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== Reasons for the migration ==
 
== Reasons for the migration ==
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Exact reasons for the Dawn are unknown and some of its aspects constitute an anthropological mystery.
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Exact reasons for the Dawn are unknown and some of its aspects constitute an anthropological mystery. Specifically, migration resulted in the development of several original languages, religions and cultures which, as far as we know, have little in common with the civilization of Western Dantria.
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In addition to that, the development of several original languages, religions and cultures is not entirely expected either: these cultures ended up having little in common with one another, while the expectation is that migrants from Western Dantria would have a relatively common cultural background. For instance, [[Lolion]], which was the main religion in Dantria, seemed to be virtually unknown to the Dawn settlers. Instead, Lolion was later exported by monks through [[Gantolia]] almost 10 centuries later.
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But in addition to that, these cultures ended up having little in common with one another, while the expectation is that migrants from Western Dantria would have a relatively common cultural background. For instance, [[Lolion]], which was the main religion in Dantria, seemed to be virtually unknown to the Dawn settlers. Instead, Lolion was later exported by monks through [[Gantolia]] almost 10 centuries later.
 
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This could be explained by the supposed extreme diversity of the population of Dantria, and possibly the coexistence of many languages and religions, although it begs the question of what prompted such different peoples to embark on a dangerous and faraway journey. Hypotheses include famine, war, disease and cultural prosecution, but none of these ideas explain features of the Dawn to full satisfaction. Surviving Dantrian documents, although few, reveal nothing of importance happening at the time of the Dawn. For instance, there is a historical treatise written by an unknown author from [[Walneer]] that dates its account to the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th [[CFR]]. It talks about some of the important events of the previous decades, but none of them feature anything that would prompt a massive migration.
      
At the same time, the settlers have seemingly exported sophisticated technologies, such as road building and architecture and well developed forms of government. [[Hogloh vy Aanua|Tarnarian royal ranks]] are believed to have been based on a system from Dantria, as both Gantolia and Asdoh have independently implemented very similar systems.
 
At the same time, the settlers have seemingly exported sophisticated technologies, such as road building and architecture and well developed forms of government. [[Hogloh vy Aanua|Tarnarian royal ranks]] are believed to have been based on a system from Dantria, as both Gantolia and Asdoh have independently implemented very similar systems.
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In contrast, the migrants of the [[New Dawn]] clearly had a common cultural background, spoke a closely related set of [[Thonthal]]-like languages and articulated reasons for their migration in a number of writings.
 
In contrast, the migrants of the [[New Dawn]] clearly had a common cultural background, spoke a closely related set of [[Thonthal]]-like languages and articulated reasons for their migration in a number of writings.
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At least some of the reasons for why the mystery developed is that the [[Lydian|violent destruction of the Western Dantrian civilization]] destroyed the majority of its written history, leaving researchers with very little to work with. At the same time, it took a long time for a more organized life to be established in the east, with significant historians emerging only by the end of the first revolution. This, in turn, was centuries after the beginning of the Dawn and the focus of authors like [[Porteek]] and [[Ludoh]] was on Tarnaria and its immediate neighbors. Finally, the subsequent emergence of [[Stogen]] led to the destruction of written documents in Tarnaria, further shattering the historical record.
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Several explanations are put forward.
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The first, articulated first by [[Mlan]], states that there could have been extreme diversity of the population of Dantria, and possibly the coexistence of many languages and religions, although it begs the question of what prompted such different peoples to embark on a dangerous and faraway journey. Hypotheses include famine, war, disease and cultural prosecution, but none of these ideas explain features of the Dawn to full satisfaction. Surviving Dantrian documents, although few, reveal nothing of importance happening at the time of the Dawn. For instance, there is a historical treatise written by an unknown author from [[Walneer]] that dates its account to the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th [[CFR]]. It talks about some of the important events of the previous decades, but none of them feature anything that would prompt a massive migration.
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Mlan argues that the [[Lydian|violent destruction of the Western Dantrian civilization]] destroyed the majority of its written history, leaving researchers with very little to work with. At the same time, it took a long time for a more organized life to be established in the east, with significant historians emerging only by the end of the first revolution. This, in turn, was centuries after the beginning of the Dawn and the focus of authors like [[Porteek]] and [[Ludoh]] was on Tarnaria and its immediate neighbors. Finally, the subsequent emergence of [[Stogen]] led to the destruction of written documents in Tarnaria, further shattering the historical record.
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Another explanation was suggested by [[Thalmad]], Mlan's student who specialized in the Dawn. Thalmad refers to the earliest known trips around Ouna by Western Dantrian travelers. These roundtrips, known as [[bfaltonzee]] in [[Zamborana Zambonia]] were an activity that are mentioned in surviving Dantrian historical writings and are thought to be the primary mechanism of populating areas such as [[Teamatian]] and some areas north of Ouna long before the Dawn. Thalmad then suggests that the Dawn was itself an instance of a bfaltonzee, but one that involved masses of people, perhaps as the result of some traditional ritual, with many of the participants settling midway.
    
== Three waves of migration ==
 
== Three waves of migration ==

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