The birth of Silvö, along with twin sister Salyi, were children from the family of Walfö, of the line of Havrillö, a descendant of the Ruling House of Mártö...from the family of the progenitor Shedhö, one of the first fathers of Mankind.
The northern lands, what is now called Southern Europe possessed mixed conifer and deciduous forests and the low lands were great grasslands (since the middle sea did not exist as it does today). The lands farther to the north, starting where central France and central Germany lie today, were open coniferous woodlands and mixed steppe grasslands. Beyond these lands, the steppe-tundra dominated what is now northern Europe, but limited to the ice walls to the north.
The world at the time of Silvö's birth was much colder and more severe than today.
The world's climate stressed the world's populations everywhere. Drought, famine, epidemics, diseases, and war broke out everywhere. Many tribes rose up against another and fought their wars over the lands that possessed good resources, particularly for water, food, and minerals. Moreover, the world was getting colder and more drier than before than what is ever remembered in man's histories.
The gradual moving ice walls continued to push south which displaced all northern populations into other regions where the dense populations already existed. The scarce annual rains became legends causing the deserts of the world to expand into all directions causing more migrations into other areas for survival.
With increasing global climate changes and population displacements, strife between tribes for the right to dwell in another's traditional lands became rife globally.
During Silvö's lifetime, his homelands were impacted, but not as severe as in the mainlands to the east and west. The northern mountain ranges of the northern land mass, provides a shield to the btutal cold.
The great sea-ice walls continued to encroach from the Northern Sea. The lands of the southern land mass continued to be very productive yielding harvests due to the milder climate changes.
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