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<HEAD><TITLE>A diagram of Almean history</TITLE></HEAD> 

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<h1>A diagram of Almean history</h1>

Consider this a sort of preview of the Atlas, 
as well as an idea for creating your own worlds... 
it's a diagram I made, years ago, presenting 1800 years of Almean history.
The vertical axis is time; the horizontal axis represents various regions
of Erel&aacute;e.  You can follow a region downward to see who controlled it
at various points; or read across to see what the continent looked like at one particular time.

<p><img src="history.gif">

<p><img src="atlas/3480.gif" align=left> 

This map of Erel&aacute;e might help with the regions.  
The color scheme for the language families is the same, except that for some reason the Carhinnoi/Qaraumc&aacute;n
have mutated from light purple to olive green.  The map is for
ZE 3480, which corresponds to the bottom of the diagram.  

<p>If the type is too hard to read, the regions are, left to right,
the Western Plain; the Cadhinorian Plain; the Barbarian Plain;
Axunai/Xurno; Belshai; Cheiy; Skouras; the Lenani Steppe; Munkh&acirc;sh/Dhekhnam;
Sarn&aacute;e (= western Dhekhnam); the Curan&aacute;sh (= the eastern coast of Luduyn).

<p>I created the first version (and the first 6000 years) of the Atlas map by map, eventually
orchestrating a continental crisis that poised Munkh&acirc;sh to 
dominate Cadhinas, Axunai and the Lenani steppe all at once.

<p>That was fun, but the remaining 1800 years were more daunting.  Ancient times
consisted largely of individual civilizations arising in their own areas.
Now they had to interact, and the barbarians in between, now militarily dominant, 
were more important than ever.  I had no idea how to proceed, going map by map.

<p>The solution was the above diagram.  I could visualize the entire epoch at a glance,
plot the rise and fall of empires,
move peoples around, move <i>other</i> peoples around in response to that.
(E.g. notice how the Sainor move around after the rise of the Gelyet.)
The diagram also helped avoid another problem of going map by map: 
leaving some regions to stagnate.  This would be readily apparent on the diagram.

<p>The black horizontal <b>lines</b> mark the centuries; the red lines
are the dates I made maps for.  

<p>I should also mention that some <b>names</b> have changed.
Skourene names used to follow a Greek model; I decided to make them
look more Indic.  And Xurnese names have recently been completely
reformed; Cheiy is now known as <u>T</u>e&ocirc;.  
The diagram is out of date in other ways as well; 
often, better ideas occurred as I was doing the actual maps.  (The three empires of Gurdago, for instance.)









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Anon7 - 2021