The departure of the gods from the ancient Kyonyita Sea, and the subsequent draining and desertification of the sea which caused it to become the Kyonyita Desert of today.
Timeline detailing the history of the Khangka, especially the period after their fall from grace.
The departure of the gods from the ancient Kyonyita Sea, and the subsequent draining and desertification of the sea which caused it to become the Kyonyita Desert of today.
After 66 years of isolation, the Khangka tribes were reunified by the leadership of Vmasabadu, the chieftain of the great Yampagi of Vmalasi, who established roads and tunnels throughout the Kyonyita Desert allowing the dispersed tribes to once again communicate and trade amongst each other.
71 years after the Fall from Grace, the very first festival of Completion was held in honor of the four elemental deities at the end of the short pattern of the calendar-cycle, in an effort to get the gods' attention and begin the return to divinity.
At the Second Reformation festival of year 187 of the Fall, a massive wooden sculpture of the deities was constructed, which caught fire due to a heatstorm. The statue was completely destroyed and the fire spread throughout the ritual grounds, causing the deaths of hundreds of Khangka tribesmen. The people viewed this as a refusal of their offering, and a sign that they had not yet repaid their debts to the divines.
The great prophet Laszan is awakened following a lucid dream in the central temple of the great caverns of Vmalasi. Laszan receives a message from the four deities stating that the Fall is nearly at its end, and that The Great Flood will come after the next Completion festival in the year 1001 of the Fall, as long as certain demands are met.