Namhuy-taiim

The Red Wall near Iidongha / Tarbarii

Red walls, many meters high, being able to tell stories about about fear and destruction if they could only communicate - this is how the Red Wall of Tarbarii presents itself. 
The Namhuy-taiim separated kingdoms and people, and it told the cultures up to which point their values were valid. Thousands of Ayganyay lost their lives at the slopes of the Mujihara mountains trying to overcome this obstacle at the borders of the old kingdoms of Tihahiee, Kiaam and Lohiiam.
Tradition tells us that all of these old states were being reigned by despot families keeping a special image of reality that ruled the lives of most inhabitants and guaranteed themselves to stay in power for a long time. Hence the people of Kiaam, Lohiaam and Tihahiee in general believed that their neigbours were not behaving as peacful as they did themselves but had to be assessed as hostile and aggressive.

Much later, namely before the Age of Revolutions, they finally realized that their real enemies were the ones who ran their own countries, and that they had been knowlingly poisoning their brains and minds for centuries.

The dream of freedom the fugitives had dreamed trying to catch at least a glimpse of what's going on beyond Namhuy-taiim almost always ended up as deadly trip. In Lohiaam those who tried to overcome the borders from the outside were classified as spies of the enemy. In Kiaam the nescience and ignorance within was what was controlled best. The ones who tried to leave the country were usually sentenced the Everlasting Condemnation, which was synonymous with the death penalty.

Nowadays the Red Wall, a building that spans a distances of 2300 kilometers, is, like many other historical ayganyan relics, a location of pilgrimage. It is now a place of peace and meditation.

Here you can find Iidongha on a map.



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