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Porfíria

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Porfíria
(Kiravian Cusinaut)
Flag of (Kiravian Cusinaut)
Flag
Major citiesÉrskinsar, Krivôrok, Vittēmur
LanguagesKiravic Coscivian, Mannaki, Burgoignesc, Kilikas-Valēkas Coscivian, Eshavian Coscivian, Ĥeiran Coscivian
TypeOverseas Region
Provinces
Population
• Estimate
14,148,046
Time zoneWest Cronan Offset Time

Porfíria or Kiravian Cusinaut is an overseas region of the Kiravian Federacy located on the southern extreme of the Cusinaut subcontinent in northeastern Crona. The territory extends from the island of Rovaīon into the Archangel River Valley, bordering New Harren to the east and including the Kiravian colonies of Avenirskara in the southwest and Térrurin to the northwest. Porfíria was first permanently settled by Kiravians in 1618 AD, when the fort and trading post of Vittēmur was established at the mouth of the Archangel River. The colony subsequently attracted many thousands of Kiravian settlers who built a local economy based on exploitation of its abundant natural resources.

History

Pre-Colonial

The history of Porfiria stretches back to the earliest archaeological evidence of human arrival in Cusinaut from Alshar, with rudimentary fishing implements dated to about 20,000 BC having been excavated in Avenirskara and Tioga. The land was inhabited by various indigenous nations, including the Mannaki people who thrived in harmony with nature. The Sharkota, another indigenous group, also inhabited the region, and both nations developed vibrant cultures and trade networks connecting them to neighbouring peoples in Netansett.

Colonisation

Beginnings on Rovaion

The Kiravian presence in Porfíria dates to 1674 AD with their first landing on the island of Rovaion. The early exploration and colonisation of Cusinaut by Kiravians was auxiliary to the larger Kiro-Burgundian rivalry for supremacy over the new frontier of oceangoing intercontinental trade. Struggling to effectively challenge the Burgundine mercantile network in Audonia, enterprising Kiravians looked to offset this disadvantage by securing better access to the lucrative Alshar trade via an alternative sea route that would bypass the mostly Burgundine-dominated Sea of Istroya by sailing west from the Cape Colony.

Rovaion would become an important node in the Kiravian overseas trade network, serving as a permanent base for merchants trading with Oyashima, Kagoyama, and Metzetta (and later Daxia and Huoxia), linking ports in these countries to Cape Town and Sar-i-Pául, from whence Alshari wares could pass on to the valuable markets of Sarpedon or to Great Kirav itself, and where Kiravian exports (such as whiskey) could be taken on for the return voyage west. The infrastructure required to facilitate such business in Rovaion and maintain a strong naval presence there to protect the Kiravian merchant marine required more in terms of food and basic materials than was feasible to reliably import from the Cape, and more than local indigenous economies were equipped to provide at scale. This encouraged the development of a colonial primary sector manned by a transplanted productive class of Kiravian farmers, fishermen, and lumberers, and the concomitant formation of a settler society on Rovaion. This would be followed by efforts to extend settlement to nearby parts of mainland Cusinaut.

Early mainland settlements and conflict

In the early 1700s AD, there was a flurry of Kiravian and Yonderian settlement activity along the coastlines of what are now the Porfíria Colony and Avenirskara. Driven by aspirations of wealth and power, these Kiravian and Yonderian explorers established trading outposts and fortified settlements to solidify their presence in the region. These early colonies became centers of commerce, attracting merchants and craftsmen. As Kiravian and Yonderian settlements expanded, tensions between the two powers grew, and Burgundie - already locked into global colonial competition with Kiravia - was drawn in on the side of the Yonderians. Their competition for control over strategic resources and trading routes led to numerous clashes and conflicts. The struggle for dominance played out both on land and at sea, with naval battles becoming a common occurrence along Porfíria's shores. This period witnessed a series of fortified defenses being constructed to protect the interests of the Kiravians and the Yonderians and Burgittans. Forts, bastions, and batteries dotted the shoreline, acting as visible symbols of colonial power and control. Some of these fortifications still stand today, serving as reminders of Porfíria's tumultuous past. This conflict culminated in the War of the Broken Biscuit, which ended with Kiravian forces led by Adm. Hesperius Leonoix overwhelming the Yondro-Burgittan defences, forcing the cession of the Porfírian coast and Seváronsa to the Marble Emperor under the Treaty of Ampeloniki. The terms of the treaty obliged the Kiravian administration to respect the rights of the Cusinautiens (as the Yonderian colonists were called) and allow them to remain unmolested.

Inland expansion and contact with the Netanic League

Some entrepreneurial tradesmen had ventured up the Archangel River beginning in the 1680s, reaching Lake Wikipédia. The first formally sanctioned mission of upriver exploration beyond modern-day Krivôrok was the Macféden Expedition in 1688, which would chart the lake shores and courses of several rivers in what is now the Northeast Territory and Tioga and establish commercial contact with the Netanic League. The commercial significance of Cusinaut to the Occident had previously been limited to its utility as a waystation en route to Alshar and back, but the discovery of a reasonably advanced economy in the subcontinent's interior aroused new mercantile interest. Occidental trading parties would begin to call upon Netanic depôts with increasing frequency, providing an impetus for the ever-closer encroachment of Occidental outposts. These developments greatly concerned the isolationist leadership of the Netanic League, though strategic considerations would push them toward a conciliatory posture with the opening of Lichai to foreign merchants.

the Cusinautien voyageur Falco d'Aventure [Netansett intercourse]

Upriver expansion of Kiravian settlement was undertaken mainly by Ensciryan Coscivians and Northern Coscivians drawn by promises of landownership and new opportunities. These intrepid pioneers established communities and brought with them their rich traditions. Over time, the Ensciryans intermarried with the indigenous populations, forming unique cultural expressions and building prosperous towns and villages.

[Conflict and coëxistence with the natives]

Porfíria was originally governed from Érskinsar on the nearby island of Rovaīon. The Corned Beef Excise Dispute of 1672 moved colonists living in the mainland settlements to agitate for a separate legislature, which was granted by the Porfíria Act of 1674, though Rovaīon and the mainland settlements continued to share a high court and a governor. Rovaīon was separated from Porfíria and granted its own charter in 1680, and separate governors were appointed from 1683 onward. Ethnic differences between the majority Eshavian settler population of Rovaīon, and that of the mainland settlements (a more heterogeneous mix of Ensciryans, North Coscivians, Kir, Eshavians, and Gaels) also contributed to the demand for bifurcation. Avenirskara would later be spun off as its own colony, as would the Green River Colony and the Northeast Territory in order to provide closer supervision of these sensitive frontier regions.

Colonial Economy

The colonial economy of Porfíria relied on four sectors: Maritime trade and fishing in the coastal regions; timber, shipbuilding and naval stores; agriculture, and (to a lesser extent in the colony's early stages) mining. The region's abundant coastal waters teemed with fish, providing a valuable resource for sustenance and trade. Both the Kiravians and Yonderians recognised the economic potential of these fisheries and established fishing outposts along the coastline. The fishing industry flourished, with salted and dried fish becoming a sought-after commodity in Crona and Alshar. This thriving trade network not only brought wealth to the colonies but also facilitated cultural exchange and interaction with international markets.

[Netansett trade]

Agriculture played a significant role in the colonial economy of Porfíria, and employed a plurality of Porfírian workers. The soil and climatic conditions of southern Cusinaut were not ideal for agriculture in general, but were sufficiently favourable to the cultivation of Kiravian staples by farmers from the Highlands and upper latitudes with experience farming in a similar environment to enable the emergence of a viable agricultural sector. The Ensciryans, with their agricultural expertise, introduced new farming techniques and crops to the region, cultivating potato, Coscivian cuckwheat, dralm, oats, and gourds. Stock raising of sheep, dairy cattle, and swine was also a major source of value. Surplus produce was traded mainly to other colonies with lower agricultural output, such as Thýstara, and as provisions to visiting ships. The agricultural sector not only provided sustenance for the growing population but also contributed to the economic growth and social stability.

Northern Tracts and the Law of Settlement

By 1704, the legal boundary of Porfíria had extended far northward into the Cusinaut interior to the border with the Northern Confederation; this land had been acquired by intermittent warfare and treaties between the colonial settlers and native peoples. This area, known as the "Northern Tracts", was largely unsettled and is roughly coterminous with modern Netansett. In colonial Cusinaut, such land claims were not effective sovereignty, but rather the right to obtain and settle indigenous lands to the exclusion of other colonial powers. Increasingly, however, border forts, trade posts, and other zones of control began to be erected by the Kiravian colonial administrators through the early-to-mid 1700s. Kiravia was able to project power in this region despite limited resources because of the fractured nature of the local tribal people, who were deeply divided by ancient political and social differences. The rising power of Kiravia led to a reconsideration of these animosities, and in 1764 the landmark Treaty of Hukon was signed by the eight most powerful tribes in the region. The Treaty bound them together in loose confederation and military alliance. From then on, the Hukon League launched ever-larger raids into southern Porfíria, devestating the economy and disrupting settlement efforts. The "Hukon War" ended in 1773 with the Treaty of Vittēmur. The Treaty pledged to prevent further settlement in the Northern Tracts but allowed existing trading posts and forts to remain, and also required the Hukon to continue to trade exclusively with Kiravia rather than with other Occidental powers or the Northern Confederation. The Treaty effectively recognized the Hukon League as the legitimate representative body of indigienous peoples in the Northern Tracts. Per the Treaty, in 1774 the new Law of Settlement was enacted, which forbid non-native peoples from settling north of a certain line within Porfíria. The Settlement line comprises Porfíria's modern northern boundary.

Sunderance

During the Sunderance, Porfíria and the rest of Kiravian Cusinaut remained loyal to the Federalist government of Séan Kæśek, forming the largest contiguous area of the Kiravian Remnant and the second most populous (after Æonara). Porfíria's resources and manpower were crucial to keeping the Remnant's economy afloat during its early stage.

Post-Restoration

Kiravian Reunification brought hard economic times on Porfíria and its neighbouring colonies, as they now had to compete with Great Kirav and Koskenkorva as domestic suppliers of many of the same commodities. The post-reunification economic struggle of Porfíria and similarly-situated colonies - called the 'Little Reädjustment', in contrast to the 'Great Reädjustment' on the Kiravian mainland - was the main impetus behind the formation of the Overseas Development Executive.

Despite pessimistic forecasts by some economists, who claimed that Porfíria would never financially recover from this, Porfíria financially recovered from this.

During the Deluge, Porfíria was directly involved in the Kiroquois War. It hosted numerous Kiravian military support activities during the Final War of the Deluge, and also introduced limited conscription into its provincial self-defence and civil defence forces due to fears of home-soil attacks launched from Varshan and Netansett, the first new instance of conscription in the Kiravian Federacy since the 1988 AD National Service Suspension Order.


Geography

Provinces of Porfíria

Most of Porfíria has an oceanic climate.

River in the Northeast Territory

Major Settlements:

  • Érskinsar, Rovaion
  • Krivôrok, Thendara
  • Vittēmur, Porfíria Colony
  • Inverporfír, Porfíria Colony
  • Parera, Avenirskara
  • Nantuxen, Green River Colony
  • Kaśiska, Tioga Colony
  • Saar-Macféden, Northeast Territory
  • Vómrasar, Avenirskara
  • Sudhrun, Porfíria Colony
  • Krummavísur, Northeast Territory

Economy

A farmstead near the Kantaska border
Tin ore from County Manrán
Distillery in Saar Macféden

Although not as highly developed as its offshore neighbour Rovaīon, Porfíria has a growing and diversifying economy based on a strong primary sector - including agriculture, mining, and the harvesting of timber and fish - and supplemented by transportation, resource processing, and service industries.

During the Sunderance, Porfíria experienced a manufacturing boom. The loss of the Kiravian Mainland forced the relocation of many strategic heavy industrial works, and Porfíria, with its abundance of raw materials, would become the destination for many. Industrial growth was most heavily concentrated in Krivôrok, where Tredagon Arms Factory opened a large munitions plant. Many such factories shut down in the decades following Kiravian Reunification, but some have remained, albeit with considerably reduced workforces.

The climate and terrain of Porfíria are quite similar to that of Great Kirav, and colonists have had great success cultivating Kiravian staple crops such as potato, cale, barley, and oats. Crops native to Cusinaut, such as sallaw and clubfruit, are also cultivated, both by the indigenous population and on settler-owned land. Livestock raising is an important activity, focused on sheep and tinav camelids introduced from Great Kirav. As a result of the distributist land tenure policies adopted during colonisation and their continuation in the colony's own property laws, most settler-held agricultural land is family-owned and organised into parcels ranging from medium-sized estates to small, single-family homesteads. Most native-held agricultural land is owned collectively, either by tribes and clans according to traditional customary law or by the governments of the autonomous Mannakidan territories. Forestry is also an important industry, and Porfíria is a rising producer of softwood timber, pine resins, and paper products.

Rich stocks of [types of fish] and shellfish such as [species] are found in the cold waters of the Northern Approaches and the wider North Levantine Ocean, and [species] is plentiful in the relatively unpolluted Archangel River.

Tourism is hoped to become a major source of income for the colony in the future, as Porfíria's breathtaking natural scenery, agreeable (for Kiravians) climate, and many opportunities for hunting and fishing promise to make it a prime destination for the popular Kiravian activities of skiīng and backlanding.

Society and Culture

[Statistical Demography]

Ethno-cultural Groups

  • Coscivians: Kir, Ensciryan Coscivians, Northern/Kilikas-Valēkas Coscivians
  • Cusinautiens (from Yonderre)
  • Natives: Mannaki, Sharkota, others?
  • Kiravian and foreign Gaels


Religion

Sports

Lacrosse is the most popular sport in Porfíria. The most popular professional sports league in Porfíria is the Northern Crona Lacrosse Association (NCLA), a league with fourteen teams across Porfíria and New Harren.

Porfíria and New Harren also share a professional soccer league, the sixteen team Cusinaut Football Associated League (CFAL).

See also