Rihannsu History
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| The known history of the Rihannsu
race extneds back far beyond the two thousand years of Rihannsu planetary
culture. Our race had its infancy on a world separated from these twin
planets by hundreds of light years and even more daunting political barriers:
Vulcan.
The Vulcan of the millennia before the Rihannsu migration was a glorious place. It was a world of proud, ambitious people, challenging even for the bold and downright dangerous for the weak. Early Vulcans were an extremely emotional, violent and warlike people. The planet was divided into hundreds of small clans and city-states, each with diverse governmental structures and religions. The planet is an extremely dry world, with water and resources being rather scarce. Clans and cities fought violently to acquire these resources to insure their survival. During any given period on the planet, it was unlikely that any more than 10% of the planet was not at war, an accomplishment for a race which now prides itself on its logic above all else. Vulcan passion was beautiful and terrifying to behold, with the blood of battle running green over the deserts in the noble wars that raged throughout its history. After thousands of years of vibrant tradition, some grew tired of the ultimate test of battle, going so far as to deny the passion that sparked conflicts even as it demonstrated the mettle and honor of the Vulcan people. Under the guise of logic, a stifling peace began spreading over the planet and needless to say, decadence and liberalism soon followed. The herald of these ill changes was the philosopher Surak, still revered today on Vulcan as a near saint. Around 80 BC in Terran dating, Surak began publically praising the mental practice of logic and the philosophies of peace. As one could expect, in a turbulent world filled with constant wars and violent warriors, his philosophies were slow to spread. However, this fact changed with time, and Surak gradually gathered a small following of devoted followers. These followers were the first true Vulcans as we now know them and among these followers was one named S'Task, keen of mind and heart, and Surak's finest pupil. In the Terran year 20 BC, Vulcan received its first contact with aliens from other stars. The signals beamed in from the edge of the Vulcan system by alien vessels so shocked the Vulcans that several wars and declarations of war were put on hold until the matter could be settled one way or another. After receiving and decoding a series of mathematical codes sent by alien vessels just outside the system, Vulcan received a deluge of friendly messages promising lucrative trade and reassuring the recipients of the aliens' peaceful intent. In good faith, the Vulcan planetary government prepared to meet the aliens with a united front. Hopes were high, but they were soon proven to be wrong. Contact was made via transmissions from Vulcan, and a time and place of meeting was agreed upon. Sent in the place of Surak, who was experiencing mechanical difficulties with his transportation vehicle, S'Task served as one of the goodwill ambassadors. The Etoshan and Duthuliv pirates, interstellar scum who preyed on cultures that lacked interstellar travel, captured the envoy, killing those who resisted. The Vulcan emissaries were greeted with stun rays and blasters rather than overtures of friendship, and a large portion of the leadership of Vulcan was taken prisoner and held for ransom, S'Task among them. Vulcan retained enough of its cultural pride to refuse the extortion and wage the first total war in Vulcan's history, fought not only with their relatively primative starships but also with the Vulcan people's innate psionic abilities. Thus began the "Ahk," the greatest of all Vulcan's wars, Vulcan adepts forcing Orion pilots to attack each other or dive their ships into the sun, the Orions quickly learning that they should not have tangled with this superficially primitive species. While 'Ahkh raged through the system and the misguided Surak offered to deal peace with the aliens, S'Task led a rebellion on his slave ship, killing hundreds of his captors and returning the captive Vulcans safely home. At great risk to his life, he then rammed the liberated vessel into the Orion mothership, killing thousands of pirates and ensuring a hero's welcome upon return to Vulcan. Narrowly escaping in a rescue pod, he was found many weeks later, drifting in space, half-starved, and clinging to life only through the force of his own sheer will and anger. One who did not greet S'Task with joy was his old teacher Surak, who chided him for renouncing the philosophy of peace and logic. Although S'Task loved his master, he had learned from 'Ahkh that peace is no way to deal with a hostile universe. In order to survive, his people would have to deal with other species from positions of power that equalled or exceeded their own. The split between master and student broke both their hearts, and plunged their world into an argument that lasted fifty years. It was this event that did the most to open the split between teacher and student. After his violent experience with the Orions, S'Task renounced Surak's teachings of logic and pacifism, believing that in the hostile universe waiting for them, the only way to face all comers is from a position of absolutely superior power. Worried about pushing Vulcan into an era of civil war and bloody wars, S'Task held back promoting his philosopies in opposition to Surak, putting his world before himself. Surak had long preached that "the structure of spacetime is more concerned with means than ends: beginnings must be clean to be of profit," and S'Task agreed with his old teacher. It was with this in mind that S'Task proposed an alternative solution. As this argument between strength and logic raged, Vulcan slipped deeper into the decadence of passionless peace. Those who agreed with S'Task found themselves to be a dedicated but vastly outnumbered minority, and decided that if Vulcan would not return to its previous traditions, they would depart to forge the old Vulcan anew on another world. So it was that fifty years after a war that saved Vulcan from cultural obliteration, a hero of that war led eighty thousand like-minded people away from their homeworld to prevent the noblest aspects of that culture from being destroyed from within. The followers of S'Task decided to use Vulcan's newly developed space technology and venture out into the stars to find a new place to call their own and have the chance to forge the old Vulcan anew without tearing their place of birth apart. When Rea's Helm, the first Vulcan far-travel ship, engaged its engines and set out to find its fortunes, the split between the two factions widened to a point that has not been sealed to this day. Sixteen far-travel ships eventually joined the fleet, each vessel carrying approximately five thousand colonists and patriots committed to the journey and the old ways, giving up all they owned to construct the colonization vessels. Leaving Vulcan, each one of the colonists believed that they would be able to find a suitable planet to settle before thirty to fifty years of ship time passed. Designed for a maximum trip length of one hundred years, little did the Travellers know that they would need every single year of that ship lifetime. Refusing to trust any data gathered from the Orion pirates, the Travellers used that data in a rather unusual way, avoiding all systems mentioned and all planets listed as habitable, adding considerable time to their journey for the assumed purpose of avoiding further troubles. This plan backfired, leading them through a series of barren and lifeless systems unable to support the colonists and serving to more than triple the time spent on their journey, reaching their destination right at the end of their ships' useful lifetime. Their voyage lasted more than a hundred years, and of the sixteen ships that departed orbit, only five survived to see the discovery of the Two Worlds. Seven of the ships were lost in a newly collapsed black hole near 198 Eridani, Pennon, Starcatcher, Bloodwing, Forge, Lost Road, Lance and Blacklight meeting their fates at its hands. Corona and T'Hie were deliberately crashed by hostile telepathic aliens at Iruh, while Memory and Warbird succumbed to drive malfunctions and fell into stars. Crews of the remaining ships, Rea's Helm, Gorget, Sunheart, Vengeance and Firestorm, suffered from radiation exposure and odd diseases. By the time the Two Worlds were identified as potential targets for colonization, the five vessels carried only eighteen thousand Rihannsu of the original eighty thousand. Those five remaining craft were rewarded for their patience with the discovery of a binary pair of habitable worlds orbiting the star 128 Trianguli far from their original homeworld. After some discussion, the worlds were named ch'Rihan and ch'Havran, meaning "of the Declared" and "of the Travellers," in the tongue which the Travellers devloped and aged from the Ancient Vulcan dialect to replace their Vulcan language. In this new tongue, the travellers called themselves "Rihannsu," or "the Declared." Even in the lush environs of ch'Rihan and ch'Havran, life was hard for the settlers. Disease and crop failure further decreased the Rihannsu population to a mere nine thousand, barely enough for a viable gene pool. Land was distributed by lottery, and most of the population debarked, leaving only a few small "Ship Clans" who were reluctant to abandon the far-travel ships completely. However, life on the two worlds was not idyllic: of the 18000 Rihannsu who settled on the two worlds, approximately 6000 died in the first ten years of their settlement. Oddly enough, these 6000 did not die of disease or starvation, but from the ravages of war. Upon settling down on ch'Rihan and ch'Havran, the Rihannsu promptly picked up where things had left off on Vulcan, warring and feuding over planetary resources, as the Rihannsu had brought the violent passion of Old Vulcan with them in their ships. The first government of the Two Worlds consisted of a Grand Council composed of representatives from each province and a High Council composed of the most senior and junior members of the lower Council. This government was blamed for the famine and resource shortages of the early years, and essentially collapsed fifty years after planetfall. The next two decades saw the rapid rise, rule, and breathtaking fall of the first and last Rihannsu queen, Vriha T'Rehu. T'Rehu was a Grand Councillor's daughter from the north continent of ch'Rihan. After she inherited her father's seat, her councillory began to prosper, becoming a seat of learning and science as well as the first nation in Rihannsu (or Vulcan) history ever to raise and maintain a standing army. However, prosperity was not enough for T'Rehu, who began annexing neighboring territories by subterfuge and force. In fear, the members of the Councils gave her the powerful Master Councillory, but even this did not appease her. T'Rehu built up an army in about
67 A.S. (After Settlement) and within ten years had more might than any
in the Two Worlds. When her power was sufficient, she brought her armies
to the Grand Council and there demanded recognition. Only S'Task stood
before her and turned and left when the Council granted her demands. Using
a famine in the Southern Continent as an example of the gross failure of
the existing government, in 78 A.S. she dissolved the Councils and pronounced
herself Vriha ("the great") T'Rehu, queen of the Two Worlds. Only S'Task
was bold enough to speak against her, and she ordered him killed.
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