>>5624425>>5624435>>5624438>National Mystery: Stones of Diuth on the PeninsulaWhen the Geomancers of Diuth speak, the parliament and Naasjeholder listen to their words. Permission is granted by the highest authorities both secular and religious for the stones to be sent to the Peninsula in the care of temple priests and geomancers.
>Action 1: Fundamentals of GeomancyThe Stone speaks, and we listen. Diuth Whispers, and we hear her. With encouragement and implorement and invocation and thorough study, she and her agents might bless us with some borrowed elements of her powers to feel and listen to the land; that we might emulate some small measure of her land-shaping grace.
>Action 2: Claim Wonders of Old>Expand into marked tiles.From the reports of the first settlers, it soon becomes apparent that ancient relics stand proud upon the peninsula; the valued history of our (and possibly some other) nations left neglected by the world. What happened in the time of the disaster to cause such ruin that treasures like these go abandoned, and no living trace is to be found of the people who kept them? It is vital, therefore, that Waddania again be expanded to protect these relics in situ; these treasures will again have an owner - whatever they might be.
>Navy 1: South of the PeninsulaWith a safe harbour in Beninga bay to supply and support them, the first fleet under Admiral Beninga resumes the course of his first voyage of exploration by continuing southward along the coast.
>Navy 2: With the sad death of Jelckama at the hands of marauders and the loss of the Flagship to those pirates, Captain Heeringa takes command of the second fleet by virtue of his seniority. His orders are simple ones - sail north with the fleet in pursuit of the stolen Flagship, and either retrieve or sink the stolen vessel if it has not already been scuttled. Once that duty is done (or at least attempted, for the sake of honour), the fleet will turn about and return to safe harbour.>Army: The army will aid in exploration efforts, marching along the spine of the peninsula. The site of some ancient battle is better left to military minds for initial evaluation, even if we will have the scholars scouring through any tablets and scrolls for records that might survive from before the collapse to suggest at what we have found here. Once the site has been reconnoited, the army will be deployed to guard the peninsula upon the narrowest point.