Tribe of the Hill (The Sicans)

The Sican Tribe of the Hill migrated eastward after the Sican Diaspora, directly into Armenia. Later they went to China.

Pre-Syriac War
Before the Syriac War, the Hill tribe lived in Armenia. By 20 BCE, they gained an incredible amount of power in local politics. Their population also boomed in later half of the 1st century BCE in Armenia.

The Syriac War
In 13 BCE, the Dome tribe and the Hill tribe decided they would attack Syria and try to create a neo-Cycaen kingdom there. The Hills provided most of the manpower in the war, and lost over half of the soldiers it deployed. When the Romans defeated the Hills and Domes, the Hills traveled eastward again.

Trans-Asia
From 12 BCE until 117 AD, the Hills wandered Asia aimlessly looking for sanction. They had tiny casares in Kurdistan, Persia, Uzbekistan, Tibet, and Baluccistan at different points in time.

For a large portion of time, the tribe split into different factions that seperated, many of which were completely slaughtered. The surviving factions merged together after periods of suffering, but the proccess would repeat itself over and over.

Sino-Sican War
In 117, the Hill tribe was in Nepal when its leaders attacked China. For 3 years, the Hills moved swiftly through China and seized its cities. In 120, Shanghai fell to the Hills and they established the Hill Dynasty that ruled China until 251.

The Hill Dynasty
Beginning in 120, the Hills established a dynasty in China. In 121, they built Xanux, a city for the Hills. The Hills ruled China with power until 230.

From 230-270, the Hill dynasty declined. Some historians say the official end was in 251, when southeastern and northwestern China declared independence, but more say it was in 270 when the Song Dynasty conquered the remaining Hill Chinese lands, except for Xanux, which remained a casare for several hundred more years.