Middle seas region: Difference between revisions

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=See also=
=See also=
 
{{Audonia topics}}
[[Category: Political Geography]]
[[Category: Political Geography]]
[[Category: Cultural Geography]]
[[Category: Cultural Geography]]

Revision as of 20:52, 4 February 2024

Map of the Middle seas region
Map of the Middle seas region

The Middle seas region is the areas of eastern Audonia around the Aab-e-Farus and the Sea of Kandahar from which it gets its name.

The Middle Seas region does not have legal status but is more of a cultural and economic generalization for the peoples and nations who are in close proximity to each other and are the typical trade partners and political allies or rivals of the other nations in the region.

Throughout history, peoples, cultures, religions, and languages were constantly intermixing in the region. They were forced together through external forces like the Oduniyyad Caliphate, the Burgoignesc colonial empire, and the Caphirian colonization of Zaclaria. Today the nations of the Middle seas region are totally sovereign and independent of each other, but they share some aspects in common. Many of them, as a vestige of the Burgoignesc colonial empire, use the Burgoignesc language as their language of business and international politics. Some of them use currency pegged to the Taler. And almost all have minority Christian populations dating back to the proselytization of the Bergendii and Caphirians.

Geographic extent

It includes the nations of Bulkh, Umardwal, Zaclaria, Kandara, Tapakdore, Peshabiwar, Pukhgundi, the Burgoignesc island of Alcairet, Antilles, and Salarive.

Controversies

The nations of the Middle sea region are the ones most impacted and most vocal about Burgundie's La Garrote, as the ring of Burgundie's overseas provinces exert disproportionate control on the trade and economies of the region.

See also