Difference between revisions of "A Brief History of Amahara"

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The following is the historic narrative of Amahara from the prehistoric Age of Myth through thousands of years up to modern and futuristic times. Any specific game will of course disregard any history beyond the moment in history when it starts. Sengoku Amahara will disregard any history beyond the downfall of the Azuma Shogunate for example, as history can be averted or changed by the players. Games (and therefore players) in the past ''could'' affect the future, though likely not in some way that drastically affects the theme or overrides things already done ingame.
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The following is the historic narrative of Amahara from the prehistoric Age of Myth through thousands of years up to the modern and futuristic times of the Lunarian Invasion. Each game disregards "canon" history the moment it starts. Sengoku Amahara will disregard any history beyond the downfall of the Azuma Shogunate for example, so history can be averted or changed by the players. Games in the past can affect the future, though likely not in a way that drastically affects theme or contradicts things already done in-game.
  
 
=Mythic Era=
 
=Mythic Era=
Long ago, at the beginning of time, the three creator goddesses summoned life, the universe, and everything into being in a fit of yuri. During this Mythic Era, gods and celestials toyed with the world freely and divine beasts struck terror in heart of all humans. The common people hid behind fire during the night and could scarcely carry on with their lives during the day. Tiring of their small place in the workings of the world, the greatest of all humans, '''Tatehaya''', slew the monsters of the realm and upended the barbaric and self-destructive rule of the shaman kings. He gained the love of the moon princess '''Kaguya''' by accomplishing her Five Impossible Requests, and then went on to conquer the world. His final, most hubristic campaign was a war against the homeland of his wife, a war by the humans of the Earth against the celestials who dwelt on the Moon. The war saw him killed, the celestials extinguished, and the world shattered. The Great Flood washed all trace of civilisation away, leaving humanity a long age of rebuilding. In the end, the great land of '''Yamato''' was submerged beneath the seas and cut off from the rest of the world, leaving only the lands closest to Heaven - the Nine Islands of '''Amahara'''.  
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Long ago, at the beginning of time, the three creator goddesses summoned life, the universe, and everything into being in a fit of yuri. During this Mythic Era, gods and celestials toyed with the world freely and divine beasts struck terror in hearts of humans. Common people hid behind fire during the night and could scarcely carry on with their lives during the day. Tiring of this, the greatest of all humans, '''Tatehaya''', slew the monsters of the realm and upended the barbaric and self-destructive rule of the shaman kings. He gained the love of the moon princess '''Kaguya''' by accomplishing her Five Impossible Requests, and conquered the world. His final, most hubristic campaign was a war against the homeland of his wife, a war by the humans of the Earth against the celestials who dwelt on the Moon. The war saw him killed, the celestials extinguished, and the world shattered. The Great Flood washed all trace of civilisation away, leaving humanity a long age of rebuilding. In the end, the mythic continent of '''Yamato''' was submerged beneath the seas, leaving only the lands closest to Heaven - the Nine Islands of '''Amahara'''. Even into the modern era, this creation and foundation myth was believed by Amaharans to explain why their nation is superior to the rest of the world. Various places in Lotus Asia, Orchis Oceania, Anemone Polynesia and parts of the Middle Kingdom were claimed to have been the outermost parts of Yamato that escaped the Great Flood.  
  
Even into the Age of Steam, this creation and foundation myth is believed by Amaharans to explain why their nation is superior to the rest of the world. Various places in Lotus Asia such as Ryunan, Silla and parts of the Middle Kingdom are thought to have been the outermost parts of Yamato that escaped the Great Flood. The legend of Amahara's founding couple has also informed Amaharan religion and societal structure throughout history. Samurai, for example, consider Tatehaya to be the first samurai and the first shogun and thus the patron deity of the warrior class. His rule over the legendary realm of Yamato and all of the world during the Mythic Era lended precedence to the preeminent political and military position of the Shogunate despite the superior holiness of the priestesses. Unlike Kaguya however, his final fate is interpreted in different ways by various sects of Shinto or Buddhism, from having been consigned to the Netherworld for his hubris at the end of his life to being elevated as a god or buddha with dominion over heroes, wars and kings.
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The legend of Amahara's founding pair has also informed Amaharan religion and societal structure throughout history. Samurai consider Tatehaya to be the first samurai and the first shogun and thus the patron deity of the warrior class. His rule over the legendary realm of Yamato during the Mythic Era lent precedence to the preeminent political and military position of the shogun and male-dominated samurai class despite the superior holiness of the apostle and her priestesses. His final fate is interpreted in different ways by various sects of Shinto or Buddhism from having been consigned to the Netherworld for his hubris to being posthumously elevated as a god or buddha with dominion over heroes, wars and kings. The moon princess Kaguya is considered the foundational teacher, Prometheus figure or deity who brought many knowledges and building blocks of civilisation to the world. Many prehistoric inventions such as agriculture, the wheel and the Shinto religion are credited to her, along with many fantastical things subsequently "lost" such as infinite fire and the means of flight. She is thought of as the first priestess, the first doctor and even the first ninja, though the latter is only the view within the Izayoi ninja clan. Princess Kaguya is considered to be enshrined within the Apostle's person. Unlike Tatehaya, whose name is now very rare, Kaguya is a reasonably common name, being comparable in spirit to western names like Joshua or Mary.
  
The moon princess Kaguya is considered the foundational teacher or deity who brought many knowledges and building blocks of civilisation to the world. Many prehistoric inventions such as agriculture, the wheel and the Shinto religion are credited to her, along with many fantastical things subsequently "lost" such as infinite fire and the means of flight. She is thought of as the first priestess, the first doctor and even the first ninja, though the latter is only the view within the Izayoi ninja clan. Kaguya is considered to be enshrined within the Grand Shrine of Amahara (which is in fact the shrine of Kaguya), with the Apostle's person being the holy vessel. Unlike Tatehaya, whose name is now very rare on the home islands, Kaguya is a reasonably common name, being comparable in spirit to western names like Joshua or Mary.
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=Heroic Era=
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The Heroic Era of Amahara occurs after the Great Flood and begins with a "Divine Light" proclaiming '''Princess Miko''' as the descendent of Kaguyahime and appointing her the first Apostle, supposedly in 660 BC. In this era, the miko guided the people of Amahara and kept them safe by vanquishing monsters and demons, pacifying restless deluge spirits and sealing away dangerous relics and doors to strange places within the first shrines. Along the way, they suppressed the old ways of shamanism to unify the realm under correct practice: the religion of Shinto as revealed by Kaguya. Where the old beliefs held gods and demons as awesome and ineffable natural phenomena that mortals could only hope to appease, Shinto came to both honour and understand them – petitioning them for aid but also binding them with laws.  
  
=Heroic Era=
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Mikohime was followed by a succession of Apostles, a matriarchal line of holy priestesses who claim descent from Kaguya and personally enshrine her as a kami. Though rarely holding actual power herself, the Apostle remains the ultimate religious leader of the realm even in the modern era. Her authority on theological matters is final and even during the height of samurai power, her word could not be publicly opposed.
The Heroic Era of Amahara begins immediately with a "Divine Light" proclaiming '''Princess Miko''' as "the descendent of Kaguyahime" and appointing her the first Apostle, supposedly in 660 BC. In this era, the shrine maidens led the people of Amahara in quelling the remaining dangers of the world by pacifying the restless spirits left in the wake of the Great Flood, vanquishing ghosts and demons, and sealing away dangerous artifacts and doors to otherworlds. Along the way, they suppressed the wrong, old ways and superstitions of shamanism to unify the realm under correct practice: the religion of Shinto revealed by Kaguya. Where the old beliefs held gods and demons as awesome and ineffable natural phenomena that mortals could only hope to appease, Shinto came to both revere and understand them - they could be guides or protectors and could also be petitioned for aide. The two sides were to coexist and interact through rituals and ceremonies. Amahara came to be ruled in succession by the Apostles, a matriarchal line of holy priestesses who claim descent from Kaguya and to personally enshrine her as a kami. Even though actual power came to be held by the Grand Chamberlain, then the shoguns of the Shogunate Era, and then shared amongst the participants of the Serene Government with the Grand Chamberlain at its head, the Apostle has always remained the ultimate religious leader of the realm. Her authority on religious matters is final and her word could not be publicly opposed even by the Shogun.
 
  
 
=Classical Era=
 
=Classical Era=
The art of writing is thought to have been lost until its (re)introduction from the Middle Kingdom around the 4th century AD which heralded the Classical Era. A general importation of Middle Kingdom culture continued throughout the period, resulting in Aki mimicking the great capitals of the Middle Kingdom during its middle age dynasties. Along with culture came the methods and morals of civil governance and the alternative religion of Buddhism which came to be popular among the rising fighting middle class. Having grown in power steadily throughout the period, especially as the wars with the Ainyuu of Ezo escalated, and already being the clans which produced most of the shrine maidens, the warriors eventually overthrew the clerical government with the leading Watatsuki Clan establishing the Shogunate.
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The art of writing is thought to have been lost until its reintroduction from the Middle Kingdom during the early 5th century AD which heralded the literate Classical Era. The first firmly dated Amaharan written document in the historical record is from 495 AD. Gradual importation of Yu dynasty culture continued throughout the period. Although Shinto remained an illiterate religion, the civil philosophies of Confucianism and the alternative religion of Buddhism both found footholds among the intermediate fighting class. In later years, these ''samurai'' grew in importance as demon hunts and mystical crises grew less frequent and wars with rival cultures such as the '''Kitsuyu''' and '''Ainyuu''' escalated. As land ownership outside the capital reorganised to support soldiers, the theoretically middle rung warrior class eventually replaced the shrine maidens in most facets of rule.
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=Early Shogunate Era=
 +
==Watatsuki Shogunate (1033 – 1121)==
 +
A series of five shogunates ruled Amahara from 1033 to 1863, interspersed with long periods of violence. The first of these was founded by the Watatsuki dynasty from 1031 to 1033. Despite occurring in historic times, the events surrounding Amahara's transition to samurai rule are shrouded in mystery due to a program of censorship, revisionism and book burnings. Yonaga, the supposed homeland of the clan, has never been located.
 +
 
 +
The Watatsuki clan seems to have been a branch of the matriarchal apostolic line formed by the Apostle's elder brother as a high ranking samurai family – an acceptable path for noble males at the time. However, he was subsequently joined in turn by his sisters who both refused the position of Apostle after her death in mysterious circumstances. This "rebellion" caused a theological and political crisis resulting in a huge number of duels as well as a number of pitched battles involving thousands of warriors supporting either side. After two years, the Watatsuki clan split the entire dominion along class lines, resulting in major samurai clans seizing effective power with their superior military strength. In response, the line of Apostles was broken and subsequently followed a sequential selection by the Grand Shrine of Aki instead. This allowed the clerics to more closely control the throne in the face of samurai encroachment and thus retain religious and moral leadership even as warlords took over the country.
 +
 
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The Watatsuki shogunate emphasized military strength and carried on numerous campaigns into the northeast, primarily against the Kitsuyu whom they eventually exterminated and destructively assimilated. Repeated campaigns cleared land for fiefs to grant to warriors while marginalizing the clergy. The government left most of its constituent daimyo to their own devices, allowing any and all parties to freely skirmish for whatever reason so long as honour was maintained. However, the dynasty lasted less than a century before the main lineage went extinct.
 +
 
 +
==Takamachi Shogunate (1121 – 1321)==
 +
Throughout the Watatsuki period, the Takamachi clan had gained power through obtaining large holdings in the northeast. They owed their expansive holdings to good relations with the shoguns and strong participation in campaigns against the Kitsuyu. When the main lineage of the Watatsuki died out they marched south against the pretenders from the branch families. The resulting civil war lasted several years and was punctuated by much larger battles than the last dynastic transition. Armies of the warrior class reached five figures on each side in some cases.
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 +
The Takamachi were reputed for their forgiveness and political acumen, befriending many of the clans they defeated. Like the Watatsuki, they minimised their interference in the private affairs of other daimyo, acting as a first among equals. They did, however, strongly insist on peaceful relations between clans. During their reign, they reconciled the samurai and shrine maidens by affirming their spiritual and ceremonial primacy and establishing the tradition of samurai families producing shrine maidens for adoption into shrines as hostages. This eventually made shrines more open to accepting outsiders into their ranks and also reduced the importance of blood loyalty within sects. By the end of their reign, a few shrines had even begun adopting girls of low birth.
 +
 
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Another major step was the establishment of strong, official relations with the Middle Kingdom via an agreement that made the Nanri clan a tributary of the Yang dynasty (until their conquest by the Rouran). This resulted in trade with the mainland as well as an influx of technology that gave Amahara unprecedented growth and prosperity. Buddhism was also more actively imported, expanding its niche alongside Shinto. Both belief systems gained wealth, built vast fortified temples and shrines and acquired military power in their own right. While some shrines and temples tried to keep their respective faiths pure, many recognized that the two religions primarily addressed different facets of the cosmos and were able to coexist.
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=Middle Shogunate Era=
 +
==Rouran Invasions (1313 – 1321)==
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The three Rouran Invasions of Amahara occurred from 1313 through 1321. The Takamachi shogunate was then at the height of power but the lengthy peace they enforced had reduced military preparedness. Prior to the invasions, the Rouran Empire had never been defeated and had conquered half the known world. The crown jewel of their empire was the supposedly invincible Middle Kingdom, their conquest of which had shaken the foundations of civilisation itself. Despite this fearsome reputation, the Takamachi shogun elected not to negotiate and mustered all available military forces to repel the invasion.
 +
 
 +
Rouran armies fought in a vastly different way compared to traditional Amaharan warfare, where individual samurai called out a worthy opponent by name on the battlefield and engaged in a series of single combats. Though heroism retained a place on the battlefield, the Amaharan military paradigm was irrevocably changed by contact with the Rouran hordes, introducing conscripted ashigaru to make up the numbers and the use of signals and tactics in the Rouran fashion. True generalship became vital alongside courage and a sharp sword.  
  
=Shogunate Era=
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The first invasion, characterised by Rouran records as a forceful reconnaissance expedition, occurred in 1313. As the samurai clans were whittled away, both the Shinto and Buddhist sects and their religious warriors held back the seemingly unstoppable horde until typhoons blew away the Great Khan's fleet. The Rouran returned seven years later with a vastly greater force which very nearly conquered Amahara before mass death befell the invaders. A final invasion that landed and struck at the heart of the dominion in 1321 was narrowly defeated by Amaharan force of arms. Following this, Rouran power collapsed and Amahara was not threatened again.
Amahara was overthrown by warlords and the line of Apostles was broken and subsequently followed a sequential selection by the shrine maidens of the apostolic court instead. This allowed the clerics to more closely control the throne in the face of samurai encroachment and thus retain religious and moral leadership even as strongmen took over other aspects of administration. Buddhism was imported, which penetrated into a niche alongside Shinto. Both belief systems became allies of the ruling samurai class. They gained wealth, built vast fortified temples and shrines and acquired military power in their own right.  
 
  
A series of five shogunates ruled Amahara from 1033 to 1853, interspersed with long periods of fighting and civil wars. The transitions between the third and fifth shogunates proved especially violent and destructive. Amahara Shinto evolved from this militarism, leading to the conquest of Ryunan during the relatively shortlived Toyotomi Shogunate. Despite all efforts of preservation however, the last of the divine beasts retreated into the deepest of wildernesses and most gods fell silent in ever longer periods of slumber.
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==Azuma Shogunate (1322 – 1567)==
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Although ultimately victorious, the Takamachi clan suffered crippling military and economic damage. In the aftermath of the invasions, the shogun's prestige was eclipsed by the era's risen star and one of his own former subordinates, the war hero Azuma Hatsunari. In addition to his own power, Hatsunari could also count on an entire generation of "young" clans founded during the war when large numbers of ashigaru were raised to battle the invaders. Many of these armed commoners were promoted into the samurai class and the bulk of these initially owed loyalty to the Azuma. Within a year, Hatsunari forced the shogun to retire and appropriated Takamachi lands near the capital for veterans.  
  
The Yanari Shogunate became the fifth and last shogun dynasty to rule Amahara, lasting the final 199 years of the shogunate era. Amahara and the rest of the east fell behind Rose Europe during those last two centuries.
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The early years of the third shogunate were a violent time as Hatsunari, having defeated an unprecedented and apparently overwhelming outside force, felt entitled to greater power than any shogun before him. The Azuma's rivals during the war continually rose up against his authoritarian rule and he spent the rest of his lifetime crushing rebellions. Nevertheless, his clan centralised the shogunate's power and cemented its supremacy to unprecedented levels.  
==Watatsuki Shogunate==
 
==Takamachi Shogunate==
 
==Rouran Invasions==
 
The Rouran Invasions of Amahara occurred roughly two centuries ago. Amahara was ruled at the time by the Takamachi Shogunate, the second of the shogun dynasties since the overthrow of direct rule by the Apostles of Amahara. The military strength of the buddhist sects had reduced and the Grand Shrine of Amahara, while still nominally the spiritual leader over all of the domain, was at the nadir of its power. Prior to the invasions, the Rouran Empire had never been defeated and had conquered half the known world. The crown jewel of their empire was the supposedly invincible Middle Kingdom, the conquest of which shook civilisation itself to its foundations. Despite this fearsome reputation, the Takamachi shogun elected not to negotiate and mustered all available military forces to repel the invasion.
 
  
Rouran armies fought in a vastly different way compared to traditional Amaharan warfare, where individual samurai call out a worthy opponent by name and engage in single combat. Though heroism retained a place on the battlefield, the Amaharan military paradigm was irrevocably changed by contact with the Rouran hordes, introducing conscripted ashigaru to make up the numbers and the use of signals and tactics in the Rouran fashion. True generalship became vital alongside courage and a sharp sword. As the samurai clans were whittled away, both the Shinto sects centered around the Grand Shrine of Amahara and the various Buddhist sects remilitarised and played a greater role in the affairs of the domain. In the end, phenomenal storms blew away the Great Khan's fleets, mass death befell his armies, and the invasions were extinguished.
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During the Azuma shogunate, the wartime expedience of ashigaru became a permanent feature. The Ainyuu were driven to remote Ezo as Amahara consolidated and further expanded northern territories. Credit for victory over the Rouran also went to the Shinto sects who brought down divine punishment on the invaders. The spiritual supremacy of the Amaharan domain and of the Apostle herself were reconfirmed. The shrine maidens were Hatsunari's most important allies throughout the invasions and his clan maintained a tradition of being ostentatiously observant.
  
The invasions had great importance to the subsequent history of Amahara. Although ultimately victorious, the Takamachi clan suffered irreparable damage and its leadership received most of the blame for the early losses. They were replaced by the war hero Azuma Hatsunari, one of their own former subordinates, who received much of the credit for the later victories. More than just the Azuma clan advanced from the conflict; an entire generation of "young" clans consider themselves to have been founded during the war. Amahara's ruling class also became much more aware that an outside world existed beyond the peaceful trade relations and importation of Middle Kingdom culture that had taken place for centuries.
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The Rouran had also brought an acute awareness of the outside world beyond the Middle Kingdom and an awareness of outside gods which Shinto had an obligation to recognise. The religion emerged from the war with a militaristic and expansionist spirit. Over the centuries, shrine maidens would trickle overseas on trading ships, spreading Shinto, establishing shrines in distant lands and sometimes bringing back tales of foreign places. Amahara Shinto evolved from this and future periods of militarism, ultimately leading to the conquest of '''Ryunan''' during the fourth shogunate.
  
The other half of the credit for the victories went to the gods and the Shinto sects who interceded with them on behalf of the people of Amahara. The spiritual supremacy of the Amaharan domain and of the Apostle herself were confirmed. The shrine maidens of the various sects gained a greater share of temporal power throughout the realm, though the shogunate remained supreme. Along with awareness of the outside world came the awareness of outside gods as well, which Shinto had an obligation to recognise. Shinto emerged from the war with a militaristic spirit and already the spirit of expansion. Over the next two centuries, shrine maidens would trickle overseas on trading ships, establishing shrines in distant lands and sometimes bringing back tales of foreign places. The Buddhist sects also benefitted from increased prestige, wealth and power as its teachings of Zen and the esoteric arts spread, gaining particular traction amongst the samurai who sought personal enlightenment and martial supremacy.
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===Decline===
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In 1467, the twins Yoshihichi and Yoshikira were born under circumstances that later led to dispute as to who was actually the firstborn. In 1477, the shogun attempted to impartially resolve the issue by splitting the family into two equal branch lineages. This quickly backfired after his death, leaving the clan riven by an intractable rivalry and the shogunal seat vacant despite an agreement that the Azuma clan itself still held it. Within a generation, the two branches were occupying the opposite north and south keeps of Asuka Castle, famously separated by a nightingale floor. What began as brawls progressed to open street battles between warriors of each respective branch within the capital itself. In 1503, Yoshihichi of the Southern Azuma called on an outlying vassal for additional men and set off a fateful chain of escalations. General violence erupted between rival clans throughout Amahara, heralding the arrival of the Sengoku period.
  
==Azuma Shogunate==
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===Incident at Asuka Castle===
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On 16 August, 1540, the entire households of both main branches of the Azuma clan were assassinated within Asuka Castle despite the protection of the nightingale floor. A chaotic battle immediately erupted in the capital, lasting for days and leaving it in flames. This final blow effectively ended the Azuma shogunate which was held only in regency until 1567 when the shogunate became vacant until the Kagamine shogunate seized power later in the century.
  
 
==Kagamine Shogunate==
 
==Kagamine Shogunate==
==Yanari Shogunate==
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The shortlived Kagamine shogunate reunified Amahara and was responsible for the conquest of Ryunan.
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 +
Despite all efforts of preservation, the last of the divine beasts retreated into the deepest of wildernesses during this period and most gods fell silent in ever longer periods of slumber.
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 +
=Late Shogunate Era=
 +
==Yanari Shogunate (1601 – 1863)==
 +
The '''Yanari''' shogunate became the fifth and last dynasty to rule Amahara, lasting the final two and a half centuries of the shogunate era. Amahara and the rest of the east fell behind Rose Europe during this period.
 +
 
 
=Steam Era=
 
=Steam Era=
 
==Bakumatsu==
 
==Bakumatsu==
In 1853, the New Britannian Pacific Fleet swept into Kaikyo Harbor with invincible warships clad in black iron and coal smoke to demand the right to trade with the Yanari Shogunate, which had enforced a policy of isolationism for two centuries. The government's inability to respond to this threat and subsequent capitulation to the foreigners' demands led to widespread dissatisfaction and economic turmoil as specie base of the Shogunate economy collapsed. Conditions were exacerbated by a series of natural disasters which seemed to indicate that the gods themselves had also been seriously displeased. As they did long ago during the Rouran Invasions, the people of Amahara looked to the shrine maidens for answers.
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In 1853, the New Britannian Pacific Fleet swept into Kaikyo Harbour with invincible warships clad in black iron and coal smoke to demand the right to trade with the Yanari shogunate, which had enforced a policy of isolationism for over two centuries. The government's inability to respond to this threat and subsequent capitulation to the foreigners' demands led to widespread dissatisfaction and economic turmoil as specie base of the shogunate economy collapsed. Conditions were exacerbated by a series of natural disasters which seemed to indicate that the gods themselves had also been seriously displeased.  
  
The long dormant clans over which the Yanari Shogunate had lorded for two centuries suddenly smelled blood and raised their level of assertiveness through the 1850's as the central government struggled. Violence became common in the countryside as peasant uprisings grew seasonally. As an extension of their traditional roles as mediators between humanity and the spirits, the Grand Chamberlain obtained a carefully calculated holy edict from the Apostle, which thereafter triggered official statements of dissent from many of the most powerful clans across the Home Islands. A brief civil war followed, but seeing the balance of forces the remainder of the loyalists collectively negotiated peace after just a few battles. The last Yanari Shogun 'put his prerogatives at the Apostle's disposal', thus ushering in the Serene Restoration.
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The long dormant clans over which the Yanari shogunate had lorded suddenly smelled blood and raised their level of assertiveness through the 1850's as the central government struggled. Violence became common in the countryside as peasant uprisings grew seasonally. As an extension of their traditional roles as mediators between humanity and the spirits, the Grand Chamberlain obtained a carefully worded holy edict from the Apostle, which thereafter triggered official statements of dissent from many of the most powerful clans across Amahara proper and a brief civil war. However, upon seeing the balance of forces, most of the loyalist factions collectively negotiated peace after just a few battles. The last Yanari shogun "put his prerogatives at the Apostle's disposal" in 1863, thus ushering in the Serene Restoration.
  
 
==Serene Restoration==
 
==Serene Restoration==
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The Serene Restoration formally established the theocratic Dominion of Amahara and brought it into the modern world. The Shinto clergy regained dominance in national leadership after over eight hundred years of samurai rule.
 +
 +
=Sixty Years War=
 +
From 1918 to 1978, much of the industrialised world was embroiled in an on-and-off series of global industrialised conflicts that would be known as the Sixty Years War. While Rose Europe bore the brunt of misfortune early in the period, Amahara's home islands were invaded in the final years. Narrowly escaping collapse, the Dominion of Amahara eventually emerged victorious and became one of the three major members of the North Ectasian Economic Treaty, one of the sides in a new Cold War equilibrium enforced by the spin bomb, a weapon of mass destruction.
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=Modern Era=
 +
==Lunarian Invasion==
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In 2027, the Lunarians invaded Earth
  
 
[[Amahara Portal]]
 
[[Amahara Portal]]
 
[[Category:Amahara]]
 
[[Category:Amahara]]

Revision as of 01:46, 10 July 2012

The following is the historic narrative of Amahara from the prehistoric Age of Myth through thousands of years up to the modern and futuristic times of the Lunarian Invasion. Each game disregards "canon" history the moment it starts. Sengoku Amahara will disregard any history beyond the downfall of the Azuma Shogunate for example, so history can be averted or changed by the players. Games in the past can affect the future, though likely not in a way that drastically affects theme or contradicts things already done in-game.

Mythic Era

Long ago, at the beginning of time, the three creator goddesses summoned life, the universe, and everything into being in a fit of yuri. During this Mythic Era, gods and celestials toyed with the world freely and divine beasts struck terror in hearts of humans. Common people hid behind fire during the night and could scarcely carry on with their lives during the day. Tiring of this, the greatest of all humans, Tatehaya, slew the monsters of the realm and upended the barbaric and self-destructive rule of the shaman kings. He gained the love of the moon princess Kaguya by accomplishing her Five Impossible Requests, and conquered the world. His final, most hubristic campaign was a war against the homeland of his wife, a war by the humans of the Earth against the celestials who dwelt on the Moon. The war saw him killed, the celestials extinguished, and the world shattered. The Great Flood washed all trace of civilisation away, leaving humanity a long age of rebuilding. In the end, the mythic continent of Yamato was submerged beneath the seas, leaving only the lands closest to Heaven - the Nine Islands of Amahara. Even into the modern era, this creation and foundation myth was believed by Amaharans to explain why their nation is superior to the rest of the world. Various places in Lotus Asia, Orchis Oceania, Anemone Polynesia and parts of the Middle Kingdom were claimed to have been the outermost parts of Yamato that escaped the Great Flood.

The legend of Amahara's founding pair has also informed Amaharan religion and societal structure throughout history. Samurai consider Tatehaya to be the first samurai and the first shogun and thus the patron deity of the warrior class. His rule over the legendary realm of Yamato during the Mythic Era lent precedence to the preeminent political and military position of the shogun and male-dominated samurai class despite the superior holiness of the apostle and her priestesses. His final fate is interpreted in different ways by various sects of Shinto or Buddhism from having been consigned to the Netherworld for his hubris to being posthumously elevated as a god or buddha with dominion over heroes, wars and kings. The moon princess Kaguya is considered the foundational teacher, Prometheus figure or deity who brought many knowledges and building blocks of civilisation to the world. Many prehistoric inventions such as agriculture, the wheel and the Shinto religion are credited to her, along with many fantastical things subsequently "lost" such as infinite fire and the means of flight. She is thought of as the first priestess, the first doctor and even the first ninja, though the latter is only the view within the Izayoi ninja clan. Princess Kaguya is considered to be enshrined within the Apostle's person. Unlike Tatehaya, whose name is now very rare, Kaguya is a reasonably common name, being comparable in spirit to western names like Joshua or Mary.

Heroic Era

The Heroic Era of Amahara occurs after the Great Flood and begins with a "Divine Light" proclaiming Princess Miko as the descendent of Kaguyahime and appointing her the first Apostle, supposedly in 660 BC. In this era, the miko guided the people of Amahara and kept them safe by vanquishing monsters and demons, pacifying restless deluge spirits and sealing away dangerous relics and doors to strange places within the first shrines. Along the way, they suppressed the old ways of shamanism to unify the realm under correct practice: the religion of Shinto as revealed by Kaguya. Where the old beliefs held gods and demons as awesome and ineffable natural phenomena that mortals could only hope to appease, Shinto came to both honour and understand them – petitioning them for aid but also binding them with laws.

Mikohime was followed by a succession of Apostles, a matriarchal line of holy priestesses who claim descent from Kaguya and personally enshrine her as a kami. Though rarely holding actual power herself, the Apostle remains the ultimate religious leader of the realm even in the modern era. Her authority on theological matters is final and even during the height of samurai power, her word could not be publicly opposed.

Classical Era

The art of writing is thought to have been lost until its reintroduction from the Middle Kingdom during the early 5th century AD which heralded the literate Classical Era. The first firmly dated Amaharan written document in the historical record is from 495 AD. Gradual importation of Yu dynasty culture continued throughout the period. Although Shinto remained an illiterate religion, the civil philosophies of Confucianism and the alternative religion of Buddhism both found footholds among the intermediate fighting class. In later years, these samurai grew in importance as demon hunts and mystical crises grew less frequent and wars with rival cultures such as the Kitsuyu and Ainyuu escalated. As land ownership outside the capital reorganised to support soldiers, the theoretically middle rung warrior class eventually replaced the shrine maidens in most facets of rule.

Early Shogunate Era

Watatsuki Shogunate (1033 – 1121)

A series of five shogunates ruled Amahara from 1033 to 1863, interspersed with long periods of violence. The first of these was founded by the Watatsuki dynasty from 1031 to 1033. Despite occurring in historic times, the events surrounding Amahara's transition to samurai rule are shrouded in mystery due to a program of censorship, revisionism and book burnings. Yonaga, the supposed homeland of the clan, has never been located.

The Watatsuki clan seems to have been a branch of the matriarchal apostolic line formed by the Apostle's elder brother as a high ranking samurai family – an acceptable path for noble males at the time. However, he was subsequently joined in turn by his sisters who both refused the position of Apostle after her death in mysterious circumstances. This "rebellion" caused a theological and political crisis resulting in a huge number of duels as well as a number of pitched battles involving thousands of warriors supporting either side. After two years, the Watatsuki clan split the entire dominion along class lines, resulting in major samurai clans seizing effective power with their superior military strength. In response, the line of Apostles was broken and subsequently followed a sequential selection by the Grand Shrine of Aki instead. This allowed the clerics to more closely control the throne in the face of samurai encroachment and thus retain religious and moral leadership even as warlords took over the country.

The Watatsuki shogunate emphasized military strength and carried on numerous campaigns into the northeast, primarily against the Kitsuyu whom they eventually exterminated and destructively assimilated. Repeated campaigns cleared land for fiefs to grant to warriors while marginalizing the clergy. The government left most of its constituent daimyo to their own devices, allowing any and all parties to freely skirmish for whatever reason so long as honour was maintained. However, the dynasty lasted less than a century before the main lineage went extinct.

Takamachi Shogunate (1121 – 1321)

Throughout the Watatsuki period, the Takamachi clan had gained power through obtaining large holdings in the northeast. They owed their expansive holdings to good relations with the shoguns and strong participation in campaigns against the Kitsuyu. When the main lineage of the Watatsuki died out they marched south against the pretenders from the branch families. The resulting civil war lasted several years and was punctuated by much larger battles than the last dynastic transition. Armies of the warrior class reached five figures on each side in some cases.

The Takamachi were reputed for their forgiveness and political acumen, befriending many of the clans they defeated. Like the Watatsuki, they minimised their interference in the private affairs of other daimyo, acting as a first among equals. They did, however, strongly insist on peaceful relations between clans. During their reign, they reconciled the samurai and shrine maidens by affirming their spiritual and ceremonial primacy and establishing the tradition of samurai families producing shrine maidens for adoption into shrines as hostages. This eventually made shrines more open to accepting outsiders into their ranks and also reduced the importance of blood loyalty within sects. By the end of their reign, a few shrines had even begun adopting girls of low birth.

Another major step was the establishment of strong, official relations with the Middle Kingdom via an agreement that made the Nanri clan a tributary of the Yang dynasty (until their conquest by the Rouran). This resulted in trade with the mainland as well as an influx of technology that gave Amahara unprecedented growth and prosperity. Buddhism was also more actively imported, expanding its niche alongside Shinto. Both belief systems gained wealth, built vast fortified temples and shrines and acquired military power in their own right. While some shrines and temples tried to keep their respective faiths pure, many recognized that the two religions primarily addressed different facets of the cosmos and were able to coexist.

Middle Shogunate Era

Rouran Invasions (1313 – 1321)

The three Rouran Invasions of Amahara occurred from 1313 through 1321. The Takamachi shogunate was then at the height of power but the lengthy peace they enforced had reduced military preparedness. Prior to the invasions, the Rouran Empire had never been defeated and had conquered half the known world. The crown jewel of their empire was the supposedly invincible Middle Kingdom, their conquest of which had shaken the foundations of civilisation itself. Despite this fearsome reputation, the Takamachi shogun elected not to negotiate and mustered all available military forces to repel the invasion.

Rouran armies fought in a vastly different way compared to traditional Amaharan warfare, where individual samurai called out a worthy opponent by name on the battlefield and engaged in a series of single combats. Though heroism retained a place on the battlefield, the Amaharan military paradigm was irrevocably changed by contact with the Rouran hordes, introducing conscripted ashigaru to make up the numbers and the use of signals and tactics in the Rouran fashion. True generalship became vital alongside courage and a sharp sword.

The first invasion, characterised by Rouran records as a forceful reconnaissance expedition, occurred in 1313. As the samurai clans were whittled away, both the Shinto and Buddhist sects and their religious warriors held back the seemingly unstoppable horde until typhoons blew away the Great Khan's fleet. The Rouran returned seven years later with a vastly greater force which very nearly conquered Amahara before mass death befell the invaders. A final invasion that landed and struck at the heart of the dominion in 1321 was narrowly defeated by Amaharan force of arms. Following this, Rouran power collapsed and Amahara was not threatened again.

Azuma Shogunate (1322 – 1567)

Although ultimately victorious, the Takamachi clan suffered crippling military and economic damage. In the aftermath of the invasions, the shogun's prestige was eclipsed by the era's risen star and one of his own former subordinates, the war hero Azuma Hatsunari. In addition to his own power, Hatsunari could also count on an entire generation of "young" clans founded during the war when large numbers of ashigaru were raised to battle the invaders. Many of these armed commoners were promoted into the samurai class and the bulk of these initially owed loyalty to the Azuma. Within a year, Hatsunari forced the shogun to retire and appropriated Takamachi lands near the capital for veterans.

The early years of the third shogunate were a violent time as Hatsunari, having defeated an unprecedented and apparently overwhelming outside force, felt entitled to greater power than any shogun before him. The Azuma's rivals during the war continually rose up against his authoritarian rule and he spent the rest of his lifetime crushing rebellions. Nevertheless, his clan centralised the shogunate's power and cemented its supremacy to unprecedented levels.

During the Azuma shogunate, the wartime expedience of ashigaru became a permanent feature. The Ainyuu were driven to remote Ezo as Amahara consolidated and further expanded northern territories. Credit for victory over the Rouran also went to the Shinto sects who brought down divine punishment on the invaders. The spiritual supremacy of the Amaharan domain and of the Apostle herself were reconfirmed. The shrine maidens were Hatsunari's most important allies throughout the invasions and his clan maintained a tradition of being ostentatiously observant.

The Rouran had also brought an acute awareness of the outside world beyond the Middle Kingdom and an awareness of outside gods which Shinto had an obligation to recognise. The religion emerged from the war with a militaristic and expansionist spirit. Over the centuries, shrine maidens would trickle overseas on trading ships, spreading Shinto, establishing shrines in distant lands and sometimes bringing back tales of foreign places. Amahara Shinto evolved from this and future periods of militarism, ultimately leading to the conquest of Ryunan during the fourth shogunate.

Decline

In 1467, the twins Yoshihichi and Yoshikira were born under circumstances that later led to dispute as to who was actually the firstborn. In 1477, the shogun attempted to impartially resolve the issue by splitting the family into two equal branch lineages. This quickly backfired after his death, leaving the clan riven by an intractable rivalry and the shogunal seat vacant despite an agreement that the Azuma clan itself still held it. Within a generation, the two branches were occupying the opposite north and south keeps of Asuka Castle, famously separated by a nightingale floor. What began as brawls progressed to open street battles between warriors of each respective branch within the capital itself. In 1503, Yoshihichi of the Southern Azuma called on an outlying vassal for additional men and set off a fateful chain of escalations. General violence erupted between rival clans throughout Amahara, heralding the arrival of the Sengoku period.

Incident at Asuka Castle

On 16 August, 1540, the entire households of both main branches of the Azuma clan were assassinated within Asuka Castle despite the protection of the nightingale floor. A chaotic battle immediately erupted in the capital, lasting for days and leaving it in flames. This final blow effectively ended the Azuma shogunate which was held only in regency until 1567 when the shogunate became vacant until the Kagamine shogunate seized power later in the century.

Kagamine Shogunate

The shortlived Kagamine shogunate reunified Amahara and was responsible for the conquest of Ryunan.

Despite all efforts of preservation, the last of the divine beasts retreated into the deepest of wildernesses during this period and most gods fell silent in ever longer periods of slumber.

Late Shogunate Era

Yanari Shogunate (1601 – 1863)

The Yanari shogunate became the fifth and last dynasty to rule Amahara, lasting the final two and a half centuries of the shogunate era. Amahara and the rest of the east fell behind Rose Europe during this period.

Steam Era

Bakumatsu

In 1853, the New Britannian Pacific Fleet swept into Kaikyo Harbour with invincible warships clad in black iron and coal smoke to demand the right to trade with the Yanari shogunate, which had enforced a policy of isolationism for over two centuries. The government's inability to respond to this threat and subsequent capitulation to the foreigners' demands led to widespread dissatisfaction and economic turmoil as specie base of the shogunate economy collapsed. Conditions were exacerbated by a series of natural disasters which seemed to indicate that the gods themselves had also been seriously displeased.

The long dormant clans over which the Yanari shogunate had lorded suddenly smelled blood and raised their level of assertiveness through the 1850's as the central government struggled. Violence became common in the countryside as peasant uprisings grew seasonally. As an extension of their traditional roles as mediators between humanity and the spirits, the Grand Chamberlain obtained a carefully worded holy edict from the Apostle, which thereafter triggered official statements of dissent from many of the most powerful clans across Amahara proper and a brief civil war. However, upon seeing the balance of forces, most of the loyalist factions collectively negotiated peace after just a few battles. The last Yanari shogun "put his prerogatives at the Apostle's disposal" in 1863, thus ushering in the Serene Restoration.

Serene Restoration

The Serene Restoration formally established the theocratic Dominion of Amahara and brought it into the modern world. The Shinto clergy regained dominance in national leadership after over eight hundred years of samurai rule.

Sixty Years War

From 1918 to 1978, much of the industrialised world was embroiled in an on-and-off series of global industrialised conflicts that would be known as the Sixty Years War. While Rose Europe bore the brunt of misfortune early in the period, Amahara's home islands were invaded in the final years. Narrowly escaping collapse, the Dominion of Amahara eventually emerged victorious and became one of the three major members of the North Ectasian Economic Treaty, one of the sides in a new Cold War equilibrium enforced by the spin bomb, a weapon of mass destruction.

Modern Era

Lunarian Invasion

In 2027, the Lunarians invaded Earth

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