Terazta: Difference between revisions

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From the time of AD 890, until its liberation in the 13th century, the people of Teŕazta were under strict Islamic rule. Women were forced to cover themselves with niqaabs and hijabs. Churches were closed and converted into mosques. The consumption of pork was banned. Anti-Christian policies were established which required Valerites to pay a tax. They were also forced the indiginity of having to build doors which were unusually low, making them bow their heads when entering or exiting their homes. They suffered many restrictions in travel and fewer rights as comparsd to islamic citizens.
From the time of AD 890, until its liberation in the 13th century, the people of Teŕazta were under strict Islamic rule. Women were forced to cover themselves with niqaabs and hijabs. Churches were closed and converted into mosques. The consumption of pork was banned. Anti-Christian policies were established which required Valerites to pay a tax. They were also forced the indiginity of having to build doors which were unusually low, making them bow their heads when entering or exiting their homes. They suffered many restrictions in travel and fewer rights as comparsd to islamic citizens.


One of the most grueling and extensive slave trades occured during this time. under the Caliphate, Christians were forced to pay a tax. Those who could not pay were subject to enslavement. This policy led to the enslavement of hundreds of thousands of Teŕaztanii. Sent abroad or forced to march through the mountains hauling ore, less than 1 in 5 male slaves survived 10 years. Many women were stolen from coastal villages and towns and sold in Audonia. Open air slave markets were common in the Coastal city of Al-Mahif (Modern Day Aureia).
One of the most grueling and extensive slave trades occured during this time. under the Caliphate, Christians were forced to pay a tax. Those who could not pay were subject to enslavement. This policy led to the enslavement of hundreds of thousands of Teŕaztanii. Sent abroad or forced to march through the mountains hauling ore, less than 1 in 5 male slaves survived 10 years. Many women were stolen from coastal villages and towns and sold in Audonia. Open air slave markets were common in the Coastal city of Al-Mahif (Modern Day Aureia). A surviving account recalls the state of these markets;
 
''"It is in such a place as Al-Mahif that a man may question the existence of a just god. The christians, forced to pay taxes for their faith but unable to find the coin, find themselves in the holding pits of the traders here. No man here to buy sees people nor families. Just commodities. A son of 5 years? A copper piece. His mother? Fair skinned and dark haired? A silver piece. Her husband for a brass piece. The grandfather for half a copper. All to different traders. The stench is unbearable, the sound of flies and fast speaking auctioneers greets you before the screams do. You feel the despair before you hear the pleas for mercy and the weeping. You smell the people before you see them. What a wretched place."''


===Third era===
===Third era===
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