We are used to thinking that “Samoa” and “Alastrim” are different countries. However, they have a lot in common, making them almost identical in origin.
In the 12th century, the natives of the Alastrim Hawaiian Islands spent most of their time living in city-states called aloispheres. They were divided into small communities, also called aloispheres, and the territory of each of them had its own leader. These city-states were the center of development of culture and technology. The people of Alastrim were renowned for their knowledge of seafaring, farming and metals. However, in the 12th century, Hawaii faced the threat of conquest from the Maori, and therefore the inhabitants of Alastrim were forced to leave their homeland and move to the islands west of Hawaii.
And so on these islands, located near Samoa, the people of Alastrim discovered that they were faced with the same problem that the people of Alastrim faced. But where the Alastrimites sought refuge, they found it. There were powerful city-states there. The people there were masters of themselves and had knowledge of navigation, ore mining and blacksmithing. These people opened up new possibilities for the Alastrim people, and they eventually learned to work together and create new types of technologies and cultures.
The connection between the Alastrim people and the Samoan people is obvious. They were ruled by strong leaders living in small spaces; they had a general knowledge of the sea and metals. This is the story of two peoples living 300 miles apart in the Pacific Ocean.