Talk:Konig des Menschen Chapter VI (Map Game)/@comment-46339931-20200718124214

Passamaquoddy
 * Government: Chiefdom
 * Sakom (Head Chief): Nutewestaq (Born 1427)
 * Economy: Shells and carved beads are traded in exchange for food and services.
 * Capital: Ehecinaqoten
 * Demographics:
 * Population: ~28,300
 * Major Cities:
 * Ehencinakhiqoten: ~1,500
 * Atpechantwekomon: ~950
 * Rural Areas: ~25,850
 * Religion:
 * Native Beliefs: ~99%
 * Norse: ~1%
 * Ethnicity:
 * Passamaquoddy: ~96%
 * Mixed: ~1.5%
 * Norse: ~1.5%
 * Other Natives: ~1%
 * Wars and Conflicts:
 * None
 * Diplomacy:
 * Nahican: I propose an alliance or union between our peoples for protection and defense in case of an attack from Vinland. We are culturally and ethnically similar as well.
 * Events
 * Following a virus that temporarily passed through the region, some groups in Passamaquoddy choose to settle down and form permanent settlements. This helps the disabled, injured, and sick people receive the attention and support they need.
 * The first major settlement to grow is a town called Ehecinakhiqoten, or “Refuge where we hid under trees when it rained,” due to the dense forest . It is located near modern-day Bangor.
 * Another settlement grows up near modern-day Augusta, named Atpechantwekomon, a shortened version of Atpeche’tan’nutaptuwecik’cocamkikomon, meaning “Water rises and falls where the river is shallow so that the hunters strike the ground with their oars,” because of the shallow bay near which the huts were constructed.
 * Most Passamaquoddy people get food from fishing, hunting, and foraging, as sustainable agriculture has yet to spread this far north from the southern nations where it is used more. Some farming techniques borrowed from nearby Vinland settlements may prove helpful in the future, however.
 * As it stands now, there is no writing to go with the Passamaquoddy language, but a bright child is born to the Head Chief who would eventually come to replace the oral tradition of the nation with a permanent documentation of Passamaquoddy’s history.