Difference between revisions of "SeOCC"
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+ | ==The History of SeOCC== | ||
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+ | The first known inhabitants of the area that became SeOCC were Aperins who set up small fishing villages around 500 BCE. Rougly 50 CE, western Aperin suffered a critical famine that, archeological evidence suggests, was the result of a 100 year climate shift that diverted moisture bearing winds towards the south, denying the mountainous ranges of the Aperins rain their crops depended upon. During this time, the fishing villages thrived, as their food supply was not so affected by the lack of rain, and soon the villages became moderate sized cities. | ||
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+ | The real change, though, came during hte 17th century, when Rigan settlers arrived in western Aperin; the Rigans settled, most often by force, the land west of the mountain ranges that ran north and south through northern Aperin; this resulted in either the extinction of many of these cities or their conversion from simple fishing villages into hubs for Rigan vessels bringing supplies to move inland. As the Rigan settlements began shipping goods home, these cities became trade centers, largely due to their stragetic location between the two major Rigan settlements and on the eastern edge of the Orcas Sound. |
Revision as of 04:50, 8 October 2004
none | |
Flag of SeOCC | |
Motto: Cognoscare, Facare, Amare | |
SeOCC | |
Region | Aperin |
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Capital | SeOCC |
Official Language(s) | Rigan, Aperin, Celdonian |
Leader | none |
Population | 292 Million |
Currency | Credit |
NS Sunset XML |
The History of SeOCC
The first known inhabitants of the area that became SeOCC were Aperins who set up small fishing villages around 500 BCE. Rougly 50 CE, western Aperin suffered a critical famine that, archeological evidence suggests, was the result of a 100 year climate shift that diverted moisture bearing winds towards the south, denying the mountainous ranges of the Aperins rain their crops depended upon. During this time, the fishing villages thrived, as their food supply was not so affected by the lack of rain, and soon the villages became moderate sized cities.
The real change, though, came during hte 17th century, when Rigan settlers arrived in western Aperin; the Rigans settled, most often by force, the land west of the mountain ranges that ran north and south through northern Aperin; this resulted in either the extinction of many of these cities or their conversion from simple fishing villages into hubs for Rigan vessels bringing supplies to move inland. As the Rigan settlements began shipping goods home, these cities became trade centers, largely due to their stragetic location between the two major Rigan settlements and on the eastern edge of the Orcas Sound.