History of the Dales and the Elven Court:
The founding of the Dalelands long preceded the creation of any of the existing
Dales by hundreds of years, and the year numbering system known as Dalereckoning
is actually a commemoration of humankind being given permission to settle in the
lands north and west of the Inner Sea. Most of the current Dales are relative
newcomers, the older having been abandoned, destroyed, or overrun long ago. In
those ancient days, when Suzail and Chondathan (now called Saerloon) were mere
coastal trading posts, the elves who ruled this forest entertained a request
from settlers from the East; refugees and farmers from far-off Impiltur and
Damara. This request was to farm and settle the borders of the great forest
Cormanthor, in particular the rich delves and dales along the rivers Arkhen and
Ashaba. These newcomers did not wish to lumber or clear the inhabited forest,
but only to settle on the rich territories on its edges, and unlike some other
settlers (early Sembia comes to mind) were willing to ask permission.
The lords of the Elven Court granted that request in return for aid from these
new Dalelanders against outside aggression, both monstrous (orcs and goblins
from the lands of Thar) and human (the rising powers in Cormyr and Sembia). In
commemoration of this pact, humans and elves raised the Standing Stone that is
now seen where the Moonsea Ride reaches Rauthauvyr's Road, the road from
Essembra to Hillsfar. It is from the date of the raising of this stone that
Dalereckoning is counted. According to the pact made, the Dalesmen would only
settle those regions that were unforested or unclaimed by the elves. As the
elven woods receded under the axes of further invaders and settlers, old Dales
perished and new ones came into being along the borders of the woods. People,
both good and bad, have raised petty nations in the Dalelands since, though any
one Dale that turned against the pact would have to deal with the others. Each
of the Dales is a large swath of farms and fields, with a few scattered
settlements and usually one central marketplace, capital, or Dale center. These
centers are often, but not always, named after the Dales they are in, adding to
the confusion as to what is a Daleland's territory.
The Dales are not city-states, for their largest groupings of population rate as
towns at best, and they lack the defensive walls common throughout the
Heartlands. They are neither true nations in the fashion of Cormyr or Sembia,
and occupy a gray middle ground wherein they are nothing more, or less, than
Dales.
Each Dale has slightly different laws, customs, and military organizations. Many
rely on the work of charismatic heroes and adventuring companies for aid in
times of trouble, and a large number of these individuals use the region as a
base. This attraction for adventurers is further increased by the large number
of elven and pre-elven ruins in the area and the departure of the Elven Court
for Evermeet, leaving the woods open for exploration and exploitation.
The history of the Dales is filled with battles and attacks on its various
members. In the Year of the Worm (1356 DR), Scardale, under the command of
Lashan Aumersair, launched a number of swift attacks, conquering a number of the
surrounding Dales. A coalition of forces from the others, as well as Sembia,
Cormyr, and Zhentil Keep crushed the invaders and occupied Scardale. During the
Time of Troubles (1358 DR/0 PR), Shadowdale was attacked by Zhentil Keep. More
recently, the Dalelands have committed forces to a unified army under King Azoun
IV of Cormyr to turn back the Tuigan Invasion (1360 DR).