Washakara: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
|||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 178: | Line 178: | ||
=== Religious Demographics === | === Religious Demographics === | ||
== Economy == | == Economy == | ||
==Military== | ==Military== | ||
[[Category:IXWB]] | [[Category:IXWB]] | ||
{{Template:Award winning article}} | {{Template:Award winning article}} | ||
[[Category:2023 Award winning pages]] | [[Category:2023 Award winning pages]] | ||
Latest revision as of 17:21, 25 June 2024
This article is considered abandoned lore either because its creator has changed projects or has left the community. Accordingly, it is not only non-canon but it is also eligible for salvage pending approval from an administrator.
|
State of Washakara Washakara | |
---|---|
Motto: "Heta Apytégui, Peteĩ" "Out of many, one" | |
Capital and | Nauanau |
Government | Parliamentary republic |
• President | Breua Lunaesa |
Legislature | People's Progressive Congress |
Population | |
• 2025 estimate | 9,245,959 |
GDP (nominal) | estimate |
• Per capita | $15,102 |
The State of Washakara is a small state in Southern Crona, border to the North by the Confederated Provinces of Arcerion and to the South by the Imperial Kingdom of Paulastra. It was formed as a result of a side theater of the First Great War war between Arcerion and Paulastra, with the nation established by treaty in 1898 which formally withdrew both parties from the conflict.
Washakara is distinguished by significant amount of income and social inequality between its residents, and is primarily notable economically for its role as a major transportation corridor between Paulastra and Arcerion. Many international observers have classified Washakara, functionally, as a condominium of Paulastra and Arcerion. Washakara remains as one of the few places where relaxed immigration laws allow an influx of foreign refugees from Varshan to arrive, and the influx of these immigrants is having a significant disruptive effect on Washakaran society and politics.
Etymology
Geography
History
Early history
With the widespread arrival of Levantine settlers to Southern Crona in the late 1700s, Indigenous populations found it increasingly difficult to remain in the same area as what would eventually become Arcerion. Be it border skirmishes, economic issues, famine, or just mass migration away from ancestral lands, the Indigenous populations of Southeastern Cronan peninsula were gradually moved to an area South-East of where modern Arcerion is today.
In the region claimed by settlers of what would become Arcerion, Paulastra began the establishment of its Western Reserve, a new home for tribal people after land clearances and forced relocations in the wake of the new nation's civil war. The establishment of the reserve also included tribes legally recognized by the Paulastran government, who began to be given increasing self-governance authority within the reserve. The reserve continued to receive an influx of resettled tribes from Paulastra, and from Arcerion there was a continuous influx of people towards the refuge state, and by 1895 this population had reached 3 million. Mostly farmers and agrarian, they were either displaced due to the rapid pace of the Arcer expansion or forcibly through force.
Establishment
The Washakara Basin was claimed by both Arcerion and Paulastra throughout the late 19th century and saw settlement and encroachment by both nations during the 1880s and 1890s. When Arcerion was drawn into the First Great War due to diplomatic commitments in Levantia and Sarpedon, Paulastra moved its armies into the Washakara basin and began to fortify the most extreme border claim, territory largely within the international consensus of Arcerion territory. Arcerion declared war on Paulastra in June of 1897, beginning the Basin War. The Basin War, a side front of the First Great War, largely saw loose columns of forces from both nations fight skirmishes throughout the bush without any major campaigns or battles fought. Due to the increasing ferocity of the war abroad, concerns about the Cape, and other factors, both sides were eager to reach a permanent settlement by early 1898. Negotiations produced an independent state as a condominium in the center of the disputed territory, with both sides annexing significant portions of the basin along the periphery of the new state. The independent state would be governed by the Paulastran treaty-recognized "statutory tribes" which had lived in the basin for centuries.
Nation-building and paternalism
Segregation era
Reform period
Modern history
Varshani refugee crisis
Government
Executive
Legislature
Local governance
Culture and society
Washakaran society is largely distinguished into two major "classes" or "groupings" within Washakaran society - members of the so-called "statutory tribes" and the "transferees". The statutory tribes are tribes who have always occupied the lands consisting of present Washakaran territory, and until the mid-20th century they were the only groups given the right to vote. The transferees are groups of people who were forcibly relocated to Washakara by the governments of Paulastra and Arcerion. As the nation has existed for nearly a century and a half, unique cultural traditions have been established among each group as well as those which transcend groupings. Due to close interaction, both politically and culturally, both groups have largely established relatively uniform cultural traditions despite themselves largely originating from dozens of diverse tribes.
The nation's flag and emblem, adopted in 1980, reflects the diverse origin of its people. The flag's four colors and the patchwork of color on the emblem's buffalo attempt to depict people of many different backgrounds coming together into one nation.
Statutory culture
The fourteen statutory tribes - those recognized by treaty with Paulastra - are the predominant cultural group in Washakara with respect to economic presence and public visibility. Statutory culture largely retains many of the cultural traditions and mores present in Washakara for centuries, but has also begun to integrate elements of Occidental civilization due to statutory wealth and influence of the neighboring powers.
Cuisine
Transferee culture
Transferee Washakarans have grown to proudly embrace their heritage despite the negative role the two Occidental nations in Crona played in its creation. Most transferees have lost specific tribal affiliations and instead identify with a generic indigienous pan-Cronan worldview.
While most transferees have taken to the practice of religions like Arzalism and M'acunism due to their pan-Cronan identity, many have also taken to more radical forms of Christian liberation theology.
Politically, a loud and sizable minority of transferees are revolutionary socialists.
Intercultural relations
Relations between the statutory and transferee peoples in Washakara has undergone various stages and has varied by party control and world events. Generally, when the relocations began, most statutory people viewed the people being relocated into their land not as interlopers but as victims, and in the 19th century many "Relocatee Benefit Soceities" were established among the statutory elite to provide for the basic needs of the transferees who were wthout employment or land to sustain themselves. The so-called "paternalist era" of intercultural relations lasted until around 1905, not long after the establishment of Washakara as a sovereign entity. After that time, the governments of Washakara attempted to resist additional relocations or immigration by indigienous peoples from its neighboring states, and popular opinion began to view transferees as a societal burden; transferees were viewed as economic leaches and generally undesirable among statutory society. This view remained the predominant one for the first half of the 20th century. Legal segregation took effect in 1917 and lasted until 1970. During the 1950s, various civil rights movements for the transferees among statutory peoples began, and various pan-Cronan notions improved intercultural relations somewhat during the 1950s and 60s. Legal segregation was abolished in 1970, and the transferees were given the right to vote in 1967.
Despite the political reforms undertaken by the statutory peoples, significant resentment still exists between the peoples. Among statutory Washakarans, the transferees are viewed as little more than welfare queens and people without an identity; many view the transferees as ungrateful for causing disruption among the ancestral land of the statutory peoples. Among the transferees, the statutory peoples are viewed as oppressors and a domineering overclass who, despite reforms, dominate society. Many view the statutory peoples as agents of Occidental oppression.
Immigration
A major influx of refugees from former Varshan representing a growing part of the population every year.
Demographics
Linguistic Demographics
Religious Demographics
Economy
Military