The wiki has recently been updated. Please contact me by talk page or email if you encounter any issues.

History of Risevne: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
 
No edit summary
 
(8 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
It is thought that the islands of [[Masalna]] and [[Agalmare]] have been inhabited by humans since around 450,000 years ago; the most ancient evidence of human inhabitation include stone tools made from the volcanic stone of southern Agalmare, dating from nearly 22,000 years ago.  
This page discusses the history of the two islands, [[Masalne]] and [[Agalmare]], which comprise the country of [[Risevne]].  


The first known evidence of large-scale, sedentary settlement in the islands is what is now known as the [[Nurmiara Hills Culture]] dating approximately from 9,000 BDN to around 4,000 BDN; sites corresponding to this culture have been found across the [[Nevgasira Plain]], farther north along the western coast of Masalna island almost up to present-day [[Osbane Province]], and even on Agalmare. Characteristics of this culture include elaborate pottery, of initially the "clam" and then the "twine-mark" style; extensive use of volcanic rock for tools such as adzes, arrowheads and sickles used for harvesting; firm evidence of coordinated agriculture on the Nevgasira Plain; and eventually the use of bronze artifacts, with locally produced copper and tin from Agalmare, including elaborate bronze goblets.
==Prehistory and Early civilisations==
 
''Articles: [[Mengolam Culture]], [[Narusgerya Culture]], [[Histari Culture]], [[Pelisadas Culture]], [[Agalmare A Culture]], [[Agalmare B Culture]], [[Ostunisalme Civilisation]]''
 
Some of the earliest stone tools to be found on the islands include chisels and hand-held adzes dating from nearly 27,000 BDN, marking the possible beginning of the paleolithic age in Masalne. The Mengolari Culture, discovered in a series of small caves near the present-day town of [[Mengolari]] in [[Lusedon Province]], was distinguished by a large number of flint plates in the shape of gingko leaves, speculated to have a ritual purpose; the Agalmare B Culture across the inland sea may be closely related to the Mengolam, and certainly both trade and conflict seems to have happened amongst them.
 
In 1956 DN excavations for a high-rise housing estate to be built on what was then the outskirts of [[Isana]] uncovered several artifacts pointing to a neolithic civilisation in that area, including pottery, polished stone tools and long stilt houses of wood and coastal palm leaves - the remains found in the site, reconstructed, were estimated to be nearly 30 metres long, standing 1.2 metres on stilts, and around 4 metres wide. At first estimated to be around 3,500 years old, later dating placed it at around 3,000 BDN, making it a type site of a culture (now called the Narusgerya Culture after the district of its discovery) now believed to have stretched from 9,000 BDN to around 2,000 BDN.
 
While the Narusgerya culture was the most advanced, populated and widespread civilisation on Masalne at the time, it was not the only one. Discoveries in [[Serteni Province]] in 1932, and later in [[Basene Province]] in 1946, reveal the existence of two other cultures, now known respectively as the Histari and Agalmare A Cultures; the first lasted from around 6,000 BDN to 2,200 BDN before the sites were mysteriously abandoned and eventually taken over by the Late Narusgerya, while the civilisation on Agalmare seems to have prospered around the same time as the Narusgerya on Masalne - extensive amounts of artifacts from both civilisations have been found on each other's territories, suggesting a well-developed trade network that survived even the collapse of the Narusgerya culture and its replacement by what is known as the [[Ostunisalme]] civilisation (which nonetheless retained much of the cultural aspects of the culture they conquered).
 
Most important amongst the developments of these multiple cultures was the eventual adoption of a system of writing; some of the earliest markings shown definitively to be writing date from around 2,200 BDN, and within two centuries historical finds containing writing were common finds throughout  Masalne and later Agalmare. By around 800 BDN, the scripts of the island had coalesced into two main scripts, known separately as [[Proto-Semasar A]] and [[Proto-Semasar B]].
 
[[category:History of Valmante]]
[[category:Risevne]]
[[Category:History of Risevne|*]]

Latest revision as of 19:44, 20 November 2006

This page discusses the history of the two islands, Masalne and Agalmare, which comprise the country of Risevne.

Prehistory and Early civilisations

Articles: Mengolam Culture, Narusgerya Culture, Histari Culture, Pelisadas Culture, Agalmare A Culture, Agalmare B Culture, Ostunisalme Civilisation

Some of the earliest stone tools to be found on the islands include chisels and hand-held adzes dating from nearly 27,000 BDN, marking the possible beginning of the paleolithic age in Masalne. The Mengolari Culture, discovered in a series of small caves near the present-day town of Mengolari in Lusedon Province, was distinguished by a large number of flint plates in the shape of gingko leaves, speculated to have a ritual purpose; the Agalmare B Culture across the inland sea may be closely related to the Mengolam, and certainly both trade and conflict seems to have happened amongst them.

In 1956 DN excavations for a high-rise housing estate to be built on what was then the outskirts of Isana uncovered several artifacts pointing to a neolithic civilisation in that area, including pottery, polished stone tools and long stilt houses of wood and coastal palm leaves - the remains found in the site, reconstructed, were estimated to be nearly 30 metres long, standing 1.2 metres on stilts, and around 4 metres wide. At first estimated to be around 3,500 years old, later dating placed it at around 3,000 BDN, making it a type site of a culture (now called the Narusgerya Culture after the district of its discovery) now believed to have stretched from 9,000 BDN to around 2,000 BDN.

While the Narusgerya culture was the most advanced, populated and widespread civilisation on Masalne at the time, it was not the only one. Discoveries in Serteni Province in 1932, and later in Basene Province in 1946, reveal the existence of two other cultures, now known respectively as the Histari and Agalmare A Cultures; the first lasted from around 6,000 BDN to 2,200 BDN before the sites were mysteriously abandoned and eventually taken over by the Late Narusgerya, while the civilisation on Agalmare seems to have prospered around the same time as the Narusgerya on Masalne - extensive amounts of artifacts from both civilisations have been found on each other's territories, suggesting a well-developed trade network that survived even the collapse of the Narusgerya culture and its replacement by what is known as the Ostunisalme civilisation (which nonetheless retained much of the cultural aspects of the culture they conquered).

Most important amongst the developments of these multiple cultures was the eventual adoption of a system of writing; some of the earliest markings shown definitively to be writing date from around 2,200 BDN, and within two centuries historical finds containing writing were common finds throughout Masalne and later Agalmare. By around 800 BDN, the scripts of the island had coalesced into two main scripts, known separately as Proto-Semasar A and Proto-Semasar B.