Sunday 1 November 2015

Thule

What do we know about Thule?

As the king has formally recognized Thule as an independent nation we now have a new neighbour to the east.

The Greek explorer Pytheas is the first to have written of Thule, doing so in his now lost work, On the Ocean, after his travels between 330 BC and 320 BC. for many years it was thought to be mythology, but then so were many other things. Thule of today is a high plateaux and highlands situated in what was the north sea bed, once known as Dogger Bank. The inhabitants appear to be a short but strong people given to big beards and tattoos, many have called them dwarfs for their resemblance to fairy tale characters.

Unofficial trading has been going on since not long after the Event, with residents of Essex make first contact.

The folk of Thule are a civilized and honourable people with an aptitude for mechanical devices and building, they have found work in many walks of British life with some even enlisting in the royal navy, they have a professor in the royal institute, the member of parliament for Thanet is dwarven and they run a school of engineering in Edinburgh for bright candidates taken purely on merit.
according to doctor Isaac Bellings the famed historical linguistic says Thulian language is closely related to early Germanic tongues, and cultural similarities can be found with early north sea cultures and that of the Thule.

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