Rovaion
Rovaīon is a Kiravian colony in Cusinaut, occupying a large island directly to the south of the subcontinental mainland, beneath Porfíria.
Axerka Rovaīon Colony of Rovaīon | |
Flag | |
Country | Kiravian Federacy |
Theme | Overseas Regions |
Capital | Érskinsar |
Largest City | Érskinsar |
Population | 7,866,000 |
Governor | Dávidus Téniśiron |
Legislature | Válora |
Stanora seats | 3 |
Official languages | Taństan, Kiravic |
Other Languages | [native languages] |
Timezone | Offset Cusinaut Time |
Postal Abbreviation | RVN |
History
The Kiravian presence on Rovaīon dates to 1608 AD. 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. Unable 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.
[Actual discovery and initial settlement]
Rovaīon became 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 Rovaīon 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 Rovaīon and nearby parts of mainland Cusinaut.
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. Ethnic differences between the majority Taństan settler population of Rovaīon, and that of the mainland settlements (a more heterogeneous mix of Ensciryans, North Coscivians, Kir, Taństans, and Gaels) also contributed to the demand for bifurcation.