Rototornicia

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Rototornicia
Region of Peratra
ContinentAustralis
SubcontinentPeratra
Historical relations Daxia
 Timbia
 Samalosi (part of  Castadilla)
Possible culturesPolynesian
Daxian
Area
 • Total687,300 km2 (265,360 sq mi)

Rototornicia is a region located in midwestern Peratra, itself a subcontinent within Australis. It borders Timbia to the north. the Castadillaan state of Samalosi to the east, Tebelvonia to the south, and Baclovia to the southeast.

Located in one the western part of central Peratra, Rototornicia was historically settled by the Polynesians. Like most other Polynesian societies in Peratra prior to the arrival of the Daxians, much of Rototornicia's history was defined by a traditionally tribal society with an emphasis on excellent navigational skills which has allowed the entire Pertran subcontinent to be settled, no matter how sparse, by Polynesian tribes by the time Daxian traders arrived on the subcontinent in the early 17th Century which led to a slight Daxian influence on the culture of Rototornicia as well as a migratory period as Timbian tribes began moving southward. At the same time, small groups of Samalosian tribes would manage to navigate their way through the Tula’au o Tina mountains and establish settlements of their own. Due to the prevalence of the Tula’au o Tina mountains to its east, however, Rototornicia has largely avoided the mass conversions to Catholicism that Samalosi had underwent, thus making Rototornicia one of the last places in which the indigenous beliefs of the Samalosians have survived.

Geography

Rototornicia is located on the west coast of central Peratra in a mountainous region that stretches from the Ocean of Cathay to the west to the Tula’au o Tina mountains in the east which defines the focal point of the border between Rototornicia, Tebelvonia, and Baclovia. The Tula’au o Tina mountains begin to significantly subside closer to the south of the region, with the border between it and Tebelvonia being one of the least mountainous parts of the Tula’au o Tina mountains and even follows a river as the border heads to the coast; the same applies to the border between Rototornicia and Timbia. In the heartlands of Rototornicia, there exists four medium-sized lakes, all within the borders of the region.

The climate of Rototornicia is subject to an up and coming climate reboot.