The Northern Doglands were never a kingdom of their own, nor did they emerge from a single lineage or heroic age. They existed as the battered remnant of Old Jantara’s conquests—a stretch of land marked by devastation, forced migration, and a patchwork of ruined subkingdoms, each with its own bitter history of betrayal, humiliation, and subjugation.
In the last centuries of Old Jantara’s rule, the region was divided between five subject realms: Kova, Erex, Aros, Banti, and Ranya. These were not allies, nor even stable rivals, but desperate neighbors—each doomed in their own way as the jackal lords tightened their grip and the machinery of oppression ground out every last ounce of resistance or hope.
Kova had been the first to fall. Once a loose alliance of three small kingdoms, its leaders failed to unite against the oncoming jackal hosts. Jackal armies overwhelmed them in less than a year. The leaders of Kova were slaughtered, their resistance shattered, and their people cast into servitude or scattered to the wind.
Erex collapsed next, and not by force of arms, but through treachery. Its ruling council, promised mercy in exchange for surrender, capitulated—only to be burned alive in public squares, their families chained and sent south to serve as living reminders of jackal “leniency.” The betrayal of Erex became a lesson repeated in Dogfolk stories for generations: every promise from a jackal lord was a noose.
Aros did not fall in battle, but through famine. Jackal governors poisoned wells, burned stores, and blockaded the valleys until hunger drove the defenders to submission. Even then, those who surrendered were offered no clemency. The armies of Aros, mustered as a show of fealty, were ambushed and slaughtered; their homes, already emptied, were burned behind them.
Ranya stood longest in the south, a land of fortified valleys and river towns held together by desperation. The folk of Ranya endured repeated assaults, losing ground village by village until, at last, the survivors were hunted down or driven out. Their names and stories survived only in the genealogies of later Dogfolk clans, and in the ruins they left behind.
Banti was the outlier, the last and most stubborn of the northern realms. Backed quietly by the Ruseloni beyond the border, Banti’s people waged a persistent, bloody resistance, using their forests and hills as shelter for generations. Some claimed Banti never truly surrendered, and that it remained a thorn in the jackal’s side, the heart of Dogfolk defiance, even as the rest of the region fell to ruin.
As these kingdoms fell, the jackal conquerors did not simply absorb their lands. They relocated and broke apart entire populations—not by lineage, but by labor needs and convenience. Folk from every subkingdom found themselves uprooted, resettled in tent cities, makeshift camps, and squalid shantytowns. The old ties of kin and place unraveled, replaced by a new, shared identity built on the trauma of dispossession.
These grim settlements were the cradle of what would become the Northern Doglands: a land of exiles and survivors, ruled not by law but by the logic of necessity. The traditions of Kova, Erex, Aros, Ranya, and Banti endured only in fragments—songs half-remembered, rituals practiced in secret, grudges passed down with each telling. In time, these broken peoples forged a kind of solidarity, not through shared history, but through the stubborn will to outlast their oppressors.
The History of Bantos
- The Bantos Rebellions
- The Last Days of Old Jantara
- The Bantos Uprising
- The Border Wars
- The Townshend Battles
- The Battle of Northwall Cross
- The Battle of the Barrier
- The Ruination of the Jantaran Gates
- The Border Wars
- The Burning of Jantara
- The Rise of Bantos
- The Fall of Jantara
The Jackalands of Yorozh
- New Jantara




