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==History==
==History==
[[File:EkLFucGWkAAvdsSi2.jpg|260px|thumb|right|Songaskians frequently wear no armor, or very little armor, on account of relying on their Dragon Scale if they get into a pinch. This also helps their vanity.]]
[[File:EkLFucGWkAAvdsSi2.jpg|260px|thumb|right|Songaskians frequently wear no armor, or very little armor, on account of relying on their Dragon Scale if they get into a pinch. This also helps their vanity.]]
Songaskian history is immensely difficult to verify or prove, largely because the events leading up to their arrival on Aloria remain a mystery. The Songaskians had no writing in the early days of their arrival, and no other Races (besides the Qadir who have their own version of events) witnessed their creation in this particular corner of the world. The majority of Songaskian history is guarded and told by the College of Priesthood, which is also a major religious organization, and likely has some inherent bias to what is told. That being said, the story of Songaskian arrival begins somewhere 100 BC, when the Sariyd Empire (the forerunners of the Qadir) brought conflict to the Black Desert Dragons of Farah'deen. The Sariyd and the Black Desert Dragons had always lived in an uneasy agreement of mutual indifference, with the Black Desert Dragons living in the scorching deserts of Bouginaptoii, Idalbile, Khatil-Assatola, Baouele-Mbene, Khgargoro, Banforakoro, and Ouelessaboulefassabagougou. Each of these deserts contained two pairs of Dragons, meaning a total of 14 Black Desert Dragons roamed the massive landmasses of Farahdeen, while the Sariyd stuck to their pearl cities and known trade routes as well as oases. The Black Desert Dragons were considered a nuisance to the Sariyd, because they made the majority of Farahdeen infertile and dry, while the Black Desert Dragons were wary of the Sariyd who “Developed the means to scar the very world itself with their pride”, or so it is told by the Priesthood.  
Songaskian history is immensely difficult to verify or prove, largely because the events leading up to their arrival on Aloria remain a mystery. The Songaskians had no writing in the early days of their arrival, and no other Races (besides the Qadir who have their own version of events) witnessed their creation in this particular corner of the world. The majority of Songaskian history is guarded and told by the College of Priesthood, which is also a major religious organization, and likely has some inherent bias to what is told. That being said, the story of Songaskian arrival begins somewhere 100 BC, after the Sariyd Empire (the forerunners of the Qadir) brought conflict to the Black Desert Dragons of Farah'deen. The Sariyd and the Black Desert Dragons had always lived in an uneasy agreement of mutual indifference, with the Black Desert Dragons living in the scorching deserts of Bouginaptoii, Idalbile, Khatil-Assatola, Baouele-Mbene, Khgargoro, Banforakoro, and Ouelessaboulefassabagougou. Each of these deserts contained two pairs of Dragons, meaning a total of 14 Black Desert Dragons roamed the massive landmasses of Farahdeen, while the Sariyd stuck to their pearl cities and known trade routes as well as oases. The Black Desert Dragons were considered a nuisance to the Sariyd, because they made the majority of Farahdeen infertile and dry, while the Black Desert Dragons were wary of the Sariyd who “Developed the means to scar the very world itself with their pride”, or so it is told by the Priesthood.  


Eventually, this mutual disinterest between the Black Dragons and the Sariyd broke down, and while the exact year of the conflict is not recorded, it is at least very clearly recorded that it was the Black Desert Dragons that attacked first. These beings started laying waste to smaller communities and whipping up massive sandstorms that coursed through the land, swallowing whole valleys and covering whole mountains. In some areas of Farahdeen, it was thought that the sun had gone dark, with sand swallowing the land, suffocating the animals and killing the crops. The Sariyd quickly fought back with large stampeding beasts of brass and copper, built like bulls and hellish steeds, capable of shooting large projectiles that would impale a normal man. The Sariyd called this the Red Hunt, not because the Dragons were Red (as they were in fact Black), but because the cover of sand storms gave all of the pearl cities of the Sariyd Empire a red hue, and because the Sariyd population were choking on the Dragon attacks.
Eventually, this mutual disinterest between the Black Dragons and the Sariyd broke down, and while the exact year of the conflict is not recorded, it is at least very clearly recorded that it was the Black Desert Dragons that attacked first. These beings started laying waste to smaller communities and whipping up massive sandstorms that coursed through the land, swallowing whole valleys and covering whole mountains. In some areas of Farahdeen, it was thought that the sun had gone dark, with sand swallowing the land, suffocating the animals and killing the crops. The Sariyd quickly fought back with large stampeding beasts of brass and copper, built like bulls and hellish steeds, capable of shooting large projectiles that would impale a normal man. The Sariyd called this the Red Hunt, supposedly not because the Dragons were Red (as they were in fact Black), but because the cover of sand storms gave all of the pearl cities of the Sariyd Empire a red hue, and because the Sariyd population were choking on the Dragon attacks.


The exact nature of the conflict is badly recorded, but in rough lines, the Dragons were very obviously losing, causing them to retreat to a location called Kouriyasui, which was always considered the home of the Black Desert Dragons, and where they held their Conclave. Kouriyasui had never been approached by the Sariyd, on account of being a massive valley made of quicksand, with a single huge mountain in the middle with a flat top and what looked like buildings. The vast valley was surrounded by huge towers of black marble and gold, with sundisks resting on top of them that would cast reflected light at each other and into the valley, giving rise to no shadows and no darkness. The Sariyd assaulted the valley with massive spider-like machines, arthropod-like assault vehicles and giant walking bipedal clockwork mechs that blasted white light from their eyes at the Dragons. It is there in their final act of desperation, that the Black Desert Dragons, according to the Priesthood, gave heed to the decree from the Old Ones that the time of Dragons had passed, and that Creation would rule. It is however believed by [[Dragon Worshipers]] elsewhere that the Black Desert Dragons dissented the decree, though not by rejecting it outright. Instead of dying or disappearing, they chose to become Creation itself. It is said among the Songaskians that each of the Dragons part-took in one huge Draconic ritual or spell that would “Give birth to each songaskian, one black scale at a time, so that all scales would give rise to a nation”. In essence, the Songaskians believe that the first of their kind were born from the scales of Black Dragons, who gave life to them, and in the process disappeared to live on in their new creation. The byproduct of this spell, however, was a sandstorm of cataclysmic proportions that rapidly raged across Farahdeen like a shockwave.  
The exact nature of the conflict is badly recorded, but in rough lines, the Dragons were very obviously losing, causing them to retreat to a location called Kouriyasui, which was always considered the home of the Black Desert Dragons, and where they held their Conclave. Kouriyasui had never been approached by the Sariyd, on account of being a massive valley made of quicksand, with a single huge mountain in the middle with a flat top and what looked like buildings. The vast valley was surrounded by huge towers of black marble and gold, with sundisks resting on top of them that would cast reflected light at each other and into the valley, giving rise to no shadows and no darkness. The Sariyd assaulted the valley with massive spider-like machines, arthropod-like assault vehicles and giant walking bipedal clockwork mechs that blasted white light from their eyes at the Dragons. It is there in their final act of desperation, that the Black Desert Dragons, according to the Priesthood, gave heed to the decree from the Old Ones that the time of Dragons had passed, and that Creation would rule. It is however believed by [[Dragon Worshipers]] elsewhere that the Black Desert Dragons dissented the decree, though not by rejecting it outright. Instead of dying or disappearing, they chose to become Creation itself. It is said among the Songaskians that each of the Dragons part-took in one huge Draconic ritual or spell that would “Give birth to each songaskian, one black scale at a time, so that all scales would give rise to a nation”. In essence, the Songaskians believe that the first of their kind were born from the scales of Black Dragons, who gave life to them, and in the process disappeared to live on in their new creation. The byproduct of this spell, however, was a sandstorm of cataclysmic proportions that rapidly raged across Farahdeen like a shockwave.  


The cities that were already covered in a red haze often never saw it coming as the sand coursed through the streets, through every opening and nook and cranny to fill up the insides of homes, people, animals and suffocate all life. The assault on Kouriyasui came to an immediate halt, all the clockwork giant’s technicians and operators dying from suffocation, their mechs and machines grinding to a halt in the valley, half-sunken into the quicksand. The shockwave continued, swallowing all of the Sariyd pearl cities and killing millions of them in the process, only halting just beyond the pearl city of Dogono. When the Great Storm subsided, the only land on Farahdeen that had remained untouched was the backwards and often forgotten province of Al-Alus and Mooriye, where the pearl cities of Alus-Ahadara and Mzwenhlanhla which were previously some of the smallest Sariyd pearl cities left, suddenly became the last. The Sariyd had been dealt a massive blow, losing not only countless cities, but also hundreds of libraries, workshops, archives, palaces and other structures of learning and science, buried deep into the sands of the Farahdeen deserts, some to never be seen again. By the time the Cataclysm rolled over, the Sariyd had already become known as the Qadir among themselves, and Farahdeen was mostly spared from the destruction that ravaged the Allorn Empire and other places in the world. The extreme loss of life and identity for the Qadir had however damaged them on the global playing field, a position from which they would not recover until modern times.
The cities that were already covered in a red haze often never saw it coming as the sand coursed through the streets, through every opening and nook and cranny to fill up the insides of homes, people, animals and suffocate all life. The assault on Kouriyasui came to an immediate halt, all the clockwork giant’s technicians and operators dying from suffocation, their mechs and machines grinding to a halt in the valley, half-sunken into the quicksand. The shockwave continued, swallowing all of the Sariyd pearl cities and killing millions of them in the process, only halting just beyond the pearl city of Dogono. When the Great Storm subsided, the only land on Farahdeen that had remained untouched was the backwards and often forgotten province of Al-Alus and Mooriye, where the pearl cities of Alus-Ahadara and Mzwenhlanhla which were previously some of the smallest Sariyd pearl cities left, suddenly became the last. The Sariyd had been dealt a massive blow, losing not only countless cities, but also hundreds of libraries, workshops, archives, palaces and other structures of learning and science, buried deep into the sands of the Farahdeen deserts, some to never be seen again. By the time the Cataclysm rolled over, the Sariyd had already become known as the Qadir among themselves, and Farah'deen was mostly spared from the destruction that ravaged the Allorn Empire and other places in the world. The extreme loss of life and identity for the Qadir had however damaged them on the global playing field, a position from which they would not recover until modern times.


The Songaskians appeared from the Great Storm, as if children wandering from a dark forest that they had gotten lost in. They were created as both adults and children, left behind with a language and ideology, but with no Dragons to guide them. There was a common identity shared among them, and a story told of their creation, that would continue to guide them to retake the old Sariyd cities, where even though the Sand had killed mere years before, the white pearl colors of their bastion walls and the gold-domed towers remained as pristine as ever, reflecting and basking in the sunlight that was so plentiful in Farahdeen. Indeed, in many pearl cities, the Songaskians simply picked up where the Sariyd had left and died, as the Great Storm had effectively only touched animals and people, but not buildings and items. The Songaskians started building their own culture from scratch, and before long, animals started returning to the deserts and the wetlands, crops started growing again, and songs could be heard in the streets of the old Empire. After 10 years, it was as if the Great Storm had never happened, a newcomer would think that the Songaskians had existed in these pearl cities for hundreds of years, that is how at home and at ease they appeared. The Qadir held onto Kankagner for several more decades, before the Songaskians overpowered them in 170 AC, and the final boundaries between the Masaya and the Qadir states were more or less created.  
The Songaskians appeared from the Great Storm, as if children wandering from a dark forest that they had gotten lost in. They were created as both adults and children, left behind with a language and ideology, but with no Dragons to guide them. There was a common identity shared among them, and a story told of their creation, that would continue to guide them to retake the old Sariyd cities, where even though the Sand had killed mere years before, the white pearl colors of their bastion walls and the gold-domed towers remained as pristine as ever, reflecting and basking in the sunlight that was so plentiful in Farahdeen. Indeed, in many pearl cities, the Songaskians simply picked up where the Sariyd had left and died, as the Great Storm had effectively only touched animals and people, but not buildings and items. The Songaskians started building their own culture from scratch, and before long, animals started returning to the deserts and the wetlands, crops started growing again, and songs could be heard in the streets of the old Empire. After 10 years, it was as if the Great Storm had never happened, a newcomer would think that the Songaskians had existed in these pearl cities for hundreds of years, that is how at home and at ease they appeared. The Qadir held onto Kankagner for several more decades, before the Songaskians overpowered them in 170 AC, and the final boundaries between the Masaya and the Qadir states were more or less created.