Veraise and Latin Heroic Age: Difference between pages

From IxWiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{| align=right cellspacing=0 width=350px class="infobox toccolours" style="padding: 0.8em 0.8em 0.8em 0.8em; margin: 0em 0em 0.75em 0.75em; background: #fcfcfc; vertical-align: middle; border-h: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; border-top: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; border-left: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; border-right: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; border-bottom: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; border: 1px #c6c6c6 solid; font-size: 85%; span: 1px #c6c6c6 solid;"
{{wip}}
| colspan="2" bgcolor="#3CB371" |
|-
| colspan=2 | <hr>
|-
| style="font-size: 10.2pt; background: #fcfcfc; text-align: center;" colspan=2 | '''Territory of Veraise'''<br>'''''Territoire de Veraise'''''
|-
| align=center colspan=2 style="padding: 0em 0em 0.5em 0em; text-align: center; background: #fcfcfc;"| <br><small>Flag</small>
|-
| align=center colspan=2 style="padding: 0em 0em 0.5em 0em; text-align: center; background: #fcfcfc;"|
|-
| colspan="2" bgcolor="#3CB371" |
|-
| colspan=2 | <hr>
|-
| '''Country''' || [[Alstin|United Republic]]
|-
| '''Capital'''<br><small> || Saint-Stephan
|-
|'''Largest City'''<br></small> || Gastineau
|-
| '''Population''' || 969,741
|-
| '''Governor''' || Emilie Duplain
|-
| '''Legislature''' || Assemblée des Députés
|-
| '''Official languages''' || {{English|Alstinian Aenglish}}, [[Burgundian language|Burgoignesc]]
|-
| '''Recognised languages''' ||
|-
| '''Postal Abbreviation''' || VE
|-
| '''Time Zone''' || Central Cronan Time
|-
| colspan="2" bgcolor="#3CB371" |
|-
| colspan=2 | <hr>
|}
[[Category:IXWB]]


'''Veraise''', officially the '''Veraise Territory''' is an overseas incorporated territory of the [[Alstin|United Republic]], located in mainland southern Crona bordering [[Kartejya]] to the south and [[Credesia]] to the east and north.
The '''Latin Heroic Age''', sometimes referred to as the '''Adonerii Colonial Age''', refers to both a historical period and a series of myths regarding the settlement of [[Latinic people|Latinic peoples]] on mainland [[Sarpedon]] and [[Levantia]]. The period, which spans from approximately 1500 BC to 500 BC, deals specifically with colonization efforts of [[Adonerum]] which would found cities forming the later nucleus of both [[Great Levantia]] and [[Caphiria]] and related societies. To historians of Antiquity, the myths which emerged regarding this time period were considered to be material history, and these considerations continued throughout much of the Medieval period. Critical historians of the 18th and 19th century rejected many of the foundational myths of Latinic societies and established modern historiographies about the age of settlement and colonization, though 21st century historians are presently reevaluating the mythic stories and a majority of scholars believe that the myths have at least some basis in historical fact, albeit with greatly exaggerated narrative events. The Latin Heroic Age is considered to be one of the foundational events of the [[Occidental world]].
 
==Geography==
Veraise occupies a strip of coastal lowlands near the mouth of the River Marcian in neighboring Kartejya.
 
The territory has a humid subtropical climate characteristic of much of southwestern Crona.


==History==
==History==
[[File:Jean-Claude Gastineau.jpg|200px|right|Jean-Claude Gastineau, the founder and first viceroy of Port-Verde]]
{{Main|History of the Ancient Latinic civilization}}
Veraise was inhabited by the Cartesian people and their ancestors for several millennia before the arrival of [[Levantia|Levantines]]. During the [[Timeline_of_major_world_events#17th_century|Age of Exploration]], Veraise was settled by the [[Burgoignesc_North_Levantine_Trading_Company#Colonial_ventures|Martillien North Levantine Trading Company (MNLC)]] under the navigator Jean-Claude Gastineau, establishing a trading post and way station that he dubbed Port-Verde (present-day Gastineau) in [[1593]].
As reflected in the myths, the Latin Heroic Age was a historical period in which the [[Adonerum|Adonerii League]] based in [[Urlazio]] established [[Latinic people|Latinic]] colonies across [[Sarpedon]] and [[Levantia]]. The settlement of these areas by the Adonerii was heavily mythicized by the societies which sprung from their colonies in the succeeding centuries, giving rise to the name "Heroic Age". The colonists were either remembered as driven by the gods and overcoming many natural and supernatural obstacles, or themselves were transformed into demigods and gods in later tellings.
 
 
During the [[Kiro-Burgoignesc Wars]], Veraise was attacked by the [[Ehemo]]ans, who were friendly to the [[Kiravia]]ns at the time, but was never captured or occupied. It was, however, eventually sold ceded to [[Ehemo]]an control in [[1812]], as the costs in holding the territory began to outweigh its benefits.
 
Under [[Ehemo]]an rule, Veraise became known as the "Lynchpin", as its location near the mouth of the Carte River allowed for [[Ehemo]] to not only influence indirectly neighboring [[Kartejya]], but also secured the [[Ehemo]]an core against an invasion from the south. Nevertheless, the local Veroui (people of Burgoignesc descent) increasingly grew discontent over the next two centuries as a result of their unofficial status as second-class citizens, as well as a lack of autonomy in regional affairs. This culminated in the Veroui Revolt, in which the Veroui assisted the [[United Republic]] in driving the [[Ehemo]]ans out of Veraise, as part of the then-concurrent [[Kartejyan War]]. As part of the Treaty of Dawsbury, which ended the war in January [[2020]], Veraise was transferred to and annexed by the [[United Republic]] as an autonomous territory.
 
==Government==
Veraise is an incorporated territory of the United Republic. Its governmental structure and fundamental law are prescribed by the Veraise Territorial Charter, promulgated by President Benjamin Ryder and validated by Parliament in 2020. The Governor of Veraise is elected by the residents of Veraise, and is prescribed a four-year term by the Charter, though a Governor may be replaced or recalled at any point in their term.
 
The territorial legislative body is known as the ''Assemblée des Députés''  (Assembly of Deputies). It is a part-time body that meets twice annually at for a period of 12 weeks. The Assembly comprises of 40 seats, apportioned according to population, with a guaranteed minimum of two seats per precinct.
 
Veraise sends a single non-voting Delegate to the National Council.
 
==Society & Culture==
Veraise has an ethnically diverse population. 39% of residents are identified as being of Burgundian-descent, 21% are native Cartesians, and 33% are of other origins, mainly descended from migrants from Kartejya, Ehemo, and Anta Carda.


Veraise is a multilingual society, with the most widely spoken languages in the territory being Alsintian Ænglish, Burgoignesc, and Vertannes. 62% of Veroui are Catholic, with minorities practicing other Christian traditions, most prominently the Chantry of Alstin.
==Founding myths==
===Journey of the Fifty===
The Journey of the Fifty was the foundational myth of Latin civilization in [[Levantia]] according to the [[Religion_in_Great_Levantia#Cult_of_the_State_God|ancient religion of Great Levantia]]. In it, a demigod named Levas - the son of a mortal man and a goddess whom was deceived by the man - is cast out of [[Ancient Istroyan civilization|Istroya]] along with forty nine other demigods by order of the gods, who believe the group to be a threat to their own power. The fifty demigods travel to [[Adonerum]] where they reside for a time, learning the traditions of the [[Latinic people|Latins]] there, including their seafaring and frontier prowess. The fifty then decide to travel east to the rising sun until they hit land along with an army given by the Adonerii. The Journey includes many details of feats of heroic strength, including animal wrestling and major climatological events, until the group travels far enough inland from the [[Urce River]] to reach a place of calm waters and a useful bay in what would later become [[Urceopolis (City)|Urceopolis]]. There, the Istroyan pantheon appears to Levas and the fifty, having reconsidered their earlier fears and having found Levas worthy. Levas is granted godhood, and in exchange for his bond to respect the powers of the other gods he is given all of the new land he finds. The traditional stories diverge here, with Levas's fate being uncertain. Most stories include him either directly ascending or melting into the soil, having become one with the land he now owned. Another story indicates that he ruled over the land as a god before his physical body died. Some modern archaeologists believe the latter story was more widely believed given the presence of what they believe to be a "tomb of Levas", though this discovery is contested within academic circles. According to the myth, the forty nine remaining demigods would later be joined by old friends from Adonerum, forming the basis of Latinic society in Levantia. 19th and 20th century religious critics believed that the ascension of Levas was the direct inspiration for Christian writers who they argued copied the event with the {{wp|Ascension of Jesus|ascension of Christ}}, though modern theologians and religious scholars have rejected this thesis.


==Economy==
The story of the Journey of the Fifty was solidified within [[Great Levantia|Great Levantine]] canon by the work of several authors around the time of 150 BC. Though the story is imbued with religious elements, modern scholars believe that the Journey of the Fifty is a heavily mythologized version of an actual series of events passed on by oral tradition. Scholars have uncovered earlier indirect references to an expedition of a small group of Latinic explorers both in Levantine and [[Urlazio|Urlazian]] sources who traveled deep into the Levantine interior via the [[Urce River]]. Scholars also believe that the original Istroyan-language name of [[Urceopolis (City)|Urceopolis]] indicates that the area may have been originally discovered by Istroyan explorers rather than Latinic ones.
Veraise has a diversifying economy rooted in plantation agriculture and cargo shipping, though it has been transitioning towards a service orientation in recent decades, with tourism, sea and air transportation, retail trade, and commercial fishing are the sectors contributing most to economic growth since the early 2000s.


[[Category: Burgundie]]
[[Category: History]]
[[Category: History of Burgundie]]
[[Category: Levantia]]
[[Category: Sarpedon]]

Revision as of 14:21, 1 April 2022

The Latin Heroic Age, sometimes referred to as the Adonerii Colonial Age, refers to both a historical period and a series of myths regarding the settlement of Latinic peoples on mainland Sarpedon and Levantia. The period, which spans from approximately 1500 BC to 500 BC, deals specifically with colonization efforts of Adonerum which would found cities forming the later nucleus of both Great Levantia and Caphiria and related societies. To historians of Antiquity, the myths which emerged regarding this time period were considered to be material history, and these considerations continued throughout much of the Medieval period. Critical historians of the 18th and 19th century rejected many of the foundational myths of Latinic societies and established modern historiographies about the age of settlement and colonization, though 21st century historians are presently reevaluating the mythic stories and a majority of scholars believe that the myths have at least some basis in historical fact, albeit with greatly exaggerated narrative events. The Latin Heroic Age is considered to be one of the foundational events of the Occidental world.

History

As reflected in the myths, the Latin Heroic Age was a historical period in which the Adonerii League based in Urlazio established Latinic colonies across Sarpedon and Levantia. The settlement of these areas by the Adonerii was heavily mythicized by the societies which sprung from their colonies in the succeeding centuries, giving rise to the name "Heroic Age". The colonists were either remembered as driven by the gods and overcoming many natural and supernatural obstacles, or themselves were transformed into demigods and gods in later tellings.

Founding myths

Journey of the Fifty

The Journey of the Fifty was the foundational myth of Latin civilization in Levantia according to the ancient religion of Great Levantia. In it, a demigod named Levas - the son of a mortal man and a goddess whom was deceived by the man - is cast out of Istroya along with forty nine other demigods by order of the gods, who believe the group to be a threat to their own power. The fifty demigods travel to Adonerum where they reside for a time, learning the traditions of the Latins there, including their seafaring and frontier prowess. The fifty then decide to travel east to the rising sun until they hit land along with an army given by the Adonerii. The Journey includes many details of feats of heroic strength, including animal wrestling and major climatological events, until the group travels far enough inland from the Urce River to reach a place of calm waters and a useful bay in what would later become Urceopolis. There, the Istroyan pantheon appears to Levas and the fifty, having reconsidered their earlier fears and having found Levas worthy. Levas is granted godhood, and in exchange for his bond to respect the powers of the other gods he is given all of the new land he finds. The traditional stories diverge here, with Levas's fate being uncertain. Most stories include him either directly ascending or melting into the soil, having become one with the land he now owned. Another story indicates that he ruled over the land as a god before his physical body died. Some modern archaeologists believe the latter story was more widely believed given the presence of what they believe to be a "tomb of Levas", though this discovery is contested within academic circles. According to the myth, the forty nine remaining demigods would later be joined by old friends from Adonerum, forming the basis of Latinic society in Levantia. 19th and 20th century religious critics believed that the ascension of Levas was the direct inspiration for Christian writers who they argued copied the event with the ascension of Christ, though modern theologians and religious scholars have rejected this thesis.

The story of the Journey of the Fifty was solidified within Great Levantine canon by the work of several authors around the time of 150 BC. Though the story is imbued with religious elements, modern scholars believe that the Journey of the Fifty is a heavily mythologized version of an actual series of events passed on by oral tradition. Scholars have uncovered earlier indirect references to an expedition of a small group of Latinic explorers both in Levantine and Urlazian sources who traveled deep into the Levantine interior via the Urce River. Scholars also believe that the original Istroyan-language name of Urceopolis indicates that the area may have been originally discovered by Istroyan explorers rather than Latinic ones.