Talk:Konig des Menschen Chapter V (Map Game)/@comment-26044830-20190927222003

Gwarri Chiefdom

 * Government: Tribal confederation
 * Grand Elder: (Unknown, lost to history even to oral tradition)
 * Elder Council: Roughly 25 to 40, fluctuates often
 * Military: Since the 1010s, the military or a voluntary standing army (technically) has increased to approximately 120 warriors that have a some form of 'code of law', but instead of a code of law that is written, it was spoken through oral tradition, which is passed down among warriors' own chosen sons and descendants. However, much of the army uses only bow and arrow, stone axes (basically makeshift axes made out of rock, the most advanced melee weapon that will ever come) and spears, since they are largely undeveloped and are unlikely to advance in technology in some way.
 * Economy: Economy is largely primitive and largely comprised of hunter-gathering stuff, but for the first time, a rudimentary use of bartering has become a thing. There is no agricultural activity though unfortunately, since there are no crops that are viable to keep a stable amount of food in the chiefdom (unless there is a miracle that Asians make contact with the Aboriginals, then it is highly likely that the Aboriginals would advance)
 * Demographics: An estimated population of 2 300 live in the chiefdom so far, while the rest of Australia is thought to be roughly around 400 000 at the time. Population is largely estimated by modern historians because there is no written script that could produce proper demographics. Culture is obviously Aboriginal and they speak the language of the Gwarri. Religion is largely derived from the tales of Dreamtime that is passed down by oral tradition. However, a centralised deity called the Rainbow Serpent has grown in popularity over the past twenty years or so and basically uses oral tradition to spread down the emphasis of this deity.
 * Events:
 * Peak of the Key Village and Always Will Be: Garrihu has reached around a fluctuating 120 to 190 people and caps there by the mid-11th century. The more plausible reasons that have been unravelled by historians (for meta reasons) is that even though there were some form of proper settlements in pre-colonisation Australia, it turns out that they cannot grow bigger than villages, since there is no agricultural activity and so, the hunter-gatherer society, no matter how sophisticated or organised it is, without any form of agricultural activity or advanced technology, Aboriginals would remain in stasis for the next 700 years. There is also this so-called 'ecological reason' and that they wanted to keep their places healthy by making it environmentalist (even though that concept is not on Aboriginal minds yet until the colonisers)
 * The Great Lake: The Gwarri people are curious about the so-called 'blessings' from the Great Lake and believe that the lake has 'healing' properties that is so desired that it needs to be taken (even though this myth was a false one and is propagated by oral traditions of other Aboriginal people). So the Gwarri made its plans to seize the lake from other Aboriginal peoples that the Gwarri has deem them to be 'inferior' and sent out dozens of warriors to subjugate local tribes and plan to surround the lake by the end of few cycles or so (roughly around the 1060s/70s). It is also that Mjorrany (b. 1032) was a key component to the fight, even though he is still young, his father taught him many things about envisioning on exploring other places to see and do, before becoming the Grand Elder sometime in the 1070s/80s.