Nāhuarunayala (Abya Yala)

Nāhuarunayala is a nation and vast empire founded in the year 1448 AD by a Kuna chieftain who made an alliance with both Tawantinsuyu and Ēxcān Tlahtōlōyān after many travels across Abya Yala to increase security and trade with his chiefdom. Starting from a small chiefdom that conquered its local rivals, millions of settlers from the Inca and Aztec realms settled within the chiefdom intermixing with the less numerous indigenous Kuna people resulting the ethnogenesis of the Nāhuaruna, by 1500 the Nāhuaruna conquered the Inca and Aztec lands however absorbing their nobility considering their historical contributions, and annexed the Carribean islands.

((Founding))

The history of Nāhuarunayala is rich in cultural heritage, historical achievements and warfare despite the recent foundation of the nation, as soon as the alliance in 1448 AD was formalised, ball courts and a road systems were installed and goods from Tenōchtitilan and Qusqu were imported by Aztec and Inca merchants, many of whom married Kuna women or women from other Chibchan people's creating the first Nāhuaruna children. Considering the rivalry between the local Kuna or related tribe's chieftains as well as their the common chieftain disputes with Inca and Aztec merchants, it was decided by the majority of locals that their nation must be led by an emperor. So they sent their delegates on long travels from the Proto-Nāhuaruna Chiefdom to Tenōchtitilan and Qusqu to deliberate the issue, in response the Sapa Inka of Tawantinsuyu had sent one of his sons to govern the chiefdom and the Tlātoani of Tenōchtitilan sent one of his daughters as the bride of the Sapa Inka's son. Their marriage took place in what was then the Proto-Nāhuaruna chiefdom but when the marriage was finalised the great empire of Nāhuarunayala was born.