Kostava

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Kostava

Костава (Kostav)
Flag of Kostava
Flag
Emblem of Kostava
Emblem
Anthem: "Grand Anthem of Kostava"
Location of Kostava in Sarpedon
Capital
and largest city
Gorenk
Official languagesKastov
Ethnic groups
  • 88.8% Kastov
  • 10.2% Latinic
  • 1.0% Others
Religion
Catholicism
Protestantism
Demonym(s)Kostavan (noun)

Kostavan (adjective)

Kostavans (plural)
GovernmentRepresentative Democracy
• President
Mikhail Kevartli
• Prime Minister
Urkali Utze
LegislatureKostavan Assembly
Senate
Oblasts' Duma
Establishment
• An event
A date
Area
• Total
568,661 km2 (219,561 sq mi)
Population
• Estimate
224,000,000
GDP (PPP)estimate
• Total
$40 trillion
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
$7.84 trillion
• Per capita
$35,000
GiniPositive decrease 36.0
medium
HDI (Estimate)Increase 0.821
very high
CurrencyKostavan Syri (₴)
Time zoneCentral Sarpedon Time (CST)
Mains electricity220 V–50 Hz
Driving sideright
Calling code+7
Internet TLD.ko
.ко

Kostava (Kostavan: Костава), sometimes referred to as the Grand Republic of Kostava (Kostavan: Великая Республика Костава) or the Dominion of Kostava (, is a country in southwes)tern Sarpedon. It is bordered to the north by Pelaxia and Volonia, as well as bordered to the east by Calto and Doulan. Kostava is a highly urbanized nation, with about 4/5ths of its population living in urban centers like the capital Gorenk, or regional centers such as Denst or Fervonst. Kostavs, who are native to the region, make up the majority of Kostavans, and Kostava once served as their titular nation prior to the Kostavan Civil War.

Inhabited since the lower paleolithic era, Kostava is home to some of the oldest sites of civilization. Proper city-states began to establish themselves around 14th century BC, with dozens of kingdoms controlling the land. The South Slavs were the dominant culture that emerged at the beginning of the 3rd century AD, and Christianity was widely adopted, helping the establishment of Gorenkian Kov, which is commonly believed to be the first South Slav state in the world. Gorenkian Kov fractured into several slavic states by 8th century AD. The Grand Duchy of Gorenk claimed to be the successor of Gorenkian Kov, and began unifying Kostavan lands, declaring the Tsardom of Kostava in 1421. In 1587, Rurik Ugar was crowned tsar of the Tsardom of Kostava and began a series of aggressive skirmishes to become the 2nd largest empire in Sarpedon, behind the Third Imperium of Caphiria. The empire fought alongside the Aliança in the First Great War, and the subsequent loss of said war resulted in the Great Socialist Uprising in which members of the lower and working classes stormed the capital and killed the Tsar of Kostava. This resulted in a schism between northern and southern Kostava, creating 2 opposing states, the Kostavan Socialist Republic, and the Most Serene Republic of Kartvelia, which fought each other in the Kostavan Civil War. The Kostavan Socialist Republic is usually considered to be the victor of the war, but as part of the peace talks that unified the two countries, the new country was required to drop all official socialist terminology, and as such the new country is only to be known as Kostava. During the Second Great War, Kostava underwent rapid industrialization and fought alongside pro-Levantine forces such as Delepasia hoping to secure successful international trade for the commune. Following the war, the Kostavan governmen took a notably anti-Caphirian stance during the Occidental Cold War, leading to particularly harsh tensions due to the two nations' proximity. After the end of the Cold War in 1984, Kostava's ruling class no longer saw the need to enforce as much socialist propaganda on the youth, and so began the period of Glasnost and Perestroika (гласность и перестройка) in which Kostava became a more free democracy, adopted a mixed market economy, and became more involved in peaceful international relations.

Kostava is usually considered a great regional power of Sarpedon, and is a member of the League of Nations as well as other intranational organizations with Castadilla and Veltorina.

Etymology

The Ænglish name Kostava first appeared in the 14th century, borrowed from Medieval Latin. The term was created by applying the suffix -a with Kostav (from Kostava).

There are several words in Kostav which translate to "from Kostava" in Ænglish. The noun and adjective костав, kostav refers to ethnic Kostavans. The adjective костави, kostavi denotes Kostavan citizens regardless of ethnicity. The same applies to the more recently coined noun коставанский, kostavaskiy, in the sense of citizen of the Kostavan state.

The oldest endonyms used were Kov (Ков) and the "Kostavan land" (Коская земля, Koskaya zemlya). Another Medieval Latin name for Kov was Kastovia.

In Kostava, the current name of the country, Костава, comes from the Pelaxian name Kostía. The name Косия (Kosiya) was first attested in 1387. The name Kostava appeared in Kostavan sources in the 15th century and began to replace the vernacular Kov during the rise of Gorenk as the center of a unified Kostavan state. However, until the end of the 17th century, the country was more often referred to by its inhabitants as Kov, the "Kostavan land" (Koskaya zemlya), or the "Gorenkovite state" (Gorenkovskoye gosudarstvo), among other variations.

In 1421, Tsar Syimba the Great proclaimed the Kostavan Empire (Kostavaskaya imperiya). The name Kostava was used as the common designation for the multinational Kostavan Empire and then for the modern Kostavan state. Kostavan is distinguished from the ethnonym kostav, as it refers to a supranational identity, including ethnic Kostavans. After the First Great War and the proclamation of the Kostavan SR in 1902, the "Kostavan" in the title of the state was Kostaviya, rather than Kostav, as the former denoted a multinational state, while the latter had ethnic dimensions. In modern Kostava, the name Kov is still used in poetry or prose to refer to either the older Kostava or an imagined essence of Kostava.

History

Prehistory

The oldest traces of archaic humans in what is now Kostava date from approximately 1.8 million years ago in the form of the Dmanisi hominins, a subspecies of Homo erectus representing the oldest-known fossils of hominins in Sarpedon. Buffered by the Ugar mountains and benefiting from the ocean's ecosystem, the region seems to have served as a refugium throughout the Pleistocene, while the first continuous primitive settlements date back to the Middle Paleolithic, close to 200,000 years ago. During the Upper Paleolithic, settlements developed mostly in western Kostava, in the valleys of the Riyona and Kila rivers.

Signs of agriculture date back to at least the 6th millennium BC, especially in western Kostava, while the eastern regions became stably populated in the 5th millennium BC, as evidenced with the rise of various eastern cultures. Archaeological findings show that settlements in modern-day Kostava were responsible for the first use of fibers, possibly for clothing, more than 34,000 years ago, the first cases of viticulture (7th millennium BC), and the first signs of gold mining (3rd millennium BC).

Kostava by the 3rd century

Pre-Kostavan states

The first major powers of modern day Kostava appeared around the 3rd century AD, as 8 kingdoms scrambled to claim all of Kostava. The smallest of the kingdoms was the Duchy of Soviyeska, which maintained peaceful relations with the nearby Principality of Mudansk while warring against Gorenkian Kov and Kartvelia. Origvia was a kingdom ruled by the Orig dynasty in eastern Kostava, and was the first kingdom to be annexed by Gorenkian Kov, before Soviyeska, Mudansk, Kartvelia, Biyana, Sekartvelos, and Brudashme in that order.

By the 5th century, the entire peninsula was under control of Gorenkian Kov, which made efforts to Catholicize the region. Gorenkian Kov notably encountered hardships converting the 3 maritime kingdoms of Biyana, Brudashme, and Origvia, as these kingdoms had strong pagan beliefs which were uncommon for other kingdoms in the region. Kostavan culture was less influenced by Catholic writings than Levantiane and Caphirian cultures, as Gorenkian Kov spread Christianity through state regulated books, and did not follow the Catholic canon as closely as other Catholic states. The modern Kostavan language reflects this with much less Latin and Greek terms than cultures that had Latin and Greek introduced to them through the Bible.

Kostava by the 8th century

Gorenkian Kov collapsed in the 8th century due to disputes over who would be the next leader, leaving behind various states warring over the land that they believed that they could claim. Gorenk's dominance waned in the west as noble families who claimed to be the successors of previous states slowly took control of portions of Kostava. Two notable opposers to Gorenk rule included Lutaska and Novgud which became popular and wealthy regional powers after Gorenkian Kov's collapse. The Grand Duchy of Gorenk was the only empire that made very successful efforts to reunite the states under Kostava, and in 1421, the Tsardom of Kostava was declared. Notably, the only empire to carry over from before Gorenkan Kov's successful takeover of the entire peninsula was Kartvelia. Other notable kingdoms include Twei Piks which controlled two tiny peninsulas of islands otherwise controlled by Polonskiya, and the Verassan people, who sought to be the successor of Origvia. Several states competed to be the successor of the Principality of Biyana, but one notably was called South Kartvelia, despite having nothing to do with the Kartvelian state. This is evidence to how the Kartvelian identity was spreading across southern Kostava, and is the historical basis for the modern day Kartvelian provinces.

Tsardom of Kostava

Tsardom of Kostava

Коставское царство
1421–1902
Flag of Kostava
Flag
of Kostava
Coat of arms
CapitalGorenk (1421-1587)
Ugargrad (1587-1902)
Religion
Catholicism
GovernmentAbsolute Monarchy
Tsar 
• 1881-1902
Gregor Pelukov
History 
• Proclamation of the Tsardom
3 September 1421
• Great Socialist Uprising
23 October 1902
CurrencySyri
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Grand Duchy of Gorenk
Kostavan Socialist Repulic
Today part ofKostava
Doulan
Calto
Cogenia
Greater Salesia

After conquering about half of modern day Kostava, Tsar Syimba the Great declared the Kostavan Empire from the lands previously known as belonging to the Grand Duchy of Gorenk. The groundwork of the Kostavan Empire was laid by Tsar Syimba the Great (r. 1399–1462), who greatly expanded his domain, established a centralized Kostavan national state, and secured independence against Caphiria. Under the leadership of Tsar Syimba the Great's grandson, Rurik Ugar (r. 1587-1638), Kostava grew every year. The Tsardom of Kostava tried to aggressively expand its borders in the north and east, but met resistance from initially the Isurian Kingdom, but by 1587 also the Pelaxian Kingdom, and the Third Imperium of Caphiria. Spreading east into modern day Doulan and and Calto, Tsar Ugar turned the tsardom into an empire, and fought numerous wars that turned Kostava into a major Sarpedonian power.

Ugaritic Reform

From its founding in 1421, the tsardom was an absolute monarchy without any other form of government. With the crowning of Rurik Ugar in 1587, Tsar Ugar created the Kostavan Senate, curbed the influence of the clergy, revamped the military, and organized local forms of government for towns. He moved the Kostavan capital from Gorenk to his personally created city of Ugargrad, and led a cultural revolution that introduced more modern, scientific, and rationalistic ways of thinking. Tsar Pella (r. 1762–1796) presided over further expansion of Kostava by conquest, colonization, and diplomacy, while continuing Ugar's policy of modernization. Alexis II (r. 1801–1825) helped constitute the Holy Codes, which aimed to restrain the rise of secularism and liberalism across Kostava. Alexis III (r. 1855–1881) initiated numerous more reforms, most notably the 1825 emancipation of all 26 million serfs.

By the start of the 16th century, Kostavan territory extended from the Natiserve Bay in the west to the Pelian Channel in the east. By the end of the 18th century, Kostava had expanded its control over most of southern Sarpedon, including parts of Doulan, Calto, Cogenia, and Greater Solesia. Despite its extensive territorial gains and great power status, the empire was in a perilous state. The devastating Kostavan famine of 1879-1880 killed hundreds of thousands and led to popular discontent. As the last remaining absolute monarchy in Sarpedon, the empire saw rapid political radicalization and the growing popularity of revolutionary ideas such as socialism and republicanism. The last tsar of Kostava, Gregor Pelukov, authorized the creation of the Oblasts' Duma, although he still retained absolute political power.

First Great War

In 1886, Kostava entered the First Great War on the side of the Aliança, hoping to limit Caphiria's power and spread Kostavan territory. However, Kostava suffered a series of defeats against Caphiria that further galvanized the population against the tsar. In late 1902, after the war's conclusion, mass unrest among the population caused by food shortages, political dysfunction, and the loss of the First Great War culminated in the Great Socialist Uprising, in which members of the lower and working classes rioted at the capital of Ugargrad. Hoping to ease tensions by not provoking a violent response, Tsar Pelukov did not try to quell the riots, allowing socialist leaders such as Gorad Krosnik and Vladimor Kot to raise mass demonstrations against the government. In late October, 1902, groups burst into the Imperial Palace and beheaded Tsar Pelukov. Relatives of the tsar that were next in line were originally believed to have fled from Kostava and disappeared, until 1998 when workers restoring the Imperial Palace discovered 3 skeletal remains, an adult female and two children that were buried underneath the palace's basement, which would later be confirmed by DNA tests to be Tsar Pelukov's wife and 2 young sons. Historians now believe that Vladimir Kot had led a small group of soldiers to capture Tsar Pelukov's family, bring them to the basement, and discretely kill them and hide the bodies so that they could not become martyrs, nor could they attempt to retake the throne in the future. Socialists took control of all aspects of government on 23 October, 1902, declaring the new nation as the Kostavan Socialist Republic, but the new government would never reconquer the territory of the Tsardom of Kostava.

Kostavan Socialist Republic

Kostavan Socialist Republic

Коставанская Социалистическая Республика
1902–1918
Flag of Kostava
Flag
Emblem of Kostava
Emblem
Motto: "Пролетарии всех стран, соединяйтесь!"
English: "Workers of the world, unite!"
Anthem: "The International"
CapitalUgargrad (1902-1903)
Gorenk (1903-1918)
Religion
State Atheism
GovernmentSocialist Directorial Republic
Director 
• 1914-1918
Benin Yorkov
History 
• Great Socialist Uprising
23 October 1902
• Kartvelian Reunification
1 January 1918
CurrencyCommune Syri
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Tsardom of Kostava
Kostava

The Kostavan Socialist Republic was established on 23 October 1902 by Gorad Krosnik and Vladimor Kot. The government was initially reorganized to operate as an absolute oligarchy among all socialist party members, but as membership grew, this became a problem, so the government was reorganized again to be headed by the Director and head of party Gorad Krosnik, and also equally controlled by General of the Socialist Army Vladimor Kot. Krosnik was under the implication that all of Kostava would readily accept socialist rule, however, much of Kostava rejected any form of government operating from Kostava proper, and thus when the Tsardom of Kostava collapsed, 5 states immediately formed out of former territory. Krosnik immediately put the highest priority on reconquering Kartvelia, as this was the closest related state to Kostava and had previously been controlled by the Gorenkian Kov and Grand Duchy of Gorenk. Kot also gave insight in how a possible war with Kartvelia would be much easier to win, as conflict with other states would require traversing the treacherous Ugar mountains.

Once the Kostavan Civil War ended in 1918, the government was no longer interested in waging war against former territories.

Most Serene Republic of Kartvelia

Southern Kostava was its own country before the civil war

Second Great War

Anti-Caphirian, industrialization, Delepasian ally

Occidental Cold War

Anti-Caphirian again

Glasnost and Perestroika era

Communist parties begin to loosen propaganda and the country becomes more free

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Northern Kostava is a unitary state, with only counties and city governments alongside national governments. Counties in northern Kostava include: Kosalaya, Zaskanava, Grajnidar, Chrobonsk, North Volkia, South Volkia, East Puertego, and Patraja.

Southern Kostava, known as Kartvelia, is made up of 11 oblasts. The island oblasts of Grajnabad, Islaka, Tumika, Kralank, Chepelia, and Tbisacap, as well as the 5 mainland oblasts of Alaka, Sasha, Tbivanistan, Kastovia, and Pelia.

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A classic Kostavan shortbread cookie

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The national dish of Kostava is the shortbread cookie.

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Self-reported ethnic origin in the XXX (20XX)

  1 People (81.4%)
  2 People (7.2%)
  3 People (3.8%)
  4 People (2.8%)
  5 People (2.2%)
  6 People (1.4%)
  Other (1.2%)








Religious affiliations in the XXX (20XX)

  Religion 1 (94.5%)
  Religion 2 (1.7%)
  Religion 3 (1.3%)
  Religion 4 (.5%)
  Religion 5 (2%)


How large is your country's military? Is it large but poorly equipped or small and elite? Does your country have a martial tradition?