Post by plaustrumimperialist on Jul 22, 2016 20:23:37 GMT -5
There are a number of historical scholars who believe in what they call now the "Bren-so Effect." There is too little recorded history and too little time since the establishment of this theory to give it validity, but it does raise concern among the people. In a nutshell, this is what it is (btw, please look into other lore I've made, so that this doesn't sound completely bonkers):
Say that there are two tribes, A and B. Tribe A lives on the coastline, eating nothing but fish (since there is no other food source at the coastline). Tribe B lives on the plains of Lower Mliza, feeding on the fertile plains, living healthy, and enjoying life. However, the coastline's fish change the size and stature of the people eating them, so the tribesmen of Tribe A begin to grow in height and strength. Tribe A, both out of a fear of the sea and out of a desire for better living, desire Tribe B's lands. Now that they have grown considerably, they would be capable of winning over Tribe B in a one-to-one fight. Thus, Tribe A overthrows Tribe B, taking ownership of the fertile plains. Tribe B then is banished to the coastline, grows tall and strong by eating the fish, and the cycle makes a full circle.
At the time of the Zjau-yl Sovereignty, the Bren-so are the tribe isolated at the coastline, while the other six tribes enjoy the fertile plains further inland. Thus, there is a concern that the Bren-so will rise up to overthrow the Zjaum as the masters of Lower Mliza. Critics of this hypothesis say that there are just too many people in the fertile lands for this to happen, or that the Bren-so have no such ambition. Nonetheless, this is a cautionary tale for the Zjau-yl Sovereignty.
Say that there are two tribes, A and B. Tribe A lives on the coastline, eating nothing but fish (since there is no other food source at the coastline). Tribe B lives on the plains of Lower Mliza, feeding on the fertile plains, living healthy, and enjoying life. However, the coastline's fish change the size and stature of the people eating them, so the tribesmen of Tribe A begin to grow in height and strength. Tribe A, both out of a fear of the sea and out of a desire for better living, desire Tribe B's lands. Now that they have grown considerably, they would be capable of winning over Tribe B in a one-to-one fight. Thus, Tribe A overthrows Tribe B, taking ownership of the fertile plains. Tribe B then is banished to the coastline, grows tall and strong by eating the fish, and the cycle makes a full circle.
At the time of the Zjau-yl Sovereignty, the Bren-so are the tribe isolated at the coastline, while the other six tribes enjoy the fertile plains further inland. Thus, there is a concern that the Bren-so will rise up to overthrow the Zjaum as the masters of Lower Mliza. Critics of this hypothesis say that there are just too many people in the fertile lands for this to happen, or that the Bren-so have no such ambition. Nonetheless, this is a cautionary tale for the Zjau-yl Sovereignty.