Lemari

General information
In the year 1066, at the time of the Norman Conquest, one family decided to flee Britain. This family was made up of a man and woman who had been high in the English society along with their three young children, and the man knew how to read and write. Because of this, they took the few books they owned with them: a copy of the Bible in Latin and a book in Old English which included The Fight at Finnsburh, The Wife's Lament, The Husband's Message, and The Dream of the Rood. The family set out in a small boat to travel across the ocean to some uncharted land where they could live in peace, and eventually landed on an island in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. They found that this island had all that they needed: space to build a house and plant fields with the seeds they had brought with them, edible plants, sheep and goats, and plenty of space to expand. There were other inhabitants, but they lived in a small village on the opposite side of the island and did not mind the newcomers. The family lived in peace for many years, and when their four children (one of whom had been born on the island) were twelve, fifteen, seventeen, and twenty years old, the mother and father died.

It was at this time, as well, that another family of political refugees found the island, this time from what would later become Portugal. War had reached the home of this family, and they hoped to find a place in which to raise their children in peace. Thus, they left with their children in a boat, hoping to land in some inhabitable place. The four children of the original set of refugees greeted the newcomers warmly, and invited them to build a home near their own. The family accepted the offer, and they began to have a community. The new family was composed of a mother and father, both around thirty-five years old, and their three children, one of whom was eight years old and the other two of whom were thirteen. Their mother, surprisingly, was pregnant at that time with one more child. When that child was born, the mother died in child birth and the English refugees offered to help raise the child.

The children in the new family set out after a while to explore the rest of the island, and met some members of the native community which inhabited the other side of the island. They soon learned that many of the elders in that community had been wiped out by the same disease which had killed the parents of their new friends, and those who were left would welcome joining forces between the two communities. Indeed, since they had already been a very small community, made up of just three families, there were only eight of them left who were over the age of twelve--the age at which they came of age. These eight followed the twins back to their home and met the two families that lived there, and decided to move their community across the island to join the others.

The mix of these three families, British, Portugese, and Pandori, was the beginning of the Lemari people. Their elders and parents had all died--for the last remaining parent in the Portugese family died soon thereafter--and it was up to the young people and few children who remained to rebuild their lives. They worked together, and as they worked their languages mixed and created a fourth language, mixing English, Portugese, and Pandori. Their language, which they called Lemari like themselves, was named from their word for peace or alliance against the outside forces that threatened to drive them to extinction.

It has now been nearly two hundred years since the founding of this community, and they have become strong once more. Some people have followed in the wandering and sea-faring traditions of their ancestors and left to explore new lands, but most have stayed in their island, since it is a large island and has many resources available. They live in villages made up of a few families each, scattered through the island, and grow corn, wheat, and beans in their fields. They also keep flocks of sheep, gather the local edible plants, and hunt animals native to their land. Each village has its elder, and the elders from the different villages meet often to discuss issues of governance, land use, and any other disagreements which have arisen. Occasionally they must have an arbiter, and in these situations the elder from the original community settles their disagreements.