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  • History of Kalibara
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  • The history of Kalibara concerns the formation of the Imperial Dynasty of Kalibara, its growth, expansion, and conflicts between 1532 to the present. Kalibara itself was uninhabited until its discovery by Nyasore I in 1532, and little about its past before that year is known. Kalibara's first capital was located at Makazi, but was moved sometime after to the planned city of Kimbilio. As Kalibara grew from the trade of gold, spices, slaves, and sugar, it expanded its borders to include Somalia in 1590, Oman in 1597, the Maldives in 1644, Ceylon in 1648, Burma in 1652, and Yemen in 1654. Dravida was aquired in 1666, but wasn't fully supressed until 1673, and Sumatra was conquered during a series of conflicts lasting between 1671 to 1708. Madagascar was aquired through the unification of the
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abstract
  • The history of Kalibara concerns the formation of the Imperial Dynasty of Kalibara, its growth, expansion, and conflicts between 1532 to the present. Kalibara itself was uninhabited until its discovery by Nyasore I in 1532, and little about its past before that year is known. Kalibara's first capital was located at Makazi, but was moved sometime after to the planned city of Kimbilio. As Kalibara grew from the trade of gold, spices, slaves, and sugar, it expanded its borders to include Somalia in 1590, Oman in 1597, the Maldives in 1644, Ceylon in 1648, Burma in 1652, and Yemen in 1654. Dravida was aquired in 1666, but wasn't fully supressed until 1673, and Sumatra was conquered during a series of conflicts lasting between 1671 to 1708. Madagascar was aquired through the unification of the kingdoms there by Kenan III in 1723, afterwhich he proclaimed himself "King of Madagascar". Today, Kalibara has grown to become one of the most powerful on earth, and its cultural impact, while limited to Africa and much of the Southeast Asia, has been a deciding factor in the growth of its territories and the people that inhabit them.