Pela Huban (pronounced PEH-lah HOO-bahn) is one of the most densely populated cities in the world, home to roughly one and a half million people. Limited to an island between two forks in the Blackwater River, Pela Huban is a city-state in the most literal sense.
Geography, flora, and fauna
History
Growth under the Sangiran Empire
The land on which Pela Huban sits has been inhabited for millennia, but the history of the modern city starts considerably more recently. After annexing Langkha in Y8130*, the volume of trade, visitors, and immigrants to the Sangiran Empire increased markedly. Wishing to control the activities of these newcomers, the Eternal Suzerain decreed that foreign arrivals would only be permitted to visit the port of Pela Huban.
The city was granted a level of autonomy, functionally separating it from Langkha, and the new arrivals were allowed a significant degree of social and political influence. This came with a number of restrictions, however. Most notably, inhabitants of the city were required to remain on Crane Island and were disallowed from venturing elsewhere in Kea Racha unless granted a special exemption.
Pela Huban's growth rapidly accelerated, fueled by the constant influx of immigrants from both elsewhere in Kea Racha and from abroad. With limited space to expand, many of the features of the modern city began to take shape.
Independence
After the death of the last Eternal Suzerain in Y9906*, the Sangiran Empire began to disintegrate. Pela Huban remained part of the vestigial empire until Y9631*, when the city-state declared independence alongside Langkha.
Though it was no longer bound by imperial decree, Pela Huban only continued to grow. Centuries of infrastructure and systems had been built to efficiently carry goods between the city and the rest of Kea Racha, and most simply found it convenient to continue to use the port as the primary gateway to the larger island.
In the absence of imperial administration, however, the law and order of Pela Huban broke down. Without the assistance of the Sangiran forces that previously bolstered their numbers, the Sentinels were unable to manage the city's overwhelming population. Gangs began to carve up portions of the city into their own fiefdoms, something that has continued to the present day.
Demographics
Individuals of every ancestry can be found in Pela Huban. Visitors and immigrants from around the world have made the city incredibly cosmopolitan, as people of all ancestries, backgrounds, and cultures live and work in close proximity to each other.
Pela Huban is arguably the largest city in the world, with an estimated one and a half million inhabitants. The exact population is not definitively known, as past efforts at conducting a census have been stymied by the city's dysfunctional government and the constant influx of new residents. Roughly a million more people live just outside Pela Huban, on the opposite banks of the Blackwater River. Though officially residents of Langkha, it is not uncommon for people living there to travel across the river regularly for work and to visit marketplaces.
Culture
Government
Judiciary
Pela Huban has a rather unusual form of government, one based entirely on the judiciary and courts. The laws of the city are based on an extensive corpus of cases and judicial decisions, which form a precedent for any new situations that may arise. Laws are not something decided by a council or mayor, but rather are evolved over time by the conclusions of the city's many judges.
Each precinct of the city elects three executive judges for ten year terms, who hear any cases that have no clear precedent. Below them is a vast array of lower judges, also elected, who resolve issues relating to common disputes and crimes.
Above the executive judges is the auditor judge, a figure elected by the entire city. The auditor judge has the authority to strike down any decisions by the executive judges, for example if a case is decided in a manner clearly at odds with existing laws.
Sentinels
Though frequently overwhelmed and drastically understaffed, Pela Huban employs a large number of officers to keep order. Known as the Sentinels, this organization is intended to enforce the laws of the city. To many Hubanese, however, the Sentinels are seen as little different from the various organized gangs that de facto run sections of the city. Despite attempts at reformation by many judges, the Sentinels largely protect those who will pay for their services - bribery is rampant and seen as a fact of life to many in the city.
Each precinct has its own branch of the Sentinels, who often lack the resources or lines of communication to effectively cooperate.
Sentinels use a standard set of armor, lamellar of either leather, bronze, or steel, depending on the rank of the officer. Most Sentinels decorate their armor with the name or symbol of their precinct, and some include other emblems or phrases indicating their experiences or status.
A special branch of the Sentinels, called the Bloodhounds, handles especially serious crimes in the city. All Bloodhounds are skilled investigators or trained in divination magic, able to extrapolate from even the most tangential of clues. Bloodhounds have free reign of the city and a special status that grants them exemptions to many laws, as long as it is in pursuit of their work. Most Bloodhounds wear no uniform or obvious markings, preferring to blend in whenever possible.
Economy
Immense amounts of material pass through the port of Pela Huban every day. Referred to by some as the "Gateway to Kea Racha", a majority of merchant ships that ply the trade routes of the Kilche Sea consider Pela Huban to be their most important port of call. The city's docks are an unending flurry of activity, as crews work to move cargo day and night.
Despite the city's lack of space, Pela Huban does have industry of its own. Workshops, smithies, refineries, and more have been built wherever possible, often mixed in with residential buildings.