Acoul Noyon

Acoul Noyon (22 May 1858 - 7 November 1939) was an Ordrish, , , , , , and. One of the early pioneers of, Noyon's unique political philosophy which came to be known by his namesake, which he personally referred to as "radical federalism", synthesized concerns about the intersection of with  in the context of both anarchist thought and the emergent science of ecology. During his career, he published over a dozen books which covered these topics, ranging from texts on zoology, sociology, urbanism, philosophy, and intersections between politics and the environment.

His works were largely delineated between his experiences prior to and following the First World War (1905-1914). Among his most important works were Wood and Steel (1883), The Illusion of Scarcity (1895), A Federation of Labor (1900), and The Virtue of Animals (1903). During the war, he focused primarily on activism, and then largely receded from public life between 1914 and 1919. From 1917 and 1919, he composed what would become his most influential work, Dawn over the Penguinnes, originally composed of what he defined as "letters to a friend long passed", believed by many to be his longtime colleague and friend Jois Duchesne, who many suspect shared a private romantic relationship with Noyon prior to his death in 1914. His postwar works were typically published as smaller essays as opposed to full texts, while he travelled to continue his zoological research and aid in union organizing across postwar Alutra and Osamia. Following the events of the Brandesian Dictatorship in 1929, he departed his native Ordrey for the last time, having been forced to flee for his participation among leftist paramilitaries which emerged during the latter phase of the Ordrish Constitutional Crisis. He would spend the rest of his life in Gemurtak where he served as a researcher at [GEMURTAK UNIVERSITY] in [CITY], where he would continue to work until [REVOLUTION].