Kellaborn Yearly Calendar, showing seasons, gods, and their associated holidays
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Kellaborn Yearly Calendar, showing seasons, gods, and their associated holidays
That willful man, held fast did he
To his hammer, carried on high
The ruhk did cry, beat great wings up to the sky
Stubborn a beast was he
The ruhk bore the smith to a mountain cliff
dropped hammer and he there
And said to him, “man of iron, teach me this:
How to work your hammer’s trade.”
Kanai Idol, item plundered from a noble's home in Kellabor sometime during the Sorian Wars, dated to the early 2nd Age. From the Lapri History Museum Collection.
Ancient artifacts depicting Kanai are extremely rare, for reasons unknown.
Is there any kind of worldbuilding that you've done that whenever you think of it, you can't help but smile?
this animal!!!!! it's called a bep because it goes "bep bep bep bep bep!" I love them.
they are very commonly found on alpine tundra
prancing garjen
been thinking about Kellaborn folk tales.
So, in order, we've got the legend of the moondrake, a great drake so hungry it ate the moons and stars. It was slain by a Kanai hero. Then we have the Smith and the Ruhk, which is a well-known folk song. Then we have the direrodi and the rodi, a fable about a direrodi that tries to tempt a loyal rodi into leaving its charges and joining its pack in the wild. Not sure where that goes yet, I'm thinking there are a few different endings. And finally we have the tale of a Medved' Beis that swallowed a whole village, but all the villagers just rebuilt their houses in her belly and kept living there forever. (human folk drawings of Kanai often depict them with four eyes)
2. Can Kanai or Sphinx catch human illnesses?
3. What's the common lifespan for Kanai and (Mountain) Sphinx? Does it vary in different regions?
2. Kanai can catch anything a human can catch, but unless they're very very young or very very old, their bodies will fight it off without them even noticing. Rarely, Kanai can get bacterial infections from really bad wounds, and they can also catch parasites, but it's very unusual for these things to be dangerous to them. Sphinx, on the other hand, won't catch all the same illnesses as humans (they wouldn't catch a cold or the flu) but in theory they could still catch zoonotic diseases and bacterial infections, and there are likely some viruses specific to them. They don't have any special ability to fight stuff off like Kanai do.
Why? It's because Kanai and sphinx don't come from the same place. They're... made of different stuff, so to speak.
3. So... hmm... Well, without spoiling anything, I'll say that both Kanai and sphinx are capable of living longer than humans, but the average gets dragged down a bit by high child mortality rates. Kanai are very fragile as babies, and sphinx are just........ chaotic lmao. A significant percentage of young sphinx deaths are high speed collisions with stuff.
Have humans and/or Kanai ever tried negotiation with each other, either as groups or individuals?
A fabulous question with a complicated answer!
So worldbuilding spoilers ahead (if that's a thing), but for thousands of years Kanai and humans actually got along! Though for most of that history they didn't really live together or interact closely, they were very cooperative. Kanai eating humans was basically unthinkable.
A few hundred years before the story takes place, a series of events (some war, some drought, more war, a lot of fire, the beginnings of industrialization, etc) caused a lot of devastation to Kellabor's ecosystem. For several years some Kanai tried to negotiate with the then-government (a monarchy) to stabilize things, but there were problems. Kanai have never had any kind of centralized government or representatives for themselves, outside of very localized elder groups, and so the Kingdom of Kellabor disregarded their petitions (remember that until now Kanai had been nothing but peaceful and helpful).
Pregnant Kanai that go into wintersleep without enough fat on their bodies will reabsorb their embryos. Things were so bad for a few seasons that no Kanai were born for several years, and many perished of winterfright or good old fashioned regular starvation. Kanai were staring extinction in the face.
And then a few of them had the bright idea to just, y'know... eat the humans. Those that did survived, and the idea soon spread like a plague.
Almost immediately the old Kellabor government collapsed. Most records were lost and the country regressed technologically by several hundred years. Humans fled to walled cities like Loske and hunkered down. Over the next century, humans started to learn to defend themselves, and the ecosystem healed enough that Kanai mostly returned to their normal habits and became more secretive. However, most Kanai maintain a belief that negotiating with humans is stupid, and that humans need to be managed the same way every other animal is: by eating them when they get out of hand. While humans have ventured out of their walled cities and started reestablishing themselves, they do so at huge risk.
The "modern" government, the Sutzgrad government, is only a few hundred years old, if that. The country is still rebuilding.
All that being said, yes, in some isolated areas Kanai and humans are getting along and cooperating for mutual benefit, even at the time of the story. As an example, I actually have another story idea about a family of Kanai that allow weg drovers to graze their droves in their territory, protecting them from direroden and fen cats in exchange for wool and wegskins.