Tryhstian Littoral
Territory of the Tryhstian Littoral Território do Litoral Tryhstião (Tryhstian) Skírēn Tryhstiex Itasersk (Kiravic) | |
Flag | |
Country | Kiravian Federacy |
Capital | Aumém |
Largest City | Véira |
Population | 682,380 |
Governor-General | Lávrentiur Héroskan |
Comissário principal' | António Duarte Rebelho |
Stanora seats | 2 |
Official languages | Tryhstian, Kiravic |
Postal Abbreviation | TTL |
The Tryhstian Littoral Territory is an incorporated, internal territory of the Kiravian Federacy consisting of several unconnected coastal cities, islands, and enclaves on the southern and southwestern coasts of Great Kirav.
Administrative Divisions
The Tryhstian Littoral is divided into six municipios, each corresponding to one of its main territories and encompassing any nearby islets and enclaves. The municipios are considered the statistical and juridical equivalent of countyships in the rest of the Federacy, but play a much larger rôle in local governance and the provision of public services than the average countyship.
Each municipio is subdivided into a number of freguesias, or "parishes".
- Véira - The most populous municipality, comprising a peninsula extending from Andrēdan
- Seia - A coastal island off of County Nuvôn, Korlēdan.
- Sernpedal - Coastal exclave and cluster of 40 small upriver exclaves on the River Sernpedal.
- Albarinho, Raçine, e Bruxinha - Cluster of two landlocked enclaves inside Issyria and a third coastal exclave downstream from the former two on the River
- Cesui - Cluster of parcels adjoining Valtéra.
- São Tomás e Camões - A pair of offshore islands in the Sea of Odoneru.
Politics and Governance
The Tryhstian Littoral is governed according to the Compact of São Lugo and the Territorial Charter of the Tryhstian Littoral. As a territory, the Tryhstian Littoral enjoys less autonomy from the federal government than a state, can have its charter revoked by the Stanora or suspended by the Prime Executive in case of emergency or systemic misconduct, and can have its accounts audited by the Council of States. Although Kiravian territories are normally intended to become full states over time, the Compact of San Lugo waives the possibility of the Tryhstian Littoral applying for statehood in exchange for guarantees of greater autonomy than a territory would ordinarily enjoy.
The Compact of São Lugo and the Territorial Charter outline a semi-presidential structure for the territorial government. Most executive decisions are made and issued by the Xunta do Estado, also referred to as the Executive College or Cabinet. The Cabinet is chaired by the Comissário principal or Prime Commissioner, and its members are appointed by the Governor-General (in consultation with the Comissário), but the body as a whole is accountable to the Cortes (legislature) which can dismiss the Xunta and/or the Comissário through a vote of no confidence.
The Governor-General is appointed by the Prime Executive of the Kiravian Federacy in consultation with senior members of the Tryhstian government. The Governor-General is usually a Coscivian-Kiravian and is often not native to the territory, though six Tryhstians have been appointed to the post over the course of the territory's history. The Governor-General appoints the Comissário principal, but because his selection can be dismissed by the Cortes, the Governor-General typically appoints the person nominated by the leading party or coalition in the legislature. In addition to appointing the Prime Commissioner and Executive College, the Governor-General participates in policymaking as an ex officio member of the College, can veto legislation, officially promulgates regulations and directives made by the Xunta, commands the Territorial Security Force, and can declare states of emergency.
Legislative power is vested in the Cortes, a unicameral legislature comprising three at-large seats returned from each municipio by single transferable vote, and one seat returned from each freguesia by plurality vote. The Cortes levies taxes, formulates and approves the government's budget, and passes legislation. Parties represented in the Cortes include the Partido da Libertá (Liberal conservative, Tryhstian subnationalist), Partido Social-Cristão (Christian-democratic), Kiro-Hekuvian Party, Federal People's Party (Conservative, pro-Kartika), Partido do Trabalho (Social-democratic), Partido da Solidariedade Integral (Distributist), A Direita Autónoma (traditionalist Catholic), and União pelas Freguesias (localists).
The Tryhstian legal system is derived from Latino-Hekuvian law and codified in the Tryhstian Civil Code and Tryhstian Penal Code. Tryhstia is the only civil law jurisdiction in the Federacy, with Coscivian law and Cosco-Brehon law prevailing elsewhere.
Migration controls
In [YEAR] the Federal Consistory ruled in Ýstrinen v. Tryhstian Littoral that the territorial government did not have the power to maintain border controls between itself and the rest of the Federacy, but that unlike the states, it did have the right to exercise control over who was allowed to reside in the territory and be ethnically preferential in granting residency rights in accordance with the Compact of São Lugo's designation of the territory as "the abode of the Tryhstian people" and its guarantee that the Tryhstian culture, language, and customs would be conserved there.
Since the Ýstrinen ruling, the territorial government has maintained a migration policy aimed at preserving the Tryhstian demographic majority. How this policy is implemented and how strictly it is enforced has varied according to changing political conditions, with more restrictive measures being taken under more nationalist/subnationalist administrations or during acute housing shortages. The Tryhstian Department of State (Departamento de Estado) is responsible for granting residency permits, state identity papers, and approval for sales of residential property to non-resident persons and out-of-territory corporations. Preference in the granting of residency permits has always been given to ethnic Tryhstians. Certain administrations have also prioritised Coscivians (by patrilineal descent) with Tryhstian ancestry over other Coscivian applicants, and full-blooded Tryhstians over Tryhstian applicants with mixed ancestry. The government has also typically been liberal in issuing Tryhstian Littoral passports to ethnic Tryhstians living in other federal subjects. In [year], it was discovered that the PdL Xunta of Fernão António da Costa, known for its strong ethno-nationalist bent, had been manipulating the system by flooding the Department of State with fake applications made using the names and Fiscal Identifier Numbers of unwitting ethnic Tryhstians in Metrea and Argevia in order to drown out Coscivian applicants. Although no criminal charges were filed, this scandal resulted in the resignation of several cabinet officials and a ◊30 million class-action lawsuit against the territorial government.
It is estimated that up to 6,000 Coscivian, Celtic, Finnic, Azikorian, and Aboriginal Kiravians are living full-time in the Tryhstian Littoral without residency permits, mostly for employment purposes. The government has generally been tolerant towards these grey-area immigrants, as they are usually white-collar workers with low rates of criminality, no access to public benefits, and no voting rights in the territory.
Society & Culture
Tryhstian culture is dominant in the territory and central to its identity. Ethnic Tryhstians, who account for just over two-thirds of the territory's residents, trace their genetic and cultural heritage back to the Old Tryhstian people of what is now Heku and Insui, and to the mediæval Celtic societies of Great Kirav. The Old Tryhstians were a mercantile and seafaring people who spoke a divergent dialect of Hekuvian Latin that evolved into the modern Tryhstian language. The Tryhstians arrived in Great Kirav from across the Sea of Odoneru first to establish seasonal fishing settlements and then to establish trading posts. The towns and cities that grew out from these trading posts, inhabited by the descendants of Tryhstian merchants and local Celts, would later form the territorial basis of the Tryhstian Littoral.
The largest non-Tryhstian groups in the Littoral are Coscivians and Hekuvians.
Language
Tryhstian is the territory's first official language (as designated by the Territorial Charter) and the primary working language of the government. It is the most widely-spoken language in the territory and the main language of instruction in public schools. Nonetheless, the territory is quite multilingual: Some forty percent of ethnic Tryhstians report an "intermediate command" of Kiravic or better, while two-thirds of Coscivians report an intermediate or better command of Tryhstian. Around 50% of the non-Hekuvian population reports a firm command of Latin, compared to the national average of 11%. Italian, Greek, and Lebhan are also widely understood.
Most public signage in Tryhstia is bilingual (Tryhstian and Kiravic), with the exception of streets signs (almost exclusively Tryhstian) and public transport and safety signs (which are also printed in Latin). Shops and businesses in urban areas popular with foreign visitors usually offer signs, menus, and other written materials in Tryhstian, Kiravic, and Latin, while more peripheral areas conduct business entirely in Tryhstian. Court proceedings in the territory may take place in either Tryhstian or Kiravic, and both languages are permissible for addressing the Cortes. A law introduced in 21205 gives police officers who can pass a standardised Latin exam priority with regard to promotions.
Religion
The majority of Tryhstians are Roman Catholics, including virtually all ethnic Tryhstians, Hekuvians, and Urceans and about half of Coscivians. Catholicism plays an important part in the territory's cultural life.
The Tryhstian Littoral is officially a bicalendrical jurisdiction, with both the Reformed Iatic calendar and Gregorian calendar in use as civil calendars, but in practice, the Tryhstian/Hekuvian majority and the vitality of international commerce to the territory's economy ensure that the Gregorian calendar is the main one used in everyday life.
Economy
The Tryhstian Littoral has remained true to its mercantile heritage: From the establishment of the first Tryhstian communities as trading posts along the southern coasts to the reëmergence of Valera and Aumém as major ports after the fall of Kirosocialism, shipping and commerce have long been the mainstay of the Tryhstian economy, taking advantage of Tryhstia's position on the Sea of Odoneru, which connects Ixnay's largest economic engines. The more developed Tryhstian cities are significant ports of entry for goods imported from Heku, Urcea, Insui, Pelaxia, and the other nations of Ixnay Proper.
Because the Tryhstian exclaves offer a radically more pro-business political, fiscal, and regulatory climate than most of the Kiravian states that they adjoin (Issyria and Andrēdan are de facto single-party states dominated by traditionalist, agrarian, and quasi-feudal aristocratic interests), Tryhstian cities have come to serve as major financial, transport, high-end retail, and distribution hubs for vast areas of the Kiravian South. The generally hands-off approach to Tryhstian internal affairs adopted by the federal government after the Compact of St. Lugo has allowed the territory to market itself as a tax haven for foreign and multinational corporations, and a convenient tax shelter for re-exports. Tryhstia's mild climate (compared to most of Great Kirav), Romance-speaking population, Gregorian civil calendar, and general European flavour have made it an extremely attractive place for investors and entrepreneurs from Western countries to do business and establish "beachheads" in the Kiravian market.
The presence of stong finance, international trade, transport, and high-level corporate management, and tourism sectors has driven the growth of robust retail, food service, hospitality, and construction industries. High-value real estate in the territory's limited land area has encouraged the construction of high-rises and luxury hillside villas, both of which are increasingly built by Hekuvian firms and often reflect the popular Hekuvian neo-futurist architectural style blended with traditional Tryhstian motifs.
Despite the highly urbanised, commercial character of much of Tryhstia, there remain some portions of the territory, especially in the smaller municipios, that retain a more traditional economy. There are still some 200 working farms in Tryhstia, producing hogs, potatoes, cabbages, lettuce, garlic, and apples.
Notable Residents
- Pedro Hortosia Esquinha - Founder of SAK PetroMar, the largest Kiravian-owned oil tanker fleet. Lifelong resident of Véira
- Joaquim Amerigo Silva - Ace fighter pilot during the Echo Islands War, born in Sernpedal.
- Álvaro Cavaco Merced - Chief Public Health Executive under Prime Executive Candrin, born in Seia.