Mohin (MOE-hee for the country, the MOE-hee-an for residents) is a land that few outsiders understand. There are many customs that are difficult for those not from Mohin to grasp the purpose of.
Mohin is a green land. The far East and North portions are hills receding into swamps. The West is a fertile land. There are species of plant that only grow in Mohin.
Mohin is a “new” land in the opinions of many. The region and its people survived inside the Wandering Border for centuries. It was only eighty years ago when the Mohin managed to push the Wandering Border completely out of their lands without official aid from any of the other kingdoms of Mudar.
Living in relative isolation, the Mohinians developed a culture that was separate from the rest of the civilizations of Mudar. Most Mudarans consider the people of Mohin to be queer at the very least. It is not hard to find people in other nations that consider the Mohinians to be outright alien or even dangerous in spite of the fact Mohin has yet to actually ever declare war against anyone since uniting into a nation.
The Mohin are sometimes referred to as the Eaters of the Dead. A common funeral in Mohin culture is for the family and friends of the deceased to hold a feast where they and any member of society in need of sustenance feast upon the deceased loved one. This likely got its start in the early days the Mohin spent battling the Wandering Border from the inside, but the Mohin do not have any written records from that time.
Pahri (pair-EE) “The Emerald’s Blemish” is the capital of Mohin
Humans (25%), Tieflings (20%), Elves (10%), Dragonborn (10%), Dwarves (10%), Other races (10%), Halflings (5%), Gnomes (5%), Half-Orc (5%)
Mohin is largely self-sufficient. They do enjoy some of the more “exotic” other lands have to share with them such as wool, steel, and tobacco. Some of the exports coming out of Mohin include silk, opium, and plants. Some of these plants are edible including fruits, vegetables, and spices. Some have medicinal purposes that can not be found in plants from other regions of Murdar. Some are still worth researching to some scholars.