Population: It is unknown what the total population of the area is, but currently about 4,000 inhabitants scattered around a dozen known major locations.
The inhabitants are known to raid against the wildlings and bring reprisal raids on themselves and others in the north (for which they are looked down upon by all in the northern hinterlands). They have even antagonized the Klaurian peoples in its insistent and prolonged forays through and over-logging of the northern Rhyl forest. They are also rumored to consort with and protect wyldling raiders when it suits them.
Military: The people are fiercely protective of their territory and travelers are sped through and watched closely. They are not known to maintain any formal military force, although the rangers and caravan guards for travel form a readily available force which may be drawn upon to serve quickly.
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Not much is known of these peoples, other than they seem to have descended from one of the wyldling tribes of the north. Their close proximity to the settled territories of the north brought an organized culture which soon put them at odds with the traditional wyldling tribes. It is suspected by some, that the wyldling shamans ostracized them and called upon the tribes to drive them out.
The Golden Folk: The are was originally home to a small tribe of humans that had separated from The Wyldes and was in service to the Klaurians of North Pines as intermediaries. They had a developed affectation and knowledge of the Klaurians that allowed them to be tolerated.
The New Folk: Not much is known of the origins of the New Folk, as they displaced the pine tribesmen about 800 years ago. By most accounts, they appear to have descended from wildling tribes of the far north, but many traces of Kaaldian culture can be found in their society. They integrated into the the population of the golden folk, nearly tripling it in size.
For those native to or long-dwelling in the region, ALL Common Knowledge may be Pervasive.
Their close proximity to the settled territories of the north has gradually brought a settling of the people – who at once seek to embody the principles of the ‘free folk’ but maintain a distinct cultural island amidst their diverse neighbors. They view the free tribes, the pine tribes, as inferior; they themselves have worked hundreds of years to shed the stigma of wlydling or pine tribe association. Their desire to distinguish themselves from their more primitive neighbors often leads them into direct contact, as their wild history is treated by them as a shame and they seek to eradicate all traces of it – to the detriment of those living around them.
It is suspected by some that they were driven out of their home in the north; that the shamans cast them out for some unspeakable crime – perhaps this goes to explain the animosity between the pine tribesmen and wildlings and the North Pines.
Bron-Yr-Aur is comprised of an immigrant population from the north, driven south by the wyldlings 400 years ago. They are rumored to have a large degree of wyldling blood mingled amongst their own,. They displaced the small population, which had existed there for over 500 years. It is unknown what the total population of the area is, but currently about 18,000 inhabitants scattered around a dozen known major locations.