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The construction of this house is sowhat special. It consists of two wing-style houses connected together, forming an "L" shape, with a door on each side.

Emrich entered through the door on the left. Inside the spacious room, there was only one subordinate from the Agricultural Departnt, who was focused on transcribing from wooden boards onto freshly made paper.

Emrich approached and gently knocked on the wooden table, saying, "Antidoras, I’ve brought you more Reserve Tribe mbers."

The middle-aged man nad Antidoras, familiar with Emrich, asked without raising his head, "How many people?"

"Seventy-three in total, but eleven are injured and are now in the hospital. Only sixty-two have arrived. They’ve all co from the Segestica side and have been fighting the Segestica people—"

Antidoras suddenly looked up at Emrich: "There were reports about a group comprised of Skodisqi people frequently raiding within Segestica territory, causing the Segestica people a headache... Are they the ones?!"

"That’s them! Recently, the Segestica people intensified their encirclent of that group. The people I brought are the only survivors..." Emrich said in a low voice.

"It seems their hatred towards the Pannonians runs deep?"

"I took them from the border of Westeni, brought them for registration, and inford them that there were Pannonians in the tribe. At first, they were resistant, but it’s much better now, not much different from the tribesn who ca from Brochi..."

"But we still need to be more cautious. This is our first ti accepting Scodisqi slaves who escaped from Segestica after establishing the tribe, and the Segestica people are more demanding of you Skodisqi than of the Brochi people..." Antidoras cautiously said, handing a wooden board to Emrich, "Write down their nas first."

This was a necessary procedure, and Emrich was familiar with it. He picked up an ink brush and skillfully wrote the tribesn’s nas, occasionally stepping out to inquire if he forgot any.

As Antidoras looked at the densely packed nas on the wooden board, he asked, "Is there anyone who needs special attention?"

Emrich hesitated for a mont and pointed to a na: "...Him, Gowes."

"Anyone else?"

"The rest are fine."

Antidoras took the board, circled Gowes’s na with ink, then opened a thick book, each page listing the residents of a dormitory. As he browsed, he assigned dormitory numbers above the nas of these newcors on the board.

After finishing, he led Emrich through the door on the right. Inside the room was a fully ard centurion.

Actually, the Military Departnt sent a Centurion to guard the Reserve Tribe mbers’ residence area, but since the Reserve Tribe mbers needed to go out to work during the day, most soldiers also had to follow to maintain order.

"Sixty-two Reserve Tribe mbers have just arrived. Here’s the list, and I’ve already assigned the rooms." Antidoras handed the board to the centurion.

The centurion glanced at the board and then handed it back to Antidoras, saying, "You handle the arrangents; I’ll back you up."

Thus, the sixty-two Scodisqi slaves who fled from Segestica were quickly dispersed and individually allocated to each room.

The room where Gowes stayed was Room Ten, not far from the room guarded by the Guard.

After the centurion led him into the room, he began looking around: The room wasn’t spacious, and the ceiling wasn’t too high, but it was relatively long, with beds on both sides extending from one end to the other. The bedding base seed not to be lined with clay, sturdier, about a quarter-ter high. Wooden planks served as bed boards, planed smooth so as not to hurt hands, and topped with soft straw and hay, making it quite comfortable to lie on. The two rows of beds could accommodate dozens of people, with a passageway in between, and a wooden shelf against each wall filled with numbered earthenware pots and bowls, with a door on each side for convenient access.

Each entrance had a small hearth, and the ceiling had a chimney. The long walls on both sides were gray-white, likely made of the sa material as the bedding base, also quite solid. However, at intervals, a vertical arc-shaped wood grain protruded, probably the wooden pillar supporting the roof. Each long wall had two small wooden windows for ventilation and lighting...

Although dozens of people slept in one room, it was far better than the living conditions when he was a slave in the Panlori Segestica Tribe, and it was more comfortable than when they were resisting the Segestica people, eating and living rough daily, although he didn’t know these specialized houses for the Reserve Tribe mbers were built just five or six days prior.

The ergence of these longhouses was thanks to a carpenter nad Seckblas, who was a slave at the Sarabia shipyard before joining the rebel army. Before becoming a carpenter, he was an artisan from a tribe on the Iberian Peninsula responsible for building houses for the tribesn.

Despite his age, he was very clever. When the tribe was destroyed by the Romans, all surviving tribesn beca captives, he proactively told the Romans that he "was good at woodworking," so he wasn’t sent to farm but was sold to a shipyard.

At the shipyard, because of his woodworking skills, he wasn’t harshly treated. Out of interest, he would use his spare ti to observe how the Italians built and repaired houses.

After joining the rebel army and settling here, he joined the team repairing the damaged houses within two forts, during which he thoroughly understood the building characteristics of the local ethnic housing.

The wooden bridge completion, the reward to Tetilipus the carpenter, and the upgrade of tribal status motivated all the craftsn of the Nix Tribe, sparking their enthusiasm for work, and Seckblas was no exception.

At this ti, they had just finished repairing all the houses. With the upcoming task of building docks and wood processing not needing too many hands, Maximus thought it wasn’t appropriate for the Reserve Tribe mbers to keep living in simple wooden sheds or tents, so a proposal to build dormitories for them was passed in the Political Affairs Hall.

But figuring out what kind of houses could quickly solve the Reserve Tribe mbers’ accommodation problem while ensuring their comfort and safety troubled the Chief Officers of various departnts, so they sought input from the craftsn, and Seckblas’s well-prepared proposal was ultimately approved.

His proposal was: First lay down the foundation, then drive dozens of wooden stakes into the ground according to the blueprint, create segnted roof wooden fras, assemble them after placing them on top, bringing the whole wooden house skeleton into shape. Next, nail wooden slats between the stakes, use freshly made simple cent mixed with water and river sand, adding a large amount of straw and hay, mixing thoroughly, and apply it between the slats until the gaps between all wooden pillars are filled. In the cent drying process, open doors, windows, and chimney spaces, completing a dormitory...

Building such a dormitory had ready timber, and more could be cut at any ti; there was plenty of straw and hay. The bedding bases were ford with stone bricks and cent, but few bricks were used, only two walls on the edge and the center to prevent the wooden board from collapsing under too much weight, leaving most spaces hollow. Cent was relatively constrained, but li kilns were under expansion to increase productivity... Therefore, raw materials weren’t an issue.

As for manpower, Seckblas and several carpenters with house-building experience supervised the entire project. They guided and examined tribesn in compacting the foundation, marking house baselines with li powder, and determining where the wooden pillars should penetrate the ground. Carpenters were responsible for processing wooden pillars, beams, and slats, with tribesn lifting beams and applying prepared cent, and carpenters finishing the doors, windows, and chimneys...

This system allowed craftsn to concentrate on their specialties, and the tribesn contributed their large numbers, doing what they could. The clear division of labor saved ti, so within just over a month, more than a hundred dormitories were successively completed, satisfying the Reserve Tribe mbers after moving in.

Because the dormitory design by Seckblas solved a major problem for the tribe, and to encourage craftsn to continue to actively unleash their creativity, by Maximus’s proposal, Seckblas was awarded by the tribe to beco the second craftsman to be promoted to a First-class Tribesman.

Now, reborn in his career, Seckblas and the carpenters were building dormitories on the Westeni side.

In fact, Seckblas also ntioned in his proposal that "after the cent hardens, the entire wall and roof should be coated with li water to make them white, making them more aesthetically pleasing...". But due to ti constraints, this hasn’t been implented yet.

Gowes, of course, didn’t know the origins of the dormitory; today, after the long journey, he was already quite tired. Seeing a large unfilled space with straw on the fringe of the left bed, he crawled over and lay on his back, gazing at the wooden plaque in his hand, pondering everything he had encountered in the Nix Tribe that day, including the daughter of the Hamsted leader, and for a mont, his thoughts beca turbulent...

.....................

"Hey, wake up!... Wake up!..." Gowes was pushed awake, opening his drowsy eyes to see many faces floating before him. He imdiately propped himself up.

"Hey, new brother, what’s your na?" A man taller and stronger than he was stood at the foot of the bed, asking kindly.

Gowes glanced around, finding the previously empty room now packed with people, not a familiar face in sight, but certainly, none were Pannonians. Also, he noticed as this man spoke, everyone else went quiet, indicating he probably had a significant status.

You are reading Rome Must Perish Chapter 336 - 215: Nix Reserve Tribe Members Administration on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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