Calimshan

{{Nation

|Name=The Pesarkhalid Caliphate

|Flag=

|Coat of Arms=

|Capital=Calimport

|Largest City=Calimport

|Official Languages=Alzhedo

|Government Type=Monarchy

|Leader Title=Caleph/Syl-Pasha

|Current Leader=Ralan el Pesarkhal

|Sovereignty Type=Pseudo-feudal lordship over a bureaucracy of Pashas and Sultans.

|Land Area=105,300 sq. mi ([Nations_ranked_by_land_area#Calimshan|?th])

|Population=5,900,000 (est) ([Nations_ranked_by_population#Calimshan|?th])

|Gross Domestic Product=11,480,000 gp

|Currency=Dinar (gold coin), Dirham (silver coin), Fals (copper coin)

}}

Geographic Overview

People of Calimshan

Races and Cultures

Life and Society

Economy

Law and Order

Compared to other realms where order and law are forces for good, Calimshan is a cesspool of corruption, graft, and greed. Its so-called laws support this structure. All the forces of law and order in Calimshan are organized to maintain the status quo of the syl-pasha's rule and the slave state. While not totally immoral or unfair, Calishite laws and those who enforce them are harsh and unforgiving. Similar to the state of affairs in Zhentil Keep before its fall, individuals with any influence have a virtual army of folk to defend them from each other and from their foreign and hidden enemies.

The Pasha's Laws
The laws of Calimshan are few, and most are unwritten. For more than five millennia, the syl-pasha's will (or that of a sultan or vizar) was deemed lawful enough to decide what was a crime and what was appropriate punishment for it. Despite the lack of a uniform legal code, the amount of overt crime is far smaller in Calimshan than most outsiders anticipate. Calishites maintain that this is because of the deterrent value of Calishite punishment: All penalties are harsh, and they always have been. Even the theft of a loaf of bread in the market can see personal justice legally enacted by the owner of the baked goods stand, who is entitled take anywhere from a finger to the whole hand of the person who stole from him. Typical penalties range from brandings and whippings performed in private (never publicly, to save face) to the amputation of limbs to executions by beheading.

Corporal punishments are usually carried out by the wronged party, or by an amlak upon those of the lower or middle classes, or by either a member or officer of the other armed forces upon those of the upper class. Sometimes a professional member of a guild of executioners and torturers is employed. Such people's fees must be paid by the lawbreaker or his estate.

Imprisonment only occurs if a person's death for a crime would lead to great unrest or political chaos. While there are no true jails in Calimshan, each drudach has at least four cells in the cellars beneath its amlakkhan, the guard house for the local amlakkar. Persons of greater station might be taken to a druzir's, sabbalad's, or sultan's house, where they would still be kept prisoner, though usually under better conditions. (Prisoners are not considered guests, and thus their captors are not held to the customs and responsibilities of being a host.)

For the most part, a Calishite penal code does not exist. Objective and fair laws, if they were decreed or enacted at all, have not been adequately enforced since the days of the Shoon Imperium. Many rangers and Harpers have noted that in Calimshan, as in the wilderness, the law is really quite simple: The strong prey on the weak; might makes right; and you are only safe as long as you respect your foe's territory and do not attempt to take what is claimed by a stronger opponent. Even paladins, who wish to uphold and honor all laws, recognize the laxness and subjective nature of law in Calimshan and, while they rarely flout or flagrantly disobey what laws they can discern, are not confounded when trapped by agents of the government in a frame or extortion. Still, Harpers and many others often give advice to those traveling into the pasha's domains. This advice breaks down into some straightforward instructions to avoid trouble:

There are so many groups of enforcers and strong-arm thugs throughout Calimshan that it is impossible to identify but a fraction of them. Everyone with something to protect or hide-from the lowliest member of the merchant class with a shop to protect to the highest of vizars shrouding the secrets of a thousand intrigues beneath the shine of a threatened blade-employs enforcers, whether they are related sons, hired mercenaries, or well-trained slaves. Often, only the locals or those who make a specific practice of studying their enemies can identify a particular band of well-armed legbreakers. However, nearly everyone within Calimshan has heard of the following three major groups of enforcers, though few outside of Calimport's upper-class drudachs could identify the groups on sight.

Defense and Warcraft

Religion

Adventurers

Politics and Power

History of Calimshan

Main Article: History of Calimshan

Government

Enemies

Cities and Sites

Basic Information

Basic Information

History in a Nutshell:

Who Rules

People

Language

History of Calimshan

Calimshan is older than either of the other Empires of the Sands, first settled over 7,000 years ago by the Djen, a humanoid race from the Elemental Plane of Air. These Djen were known to be very magical, and during the course of their rule they developed many new spells previously not available in the Plane of Air. The Djen prospered for over 1,000 years in Calimshan, but their reign was ended by an invasion of creatures and minions from the Plane of Fire. Some say this is where the bitter hatred between djinni and efreeti started, though others contend this was just a result of a hatred that was already there.

Whatever the cause, the battle was long and bloody, and took over 100 years to complete. The Djen finally routed the attackers, but were greatly weakened in the attempt. They slowly declined, and the last mention of the Djen is just under 6,000 years old. For the next 4,000 years Calimshan was dominated by nomadic tribes of humans. Tribes from various places - Chult, the Shaar, The Shining Plains, Chondath, even Amn and Cormyr - took turns dominating, only to be conquered by the next, nearly identical tribe. Slowly, the nomadic nature of Calimshan began to change.

As explorers and traders from Amn, Waterdeep, and Cormyr discovered the wonders of the area, some tribes began to settle down and develop new means of support, like fishing, farming, or trading. These communities began to band together for mutual protection, and soon a civilization was born. It was only 1,300 years ago that the Shoon Empire (now called Iltkazar) came into being.

The Shoons were a grand and glorious empire, and their excesses were the foundation of Calishite snobbery today. They grew wise and powerful in the ways of magic, and ships and caravans bearing the Shoon flag traveled across the Forgotten Realms.

900 years ago the Shoon empire abruptly vanished. A great magical upheaval was suspected at first, but learned mages of other lands dispute the claim. A force that great they say, would have disturbed magical powers and beings throughout the Realms, and that didn't happen. Sages who have studied Shoon at great length have reached no definite conclusions, but the most popular theories today center around a plague or disease that decimated the population. Today, the Shoon impact on Calimshan is still great. The grandeur of that empire is responsible, more than anything else, for the strong national character of Calimshan today.

Timeline

1358

Year of Shadows

The Time of Troubles

The Syl-Pasha Rashid Djennispool and his heirs are assassinated on Midwinter night of this year, the “Night of Red Tears”.

1359

Year of the Serpent

 

1360

Year of the Turret

 

1361

Year of Maidens

Discovery of Maztica

1362

Year of the Helm

 

1363

Year of the Wyvern

 

1364

Year of the Wave

Syl-Pasha Ralan el Persakhal begins construction of the Grand Wall of Calimport, the “Syl-Pasha’s Folly”.

1365

Year of the Sword

 

1366

Year of the Staff

 

1367

Year of the Shield

 

1368

Year of the Banner

 

1369

Year of the Gauntlet

The Trades Conflagration (Fire):  This blaze engulfs over 60% of Emerald Ward and 50% of Grand Ward.  Marekh Sabban is destroyed by the fires along with numerous area of the Muzad beneath it.

1370

Year of the Tankard

 

1371

Year of the Unstrung Harp

 

1372

Year of Wild Magic

 

1373

Year of Rogue Dragons

 

1374

Year of Lightning Storms

 

1375

Year of Risen Elfkin

 

1376

Year of the Bent Blade

 

1377

Year of the Haunting

 

1378

Year of the Cauldron

 

1379

Year of the Lost Keep

 

1380

Year of the Blazing Hand

 

1381

Year of the Starving

 

1382

Year of the Black Blazon

 

1383

Year of the Vindicated Warrior

 

1384

Year of Three Streams Bloodied

 

1385

Year of Blue Fire

 

     

Laws in Calimshan

Make no mistake; the Syl-Pasha’s word in Calimshan is law. This of course extends to the Pashas and ruling class of each city. Rarely does this directly affect the citizens, however, as countless millennia of existence ensure that traditions rule the day. Because punishments are extremely harsh (such as the loss of a hand for stealing a loaf of bread), would-be criminals must be careful to avoid exacting immediate justice by the offended party. Floggings are not uncommon. Prison time is rare, reserved for those rare individuals who could cause political upheaval if executed.

Words to the Wise

Women’s Rights

Women have it especially difficult in Calimshan. To summarize, a married woman cannot hold any property, and is expected to obey her husband. An unwed woman is expected to obey her father, and in either case, can expect to be beaten for disobeying. Most marriages among the non-poor classes are not for love, but rather, are arranged, to bring as much good fortune to the family as possible. Women of age who are yet unwed are scorned, most of all by other women.

Women striving for a life beyond the male-dominated culture that is Calimshan, must have *ahem* money, magic, or cunning – preferably all three. Individuals so gifted can rise above the restrictive confines of their station and hold power of their own. Few women in the history of Calimshan have ever held a position of office, and though it is rare, it is not unheard of.

Rulers of Calimshan

Line of Pasha-syl-Pashas of Calimshan

Naming Conventions

Calishite names follow a fairly rigid format in general. First are a person's title or titles, then his personal name, then the name of his parent and his house. Daughters are identified in relation to their mothers by the word yr linking their names. Sons are identified in relation to their fathers, unless their mothers are better known and liked. The word yn links a son's name to that of his father. The word el or a1 links a person's name and parent's name to the family name. Slaves are often allowed to keep their own personal names but have the name of the family or person that owns them added to their own with the word adh.

Example: Ariana yr Tora el Bakran is the daughter of Tora in the Bakran family.

Example: Chawal Kalil yn Nur el Jibril is a lieutenant (chawal) in the military first and foremost, after which he is the son of Nur of House Jibril.

Example: Tagar the wanderer from Westgate is captured and taken to Calimport, sold to Chawal Kalil above, and his name in Calimshan becomes Tagar adh Kalil (if kept as a personal slave) or Tagar adh Jibril (if used as a general house or estate slave by the family).

Many examples exist of people from Calimshan whose names do not conform to this format. There are a number of reasons for this problem, the largest of which is, as the above pasha put it, the "innate addle-pated nature of the barbarian scribes of the North, which does not allow them to accurately recall a name that has more than two syllables or even to tell a tale more than a minute

in length without a serious error." Other names used by a Calishite might not follow this format might because she or he is trying to remain incognito and giving a false name. The final reason for apparent name inconsistencies derives from a person's estrangement from his or her parents or family. When such a falling out occurs, a person often follows his or her personal name with just the family name (Fatim a1 Bajidh) or merely adopts the name of his or her birthplace or residence linked to his or her personal name with a word meaning "from" (Fatim yi Almraiven).

Many devout priests change their surnames to those of their gods when ordained into their priesthoods. In doing this, they do not dishonor their families, but rather they honor their deities. This practice is almost exclusively limited to Calishite clergy.