Burgundiemarch

Burgundiemarch is a province of Urcea. It is considered part of Urcea's Transionia region. With an estimated population of 5,401,299 in 2014, it is the least populous province of Urcea. The province, which consists mostly of marshy flatlands east of the Ionian Mountains, was formed from an amalgamation of lands taken from the Kingdom of Gassavelia after the Great Confessional War as well as principalities that were once part of the Kingdom of Dericania. Settlement by Urcean people from Urceopolis largely displaced the small population of Derian people and Gassavelian people by the middle of the 19th century, but the area has always been considered a cultural and political outlier in Urcean society.

Province of Burgundiemarch
Flag of Province of Burgundiemarch
Flag
Location of the Province of Burgundiemarch
Location of the Province of Burgundiemarch
CountryUrcea
Cathedral CityNew Urceopolis
Government
 • GovernorMychal Lithgla (S)
Population
 (2014)
 • Total5,401,299

Following the reorganization of Urcea into provinces under the Regency of Gréagóir FitzRex, the myriad territories that comprised the area were reformed into the single province of Burgundiemarch in 1892. Named for the neighboring country of Burgundie, the province was apparently intended by FitzRex to be a first line of defense to prevent against incursions from the Holy Levantine Empire, as a military government was installed and elections were not held in 1895 as they were in the other provinces. The province would indeed see heavy fighting between the Regal Army and the Army of Burgundie as the latter attempted and failed to enter the country by land during the Overland Campaign, a part of the Red Interregnum. Following that conflict, Burgundiemarch has been a peaceful and prosperous area as part of an important overland trade artery between Urcea and Burgundie.

The province is the least densely populated subdivision of Urcea.

History

The recorded history of what would become Burgundiemarch begins ca. 600 BC, as Adonerii explorers from Urceopolis and elsewhere launched expeditions east of the Ionian Mountains to chart the region and discover the peoples living there. The results of these expeditions do not survive, but are referenced in several other works from the 7th century BC, though modern scholarship is unclear as to how far south these expeditions ventured. Regardless, the historical consensus based on these records place Gaelic people in Burgundiemarch, primarily organized as "fierce" hill tribes involved primarily in hunter-gather type activities as well as raiding the newly established Istroyan territories further to the southeast. The marshlands of the area made it unsuitable for early farming and subject to consistent population turnover, as dominant tribes monopolizing limited resources typically meant that weaker tribes would have to migrate eastward. Burgundiemarch, along with the rest of the Ionian valley, were subjugated by Urceopolis and the Adonerii in the 550s and 540s BC, though the Adonerii phalanx was largely unsuitable for the hilly, marshy terrain of Burgundiemarch and received considerable difficulty pacifying the territory until supported by Istroyan allies in approximately 542 BC. From then on, the territory was subject to intermittent Latinic settlement until the fall of Great Levantia in 502 AD, but during the millennium-long period it was under Great Levantine control, the territory rarely saw much in the way of development or attention, and by 1 AD it was once again largely occupied by subservient Gaelic tribes practicing subsistence agriculture where the land could support it.

Geography

Cities and towns

Economy

In 2014-15, Burgundiemarch was calculated to have an approximate GDP of $184,421,953,056. Its GDP PC of $34,144 was fourth least of any Urcean subdivision.

Demographics

Government

Politics

Sports