Stewardship of Wintergen: Difference between revisions

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By the 19th century AD (XXXth century CC), most of [[Wintergen]]'s small population lived in a handful of timber camps harvesting wood, most of which was exported to [[Burgundie]] to supply its prolific shipyards. Supplementary economic activities included fishing and subsistence farming, though the island suffered from poor soils and weather and a scarcity of arable land. Though some Coscivian families had lived on [[Wintergen]] for generations and spoke a unique (and now extinct) Coscivian dialect, most of the population were transient workers from [[Koskenkorva]] and the [[Far Northeast|GreatKirav#Far Northeast]] who lived on the island as fishermen and woodcutters for three or four seasons at most.
By the 19th century AD (XXXth century CC), most of [[Wintergen]]'s small population lived in a handful of timber camps harvesting wood, most of which was exported to [[Burgundie]] to supply its prolific shipyards. Supplementary economic activities included fishing and subsistence farming, though the island suffered from poor soils and weather and a scarcity of arable land. Though some Coscivian families had lived on [[Wintergen]] for generations and spoke a unique (and now extinct) Coscivian dialect, most of the population were transient workers from [[Koskenkorva]] and the [[Far Northeast|GreatKirav#Far Northeast]] who lived on the island as fishermen and woodcutters for three or four seasons at most.


The 1820s a devastating bark beetle blight that almost eliminated the remaining forests on [[Burgundie]]. Desperate for more wood as the demand from timber producing areas outstripped the locals ability to harvest it, some enterprising [[NordHalle|NordHallish]] shipwrights formed the Burgundian North Levantine Company (BNLC) in 1823 and occupied the timber camps of [[Wintergen]].
The 1820s a devastating bark beetle blight that almost eliminated the remaining forests on [[Burgundie]]. Desperate for more wood as the demand from timber producing areas outstripped the locals ability to harvest it, some enterprising [[Port Diteaux|Port Diteauxoise]] shipwrights formed the Burgundian North Levantine Company (BNLC) in 1823 and occupied the timber camps of [[Wintergen]].


In 1836 the [[Golden Council of Ten]] decreed the Act of Economic Union, claiming that Wintergen was forevermore an integral part of Burgundie.  
In 1836 the [[Golden Council of Ten]] decreed the Act of Economic Union, claiming that Wintergen was forevermore an integral part of Burgundie.  
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