Eastern Draddwyr

Very little is known about the Welsh who live on the Great North Dovani Plain to the East of Dovani's Barrier Range. The little knowledge we have of them comes from the time of Sir Christopher Dove, who discovered Dovani in 1474 and from accounts of travellers who have explored the area. In the few decades after Western settlors arrived in Dovani the Eastern Welsh were voiceferous and, for a time, united.

Owain Glynwater
Owain Glynwater was the Welsh tribal leader who attempted to revolt against the Western settlers of Dovaniin the late 15th Century. While the majority of his fellow Welsh were adapting and adopting the Settlors' modern ways of life Glynwater was unimpressed.

Revolt
In 1497 Glynwater declared his historic decree that the ways of the settlors were the ways of evil and that anoyone who copied them would incur the wrath of the Gods.

At the time Glynwater's tribe controlled only a small North-Eastern tip of the Great North Dovani Plain around the Carrina Massiff mountain, however his influence soon grew. Other tribal leaders who publically dismissed his decree were assassinated by a small band of warriors nicknamed Glynwater's Sons.

Unite and Crusade
While the exact number of chiefs killed has probably grown as Glynwater's story was passed down the centuries there is no doubt that by 1504 he held most of the Nortern plains of Dovani. It was in that year that Glynwater declared the Welsh on the Great North Dovani Plain united in a vendetta against the people he called the "offsprings of Dove".

His campaign faltered immeadiatly however. The Western side of Dovani had been changed out of all recognition by the settlers and was already split into regions which would eventually become the four nations of Dovani. With the Barrier Range between them, Glynwater's influence was neglible in the West.

Some religious leaders have attempted to justify the genocide of the Welsh in Dranland by claiming that this is the Gods' wrath Glynwater spoke of all those centuries ago.

Loss of Contact
Within years the Welsh to the East had been all but forgotten by the West. Even their Welsh brothers in what is now Dranland had, in an attempt to curry favour with the settlors, cut all ties with the East.

Current Populations
With so little communication between East and West there is little known about the fate of Glynwater. Recent expeditions to the Plain however have found that the Welsh have seemingly returned to their tribal nature and split back into something in the region of 200 seperate tribes. There does not seem to be much communication between the tribes. Welsh remains their only language and, suprisingly, it remains very close to the Welsh spoken by their brothers in Gishoto and Dranland.