[center][b][u] 100 - 200 A.E The Tribal Wars and the Great Shattering. [/u][/b][/center] The Great Migration was but a blur, an undocumented mess, known only by what is passed by mouth. By the Second Century however, Highborn among the Grogar Tribes had begun to document the new age, properly record their people's deeds and actions after the Fall of the Promethean Empire. What is obviously known is that the lands surrounding the still divided and sought after city of Gurak was split between the Great Three, who in the decades, had slowly expanded outward and maintained dominions outside the city. Lands settled by minor Grogar Tribes came to eventually form Tribal Alliances, filling in the void left by the Empire. Surprisingly for the Grogar, the years between 110 and 120 A.E. were more disturbingly "quiet" then usual. Conflict did occur, with skirmishes between tribes and liberated slave conclaves being the most common, but raids and battles of the scale during the Fall were a rare sight indeed. The tribes used this Quiet as an opportunity to build their strength. Coastal tribes making use of the endless resources at their disposable, cutting through the jungles to build up large coastal forts and sea-faring vessels. Inland Tribes continued to fortify themselves as they prepared, ironically, making use of prisoners as slave labor. From small barely defensible camps, to fortress towns fit to fend off opposing tribes. The Decade of Silence was soon to end as the tribes grew in numbers, ready to wage a war unlike they've seen before, and so the Tribal Wars begun. From 121 A.E. to 170 A.E. The Grogar had fought in brutal slog of a war. The jungles of the West stained with the blood of millions as the tribes fought in hat seemed to be an neverending war. The bloody conflict would prove too much for the Great Three as they lost hold over Gurak as they lost more and more territory and wore one another down in the city. The Highborn Memory Keepers saw fit to declare the conflict completely over by 171 A.E. The end of the Tribal Wars also saw the end of the Great Three and the Tribal Alliances as they were. Although there was little difference admittedly, but there was indeed some. Most tribes, big and small, had either by dispersed or were completely destroyed. The Inland Grogar, for a good part of the Second and Third Centuries, were aimless Warbands slaughtering each other for even greater petty excuses. Few of the small inland tribes remained, but were too weak to assert themselves as dominant powers. And like the warbands, wore themselves down fighting among themselves or foolishly attacking the the slave conclaves, weakening themselves even further. In the last decades of the Second Century, the city became even more violent. The fighting becoming more aimless then the warands themselves, more of a all-out melee, not one Grogar fighting for a single tribe, rather fighting for themselves. The real power for the moment lied to the south. Few the isolated coastal tribes remained, however, like their northern brethren, they were in no position to conquer the aimless horde. Their eyes gazing upon the waters and the bounties that await beyond. [center][h2][u]Major Events of Gurak- 2nd Century[/u][/h2][/center] [b]Cultural:[/b] None were made at this time. [b]Technological:[/b] Coastal tribes have begun construction sea-faring ships. [b]Military:[/b] None were made at this time. [b]Government Changes:[/b] Current Grogar Tribes dissolved. West descends into Anarchy. [b]Territorial Expansion:[/b] None were made at this time.