This list is currently incomplete.
Agmapallan Danechē I (114-128)
Danechē Agmapalla was born into the Tanthene Agmapalla dynasty during the dissolution of the eleventh (Naidiechan) dynasty. Like Goesena, Pelöissod, and Tanthes itself, Panarina had emerged as a powerful rump state centred around the eponymous city. Danechē began his career as a general in Panarina’s provincial legion; following the collapse of the dynasty and Tanthene rule, Danechē quickly consolidated enough power to rival the Tanthene Governor. In 113, Agmapalla secured the support of many of the other Tanthene nobles and in 114 carried out a bloodless coup in which he seized the city of Panarina at the head of his armies and removed the Governor from his palace. Now in captivity, the Governor was induced to appoint Danechē commander of all provincial armies, a power that Danechē already had in all but name.
Following his appointment as dictator, Danechē Agmapalla conquered the Crown, including Tanthes, by 118. After his conquest of Tanthes, he received the title of Emperor. Over the next 9 years, he campaigned in Goessena and Peloïssod, quickly retaking the already-Sasinthēnized provinces by the age of 40. The next year, he became the first Sasinthēne ruler to cross the Laham into Issod proper, sieging and taking Caleogart, but succumbing to an arrow to the stomach. Accounts of his death diverge. In the national myth which sprung up around his life and conquests, he was shot at the beginning of a battle and continued to fight valiantly until he reached the river, at which point a riderless mare passed in front of him and stamped a snake. He dismounted and went to the riverside to wet his lips, but was too weak. A young soldier of Hesod stops, recognizing his enemy, and wets his lips with his own waterskin. Danechē Agmapalla calls himself Nagienai (king of kings), names the soldier Agmapallanes (son of Agmapalla) and relates his Promise to deliver the whole northern part of Ōchis to the Sasinthēnes.
Agmapallan Sabbas I (128-159)
Danechē Agmapalla was extremely circumspect when it came to managing his succession. He adopted the Tanthene tradition of designating a family member and installing him as junior Emperor, in this case, his nephew, Agmapallan Sabbas. Danechē had a young son of his own, but Sabbas was by his death far more qualified, and had already been installed at the Agmapallas’ palace in Danechaïa, near Panarina.
Sabbas I focused initially on pacifying the new province of Issod, which had a strong and distinct culture from the rest of his empire. He founded the city of Lōgomachaïa, also called Sabbassalea or Sabasgart, and installed a despot, whom he married to a local princess. He spent much of his reign in Lōgomachaïa while conquering the northeast reaches of Issod, and was nicknamed Sabbas ēLōgomachaïcōs as a result. He was unable to take Hišu. Under his reign, the succession tradition employed by his uncle gained a new distinction: while the Emperor would campaign, his designated heir would remain as a regent, a kind of limited junior emperor, in the Imperial Palace.
Agmapallan Larestē I (159-182)
(Moves capital to Lōgomachaïa)
Agmapallan Adaneléōs (182-197)
(Moves capital back after expansion into Arpenea fails)
Agmapallan Sabbastōs I (197-216)
Agmapallan Elōsechēléōs (216-231)
Agmapallan Danechē II (231-235)
Agmapallan Sabbastōs II (235-272)
Agmapallan Larestē II (272-289)
Agmapallan Lareston (289-319)
Larestē’s son, Lareston, was the last of the Agmapalla emperors.
First Imperial Interregnum
During this period, no lasting dynasties are established. The Imperial Palace itself, that being the regents and the military governors, run the Empire. during this period, the Talens migrate from Voradena. Voradena is also conquered.
Antheas (Xanathaïanes) Xanathaōs (556-578)
Xanathaōs Antheas was born to a wealthy military family. He started the Xanathaïanes dynasty, the second of the big 3.
Xanathaïanes Danechē V (578-589)
Son of Xanathaōs.
Xanathaïanes Mitreiōs (591-598)
Conquers Voradena but dies in the process.
Xanathaïanes Danechon I (598-601)
Assassinated after being persuaded to make someone a palatial emperor like a dipshit.
(Some more emperors; Second interregnum occurs (20 years), Xanathaïanes restoration follows.)
Despotate of the Palace (665-685)
Xanathaïanes Nicheleōs (685-694)
Xanathaïanes Danechē VII (694-712)
Xanathaïanes Abbeléōs (712-718)
Xanathaïanes Eleōs IV (718-719)
Xanathaïanes Paōs III (719-728)
Xanathaïanes Thémōs (728-739)
Xanathaïanes Chorōs (739-758)
Xanathaïanes Zaïdōs (758-775)
Zaïdōs Xanathaïanes ‘bowed’ Rosgart and was assassinated by Oronar nationalists.
Xanathaïanes Danechē VIII (775-769)
Danechē VIII Xanathaïanes ruled for a few days before being killed at his coronation. Around this period the Imperial Palace in Danechaïa consolidates power over the ‘cloistered Emperors’.
Xanathaïanes Sabbas III (775-818)
Cloistered Emperor. The Imperial Palace had near total control over him and his rule, using him as a mere figurehead. His paranoia was fanned by the Palace, and as his one act of defiance, he refused to name a successor or have children of his own, for fear that he would be killed by his captors when he ceased to be useful. Regardless of the Palace’s designs for him, Sabbas was killed by the Imperial Cabal in an attempt to reassert control from the Palace.
Xanathaïanes Danechē (IX) & Ourōneas Adanasē II (818-873, -843)
Danechē IV, Sabbas’s nephew, was the Palace’s chosen successor. However, The Cabal and military propped up the 40-year-old general Ourōneas Adanasē, who effectively sidestepped Palatial control by administering the Empire from Bregién. The Palace continued to prop Danechē IV up after Adanasē’s death.
Ourōneas Safenōs (843-874)
Midway into his reign, Safenōs mended the rift with the Palace by returning to the Palace at Danechaïa. He took Danechē IV hostage, but was a merciful jailor, and eventually married Xanathaïanes’ daughter to his son. Throughout his reign, he carefully managed the rivalry between the Palace and the Cabal to ensure neither developed overwhelming power.
Ourōneas Xanastōs I (874-883)
Ourōneas Xanastōs II (883-906)
Ourōneas Danechē IX (906-925)
Ourōneas Eleōs V (925-936)
Ourōneas Steloïssōs (936-958)
Ourōneas Anadanechē (958-983)
Second to last. Succeeds during the war with Cazia-Orod, signs ceasefire two years into reign.
Ourōneas Danechon II (983-1011)
Last one. Cazia-Orod takes Panarine and he fucking dies in a swamp.