Ginsukyo: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Nomadic tribes.jpg|left|thumb|Painting of Ginsukyan Nomadic pastoralism by Shirano Mokira|200x200px]]
[[File:Nomadic tribes.jpg|left|thumb|Painting of Ginsukyan Nomadic pastoralism by Shirano Mokira|200x200px]]


=== Pre-Migration ===
=== Prehistory ===
Not much is known about the land and the people that made up modern-day Ginsukyo before the [[Thasselene Migration]] which started 3,500 years ago, and most references to this period by later accounts are considered to be {{WPlink|mythical}}, especially by hiztorians from outside the country.
One of the first modern human bones along with 42,000-year-old flutes which are the oldest musical instruments ever found were found in South Ginsukyo, in the villages of eisahira and Boshio situated on the banks of the Furo River. Nomadic pastoralism developed in the Shira–Manosa steppe beginning in the Chalcolithic. Remnants of these civilizations were discovered in places such as Eientei, Yohizen, Sakamo, and moienda, which bear the earliest known traces of horses in warfare


It is generally accepted that the date where Ginsukyan prehistory ends is the start of the Migration, and there is considered to be much more archaeological and especially written evidence and recorded history after the start of the Migration.
Ginsukyo first appears in written Legend in the thaighn ''Book of Shi'', completed in 57 XY. Bokanism was introduced to Ginsukyo in the 14th century, but the development of Ginsukyan Bokanism was primarily influenced by Azyeri. Despite early resistance, Bokanism was promoted by the ruling class

The ancestors of modern Ginsukyans are the Thaigh tribes, whose original home is thought by some scholars to have been in the wooded areas.


=== Thaiqhn Gurinary ===
=== Thaiqhn Gurinary ===