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* The Marchers begin as part of Dawn. They'RE Yeomen
* They're sick of the established order and want their own
* They get up and leave, heading west with improvised weapons and arming jacks
* they found a Kingdom
* Dawn and the Marches clash with each other; there are castles in the easternmost Marcher territory and the westernmost Dawn territory
* They're a bit like the hard left - the households disagree with each other and internal fights are common


In ancient times, there were only savages in the lands that now form the Marches. [[Dawn]] to the East was the earlier nation, and even then it was ruled by noble houses who set complex and self-serving tests to keep power in the hands of a favoured few. Decades before the foundation of Empire, the royalty of Dawn drove the orcs and others west. They carved out the new border territory of the Riding with glorious adventure. Stories told in Dawn tell of triumphant battle against the foul orcs. The Marcher folk tell of nobles leaving the western people to deal with the raids and the actual day-today defence of the new border.  
In ancient times, there were only savages in the lands that now form the Marches. [[Dawn]] to the East was the earlier nation, and even then it was ruled by noble houses who set complex and self-serving tests to keep power in the hands of a favoured few. Decades before the foundation of Empire, the royalty of Dawn drove the orcs and others west. They carved out the new border territory of the Riding with glorious adventure. Stories told in Dawn tell of triumphant battle against the foul orcs. The Marcher folk tell of nobles leaving the western people to deal with the raids and the actual day-today defence of the new border.  

Revision as of 12:54, 17 August 2012

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  • The Marchers begin as part of Dawn. They'RE Yeomen
  • They're sick of the established order and want their own
  • They get up and leave, heading west with improvised weapons and arming jacks
  • they found a Kingdom
  • Dawn and the Marches clash with each other; there are castles in the easternmost Marcher territory and the westernmost Dawn territory
  • They're a bit like the hard left - the households disagree with each other and internal fights are common

In ancient times, there were only savages in the lands that now form the Marches. Dawn to the East was the earlier nation, and even then it was ruled by noble houses who set complex and self-serving tests to keep power in the hands of a favoured few. Decades before the foundation of Empire, the royalty of Dawn drove the orcs and others west. They carved out the new border territory of the Riding with glorious adventure. Stories told in Dawn tell of triumphant battle against the foul orcs. The Marcher folk tell of nobles leaving the western people to deal with the raids and the actual day-today defence of the new border.

Either way, the Riding was royal land, kept whole by yeomen's sweat, and it was yeomen from there that moved further west and cleared Upwold as a genuinely independent territory. The Marches was born in Upwold, of Yeomen who'd left Dawn, led by the first Landskeepers.

The Marchers say their forebears rebelled against the noble houses and replaced the ridiculous system of "tests of mettle" with simple declarations of loyalty. The way the people of Dawn tell it, Marchers are the descendants of Dawnish yeomen who failed their tests and moved to the new territory in shame. Marchers say the first Landskeepers found a wilderness and made it the richest land in the world, while the Dawnish claim that the first Landskeepers were little more than upstart craftsmen who came into possession of a little stolen magic. In Dawn, troubadors sing of the villany of bringing everyone down to the same level, while any Marcher will tell you anyone can rise to greatness with work. In Dawn, they believe that the test of mettle is a fine measure of person's quality, while in the Marches they tell tales of noble houses setting impossible tests to keep their "lessers" in their place. Dawn hold personal glory paramount, Marchers would die nameless if duty to the household demanded. It'd be difficult to say the two nations are friends.

However, both nations recognise the benefits of Empire: there are greater enemies to fight.

When the first Empress came to the Marches, she had a simple story to tell. Humanity was in deadly danger. Marchers nodded at the story, and were most amused by her victory over the Earls in personal combat. Still more when she gifted them with his wedding gift to her - the Riding - as theirs-in-truth. She knew what they knew. The price of owning good land like theirs. The threat of barbarian orcs, and the absolute necessity of driving them into the sea. They could see that if her Empire came to be, and her war happened, the Marches, not Dawn, would be the ones to prosper. In a simple extension of the process of household fealty, the Warden of Upwold swore to send her a senator.

Marchers from Upwold were involved in the first campaign of the new Empire. Tom Drake of Redston, Warden of Upwold,led his household and the territory's Landskeepers to Varushka. They fought through unfamiliar forests, alongside all those who opposed Alderei the Fair and brought Varushka into the Empire. Some say it was Tom who killed the boyar-king, the Redston folk just point at the broken crown on their livery and let that speak for them.

Entry to the Empire brought some changes. Pious Marcher folk returning from pilgrimages to Highguard founded the monasteries which now dot the landscape. Friars have become an important part of most Households and few powerful Marcher households do not have one or more of these learned folk by their side. Imperial writ created the market towns, outside the control of the households. Yet the traditional beliefs that give the Marchers their strength have endured every transformation brought by the Empire.

The Marches has gained more than most from the rule of the Empire. At foundation, it was two territories and an obvious base from which to expand. Early campaigns west from the Riding added the Mourne to the Marches land. In the time of the Empire's glory, they struck north and west and reached the sea to bring Mitwold into Empire and gain themselves a coast. Bregasland fell next, granted to the Marches by the Senate. Dawn may proudly boast that it's never lost a territory, but the Marches has gained much, much, more than its older neighbour.