Tzumisui Culture

The Tzumisui Culture is a group of semi-nomadic people who are well adapted for life near water and fishing.

Origin
The origin of the Tzumisui Culture and people is unknown. Some legends say the moon and water spirits blessed or cursed the original Tzumisui to be bound by water. Others say they were fish people who intermingled with humans. What is known is that the Tzumisui come from a distant land and have spread out throughout the worlds.

Arrival on Eldham
The first Tzumisui to arrive where the Tzurii, who to came Eldham to seek better life in a new land. A prominent Tzurii to arrive in Eldham was Arokiku Kawa who first settled in Stoneport. There he developed his skills and after a while moved around a bit until finally settling in Hagusaki and starting Kawa Corporation.

Arrival on Kanahulu (Tremons)
The Tzumisui to arrive in the lands of Kanahulu were the Tzukamui, who just wondered into the land due to their seafaring life style. The Tzukamui first seafared in the eastern seas of Kanahulu setting up a settlement on an island they called "Uekaomiwahi," meaning "Land of Eastern Shrubs." One day a new people arrived on the small island. These were the Utharu. The two peoples agreed to live together in peace and began to build a new, better settlement called Uthraraomi. Both people groups soon left the island as the Order of Luserose to their north claimed the island. Both cultures ventured westward where the Tzukamui settled and seafared around the islands in the Mutyas Archipelago who they call "Tzufugu" in their native tongue; meanwhile the Utharu settled north on a island larger landmass. Other than the Tzukamui Culture, the Tzuana Culture also arrived in Kanahulu but their presence is small.

Culture Groups and Society
The Tzumisui Culture can be split into smaller different cultural groups that live in different environments. One thing all subcultures share is their skill in fishing, affinity for water, and worship of ancestors. The Tzumisui's race is human? but some swear they are shapeshifting fish folk who disguise as humans.

The Tzurii Culture
The Tzurii are an ethnic group of the Tzumisui that live exclusively by fresh water sources. They prefer to inhabit flowing sources of water like rivers as they can more easily traverse water ways. The Tzurii tend to be less nomadic than other groups of the Tzumisui as they live by fresh water sources inland and thus have more contact with continental peoples whom they are influenced by. Like other groups the Tzurii are very skilled in fishing and life by water. Unlike other groups, the Tzurii are less zealous in honoring ancestors and are more industrious than other Tzumisui Culture groups. The Tzurii tend to form businesses and facilitate trade. They are skilled craftsmen with their most prized tools being their famed "Tzurisao" fishing rods and their "Yumi" long and short bows.

The Tzukamui Culture
The Tzukamui are another ethnic group of the Tzumisui. Rather than live by fresh water sources like their Tzurii cousins, these Tzumisui people live exclusively by saltwater bodies like oceans or seas. The Tzukamui are so well adapted to life by the sea they are able to drink sea water or water with high saline content. They are expert seafarers and island hop across the seas. The Tzukamui are more nomadic but also more primitive in their way of life. They are the most zealous in worship of ancestors, building small shrines on islands they land on and plan on staying on for a while.

The Tzuanai Culture
The Tzuanai are the third major cultural group of the Tzumisui. The Tzuanai are far different than the Tzurii and Tzukamui. The Tzuanai have abandoned the surface waters and have ventured underground to live near waters beneath the surface. Although called the third major culture group, little is known about the Tzuanai.

Etymology
The name Tzumisui is a name derived from the words: "tzu", "misu", and "i." The words are derived from the extinct language of Tzukahikolelo, which is thought to be the original tongue of the Tzumisui Peoples. "Tzu" means fish, "misu" means water, and "i" means people; all together it means "Fish water people" or "People who fish in/by water."