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'''Hesgarigani''', from [[Mirselec]] ''Hesgari'' "to raid", is a historical term used to refer to several kingdoms, populated by the [[Mirsel]] and based mostly on [[Masalne]], from the first to fifth centuries DN, most noted and notorious for their raids on shipping and coastal cities all along modern day [[Osonde]] and even [[Norugatne]]. Besides being raiders, however, they were also proficient traders and explorers who founded several kingdoms along the coasts of areas they had captured.
The term '''Hesgarigani''' denotes shipborne pirates, raiders, invaders and eventually settlers from what is modern day [[Masalne]], operating between the 1st and 5th centuries DN, who operated mostly on the coastal regions of [[Osonde]], but in many cases also reached far inland via rivers.  


The historical impact of the Hesgerigani on its surrounding lands, as well as towards the development of kingdoms in modern day [[Risevne]], is both varied and deep; the long-range raids, and later trading expeditions, brought back much continental culture that influenced the later scripts of the Mirselec language, while the age itself became the topic of countless sagas and epics. Ironically, as the formerly advanced empires in Osonde and Norugatne collapsed and fell into ruin, the artifacts and lessons taken by the barbaric raiders began a cultural flowering back in Masalne.
The Hesgarigani were mostly [[Mirsel|Mirselani]] by ethnicity and in origin, though their ranks would eventually swell to include peoples from over ancient [[Kavena]], [[Birasleti]] and [[Ruguzma]] such that the term would become merely a catch-all description for any pirate and raider by the 3rd century. Their travels and impact upon mainland cultures, as well as the devastation caused by the [[DN Event]], precipitated the [[Hesgarigani Era]] in both Risevan and Kavenain history, albeit with dramatically different interpretations.


==Background==
==Name and Etymology==


==First Raids==
The term Hesgarigani is quite unambiguous in [[Mirselec]]; it means "Raider" (Hesgara "raid" + -gani), and was originally used to denote merely the first phase of what is now called the Hesgarigani Era, when the Mirselani visited Osonde mainly for the simple motivation of loot. This term, however, was coined by 19th century historians, based ironically on Kavenain sources about their tormentors in that period, and does not occur as an autonym in any writings that have survived from the Mirselani, which were not yet discovered in the 19th century.


The first documented raids made by the Hesgerigani are known from records kept by the collapsing empire of the [[Igusonkla]], in modern day [[Kavena]], and date back to the late first century DN. The brief record simply states that ''late in summer this year'' (generally agreed to be around 88 DN) ''light boats from across the ocean of the east attacked and burned several towns'', followed by a list of nearly 20 towns. The fact that they all came under raids at around the same time, and also that most of the towns were around the mouth and lower valley of the [[Agronus river]] (with some towns up to 30 km upriver), indicated that far from being isolated incidents the raiding seems to have been organised.
Rather, the Hesgarigani mostly addressed themselves as simply being a member of a certain clan, tribe and eventually kingdom, as their own social structures evolved partly through direct contact with the advanced civilisations on Osonde. The closest things to a term that applies to the profession of raiding include ''Numarkhain'' (Modern ''Nimargani'', "Navigator" or "Seafarer") and ''Ganudekhain'' (Modern ''Kanidegani'', roughly meaning "Warrior").  


==Deep raids and long expeditions==
In [[Unna Kavena|the Kavenain language]] even in modern days, the term ''Ezkar'', which is based off the Mirselec verb ''Hesgara'', is used to refer to a bandit or a particularly rapacious foe; up to the 20th century, and even after, it was often used as a derogatory term for the Risevani by the Kavenain.


By 110 DN the spectre of the raiders from Masalne was well known throughout the region, and in the years between 115 and 150 DN some of the most daring raids were attempted, mostly successful. The walled city of [[Bodaigor]], near modern-day [[Gorgha]] in Kavena and nearly 550 km up the [[Matru river]], was attacked around 122 DN by an army of Hesgerigani numbering "in their thousands"; the raiders apparently bribed a servant to open the gates of the city and carried out a night attack, killing hundreds and looting the city's southern port quarter.
==Origins==


Just two years later an even larger prize was taken, in the poorly fortified city of [[Prinama]], which had been bypassed by the Hesgerigani during the 122 raid; records say that nearly 3,000 men and women were taken as slaves, and that ''three palaces were set aflame, and all their treasures robbed... the palaces burned for a month''.
The Hesgarigani, despite their seemingly monolithic image as raiders, warriors and invaders, were in fact a highly heterogenous group; for much of their history internecine warfare was just as common as warfare against other peoples. What can be ascertained is that the technology and techniques for which these people were famed came mostly from the Mirselani who inhabited the western coast of Masalne, and that these people were the driving force behind the first raids.


==The founding of new kingdoms==
The technologies used by the Hesgarigani to great effect in this era were not new; rather they had evolved over hundreds of years, hinting at an unusually high level of technological attainment even before the DN Event. Skilled at shipbuilding and navigation, the Hesgarigani made use of compasses, knowledge of which is postulated to have been gained around the early first century BDN; another intriguing fact is that, while the raids were received with great shock, the records from the period do not betray much curiosity about these people, and in some cases even calls them "Once-traders".


==Decline and assimilation==
Seen in this light of relatively highly social and technological achievement, the reasons for the spread of the Hesgarigani seem inextricably tied to the DN Event. It is postulated that the fallout from the event had negative impacts on the way of life in Masal, based around small-scale agriculture in the coastal plains regions; as productivity fell due to lack of sunlight and colder climates, the people looked to their former trading partners on mainland Osonde (who had, by this time, developed extensive irrigation technologies, which partially softened the impact of the Event), and trading soon turned to raiding. At the same time the perennial lack of a strong central force amongst the Mirselani would also have precluded a stop to the raiding by any authorities.


==Legacy and Impact==
==Characteristics==


[[category:Risevan history]]
===Organisation===
 
==The Hesgarigani Era==
 
===1st Century DN: Localised raids===
 
===Late 1st - 2nd Century DN: The Great Raids===
 
===3rd - 4th Century: Assimilation and Consolidation===
 
===Decline and Fall===
 
==Impacts==

Latest revision as of 19:02, 12 February 2007

The term Hesgarigani denotes shipborne pirates, raiders, invaders and eventually settlers from what is modern day Masalne, operating between the 1st and 5th centuries DN, who operated mostly on the coastal regions of Osonde, but in many cases also reached far inland via rivers.

The Hesgarigani were mostly Mirselani by ethnicity and in origin, though their ranks would eventually swell to include peoples from over ancient Kavena, Birasleti and Ruguzma such that the term would become merely a catch-all description for any pirate and raider by the 3rd century. Their travels and impact upon mainland cultures, as well as the devastation caused by the DN Event, precipitated the Hesgarigani Era in both Risevan and Kavenain history, albeit with dramatically different interpretations.

Name and Etymology

The term Hesgarigani is quite unambiguous in Mirselec; it means "Raider" (Hesgara "raid" + -gani), and was originally used to denote merely the first phase of what is now called the Hesgarigani Era, when the Mirselani visited Osonde mainly for the simple motivation of loot. This term, however, was coined by 19th century historians, based ironically on Kavenain sources about their tormentors in that period, and does not occur as an autonym in any writings that have survived from the Mirselani, which were not yet discovered in the 19th century.

Rather, the Hesgarigani mostly addressed themselves as simply being a member of a certain clan, tribe and eventually kingdom, as their own social structures evolved partly through direct contact with the advanced civilisations on Osonde. The closest things to a term that applies to the profession of raiding include Numarkhain (Modern Nimargani, "Navigator" or "Seafarer") and Ganudekhain (Modern Kanidegani, roughly meaning "Warrior").

In the Kavenain language even in modern days, the term Ezkar, which is based off the Mirselec verb Hesgara, is used to refer to a bandit or a particularly rapacious foe; up to the 20th century, and even after, it was often used as a derogatory term for the Risevani by the Kavenain.

Origins

The Hesgarigani, despite their seemingly monolithic image as raiders, warriors and invaders, were in fact a highly heterogenous group; for much of their history internecine warfare was just as common as warfare against other peoples. What can be ascertained is that the technology and techniques for which these people were famed came mostly from the Mirselani who inhabited the western coast of Masalne, and that these people were the driving force behind the first raids.

The technologies used by the Hesgarigani to great effect in this era were not new; rather they had evolved over hundreds of years, hinting at an unusually high level of technological attainment even before the DN Event. Skilled at shipbuilding and navigation, the Hesgarigani made use of compasses, knowledge of which is postulated to have been gained around the early first century BDN; another intriguing fact is that, while the raids were received with great shock, the records from the period do not betray much curiosity about these people, and in some cases even calls them "Once-traders".

Seen in this light of relatively highly social and technological achievement, the reasons for the spread of the Hesgarigani seem inextricably tied to the DN Event. It is postulated that the fallout from the event had negative impacts on the way of life in Masal, based around small-scale agriculture in the coastal plains regions; as productivity fell due to lack of sunlight and colder climates, the people looked to their former trading partners on mainland Osonde (who had, by this time, developed extensive irrigation technologies, which partially softened the impact of the Event), and trading soon turned to raiding. At the same time the perennial lack of a strong central force amongst the Mirselani would also have precluded a stop to the raiding by any authorities.

Characteristics

Organisation

The Hesgarigani Era

1st Century DN: Localised raids

Late 1st - 2nd Century DN: The Great Raids

3rd - 4th Century: Assimilation and Consolidation

Decline and Fall

Impacts