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{{Info nations and states
{{Info nations and states
|image = Noimg.png
|image = Noimg.png
|fullname = Songaskia Masaya
|fullname = Songaskian Masaya
|capital = Johari
|pronunciation = Song-gah-ski-an Mah-sai-a
|capital = [[Korbamakora]]
|languages = Sofaal
|languages = Sofaal
|regional =  
|regional = Common, Sofaal, Faraddi
|sovereignstate= Songaskia Masaya
|sovereignstate= Yes.
|government = Absolute Monarchy
|government = Monarchy
|currentruler = Massya Musamansa Koné
|currentruler = Massya Musamansa Koné
|population = 1,300,000 (+4,000,000 slaves)
|population = 3,250,000
|pronunciation = Song-gas-key-a Mass-eye-a
|}}
|}}
 
The Songaskian Masaya was once a world superpower engaged in slaving operations across [[Aloria]], in covert battles of espionage against the [[Regalian Empire]], with one of the greatest armies in the entire world. Sadly, such things are of the past in the present day. Following devastating wars and conflicts that have embroiled much of [[Farah’deen]], their military is bled dry, and their current leader seeks to rebuild himself and those nearby nations who were allied with his people. To do this, he has turned inward and, where there was once much news, talk, and discussion, the Songaskian Masaya is now rarely mentioned in conversation. Yet it still has a unique tradition and history perhaps unparalleled in Aloria.
Built upon the remnants of the sprawling empire of the [[Qadir]], the Songaskian Masaya has since dominated the lands and holdings of its downtrodden predecessor in [[Farah’deen]]. Built on slavery, the Masaya’s aspects as a police state and military meritocracy are central to its progression as a government, with a strong emphasis on exercising strength and maintaining power. Of course, this focus on strength and power leads many to see the Songaskia Masaya as a rival to the [[Regalian Empire]], a belief well-founded in the recent conflicts between the two military superpowers. Even Regalia’s youth bear memories of the [[Songaskian]] occupation of the Regalian capital city. Only time will tell how the Masaya will move forward in the near future, especially as they descend into civil war.  
 
===Etymology===
===Etymology===
Although the exact origins of its name remain unclear, it is known that ‘Songaskian Masaya’ translates to ‘Kingdom of the Songaskay’ in [[Lugnha]], the native language of the Songaskia. However, Lugnha is incorrectly named Qadiriq around the world, a language in which “Songaskia Masaya” doesn’t have meaning.  
The Songaskian Masaya is a simple term, as when translated from Sofaal, it means “Kingdom/Empire of the Songaski.” That is exactly what the nation is, an empire home to the vast majority of the [[Songaskian]] population of Aloria.


==History==
==History==
The exact details of the Masaya’s formation are unknown, and some Regalian scholars suspect that they will always remain this way. What is known is that the [[Songaskia]] simply appeared after what the Qadir call the [[Great Storm]], a colossal sandstorm in 121 AC, following the decade-long purge of the [[Black Desert Dragons|Black]] and [[Red Desert Dragons]]. Their civilization suffered greatly, and in the aftermath, the Songaskia appeared, forcing the Qadir out of their own lands as they moved on the pearl cities of Farah’deen, and inhabited the sandstone ruins left behind by the broken [[Sariyd Empire]].  
The Songaskian Masaya can trace its founding to 129 AC when the first remains of the [[Sariyd Empire]] were conquered by the Songaskia. Emerging from the [[Great Storm]], the Songaskia were taught and trained by the remaining [[Black Desert Dragons]] for the act of ruling Farah’deen and removing the insolent [[Qadir]], who had dared to try and kill off the Black Desert Dragons, from their position of power. When the conquest came, it was swift, as settlement after settlement of Qadir fell to these children of [[Dragons]], the Qadir weakened by such a fundamental devastation of the landscape and often, their city infrastructure. Soon though, the Songaskians required a leader, and the eldest male child of all the Songaskia is said to have been chosen by the Dragons and the sun to fulfill this role. Oumar Koné rose into the position gloriously and so completed the main conquest by the end of 140 AC. By this time, there were only two Black Desert Dragons left, the rest having slowly passed on as all their remaining weakened power ebbed from their bodies. These final two retreated into seclusion, and likely passed away sometime shortly afterward, which then saw the faith of [[Shambala]] emerge in wake to the final and ultimate disappearance of the Black Desert Dragon from Aloria. But Oumar Koné did not wallow in mourning for long, instead soon exploding out into beginning a number of grand projects. The first was a thrust south, in a bid to take control of the Almina Peninsula where a large number of Qadir were known to be gathering. The second was to begin constructing a Songaskian capital at the core of the former Sariyd territory they now controlled. The final action was perhaps the most minor, which was to send forces to scout the north and establish a local presence there. This last act was also one of his most unknown, as he gave the mission personally to several Songaskian families he trusted. Why he kept it a secret from the wider population of his court is likely because he feared Qadir spying and any attempts by that Race to undermine Songaskian expansion.
 
By 170 AC, when he passed away, the Masaya was secure in its position. Its nobility, personally invested by Oumar Koné into their positions of power, helped run the military while effective local bureaucracy aided by priests of the Shambala faith helped administer the realm. The ruler who followed him was also fairly effective, that being his son, who was crowned Oumar Koné II. He reigned far shorter than his father, at a mere twenty-one years, and his reign also saw the first major losses suffered by the Masaya. The push into the Almina Peninsula started by his father stalled as the Qadir in the region fully devoted themselves to their new focus on machines, crafting weapons of war that could go toe to toe with Songaskian military power and their [[Magic]]. At home, he was an earnest administrator and a generous ruler, and it was under him that the final stones were laid on Korbamakora, “The Golden Pearl City.” It was also in this era that the Qadir within the Masaya finally began to experience greater freedoms, and when the cruel, near chattle-slavery of before was phased out in favor of a more gentle servant-style life. All of this adds to him being remembered fondly by the citizens of the Masaya, though also as a somewhat tragic figure, particularly due to his death. Said death was on the field of battle in 191 AC against the newly emerging [[Khaneh]] Qadir [[Culture]] and their zealous state of [[Mooriye]], who put a halt to the Masayan dreams of a fully unified Farah’deen. The young man who followed after him was his first son, Youssouf Koné, but much like [[Henri II]] of the Regalian Empire several decades earlier, the man was entirely unsuited to rule. He was solely interested in hedonistic pleasures and had a lust for both sexes said to be insatiable. The Six-Month Massya as he is known today was deposed within that time in favor of his younger, pious, and very adventurous brother Djibril Koné, who promptly exiled his brother to the north where he was never seen again.  


After their inexplicable appearance in south-eastern Aloria, the Songaskia chose to consolidate and cultivate their power in Farah’deen. They amassed a population of slaves that vastly outnumbered the amount of civilians within the Masaya. Nearing 200 AC, the Songaskian Masaya developed something of a rivalry with Regalia, recognizing the Holy Empire as only of the only competing imperial forces in [[Aloria]]. Despite this, the Masaya refrained from involvement in the [[Chrysant War]] and the destruction of the [[Essa Empire]], choosing to continue building military power and support in their homeland.  
Djibril Koné began his rule with a promise: to spread the word of the sun across wider Aloria. In his reign, the first exploration ships of the Songaskian Masaya were sent out and, using Qadir maps and knowledge, made connections with wider Aloria. On land, he sent preachers into the Almina Peninsula (very unsuccessfully) and up into northern Farah’deen, to investigate reports of other Songaskian-led states. The bad news crashed down on him all at once: first, they were not the only great power in Aloria, as the powerful and rapidly growing [[Regalian Empire]] possessed vast territory on foreign shores; next, word reached him of the [[Hadrav’yan]] corruption of Shambala into a [[Unionist]] sect; finally, the Regalian Empire had harshly rejected his words of peace and the place of all under the sun in favor of their Imperial Spirit. But there was also good news. The two other nations in the north were very eager to re-establish ties with the south, and so the plans were laid to ally them with the Masaya in return to their destruction of the abomination that was Hadravia. Then, there was the discovery of the wider slave trade, specifically thanks to the [[Altalar]]. A whole new world of [[Races]] opened up to the Songaskia, and they sought to obtain as many as possible. Within three years, the vessels of the Songaskian navy were now all state-sponsored slaving vessels and while most were merely transport vessels, for slaves acquired from the markets of southern Daen within Altalar lands, others were raiding vessels to steal people from the coasts. Thus began the Masaya’s dealings with the outside world in a big way, and Djibril Koné oversaw many personally. He died in a freak naval accident while touring new slaving vessels in 239 AC.  


In more recent times, conflicts with the Regalian Empire ended in “victory” for the Masaya. Beginning in unofficial raids from both sides, these guerrilla tactics ended up escalating into a full-scale war, declared in 303 AC. One particular battle even saw a rare instance of cooperation between Dwarves and Orcs, resulting in a steam-powered fleet that demolished a whole city with cannonfire. Despite their incredible losses during the war, the Masaya still managed to capture the man who would later become the Crown Prince; Cedromar Kade. Using the Prince as something of a bargaining chip, the Masaya leveraged their possession of the royal in order to achieve a white peace, though not before occupying the city of Regalia with its numerically superior slave army. By negotiating with no small degree of finesse, the Masaya managed to return relations between the two Alorian superpowers back to how they were prior to the war, avoiding more losses.  
His successor was his son, Djibirl Koné II, who was perhaps one of the few Masaya who had to do almost nothing for much of his life. Slaving operations were effective and profitable, especially after the Regalian Pessimism began the decay of the Regalian Empire, while his nobles were all competent field generals and effective in the conflicts they engaged in. But it seems that Djibirl Koné II had one weakness: infertility. That and his lacking physique made producing an heir very difficult for him, and it is said his heart gave out while under the care of “professional women” seeking to reverse this affliction in 270 AC. The title of Massya was suddenly contested, for the first time ever, as several women of the noble family and their male allies made grasps at the crown for their own branch of the family. But it was ultimately Ayoube Koné, his cousin, stepped into the role thanks to a cabal of priests, priestesses  and slaving-focused nobles who united with his mother to put him into the role. This also uplifted his younger brother, a stern militaristic youth, who would grow into a strong and experienced general. Under his leadership, the Masaya faced its first major problems as the Regalian Empire much more decisively became an opponent on the world stage. Spy games between the powers occurred and, when the Regalian Empire came roaring out of the [[Regalian Pessimism]], which had crippled it by defeating another world power, the [[Essa Empire]], the tension was increased. Ultimately, it all came to a head in 302 AC.


This directly led to a civil war within Farah’deen, over the leader of the Masaya. Believing that the current Massya, Musamansa, was too young and simply a puppet for his mother, his uncle, Kusamanu, gathered support from the Masaya’s military leaders in the hopes of overthrowing the teenaged monarch and taking the throne for himself. Succeeding in this, Kusamanu took on the role of Massya, his first action being to place hefty bounties on the heads of Musamansa and his mother, both of whom had fled Farah’deen with the assistance of Regalian spies. The Masaya’s battle against the [[Bone Horror]] invasion across Farah’deen continues to rage on today. In spite of this conflict, the Songaskian Masaya has suffered the least in comparison to the other Alorian nations. This is mainly attributed to the defences present in their Pearl Cities, allowing some level of security against the undead hordes. Even further, a three-month long war in 305 AC saw a Regalian small-scale invasion of Farah’deen, the forces of which were ordered to slaughter any Songaskians found in the continent. With a final, disastrous battle in Altaqq that saw Regalian mercenary numbers devastated, the war was nearly lost, if not for another sudden civil war, ending the reign of Kusamanu Massya Songel and returning Musamansa Massya Song to his rightful throne.
The day after the Regalian Empire destroyed the physical form of the [[Archdemon]] at a major harvest celebration within the [[City of Regalia]], the sun shone more brightly than ever before and the Songaskians noticed. The religious caste immediately rushed to court, urging the Massya to take action, soon shaping the event into a call from the sun for the Masaya to be daring, bold, and bright. Thus came the [[First Songaskian War]], a costly enterprise that neither side ended up entirely winning, though the Songaskians did get vast wealth straight from the Imperial District of the Regalian Empire when they pulled out of the City of Regalia. Then, he died, killed by a [[Hagaan]] when riding his horse through the desert. This kicked off a new power struggle, as his wife, the lady Afua Okoro protected her young and installed-as-king son Musamansa Koné. Opposing her was her husband’s brother, Kusamanu Koné, in league with a large element of the military fearing that her moderate ways would reduce their power and, most importantly, decrease the chance that a new offensive could be launched against Regalia anytime soon. Additionally, they felt that the child, then only 14, should have a regent until he became of age. Thus, the capital city became a battleground, but Afua smuggled her son away with the aid of the Regalian ambassador to the Masaya court, and so he then lived within the Imperial Palace for the next two years. His uncle became the new Massya, imprisoning his sister-in-law, and engaging in efforts to try and reinforce the military. Ultimately, this helped little in the [[Second Songaskian War]], which saw Regalia ultimately on a warpath through Farah’deen before suddenly retreating, putting Musamansa Koné in charge of the lands they had captured, and thus he fought his uncle. The [[Songaskian Civil War]] that followed was destructive, but ultimately it came to an end when Emperor [[Cedromar I]] turned the [[Sihai]] away from supporting the pact they had made with the Masaya and the Altalar states of southern [[Daen]]. With his position weakened, the uncle yielded and left the major offices of power. His nephew, though young, has been energetic in the cleanup effort of his nation. The young man is no puppet, as any with a mind will know, but his efforts thus far have been internal and so the Songaskian Masaya as a nation endures, though fairly silent on the world stage.


==Government==
==Government==
Much like its competitor state of Regalia, the Songaskian Masaya’s governing system is built around despotic monarchy, meaning there is one supreme ruler and royal family, with aristocracy delegated to the finer tasks of the state. However, the control of aristocrats within the Masaya is much more powerful than that of Regalian aristocrats. One prominent differing aspect lies in the appointment of the aristocracy. Rather than being comprised of a bloodline-based set of nobles that rarely, if ever, change, Songaskian aristocracy is in a constant state of flux. This is due to a large emphasis on military merit over family reputation. For example, a high noble will always be a person of considerable military skill, usually a general, though an incompetent heir can result in their family being dropped from nobility altogether. Only one family has remained constant during the history of the Songaskia; the Koné family. Since the dawn of their race, the Songaskia have been led by the Konés, the royal family of their empire, each leader taking up the position of Massya, or Emperor, when translated directly.
Much like its competitor state of Regalia, the Songaskian Masaya is built around a monarchy, with one supreme ruler (the Massya) and a royal family at the top, with an aristocracy delegated to help run the state. However, the aristocrats within the Masaya are much more powerful than those of Regalia for one key reason: their military power. Military merit is highly valued with the Songaskian Masaya, even more than family reputation, as it is the aristocracy who controls the military. This leads to a strange society of leadership where leadership is always changing, as is organization. Flaws, failures, or weaknesses on the battlefield, no matter how minor, are easily exploited by political rivals or families seeking to maintain their position and disrupt any who could challenge them. For example, a high noble will always be a person of considerable military skill, but one incompetent mistake by their heir can result in their family being dropped from nobility altogether. Despite this chaotic system, the general staff of sixteen remain in control of the sixteen Districts under their control, each is focused on a major city and the surrounding area. Only one family has remained constant during the history of the Songaskian Masaya: the Koné family. Their rule has generally been strong, and thus their nation has prospered from this. As for the role of the Shambala faith in their government, its role is fascinating. As a faith, they are literally the force that holds the nation together as, while at the top of the chain, there is organizational chaos, on a local level, the priests of Shambala are a great boon to ensuring local affairs are handled effectively. As they are also bureaucrats and administrators, they normally play key roles in regional civil government. Because of this, those at the top, whoever it is, simply need to ask those below for the appropriate papers and it is often supplied very quickly and with a high level of accuracy.
 
With a military-appointed noble peerage, it is the generals of the army that decide everything within the Masaya, separate from the clergy. [[Shambala]] priestesses operate their religion nearly autonomously, with little to no oversight from the government in their endeavors of faith throughout Farah’deen. Much like Regalia, the Masaya operates as a police-state, utilizing military apparatus to control its population. However, upstarts and outbursts within the Masaya are dealt with much more efficiently than its competitor state, leading to a considerably more stable government, even during periods of social unrest.  
 
===List of Rulers===
===List of Rulers===
*121 AC - 150 AC - Oumar Koné the First
*129 AC to 170 AC - Oumar Koné I
*150 AC - 164 AC - Oumar Koné the Second
*170 AC to 191 AC - Oumar Koné II
*164 AC - 192 AC - Abdoulaye Koné
*191 AC to 192 AC - Youssouf Koné, the Six Month Massya
*192 AC - 192 AC - Youssouf Koné, the Six Month Massya
*192 AC to 239 AC - Djibril Koné I
*192 AC - 201 AC - Djibril Koné the First
*239 AC to 270 AC - Djibirl Koné II
*201 AC - 223 AC - Kassim Koné
*270 AC to 303 AC - Ayoube Koné
*223 AC - 240 AC. - Ayouba Koné the First
*303 AC to 303 AC - Musamansa Koné
*241 AC - 270 AC. - Djibirl Koné the Second
*270 AC - 300 AC - Ayoube Koné the Second
*300 AC - 303 AC - Musamansa Koné
*303 AC - 305 AC - Kusamanu Koné, the Usurper
*303 AC - 305 AC - Kusamanu Koné, the Usurper
*305 AC - present - Musamansa Koné, the Rethroned
*305 AC - present - Musamansa Koné, the Rethroned
===Law===
The Songaskian Masaya has a very different set of laws and structure in their judiciary than the Regalian Empire, largely thanks to their faith of Shambala but also due to their societal beliefs. The most extensive areas of this legislation is in the realm of slavery and the rights of the enslaved. It should be made very clear: Songaskian slavery practices are not nearly as cruel as Altalar and [[Ailor]] slavery practices. For starters, while people are property, branding or permanent harm to an individual’s body as punishment or as a form of indicating ownership is extremely rare. Instead, Songaskian slaves possess collars, wrist bands, plain clothing and other similar aesthetic accessories that denote their position as slaves when compared to the others around them. Additionally, while Songaskian slaves are technically property, they are also acknowledged as living beings and often live lives more aligned with those of servants. Songaskian slavery as a whole was once rather cruel, a vengeul streak running deep through their society against the Qadir who dared to harm their progenitors, but time and valued service tempered that rage. As a result, all slaves are seen as valuable to a Songaskian household and to the Songaskian cities they reside in and are treated fairly well as a result. They may not leave the city (or District should a master be particularly generous or require special services) they live in though, and runaway slaves are dealt with fairly harshly, as it is seen to be offensive that such slaves should seek to shirk the glorious kindness of the Songaskians. Finally, their slavery-related laws deal with the conditions for slaves to be freed, what slaves can be freed, and when. Children born to slaves must be slaves themselves, but those born either from a slave to a non-enslaved will automatically free the child. Additionally, slave children are allowed to stay with their mothers and fathers, the cruel separation practices of the Altalar a rare sight to see, and grow up treated well. They may not be traded or sold until the age of twenty, which is the age the Songaskians consider to begin adulthood. There is also one core tenant of Songaskian slave law that runs throughout all of these other rules: No Songaskian may enslave another. To do so is the epitome of darkness, however, the practice can be sanctified by the priesthood of Shambala if the Songaskian is of an enemy state. There is only one such state though that this routinely applies to: Hadravia. Fortunately, no such slaves have been taken by the Masaya in several years as the two nations are finally at peace.


===Law===
Given all of this, one might expect that in the order of their society, Songaskians are raised above all other Races. Oddly, this is not true as, instead of possessing the layered system of status within their society, the Masaya has only two: enslaved and free. Enslaved individuals do generally have less legal rights than the free, but can still equally defend themselves from charges, though oftentimes a representative is selected by their owner to represent them in the matter. As for the free citizens of society, while all other Races are essentially equal, the Songaskians possess an internal hierarchy that, while not codified into law, is so entrenched into their society that it might as well be. This hierarchy is focused around the different Heritage Lines created by the four types of Dragon that supposedly existed in ancient times. Any who lack connection to these Lines is essentially viewed as disposable and unworthy to the wider Songaskian population, who openly celebrate their own Lines through iconography, spirited discussion and actions in the vein of their Dragon ancestor. The “disposable” people who lack connections to the four lines are not very populous, but they are always at the bottom of Songaskian society, engaged in the most menial tasks possible. Some are Songaskians from other regions, not enslaved but held for ransoms that never came, or who are from families who essentially “flunked out” of their respective Heritage Line due to bad work or bad actions.
Law in the Masaya is strikingly similar to Regalia in its conduction, employing a racially-favoring police state that values Songaskia above all other races within the confines of the Masaya, though certain aspects of its laws can also be recognised as hints of the old Elven Empire. This includes the capture and keeping of slaves, the majority of whom are Rubah Songaskia. The Masaya is notable in its caste system, enforcing a strict set of groups that only certain races can be part of. Although parallels can be drawn between Regalia holding Ailor above Chi’en-ji, the Masaya truly makes the concept its own, in that the five Songaskian subraces, although apparently closely related, are all separated by social standing based on the subrace they are. For example, Ashanti and Hassal Songaskia make up the Masaya’s aristocracy and first two castes, the majority of the Masaya’s slave force is made up of Rubah Songaskia, the third caste. The fourth caste are the Jenne Songaskia, who are the Masaya’s merchants and crafters, and the fifth are the Wolor, who are considered outcasts and outlaws.  


Law enforcement within the Masaya is considered incredibly strict, owing mostly to its police state roots, with the Songaskian justice system often going to great lengths to uncover any shred of evidence that may uncover the culprit of a crime. Legal disputes are always kept at a local level, though feuds between the aristocracy are rare enough that they generally aren’t dealt with, based on the aristocracy’s constant state of flux, owed largely to the meritocracy that determines a noble’s standing.
As for the rest of the laws in Masayan society, many mirror the ideas found in Regalian Law against public disorder, misconduct, and so on. Their law is also egalitarian and justice has long been applied equally whether female or male. The administrators of this law are two bodies, the local guard forces, and the priestesses of Shambala. The local guards within the limits of a city are often a mix of free and enslaved people, the enslaved individuals normally kept by guard commanders and the like and serve in a similar capacity to the [[Regalian Guard]], with overlapping patrol routes and a great number of them helping to reinforce order rapidly when crimes occur. There are a number of minor crimes, petty theft, financial crimes, and so on, that only they handle and dish out fines and appropriate times in jail. But the major crimes, like murder, rape, and others are reserved for the judgement of the priestesses. These Mages are very powerful, not just because of their Magic, but because they are said to speak for the sun. Their system is far less kind than those of the guards and functions on a very cut and dry four strike system. Before a fourth crime, physical punishment before the public is done, increasing in severity each time and based on the crime, hands or fingers can also be chopped off as a permanent physical reminder of it. From then on, jail sentences ranging from five to twenty years are instituted, though while in prison, they are expected to reform and commit time to work like agriculture out in the fields with enslaved people, thus learning a trade to help them when they get out of jail. If a fourth crime is committed, the criminal is believed to have shown that they are utterly unable to reintegrate into society and so they are incinerated in a grand public display by the sun disk towers of the local Shambala sun temple.  


==Foreign Relations==
==Foreign Relations==
The Songaskian Masaya openly displays its disdain for near-all other civilizations in Aloria, making no attempt to hide or excuse itself regarding its many recorded enslavements of entire ships worth of people, simply for trespassing in their waters. However, the Masaya does make exceptions for some, namely the [[Altalar]] and [[Ch’ien-ji]], granting preferential treatment to the two similarly magically-gifted races. Recent times have seen the Songaskia, Ch’ien-Ji and Altalar allying in what has been named the “Magic Covenant”, though with the Masaya descending into civil war, this alliance now seems strained.
The Songaskian Masaya was once the enemy superpower to the Regalian Empire, the two nations possessing a network of allies in and around Farah’deen through with proxy wars were fought. On the side of the Masaya, their allies of [[Saruhanna]], [[Malifant]], and [[Harron]], and against them on the side of the Regalian Empire, [[Al-Alus]], [[Hadravia]], and [[Califaera]]. Mooriye was independent of both parties, though fought for the preservation of Al-Alus and thus could also be considered a Regalian ally. But in the wake of the First and Second Songaskian Wars, the [[Bone Horror Crisis]], as well as the Songaskian Civil War, this line in the sand has been wiped away. While the Regalian Empire and the Songaskian Masaya certainly retain ties to their allies, there is little to no conflict as the Masaya’s side rebuilds itself and the Regalian Empire has turned elsewhere. The Masaya, which once would have exploited the lack of material and military equipment sent to Regalian allies, is now more concerned with repairing the damage of three devastating conflicts. As for ties elsewhere, the Songaskians have long maintained relations with the Sihai in the Far East, shipping foods and materials to the nation in return for the same. They briefly also traded magical knowledge, but the political actions of Regalia ceased this. As for the rest of Aloria, the Masaya is disliked by most for the practice of slavery (which has been demonized by the Regalian Empire to the point that few know the gentleness of it) though the final few Songaskian slaving raids occured over a decade ago. The only nation they get along with to any extent is the Altalar, a similarly magically inclined people who also keep slaves. The two trade and deal in many goods, though their exchange of slaves has drastically decreased in recent decades to instead focus largely on other trade goods.


==Military==
==Military==
One of the most notable aspects of the Songaskian Masaya is its military, namely its possession of the largest land army in Aloria. However, this massive army of slaves means that the Masaya’s navy is lacking when compared to other nation-states, and its ships see more use as glorified troop transports than actual naval combatants. In this, the Songaskian Masaya offers both a foil and a weakness to Regalia’s own military. Even still, the Masaya maintains the utmost loyalty from its soldiers, most of whom were born into a life as a slave-soldier and with no other life but combat known to them, devote themselves to the purpose of war.  
The Songaskian armed forces were once one of the most prestigious and massive fighting forces in the world. Made up of thousands of enslaved but also free warriors trained in a wide range of combat styles within the Districts of the Masaya’s homeland, they were a diverse and powerful fighting force forged in the heat of Farah’deen. They also helped maintain social order, as many guard organizations also featured off-duty or loaned military units within their ranks. Unfortunately, this army has been devastated by the Masaya’s conflicts against Regalia and themselves. The First and Second Songaskian Wars saw tens of thousands die in efforts against Regalia, as unlike that nation, the Songaskians totally lack gunpowder technology. They rely heavily on their Magic to do the more devastating works of war, but such a thing requires close quarters fighting and sometimes, that was just untenable. Then, there was the civil war that more deeply harmed the nation. Armies and their commanders had to choose sides based on multiple factors, as for the first time, it was not us versus them, but another Songaskian ruler with a legitimate claim to the throne against another. In the years since the conflict has ended, the Districts and their forces have been rebuilding, but it is likely the Masaya will never again field grand armies as they once did.


==Economy==
==Economy==
Much like its military, the official economy of the Masaya is focused on slavery; the trading of slaves is a lucrative business opportunity for most anybody in Farah’deen looking to make a good deal of money. That being said, statistically, for every one citizen of the Masaya, there are four slaves, meaning that the larger profits for slave traders come from the sale of groups of slaves, rather than individuals. However, the arguably seedier underbelly of the Masaya’s economy runs on piracy. The illegal capture of foreign goods makes up 30% of the income of gold used for jewelry and decoration in the Masaya, whilst also bringing in fresh slaves that offer a higher profit for slavers on account of usually being a different race or from a different culture.  
The Songaskian Masaya has a complex economy, with several layers due to the nations they deal with, and also due to decaying trades. Domestically, the various Districts have their own trade between each other as is to be expected. The cities found around the Baouele-Mbene Peninsula and the Desert of Khatil-assatola are of particular value, since they possess the most arable land. Many common foodstuffs are grown in this territory, as a number of valuable or luxury substances which help sustain the high standard of living for many across the nation, but also international trade to regions like the Far East. Also on a local level in the trade conducted by the Masaya with Hadrityas within their territory. Numbering somewhere around forty, these fortresses communities trade clockworks and unique goods for food and metals to help them make their machines. Caravans of Qadir on their Time of Tajul also seek out these trades themselves, and follow routes now well established by tradition to major cities, pearl or otherwise. As for international trade, foodstuffs and exotic substances to the Far East in return for the same is common, and there was also once a thriving slave trade between the Songaskians and the Altalar nations. However, the slave markets have faded with the increase in Regalia’s spread in power, and also because the population of enslaved people within the region has reached a healthy, self-sustaining level. There was also once an undercurrent of legal privateering, where crews could sell their services to the Masaya in return for access to unique goods as well as handsome pay. In the wake of all the recent conflict though, such a trade is fully dead.


==Demographics==
==Demographics==
Another notable facet of the Masaya is its nearly homogenous Songaskian population, with only a miniscule percentage of this number being approved citizens from foreign nations, or so the Masaya would advertise. Despite not being citizens of the Masaya, the slaves in Farah’deen number somewhere around four-million, being a mixture of Songaskia and Qadir, with a tiny smattering of other races.
{{Demographics Table
|group1 = Songaskians
|desc1 =
{{GDP
| percentage = 45%
| description = Songaskians make up the majority of the population of the Songaskian Masaya, as they are the people who created it and now largely still run it today. Many are in positions of power and prestige, serving as the leadership and members of high society for the nation they created. Many more are also mages and fighters, honing their bodies into finely-tuned physical weapons of martial skill and mystical power. However, there are of course those lower down in society, though none are slaves.
}}
 
|group2 = Qadir
|desc2 =
{{GDP
| percentage = 20%
| description = The Qadir were once rulers of Farah’deen, numbering into the millions, but today they now take up a much smaller population amount than before while also occupying far less territory. Within the Songaskian Masaya, there are three kinds of Qadir. Two are types of free Qadir, those who are from or live within the Hadrityas that dot the desert territory claimed by the Masaya or free citizens of the Masaya living in the urban cities of the nation. The final category are the enslaved Qadir, often prisoners of war and their descendents or the descendents of the original Qadir slaves taken by the Masaya in its early years. Many pursue the creation of clockwork machines, but many more help to maintain such devices within the major cities of the Songaskian Masaya. Using to help control sewage, water supplies or entertain the upper classes, these clockwork marvels often have Qadir engineers either working for pay or enslaved to their task.  
}}


|group3 = Half Races
|desc3 =
{{GDP
| percentage = 15%
| description = The Songaskian Masaya is perhaps the only major nation of Aloria next to the Regalian Empire that can claim to possess, or to actually own, a vast population of many different [[Half Races]]. As the Songaskians possessed and still possess a diverse slave population, it is little wonder that Half Races should emerge between slaves but also slaves and free people. There is also the fact that Songaskians are extremely open and accepting of the addition of other Races with their unique features and blood to their own population. As a result, a sizable portion of the Half Race individuals within the Masaya are half Qadir/Songaskian but there are all types within the borders of the state. Most are involved in tasks suiting their unique blended backgrounds, such as [[Half Orcs]] being in the military or combat pits or [[Half-Qadir]] assisting their Qadir parent in clockwork creation.
}}
|group4 = Other Races
|desc4 =
{{GDP
| percentage = 20%
| description = The Songaskian Masaya possesses a diverse and varied population of other Races within their territory, many being slaves or the ancestors of slaves brought to the region a century ago. Many are [[Allar]] and Ailor, as regions populous in both those Races are fairly close to Farah’deen, but truly a melange of Races is present beyond this, from [[Avanthar]] to [[Orcs]] to even some [[Url]]. Some of these are also free people, either former slaves or the children of former slaves now free, or traders and emissaries from foreign nations. This population in particular tends to be concentrated to the the pearl cities found on the western coastline of the nation.
}}
}}
===Religion===
===Religion===
The state religion of the Songaskian Masaya is, undoubtedly, the [[Shambala]] faith. A religion based on worship of the sun as a sentient, all-holy, omnipotent being, Shambala faith is so ingrained into the Masaya’s society that the buildings in its cities are often adorned with polished golden disks at their tops to focus sunlight. These are especially well-taken care of at Shambala temples, where each tower is topped with one such disk, capable of burning through organic materials and melting light metals if all are focused on one object. This marvel of engineering is one of many shows of Songaskian dedication to their faith; Shambala zeal so powerful that other faiths barely exist in Farah’deen, born out of a refusal to believe that Shambala faith is wrong.  
The Songaskian Masaya is entirely devoted to the faith of Shambala. No other faith, aside from the life philosophies of the Esrah Alwattah practiced by the Qadir, is even allowed in their land. They view foreign faiths as impure and false constructs, especially Unionism. However, there has been a change in recent years. For starters, a Unionist chapel was added to the Palace of the Massya as a sign of respect for Regalian emissaries in his court in 300 AC. Additionally, the current Massya Musamansa Koné spent two years among the Regalian Empire, and though he remained loyal to his faith, he has come to believe his people should perhaps lessen their hatred for outside faiths. After all, they accept so many Races, should the faiths of those Races not also perhaps play a role in the Masaya? As it stands though, his only action has been to rechristen and even slightly expand the Unionist chapel within the Palace.


==Symbols==
==Symbols==
The chosen symbol of the Masaya is a relatively simple one, though recognised as a sign of slavery and disgusting luxury throughout Aloria. A yellow, rayless sun on a red field. The Masaya’s flag is found all throughout its holdings, from government buildings to the lands of others occupied by their own forces. Recently, the flag was flown throughout Regalia during the Masaya’s occupation.
The chosen symbol of the Masaya is a relatively simple one, though recognized as a sign of slavery, the Songaskians, and Farah’deen throughout Aloria. That symbol is a yellow or golden rayless sun on a red field. The Masaya’s flag is found all throughout its holdings, but it sometimes also has a solid black ring around the sun to represent the Black Desert Dragons who are both the children of the sun, the parents to the Songaskians, and thus are the intermediaries between herself and the mortal world.  


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*One bedtime story of the Masaya details desert demons known as [[Sadiers]], who offer three wishes to those who find them. It is said that any who are unfortunate enough to have all three wishes fulfilled may suffer great misfortune.  
*Some suspect that Massya Ayoube Koné was actually murdered by his second wife, Esfihani Kinya Bireh, who was made the Pashawa (military governor) of Regalia during the First Songaskian War. The rumor goes that she was so angry with the peace treaty, she felt her husband had betrayed the nation, and so unleashed a Hagaan into the royal caravan to kill her husband. The rumor ignores the fact that she was back in the capital at the time.
*Although the Masaya’s luxury and lavish lifestyles are some of its most well-known aspects, actual representations of these are few and far between, and not for lack of trying by the Songaskia. Massive expanses of desert separate most cities, meaning that much of their publicized wealth and power is chained to its holders, who themselves rarely move around.  
*The Songaskian navy, once a proud fleet of merchant, slaving and piracy vessels, has been reduced to a shell of its former self. Where there were once five Admirals, there is now only one, and out of a fleet of hundreds, perhaps only a few dozen ships remain.
*Many massive propaganda campaigns have been carried out around Aloria by the Masaya, in some attempt to make it known that Qadir and Songaskia are unrelated. Unfortunately, this information is often ignored or unknown, and the concept of a relation between the Qadir and Songaskia still continues to trouble the Masaya.  
*The microstate formed by the Usurper Kusamanu Koné, Karruman, is essentially a border outpost of the Songaskian Masaya. It covers a swath of eastern territory barely explored by outsiders, and like the Masaya itself, has been fairly quiet.
{{Geography}}
{{Geography}}
{{Accreditation
{{Accreditation
|Writers = Scribbe, MonMarty
|Writers = HydraLana
|Processors = HydraLana, Doc_Cantankerous, Shayin, PonyoWantHam
|Processors = Athelois
}}
}}
[[category:Geography]] [[category:Major Nations and States]] [[category:Nations and States]]

Revision as of 00:40, 29 September 2019

Songaskian Masaya
Noimg.png
Nations and States
Full Name Songaskian Masaya
Pronunciation Song-gah-ski-an Mah-sai-a
Capital Korbamakora
Official Languages Sofaal
Regional Languages Common, Sofaal, Faraddi
Sovereign State Yes.
Government Monarchy
Current Ruler Massya Musamansa Koné
Population 3,250,000

The Songaskian Masaya was once a world superpower engaged in slaving operations across Aloria, in covert battles of espionage against the Regalian Empire, with one of the greatest armies in the entire world. Sadly, such things are of the past in the present day. Following devastating wars and conflicts that have embroiled much of Farah’deen, their military is bled dry, and their current leader seeks to rebuild himself and those nearby nations who were allied with his people. To do this, he has turned inward and, where there was once much news, talk, and discussion, the Songaskian Masaya is now rarely mentioned in conversation. Yet it still has a unique tradition and history perhaps unparalleled in Aloria.

Etymology

The Songaskian Masaya is a simple term, as when translated from Sofaal, it means “Kingdom/Empire of the Songaski.” That is exactly what the nation is, an empire home to the vast majority of the Songaskian population of Aloria.

History

The Songaskian Masaya can trace its founding to 129 AC when the first remains of the Sariyd Empire were conquered by the Songaskia. Emerging from the Great Storm, the Songaskia were taught and trained by the remaining Black Desert Dragons for the act of ruling Farah’deen and removing the insolent Qadir, who had dared to try and kill off the Black Desert Dragons, from their position of power. When the conquest came, it was swift, as settlement after settlement of Qadir fell to these children of Dragons, the Qadir weakened by such a fundamental devastation of the landscape and often, their city infrastructure. Soon though, the Songaskians required a leader, and the eldest male child of all the Songaskia is said to have been chosen by the Dragons and the sun to fulfill this role. Oumar Koné rose into the position gloriously and so completed the main conquest by the end of 140 AC. By this time, there were only two Black Desert Dragons left, the rest having slowly passed on as all their remaining weakened power ebbed from their bodies. These final two retreated into seclusion, and likely passed away sometime shortly afterward, which then saw the faith of Shambala emerge in wake to the final and ultimate disappearance of the Black Desert Dragon from Aloria. But Oumar Koné did not wallow in mourning for long, instead soon exploding out into beginning a number of grand projects. The first was a thrust south, in a bid to take control of the Almina Peninsula where a large number of Qadir were known to be gathering. The second was to begin constructing a Songaskian capital at the core of the former Sariyd territory they now controlled. The final action was perhaps the most minor, which was to send forces to scout the north and establish a local presence there. This last act was also one of his most unknown, as he gave the mission personally to several Songaskian families he trusted. Why he kept it a secret from the wider population of his court is likely because he feared Qadir spying and any attempts by that Race to undermine Songaskian expansion.

By 170 AC, when he passed away, the Masaya was secure in its position. Its nobility, personally invested by Oumar Koné into their positions of power, helped run the military while effective local bureaucracy aided by priests of the Shambala faith helped administer the realm. The ruler who followed him was also fairly effective, that being his son, who was crowned Oumar Koné II. He reigned far shorter than his father, at a mere twenty-one years, and his reign also saw the first major losses suffered by the Masaya. The push into the Almina Peninsula started by his father stalled as the Qadir in the region fully devoted themselves to their new focus on machines, crafting weapons of war that could go toe to toe with Songaskian military power and their Magic. At home, he was an earnest administrator and a generous ruler, and it was under him that the final stones were laid on Korbamakora, “The Golden Pearl City.” It was also in this era that the Qadir within the Masaya finally began to experience greater freedoms, and when the cruel, near chattle-slavery of before was phased out in favor of a more gentle servant-style life. All of this adds to him being remembered fondly by the citizens of the Masaya, though also as a somewhat tragic figure, particularly due to his death. Said death was on the field of battle in 191 AC against the newly emerging Khaneh Qadir Culture and their zealous state of Mooriye, who put a halt to the Masayan dreams of a fully unified Farah’deen. The young man who followed after him was his first son, Youssouf Koné, but much like Henri II of the Regalian Empire several decades earlier, the man was entirely unsuited to rule. He was solely interested in hedonistic pleasures and had a lust for both sexes said to be insatiable. The Six-Month Massya as he is known today was deposed within that time in favor of his younger, pious, and very adventurous brother Djibril Koné, who promptly exiled his brother to the north where he was never seen again.

Djibril Koné began his rule with a promise: to spread the word of the sun across wider Aloria. In his reign, the first exploration ships of the Songaskian Masaya were sent out and, using Qadir maps and knowledge, made connections with wider Aloria. On land, he sent preachers into the Almina Peninsula (very unsuccessfully) and up into northern Farah’deen, to investigate reports of other Songaskian-led states. The bad news crashed down on him all at once: first, they were not the only great power in Aloria, as the powerful and rapidly growing Regalian Empire possessed vast territory on foreign shores; next, word reached him of the Hadrav’yan corruption of Shambala into a Unionist sect; finally, the Regalian Empire had harshly rejected his words of peace and the place of all under the sun in favor of their Imperial Spirit. But there was also good news. The two other nations in the north were very eager to re-establish ties with the south, and so the plans were laid to ally them with the Masaya in return to their destruction of the abomination that was Hadravia. Then, there was the discovery of the wider slave trade, specifically thanks to the Altalar. A whole new world of Races opened up to the Songaskia, and they sought to obtain as many as possible. Within three years, the vessels of the Songaskian navy were now all state-sponsored slaving vessels and while most were merely transport vessels, for slaves acquired from the markets of southern Daen within Altalar lands, others were raiding vessels to steal people from the coasts. Thus began the Masaya’s dealings with the outside world in a big way, and Djibril Koné oversaw many personally. He died in a freak naval accident while touring new slaving vessels in 239 AC.

His successor was his son, Djibirl Koné II, who was perhaps one of the few Masaya who had to do almost nothing for much of his life. Slaving operations were effective and profitable, especially after the Regalian Pessimism began the decay of the Regalian Empire, while his nobles were all competent field generals and effective in the conflicts they engaged in. But it seems that Djibirl Koné II had one weakness: infertility. That and his lacking physique made producing an heir very difficult for him, and it is said his heart gave out while under the care of “professional women” seeking to reverse this affliction in 270 AC. The title of Massya was suddenly contested, for the first time ever, as several women of the noble family and their male allies made grasps at the crown for their own branch of the family. But it was ultimately Ayoube Koné, his cousin, stepped into the role thanks to a cabal of priests, priestesses and slaving-focused nobles who united with his mother to put him into the role. This also uplifted his younger brother, a stern militaristic youth, who would grow into a strong and experienced general. Under his leadership, the Masaya faced its first major problems as the Regalian Empire much more decisively became an opponent on the world stage. Spy games between the powers occurred and, when the Regalian Empire came roaring out of the Regalian Pessimism, which had crippled it by defeating another world power, the Essa Empire, the tension was increased. Ultimately, it all came to a head in 302 AC.

The day after the Regalian Empire destroyed the physical form of the Archdemon at a major harvest celebration within the City of Regalia, the sun shone more brightly than ever before and the Songaskians noticed. The religious caste immediately rushed to court, urging the Massya to take action, soon shaping the event into a call from the sun for the Masaya to be daring, bold, and bright. Thus came the First Songaskian War, a costly enterprise that neither side ended up entirely winning, though the Songaskians did get vast wealth straight from the Imperial District of the Regalian Empire when they pulled out of the City of Regalia. Then, he died, killed by a Hagaan when riding his horse through the desert. This kicked off a new power struggle, as his wife, the lady Afua Okoro protected her young and installed-as-king son Musamansa Koné. Opposing her was her husband’s brother, Kusamanu Koné, in league with a large element of the military fearing that her moderate ways would reduce their power and, most importantly, decrease the chance that a new offensive could be launched against Regalia anytime soon. Additionally, they felt that the child, then only 14, should have a regent until he became of age. Thus, the capital city became a battleground, but Afua smuggled her son away with the aid of the Regalian ambassador to the Masaya court, and so he then lived within the Imperial Palace for the next two years. His uncle became the new Massya, imprisoning his sister-in-law, and engaging in efforts to try and reinforce the military. Ultimately, this helped little in the Second Songaskian War, which saw Regalia ultimately on a warpath through Farah’deen before suddenly retreating, putting Musamansa Koné in charge of the lands they had captured, and thus he fought his uncle. The Songaskian Civil War that followed was destructive, but ultimately it came to an end when Emperor Cedromar I turned the Sihai away from supporting the pact they had made with the Masaya and the Altalar states of southern Daen. With his position weakened, the uncle yielded and left the major offices of power. His nephew, though young, has been energetic in the cleanup effort of his nation. The young man is no puppet, as any with a mind will know, but his efforts thus far have been internal and so the Songaskian Masaya as a nation endures, though fairly silent on the world stage.

Government

Much like its competitor state of Regalia, the Songaskian Masaya is built around a monarchy, with one supreme ruler (the Massya) and a royal family at the top, with an aristocracy delegated to help run the state. However, the aristocrats within the Masaya are much more powerful than those of Regalia for one key reason: their military power. Military merit is highly valued with the Songaskian Masaya, even more than family reputation, as it is the aristocracy who controls the military. This leads to a strange society of leadership where leadership is always changing, as is organization. Flaws, failures, or weaknesses on the battlefield, no matter how minor, are easily exploited by political rivals or families seeking to maintain their position and disrupt any who could challenge them. For example, a high noble will always be a person of considerable military skill, but one incompetent mistake by their heir can result in their family being dropped from nobility altogether. Despite this chaotic system, the general staff of sixteen remain in control of the sixteen Districts under their control, each is focused on a major city and the surrounding area. Only one family has remained constant during the history of the Songaskian Masaya: the Koné family. Their rule has generally been strong, and thus their nation has prospered from this. As for the role of the Shambala faith in their government, its role is fascinating. As a faith, they are literally the force that holds the nation together as, while at the top of the chain, there is organizational chaos, on a local level, the priests of Shambala are a great boon to ensuring local affairs are handled effectively. As they are also bureaucrats and administrators, they normally play key roles in regional civil government. Because of this, those at the top, whoever it is, simply need to ask those below for the appropriate papers and it is often supplied very quickly and with a high level of accuracy.

List of Rulers

  • 129 AC to 170 AC - Oumar Koné I
  • 170 AC to 191 AC - Oumar Koné II
  • 191 AC to 192 AC - Youssouf Koné, the Six Month Massya
  • 192 AC to 239 AC - Djibril Koné I
  • 239 AC to 270 AC - Djibirl Koné II
  • 270 AC to 303 AC - Ayoube Koné
  • 303 AC to 303 AC - Musamansa Koné
  • 303 AC - 305 AC - Kusamanu Koné, the Usurper
  • 305 AC - present - Musamansa Koné, the Rethroned

Law

The Songaskian Masaya has a very different set of laws and structure in their judiciary than the Regalian Empire, largely thanks to their faith of Shambala but also due to their societal beliefs. The most extensive areas of this legislation is in the realm of slavery and the rights of the enslaved. It should be made very clear: Songaskian slavery practices are not nearly as cruel as Altalar and Ailor slavery practices. For starters, while people are property, branding or permanent harm to an individual’s body as punishment or as a form of indicating ownership is extremely rare. Instead, Songaskian slaves possess collars, wrist bands, plain clothing and other similar aesthetic accessories that denote their position as slaves when compared to the others around them. Additionally, while Songaskian slaves are technically property, they are also acknowledged as living beings and often live lives more aligned with those of servants. Songaskian slavery as a whole was once rather cruel, a vengeul streak running deep through their society against the Qadir who dared to harm their progenitors, but time and valued service tempered that rage. As a result, all slaves are seen as valuable to a Songaskian household and to the Songaskian cities they reside in and are treated fairly well as a result. They may not leave the city (or District should a master be particularly generous or require special services) they live in though, and runaway slaves are dealt with fairly harshly, as it is seen to be offensive that such slaves should seek to shirk the glorious kindness of the Songaskians. Finally, their slavery-related laws deal with the conditions for slaves to be freed, what slaves can be freed, and when. Children born to slaves must be slaves themselves, but those born either from a slave to a non-enslaved will automatically free the child. Additionally, slave children are allowed to stay with their mothers and fathers, the cruel separation practices of the Altalar a rare sight to see, and grow up treated well. They may not be traded or sold until the age of twenty, which is the age the Songaskians consider to begin adulthood. There is also one core tenant of Songaskian slave law that runs throughout all of these other rules: No Songaskian may enslave another. To do so is the epitome of darkness, however, the practice can be sanctified by the priesthood of Shambala if the Songaskian is of an enemy state. There is only one such state though that this routinely applies to: Hadravia. Fortunately, no such slaves have been taken by the Masaya in several years as the two nations are finally at peace.

Given all of this, one might expect that in the order of their society, Songaskians are raised above all other Races. Oddly, this is not true as, instead of possessing the layered system of status within their society, the Masaya has only two: enslaved and free. Enslaved individuals do generally have less legal rights than the free, but can still equally defend themselves from charges, though oftentimes a representative is selected by their owner to represent them in the matter. As for the free citizens of society, while all other Races are essentially equal, the Songaskians possess an internal hierarchy that, while not codified into law, is so entrenched into their society that it might as well be. This hierarchy is focused around the different Heritage Lines created by the four types of Dragon that supposedly existed in ancient times. Any who lack connection to these Lines is essentially viewed as disposable and unworthy to the wider Songaskian population, who openly celebrate their own Lines through iconography, spirited discussion and actions in the vein of their Dragon ancestor. The “disposable” people who lack connections to the four lines are not very populous, but they are always at the bottom of Songaskian society, engaged in the most menial tasks possible. Some are Songaskians from other regions, not enslaved but held for ransoms that never came, or who are from families who essentially “flunked out” of their respective Heritage Line due to bad work or bad actions.

As for the rest of the laws in Masayan society, many mirror the ideas found in Regalian Law against public disorder, misconduct, and so on. Their law is also egalitarian and justice has long been applied equally whether female or male. The administrators of this law are two bodies, the local guard forces, and the priestesses of Shambala. The local guards within the limits of a city are often a mix of free and enslaved people, the enslaved individuals normally kept by guard commanders and the like and serve in a similar capacity to the Regalian Guard, with overlapping patrol routes and a great number of them helping to reinforce order rapidly when crimes occur. There are a number of minor crimes, petty theft, financial crimes, and so on, that only they handle and dish out fines and appropriate times in jail. But the major crimes, like murder, rape, and others are reserved for the judgement of the priestesses. These Mages are very powerful, not just because of their Magic, but because they are said to speak for the sun. Their system is far less kind than those of the guards and functions on a very cut and dry four strike system. Before a fourth crime, physical punishment before the public is done, increasing in severity each time and based on the crime, hands or fingers can also be chopped off as a permanent physical reminder of it. From then on, jail sentences ranging from five to twenty years are instituted, though while in prison, they are expected to reform and commit time to work like agriculture out in the fields with enslaved people, thus learning a trade to help them when they get out of jail. If a fourth crime is committed, the criminal is believed to have shown that they are utterly unable to reintegrate into society and so they are incinerated in a grand public display by the sun disk towers of the local Shambala sun temple.

Foreign Relations

The Songaskian Masaya was once the enemy superpower to the Regalian Empire, the two nations possessing a network of allies in and around Farah’deen through with proxy wars were fought. On the side of the Masaya, their allies of Saruhanna, Malifant, and Harron, and against them on the side of the Regalian Empire, Al-Alus, Hadravia, and Califaera. Mooriye was independent of both parties, though fought for the preservation of Al-Alus and thus could also be considered a Regalian ally. But in the wake of the First and Second Songaskian Wars, the Bone Horror Crisis, as well as the Songaskian Civil War, this line in the sand has been wiped away. While the Regalian Empire and the Songaskian Masaya certainly retain ties to their allies, there is little to no conflict as the Masaya’s side rebuilds itself and the Regalian Empire has turned elsewhere. The Masaya, which once would have exploited the lack of material and military equipment sent to Regalian allies, is now more concerned with repairing the damage of three devastating conflicts. As for ties elsewhere, the Songaskians have long maintained relations with the Sihai in the Far East, shipping foods and materials to the nation in return for the same. They briefly also traded magical knowledge, but the political actions of Regalia ceased this. As for the rest of Aloria, the Masaya is disliked by most for the practice of slavery (which has been demonized by the Regalian Empire to the point that few know the gentleness of it) though the final few Songaskian slaving raids occured over a decade ago. The only nation they get along with to any extent is the Altalar, a similarly magically inclined people who also keep slaves. The two trade and deal in many goods, though their exchange of slaves has drastically decreased in recent decades to instead focus largely on other trade goods.

Military

The Songaskian armed forces were once one of the most prestigious and massive fighting forces in the world. Made up of thousands of enslaved but also free warriors trained in a wide range of combat styles within the Districts of the Masaya’s homeland, they were a diverse and powerful fighting force forged in the heat of Farah’deen. They also helped maintain social order, as many guard organizations also featured off-duty or loaned military units within their ranks. Unfortunately, this army has been devastated by the Masaya’s conflicts against Regalia and themselves. The First and Second Songaskian Wars saw tens of thousands die in efforts against Regalia, as unlike that nation, the Songaskians totally lack gunpowder technology. They rely heavily on their Magic to do the more devastating works of war, but such a thing requires close quarters fighting and sometimes, that was just untenable. Then, there was the civil war that more deeply harmed the nation. Armies and their commanders had to choose sides based on multiple factors, as for the first time, it was not us versus them, but another Songaskian ruler with a legitimate claim to the throne against another. In the years since the conflict has ended, the Districts and their forces have been rebuilding, but it is likely the Masaya will never again field grand armies as they once did.

Economy

The Songaskian Masaya has a complex economy, with several layers due to the nations they deal with, and also due to decaying trades. Domestically, the various Districts have their own trade between each other as is to be expected. The cities found around the Baouele-Mbene Peninsula and the Desert of Khatil-assatola are of particular value, since they possess the most arable land. Many common foodstuffs are grown in this territory, as a number of valuable or luxury substances which help sustain the high standard of living for many across the nation, but also international trade to regions like the Far East. Also on a local level in the trade conducted by the Masaya with Hadrityas within their territory. Numbering somewhere around forty, these fortresses communities trade clockworks and unique goods for food and metals to help them make their machines. Caravans of Qadir on their Time of Tajul also seek out these trades themselves, and follow routes now well established by tradition to major cities, pearl or otherwise. As for international trade, foodstuffs and exotic substances to the Far East in return for the same is common, and there was also once a thriving slave trade between the Songaskians and the Altalar nations. However, the slave markets have faded with the increase in Regalia’s spread in power, and also because the population of enslaved people within the region has reached a healthy, self-sustaining level. There was also once an undercurrent of legal privateering, where crews could sell their services to the Masaya in return for access to unique goods as well as handsome pay. In the wake of all the recent conflict though, such a trade is fully dead.

Demographics

Religion

The Songaskian Masaya is entirely devoted to the faith of Shambala. No other faith, aside from the life philosophies of the Esrah Alwattah practiced by the Qadir, is even allowed in their land. They view foreign faiths as impure and false constructs, especially Unionism. However, there has been a change in recent years. For starters, a Unionist chapel was added to the Palace of the Massya as a sign of respect for Regalian emissaries in his court in 300 AC. Additionally, the current Massya Musamansa Koné spent two years among the Regalian Empire, and though he remained loyal to his faith, he has come to believe his people should perhaps lessen their hatred for outside faiths. After all, they accept so many Races, should the faiths of those Races not also perhaps play a role in the Masaya? As it stands though, his only action has been to rechristen and even slightly expand the Unionist chapel within the Palace.

Symbols

The chosen symbol of the Masaya is a relatively simple one, though recognized as a sign of slavery, the Songaskians, and Farah’deen throughout Aloria. That symbol is a yellow or golden rayless sun on a red field. The Masaya’s flag is found all throughout its holdings, but it sometimes also has a solid black ring around the sun to represent the Black Desert Dragons who are both the children of the sun, the parents to the Songaskians, and thus are the intermediaries between herself and the mortal world.

Trivia

  • Some suspect that Massya Ayoube Koné was actually murdered by his second wife, Esfihani Kinya Bireh, who was made the Pashawa (military governor) of Regalia during the First Songaskian War. The rumor goes that she was so angry with the peace treaty, she felt her husband had betrayed the nation, and so unleashed a Hagaan into the royal caravan to kill her husband. The rumor ignores the fact that she was back in the capital at the time.
  • The Songaskian navy, once a proud fleet of merchant, slaving and piracy vessels, has been reduced to a shell of its former self. Where there were once five Admirals, there is now only one, and out of a fleet of hundreds, perhaps only a few dozen ships remain.
  • The microstate formed by the Usurper Kusamanu Koné, Karruman, is essentially a border outpost of the Songaskian Masaya. It covers a swath of eastern territory barely explored by outsiders, and like the Masaya itself, has been fairly quiet.

Accreditation
Writers HydraLana
Processors Athelois
Last Editor HydraLana on 09/29/2019.

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