Yamasan
Yamasans were devastated by the Eye of Abendego much like the Lirgeni people from whom they descended many generations ago. However, the storm affected them far more harshly, driving them from their homelands entirely.
Primarily an agricultural people, their homelands were beyond repair, and they had no real way to recover their livelihoods or even feed themselves. Of the surviving population, most families scattered to make a living for themselves as farmhands where possible. A large portion of the diaspora now resides in Absalom, while the Matanji orcs took in and protected the second-largest portion of Yamasans, who in exchange helped to greatly improve Matanji agriculture.
Despite the setbacks and limits that came with losing their nation, the Yamasan people are full of ingenuity. They’re masters of agriculture to the extent that they can grow and farm in their small and heavily urbanized neighborhood in Absalom, using materials from the buildings in the vicinity and what soil and nutrients they could acquire. At one point in time, Yamasans were separated into a caste system, with those of a higher station unwilling to partake in agricultural duties; these days, many generations removed, Yamasans are like a family who supports each other, thriving under adversity without paying any mind to the impractical customs of old.
Primarily an agricultural people, their homelands were beyond repair, and they had no real way to recover their livelihoods or even feed themselves. Of the surviving population, most families scattered to make a living for themselves as farmhands where possible. A large portion of the diaspora now resides in Absalom, while the Matanji orcs took in and protected the second-largest portion of Yamasans, who in exchange helped to greatly improve Matanji agriculture.
Despite the setbacks and limits that came with losing their nation, the Yamasan people are full of ingenuity. They’re masters of agriculture to the extent that they can grow and farm in their small and heavily urbanized neighborhood in Absalom, using materials from the buildings in the vicinity and what soil and nutrients they could acquire. At one point in time, Yamasans were separated into a caste system, with those of a higher station unwilling to partake in agricultural duties; these days, many generations removed, Yamasans are like a family who supports each other, thriving under adversity without paying any mind to the impractical customs of old.
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