Talk:Konig des Menschen Chapter V (Map Game)/@comment-26044830-20190913080156

ik no start yet but anticipation

Gwarri Chiefdom

 * Government: Tribal confederation
 * Grand Elder: (Unknown, lost to history even to oral tradition)
 * Elder Council: Roughly 20 to 30, fluctuates often
 * Military: The military of the Gwarri Chiefdom largely comprised of no more than few dozen warriors within the chiefdom that use bow and arrow to hunt animals for the chiefdom, along with spears to hunt them too.
 * 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 unlikely).
 * Demographics: An estimated population of 1 000 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.
 * Events:
 * The Beginning: For thousands of years, the Aboriginals have passed down and formed stories that were later called as Dreamtime. Myths around native Australian fauna and flora have intermingled with the culture of those who lived in Australia. For millennia, there was only prehistoric art on the caves and that they have been able to learn about their own environments, learning how to keep the environment healthy while coexisting with native animals. It wasn't until the start of the 11th century that the first cohesive, organised society that is far more advanced than all other Aboriginal cultures or tribes would be formed. Located just south of Darwin (of OTL Australia), the Gwarri have began to think outside of the box. Elders (those who lived old enough to become well respected and have the knowledge of their own culture and society) have formed the very first organised council and appointed its first grand elder (or chieftain). It marks the new chapter of Aboriginal society, but they would soon crumble to dust eventually when the European settlers step foot on Australia later on.