Bérasar

Béyasar is a major coastal city in northeastern Great Kirav, the capital and largest city of the Kiravian state of Fariva. One of the oldest Coscivian settlements in Ixnay, Béyasar is the economic, cultural, and transportation hub of the Far Northeastern region, and has an almost thousand-year-old history shaped principally by its status as a major port of the Kilikas Seaway. Along with Valēka, it was a leading Kiravian nexus of the intellectual, cultural, and technological movement known as the Northern or Kilikas Enlightenment, and is regarded as the "most Levantine city" in Kiravia due to its strong historic and demographic ties to Kuhlfros, Burgundie, and Kistan.

Contemorary Béyasar stands at the forefront of many knowledge-intensive fields, such as higher education, medical research, high-tech manufacturing, naval architecture, and investment banking, while still maintaining the robust shipping, fishing, brewing, and papermaking sectors that have been active in the city for centuries. It has a longstanding rivalry with its southern neighbour Valēka that extends from economic competition for dominance in certain industries to cuisine, music, and, most importantly, sports.

Geography and Climate
Kilikas Storm Belt, snow starts in late September, early October.

Economy
SHIPPING

Historically: Ice trade.

Fishing: Actual fish. Lobsters. OYSTERS out the úasú.

Timber processing and papermarking.

High-tech knowledge- and capital-intensive shit. Finance. The Béyasar metropolitan area hosts the second-largest concentration of biomedical research and business activity in the Federacy, after the Primóra-Kartika Metropolitan Area.

Brewing

Ethnic Makeup and Demographic History
Béyasar has been shaped by multiple waves of immigration from different parts of the Coscivian world, the wider Far Northeast, the Eastern Highlands, and Levantia. While less monumentally diverse than Valēka, Escarda, and Saar Silverda with their hundreds and hundreds of ethnic communities, Béyasar manifests a unique and characteristic blend of cultural influences from the various ethnic groups that have come to call it home.

>Foundational groups

>Lúnstem, Sea Coscivians, Keregūlem ans similar maritime groups

>Ĥeldicans, Gaels, and Highlanders. Meridian Finns.

>South and Southwestern Coscivians + Svenskem and North Elutes

>New Coscivians

>Burgundines with their various layers of history

>Urceans, Kuhlfrosians, and Kistani

Religion
Béyasar is a predominantly Christian city. Just under half of the population belongs to the Roman Catholic Church, with the next largest denominations being Insular Apostolic, Coscivian Orthodox, and Mercantile Protestant. Most of the non-Christian minority adheres to Ruricanism or Læstorianism (monotheistic religions of Coscivian origin) or are irreligious theists.

Catholic influence in Béyasar has always been very strong, owing to the city's close links with the Levantian mainland. Béyasar and its sattelite city of Epsilar are the only Kiravian cities of significant size outside of the Tryhstian Littoral where more Catholics belong to the Latin Rite than to the Coscivian Rite. The Archbishop of Béyasar is usually a Cardinal and has strong influence over the Kiravian Church as whole.

The city's Ĥeldican Coscivians, Féinem, and most of its Gaels belong to the Insular Apostolic Church. Coscivian Orthodoxy is the traditional faith among most of the Coscivian ethnic groups who immigrated to Béyasar from southern and southwestern Éorsa, as well as from the New Coscivian countries. Mercantile Protestantism arrived in the city with Burgundine merchants.

Language
The everyday language of Béyasar is Bāsahrona, a dialect of Kiravic Coscivian that forms the core of the Fariva Kiravic dialect spoken in the surrounding state. Written Kiravic usage in the Béyasar metropolitan area tends to follow the "Edskover Consensus", a group of conventions and style guides developed at Farivan universities and teaching colleges in the early decades following the Republican Revolution, and thus has noticeable differences from written Kiravic in other parts of the country that are more influenced by Valēkan or Southern conventions.

32% of Béyasar residents reported Kiravic as their only mother tongue, while an additional 26% report themselves as natively multilingual in Kiravic and one or more other languages. The most common native language after Kiravic is Gaelic (mostly Kuhlfrosian-Kiravians, native Kiravian Gaels, and Féinem), followed by Kostiatem Coscivian, Lebhan, Cālatem Coscivian, and Latin. Most educated Coscivian residents of Béyasar are Kiravic-speaking, literate in High Coscivian, and conversational in either Lebhan, Levantine Latin, or both.

Use of Levantine languages in commercial and public service settings is very common in Béyasar. Most directional signage in core areas of the city is printed in both Kiravic and Latin, and most police officers have at least a rudimentary understanding of Latin and/or Lebhan. Many downtown restaurants have bi- or trilingual menus, and electoral ballots in the city are available in Gaelic, Latin, Lebhan, Canaesh, Rexan, and Pretannic. Beginning in 21208, emergency broadcasts in the Béyasar metro area will include information in Urcean English and Kistani Gothic.

Sports
Béyasarites are known for their fanatical devotion to the city's sporting teams, and for their heated rivalry with Valēka-based teams. Fieldball (also known as "Kiravian-rules football" or "Kiravian gridiron") and hockey are the most popular sports in the city, represented at the professional level by the Béyasar Blues of the Federal Fieldball League and the Béyasar Longshoremen of the Seaboard Hockey League. Béyasar is sometimes considered the easternmost extension of the Hockey Belt running across Great Kirav's northern coast (though this is disputed by hockey fans from core Hockey Belt cities like Xūrosar and Xistódarin). Television viewership for fieldball games in the Béyasar media market is somewhat higher than viewership for hockey games, but hockey viewership has been known to edge out fieldball viewership in years that the Blues perform poorly.

The athletic rivalry between Béyasar and Valēka is deep-seated and bitter. In Valēka, which has two teams in both major professional leagues, and where affiliation with one of the two teams is a social and political fault line, residents from opposing fanbases will, as a rule, root for their intra-city rival over Béyasar. Similarly, Béyasar observes an unofficial holiday called Tæn Lakuśikorsk ("Day of Futility") whenever two Valēkan fieldball teams play one another, customarily "celebrated" by going to the pub, drinking a great deal, and making it a point to not watch the game.

Pitchblende Park in Béyasar is the home field of the Kiravian national football team.