Sabnaki
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Dominion of the Sabnaki Sabnak'alluya (Sabnak) | |
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Motto: Llaqtanchik, Mana atipasqa! ("Our People, Unconquered!") | |
Anthem: Our Dominion, Long Lived! | |
Capital and largest city | Tsaile |
Official languages | Sabnak |
Religion | M'acunism |
Demonym(s) | Sabnak (adjective) Sabnaki (plural) |
Government | Your government type |
• Autocrat of the Sabnak | Maitsoi Taphanso |
• Chief Minister | T'iis Naalnish |
Council of Ministers | |
Urban Council | |
Establishment | |
• Autocracy established | 29 April 1840 |
Population | |
• Estimate | 34,510,214 |
GDP (nominal) | estimate |
• Total | $596,888,661,344 |
• Per capita | $17,296 |
Currency | Wampo (de jure) Taler (de facto) |
Sabnaki, officially the Dominion of the Sabnaki, is a country in Cusinaut. It is neighbored by the Algosh Republic, Ashkenang, and Iriquona.
The Sabnak people trace their ancestry to some of the earliest prehistoric settlers in Cusinaut from Alshar, with some of the oldest archaeological sites on the subcontinent appearing within Sabnaki territory. A cohesive Sabnak culture began to emerge with the advent and spread of writing during the early medieval period, with a unified Sabnak political emerging by the 1400s. Sabnak writing and language differentiates sharply from that of the rest of Cusinaut, whose writing and language is inspired by cross-Nysdra cultural exchange with Varshan and other places; accordingly, the Sabnak developed a sense of social isolation from the rest of the subcontinent. As an isolationist society, the Sabnak people fought to keep their borders closed to both their neighbors and the Occident, resulting in a series of brutal wars with the Algosh people and later Northern Confederation. In the 19th century, the pre-modern Sabnak confederated state was reformed into a centralized state. The Sabnak people voluntarily receded from isolation and joined the League of Nations in the 1950s. After the fall of the Northern Confederation, the Sabnak people resumed their centuries-long skirmishing with Algoquona, the new Algosh state. Within this context, the Sabnak found new allies in the Occident. Throughout the 2010s, the Sabnak state began a rapid period of military and infrastructure modernization while importing Occidental government advisors and cultural materials. It participated in the Final War of the Deluge, fighting against Algoquona and receiving territory at the conclusion of the war. Foreign investment has led Sabnaki to possess one of the world's fastest growing economies. The economic growth has largely outpaced social and political reform, leading to significant domestic political unrest since 2010.
Sabnaki is a member of the League of Nations.
Etymology
In some Levantine countries and in Caphiria, the Dominion is referred to simply as "Sabnacia".
Geography
History
Prehistory to medieval period
Sabnak culture emerges
The distinguishing event in the history of the Sabnaki occurred over the course of the years 450 and 950 AD, when a writing system began to emerge from the peoples living around modern Tsaile. Most historians believe that the Sabnak alphabet began as a rudimentary tally system on small wooden blocks used for trade. Accordingly, most scholars believe the Sabnak Alphabet emerged as a commercial shorthand that later found use in political and artistic settings. The first archaeological evidence of literature among the proto-Sabnak dates to around 950 AD; it details the life and times of a man called Menla, the ancestor of the author. Scholarly consensus indicates that the Menla Saga was a long-standing oral tradition among his tribe that had been recorded using what was previously commercial language, and most scholars believe the very earliest form of Sabnak literature was simple codification and recording of long-extant oral traditions. By around 1050 AD, significant political and social interaction occurred via written record. The advent of writing and literature allowed the tribal peoples of modern Sabnaki to relate with eachother in ways not previously possible, building a sense of closeness and commonality between them. The availability of written family sagas allowed their proliferation and widespread adoption. By 1150 AD, most of the peoples living in modern Sabnaki shared the same written language, a shared literary history, and a growing sense of similarity between themselves not shared by other neighboring peoples. Consequently, an identifiable "Sabnak culture" emerged by around 1200 AD out of the various proto-Sabnak peoples.
While the Sabnak were not unique among the peoples of Cusinaut in developing writing, most linguists and historians agree they are the only people in Cusinaut to have independently developed writing, given that most other Cusinaut language alphabets borrow significantly from the common tradition of Varshan and the North Songun civilization that filtered north through the Nysdra. This unique literary style contributed later to the sense of alienness that Sabnak people felt from their Cusinautic neighbors, an alienation that would eventually result in the establishment of an isolationist society.