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The ancestors to the Tll-ikish are newcomers to the floodplain area, having arrived only 1500 years ago. They are semi-nomadic pastoralists. They primarily live off of sheep and goats, but also hunt animals and forage fruits and insects. Those closest to the rivers or oases have begun gardening, growing (various things to be determined). Their primary building materials are wood, and hide, which they use to make tents (some tribes have also learned to make canvas). They are of average height, have red ochre skin, slight epicanthic folds, full lips, long, non-protrusive noses, big ears, green eyes, slightly enlarged canines, stringy, frizzy black hair, high cheekbones, and difficulty growing facial hair.[[File:140928910bCsvkA_fs.jpg|thumb|The Desert]]
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The ancestors to the Tll-ikish are newcomers to the floodplain area, having arrived only 1500 years ago. They are semi-nomadic pastoralists. They primarily live off of sheep and goats, but also hunt animals and forage fruits and insects. Those closest to the rivers or oases have begun gardening, growing (various things to be determined). Their primary building materials are wood, and hide, which they use to make tents (some tribes have also learned to make canvas). They are of average height, have red ochre skin, slight epicanthic folds, big noses, big ears, green eyes, slightly enlarged canines, stringy, frizzy black hair, high cheekbones, and difficulty growing facial hair.[[File:140928910bCsvkA_fs.jpg|thumb|The Desert]]
   
   

Revision as of 21:53, 25 November 2010

The ancestors to the Tll-ikish are newcomers to the floodplain area, having arrived only 1500 years ago. They are semi-nomadic pastoralists. They primarily live off of sheep and goats, but also hunt animals and forage fruits and insects. Those closest to the rivers or oases have begun gardening, growing (various things to be determined). Their primary building materials are wood, and hide, which they use to make tents (some tribes have also learned to make canvas). They are of average height, have red ochre skin, slight epicanthic folds, big noses, big ears, green eyes, slightly enlarged canines, stringy, frizzy black hair, high cheekbones, and difficulty growing facial hair.

140928910bCsvkA fs

The Desert


The Tll-Ikish are a tribal people. They came from the north 1500 years ago to escape overcrowding, and displaced the aborigines. There are 19 tribes, some larger than others. About 9 of them have settled in the fertile river area. Here they have learned to garden leeks, peppers, garlic, and onions. later on they will harvest wheat, sorghum, and alfalfa. The tribes are led a chief, who selects two or three males from other families to be his right hand men. Leadership is hereditary, and only males can lead a tribe.

Tribal war is not uncommon among the Tll-Ikish. Usually these last for about six weeks, have a very low casualty rate, and are ended when one chief submits to the others demands (which are usually trifling). War is more about taking prisoners than killing, and is usually started over something petty, like a stolen goat or an insult to a right hand man's family.

Despite their tribal nature, the Tll-Ikish have a strong ethnic identity, and quickly ally one another to meet an external threat. For example, while they have strict inter-tribal rules on the treatment of Tll-Ikish prisoners of war, they show no qualms about sadistically abusing aboriginal ones.

Pre-civilized Tll-Ikish, wore a cotton robe, and maybe a thin hide overcoat. Chiefs and other high-ups might have colorful scarves, usually a patterned blue with maybe a few extra colors. They go barefoot, having not yet invented the sandal. At this point women's and men's dress is basically the same

At this stage they have both copper and tin, but haven't yet learned to make bronze. Most of their tools are either made out of wood or obsidian. They have no contact with any beasts of burden.

Regional plants include palm trees, fig trees, apricot trees, pear trees, cedar trees, cypress trees, sagebrush, and various orchids, as well as some rock mosses. River plants include algae (some of which is edible), lilies, wheat, sorghum, alfalfa, cattails, and one or two other reedy plants. Animals include coyotes, foxes, eagles, vultures, gerbils, wildcats, hummingbirds, woodpeckers, quails, owls, swifts, pigeons, toads, tortoises, lizards (including gila monsters), vipers, shrews, (venomous) spiders, bees, ants, grasshoppers, and a strange creature called a niqus that is to a starfish what a tortoise is to a turtle. River animals include a small population of riverfish, snails, crocodiles, antelope, hyraxes, hedgehogs, boars, and anteaters.

All Tll-Ikish shepherds carry a "ku'hih", a knobkierrie. This they use to guide their herd, to ward off threats like coyotes and wildcats, and as a last resort weapon. Many also carry a knife. In war, they are more likely to use obsidian spears and knives, atlatl javelins, and slings.

The Tll-Ikish religion is a complex subject, so I will simplify and expound upon the subject a later day. There are 5 major gods and about 16 minor ones. They were birthed by the Father Sun and the Mother Water just the same as humans, and as such should be worshiped only when they deserve it. The Tll-Ikish also believe in "Yunhhu-Ikish". This could be translated as ghosts or spirits, but those Tll-Ikish who are fluent in English almost unanimously insist on angels as the proper translation. Almost all Tll-Ikish claim to either have had a personal experience with a Yunhhu-Ikish, who they claim have their own society just like humans. They are aloof, unpredictable, ethereal beings. Coming into contact with one can be both enlightening and dangerous.

The Tll-Ikish are the new people in the desert. Further south lie the aborigines, who the Tll-Ikish call the Drs-Ikish, and who are divided into hundreds of tribes, all sharing one language family seperate from the Tll-Ikish. The Drs-Ikish are intensely xenophobic: almost every encounter between them and the Tll-Ikish has been hostile. Thus, little information about them is available at present