The first war; the taming of the elements of Sanzeia
The earliest age of Sanzeia, when the thirteen elder gods made the world and its peoples.
An era in which the giants, favored children of Ulmark, ruled the world. Ended with the fall of the giants to the corruption of Chaos.
Eo, the mother goddess, birthed the first giant into the world, and thus began the Age of Giants
It is said the first elves came to Sanzeia from the Faewild, when the blood of the twin divines, Calowean and Lyndranel, spilled into the plane. Calowean, the beautiful, took them as his chosen people.
The other gods, jealous at the power their elders received through worship, commision Hedir, the Maker, to create new races for worship. Thus are born the stoic dwarves, the fierce orcs, the cruel serpent-men, as well as a fourth race which has been struck from the annals.
The giants, tricked by the Betrayer, were corrupted by the chaos. Beginning the fall of their great empire and leading to the birth of humanity.
The era within which the greatest legends and myths of the mortal races take place. Actual documentation is scarce, but events are believed to be based in some historical fact. Ends with the the establishment of the Dwydian Calendar
The Neatherese Empire arose and fell during the age of myth in the lands that now make up the various human kingdoms. They were a race of great mages who used magics now lost to the world. Though accounts are fragmentary, the Empire fell during a magical cataclysm of its own making.
The Divine Prophet Himse is born in Enorei . 500 years later his teachings will go on to reshape the faith of the elves, ultimately leading to a schism between the Sun and Moon Elves and the exile of the Moon Elves to the north.
The Dark Elves, driven out of the lands of Himse, settle in the cold north; the founding of the Yvalian Empire.
Established year one of the Dwydian Calendar. The current age.
The Kingdom of Dywd was founded in modern Himse. Though the kingdom would ultimately last under 300 years, the calendar it created is in use to this day.