Book Title
The Inquiry of Beastmen Tribes: A Study
Author
Andres von Blair III
"...In odd extertion, the beastman interviewed and observed; their tribal religious values stem on a system of equal value. In example, a punishment is weighed in value of crime committed. Rewards and trades are also a common practice of their religious ideals.
Not practical in economic systems like that in inner, civilized cities. To determine actual value, economic systems use a more formal currency. Beastman society use everyday common items for survival use as a single tribe to survive together. Beastmen, similar in looks, take in characteristics of animals and their nature.
Perhaps their animalistic nature took the form of their rather barbaric religion.
This theory is packed with further evidence involving their willingness to fight each other despite their closeness on a yearly basis to determine who is the strongest of the beastmen. In my journey following around tribes, I found a tribe where the chief was as young as 15 human years after defeating the worn elderly chief of their tribe.
Many tribes are built around members of an older tribe leaving because of their differences with their chief, usually when a new one is elected. I have found that the oldest tribe still active was one situated in the mountains further out of the kingdom's current boundary and into the homeland of the dwarves.
According to..."
The text continues on with statistics on the mixtures of blood and theory of the exact origin of the beastmen.
"Due to the animal nature of the beastmen, its
likely that they have originated from animals creating beastmen as offspring from another race. Tests on purebred beastmen deny humans as the other parent, but beastmen seem to have a far more tolerable aura to that of smaller races most likely due to their close proximity to nature and its other animal counterparts. According to the beastmen religion, (which they call Spiritus) the beastmen explain that they originated from the spirit of animals. They were tired and called for help from their Beast God, Eandem, to protect them from the hunters of beasts ranging from elves, humans, and other meat eating races. So the Beast God reincarnated the lives lost into the Beastmen known today to have a fighting chance and protect the wildlife from the hunters. Their religion explains, to the common folk, the reason behind their widely tolerating aura and ties to the world of magick.
This would also explain the necessary treaty between beastmen and humans of the current era in the kingdom for the license to hunt and gather food supply in the areas where tribes are situated, to lessen the dangers of tribes coming in contact with other races and raiding.
The treaty allowed for beastmen and other races to come together in harmony and began a "domestication" process between them. The treaty ended up having beastmen put in slave-master positions instead of having an equal line with the other races. While beastmen were stronger and much more heavier in battle combat, they had fewer population and have no chance against other societies already far more advanced and populated than their own. Perhaps this is the exact reasoning for their mysterious lack of willing to fight back against the smaller races. However, questioning the beastmen on this only gets them to answer that the efforts put forth were far belitting to that of later consequences.
Purebred beastman over a couple generations began to grow smaller in size and obtained more 'civilized' traits of a common house dog. This was much more preferred for civilized societies as purebred beastmen found only in tribes today were far more unlikely to behave and follow direct orders or request of their non-furry counterparts.
If one compared a purebred and domesticated breed of beastman, they would notice the differences and built for both female and male counterparts along with civilizing traits such as kept, naturally trimmed hair and weaker physical strength and aura maintence.
The treaty..."
The text goes deeper into the treaty created between the majority of intelligent races. It appears even the author is confused on the exact reasoning for the beastmen's domestication, but continues.
"Testing of biological traits reveal mixture of other races, however. Embarrassing to say, beastmen do hold same biological traits of sexual reproduction to that of other races, especially human, if not holding bigger girth on purebred standards."
The text ends at a statistical point and turns to drawings of the beastmen race of both domesticated and purebred. It seems to go further, but the rest can be read at another date...