would take over from his father as village chief, and likewise his son Hyung, and after him Nyutien.
The Town of Sü
Leaders:
Nyutien Bangyi
Location:
(Purple blob with light border)
Population:
1000
Background/History:
The town that'd come to be known as Sü or Su was put down some century ago by a mixed group of individuals disbarred from their homelands now presently ruled by the Hemquan to the west. Soldiers, administrators and loyalists to their former king a failed revolt against the titled Heron Emperor forced the population of the once independent kingdom to flea into the wilderness or be enslaved or killed for their brash recklessness. Of a wider population of refugees, a group of just under five-hundred came to the region and on the banks of a wide, mighty river they laid the foundations for the first town.
Within the year though they realized they had made a poor mistake in laying their first homes. Come spring and early summer, the banks of the great river rose as spring melt and glacial melting from up-river swelled the banks and flooded the the shore, increasing its awesome span from some six miles in spot, to a full ten to fifteen. The water came up to shoulder level and swept away the early huts and cottages and nearly threatened to destroy all their crops. Some fifty were recorded as having died in the first year of flooding and the lean times this error wrought on them forced a full five years of lean harvest and sprawling foraging and hunting missions to feed the growing village.
In that time, they moved up from the banks, laying a second village above the seasonal flood levels and sewing new fields tried to get back to that simple act of living, and not just trying to survive through clenched teeth.
After five years of rugged torture and near annihilation, things became better and the village could grow. After the end of the first five years twenty children were born to the nine dead that year. In time, the population had recovered to the levels at which it had begun and the village's population was further supplemented at times by handfuls of local natives who had been previously banished from their bands and clans and found a new life among the foreign expatriates.
As the village grew into a town it took on an economy, and sent irregular rafts up-river to seek out the communities and settlements that made up the Hemquan's frontier to trade their excess for tools. The villagers began trading locally with natives, offering them rice and grains in exchange for exotic animals they as well sold up-river for metal tools and quipment.
Su grew steadily from there and its people cut down more and more of the forests to plant their crop fields and for pasturage for their cattle.
Sü's first recognized leader was a former soldier simply referred to as Bangyu. The respect he got from the people he led turned him in some ways to a local lord, and when he had his first son, Yueitu he gave him the second name Bang or Bangyi, after himself. Yueitu would take over from his father as village chief, and likewise his son Hyung, and after him Nyutien.