JACKAL AMONG SNAKES

Epilogue 3.1: Preface



Ultimately, though the Age of Fury had its troubles, there’s no denying that the Blackgard Union emerged from the other side of it better than they did the years before. The Great Chu had been cemented as an economic dependent, and trade agreements were made that favored the Blackgard Union. The population continued to boom under the imperial court’s stewardship as the children of the last age began families of their own. Advances in technology permitted such large families, and new, burgeoning fields rose up to offer new opportunities just as old ones died.

The Blackgard Union was highly dynamic, and its younger generation were open—even pursuant of— changes far unlike those seen before the Last Calamity. A great many traditionalist values had been rejected—the notion of staying in the same farm generation after generation, tilling the soil until one day your children pick up the plough had died. The Age of Revolutions was the great explosion that brought to attention this trend, which before had been bubbling under the surface.

Cities in particular became larger than they ever had been. Large urban centers—the most prominent of which is the city of Blackgard—came to dominate society, in stark contrast to how rural landholders once did. No longer did nobles claiming vast tracts of farmland have unilateral influence on society—rather, things were spread out among a far larger number of people, each of whom could pursue amenities that were only the privilege of nobility. Cities were the highest expression of that change.

If what Argrave said all those years ago in the Age of Reclamation is true—that he and his wife had always intended on stepping aside—then the point could easily be made that the Age of Revolutions is the crowning achievement of their government’s reign. If that was merely something he said to persuade people, then the fact stands that the people made his words manifest. This time period marked a shift where power was increasingly stripped away from the imperial court, and the Blackgard Union turned to a different manner of governance altogether.

This came to be from a myriad of factors, foremost among them being the notions of philosophy and culture sown in the last age and the rapid advance of technology supported by the crown. Productivity increased tenfold, allowing one man to do what once would take ten, or taking one hour to do what once would’ve taken ten. The Age of Revolutions is named thus because it is not merely one revolution. Rather, it encompasses the cultural, political, financial, and industrial changes of the age that buoyed not only the nation itself, but the entire world.

Age of Revolutions, 38-92 AC

The most notable fact about the Age of Revolutions is that no wars of aggression were started during its 54 years. Even in the supposedly glorious Age of Reclamation, countless warlords were put down by the might of the imperial army. This time of unprecedented peace made the army stagnate, some suggest, but nevertheless paved the way for an incredible flourishing of other aspects of the nation.

To explain the dramatic shift, it would be best to begin at the backbone of the nation. The whole of the Blackgard Union became better connected as infrastructure improved in quality. The Great Chu had canals allowing high-speed transfer, but these were laborious, expensive to maintain, and not necessarily cost-efficient. Conceptualized in the early 40s, the first railroad was laid in 51AC, bridging the major urban centers of New Relize and Blackgard. By 60AC, railroads had become so prominent one could travel from Seteth deep in the Burnt Desert to Quadreign in the heart of the north in a little less than two hours. Railcars, powered by advances in enchanting, were highly-efficient and cost-effective, and proved to be one of the backbones for a revolution in commerce.

Without war, and with the Great Chu as a solid ally, trade flourished. Veidimen displaced by the Age of Fury spearheaded trade routes. Many had lost house and home, had a seafaring tradition that still lived strong, and intimately understood the terrain of the Great Chu; their virtues were natural. Their polygamist practices had essentially died off by 40AC, and were made formally illegal in 41AC. Polygamy had technically been illegal for a long while, but the law was antiquated and difficult to enforce justly without sundering children from parents. They came to be thoroughly integrated.

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