Frehmenwerth

Frémenwerd, officially known as Frehmenwerth (/freɪmənveːɐ̯t/; Khunyer: Vrémenverda, /vreːmɛnvɛɹdɒ/),[1] is the capital of the Most Serene Federation of Hendalarsk, located in the centre of the Hendalarsk Capital Territory. Home to around 2,600,000 people, it is the third-largest city in Hendalarsk after Wrzeszcz-Kokoszki and Zalgisbeck. The nation's political hub, Frehmenwerth is also the key commercial entrepôt of the Upper Zalgis and serves as the gateway to southwestern Hendalarsk for domestic and international traffic from both the north and the east of the country.

Frehmenwerth

Frémenwerd (Hendalarskisch)
City
Flag of Frehmenwerth
Flag
Motto(s): 
Erste Stadt unter Städten
The First City Among Cities
Country Hendalarsk
StateHendalarsk Capital Territory
Foundation782 CE
Founded byDamsgard I Jochn
Hendalarskara BundestagNine seats
Government
 • TypeExecutive mayoralty, conciliar parliament
 • BodyFrehmenbund
 • MayorAndreas Reinhart
 • Deputy MayorMaria Schwolschloß
 • ProvisionerLukas Armenoren
Population
 (2019)
 • Total2,583,455
Demonym(s)Frehmenwerther (m), Frehmenwerthrin (f), Frehmenwerthrö (n)
Time zoneUTC-2 (Hendalarskara Mean Time)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (Hendalarskara Summer Time)
Area code(s)332
Websitewww.frehmenbund.hdl

Located in the centre of Hendalarsk at around 800 metres above sea level, Frehmenwerth has a relatively mild climate, in no small part due to the moderating influence of the prevailing southwesterly wind; this also has the less desirable effect of making the city one of the windiest in Hendalarsk, as air is funnelled through the valley in which the city sits. The Zalgis remains ice-free in the city year-round, a factor which contributed to its early significance and prosperity, although floes have been known to drift north from the more mountainous land to the south in especially harsh winters.

First mentioned in texts in 378 AD and likely founded substantially earlier, Frehmenwerth is widely held to be one of the oldest Gothic cities in Hendalarsk, and has been prominent in Hendalarskara politics and culture since its foundation. The city's sacred grove, located on an island in the middle of the Zalgis, was (and remains) a key devotional site in traditional Hendalarskara religion, and now forms the core of the Frehmenwerth Memorial Park commemmorating the Hendalarskara Civil War.

Although it has become displaced as the nation's primary economic hub in recent decades by Zalgisbeck, with the latter's position on the Vandarch at the mouth of the Zalgis driving its growth, Frehmenwerth remains the home of the national stock exchange, the HenBürs, as well as the site of many ministries and institutes of government. Most foreign governments have their primary diplomatic bases in the city's World Quarter (Weltviertel), while the Khunyer Quarter (Khunarviertel) on the banks of the Zalgis is the nation's greatest concentration of classical culture in the form of museums, theatres, galleries and concert venues, and is consequently a very popular destination for tourists. The Maximilianic University, Hendalarsk's most prestigious educational institution, is one of several universities and technical colleges located in the city, while Frehmenwerthers are regularly ranked the most educated people in Hendalarsk. The city's rent controls have helped to keep its cost of living in line with other major Hendalarskara cities - at a level which is unusually low for a capital city - and this has ensured its consistent status as the country's most liveable city in many surveys.

Geography

History

Politics and administration

Transport

Frehmenwerth is, as with most other Hendalarskara cities outside the Pentapolis, dominated by public transport. Private vehicles are allowed in most of Frehmenwerth, albeit subject to strict emissions limits and a congestion charge, but with the exception of permitted commercial vehicles are entirely banned from the city's Old Quarter, itself largely pedestrianised. Thanks to a considerably lower water table than Zalgisbeck, where a subway system has long been deemed economically unfeasible, Frehmenwerth was able to establish its first underground system during the Old Archkingdom. That line, founded in 1879 as the Metropolitan Line (Metropolinie) remains in use by the Frehmenwerther U-Bán, with heavy modifications, to this day. Public transport in Frehmenwerth is managed and operated by FMVV (Frehmenwerther Metropolitaner Verkehrsverband, "Frehmenwerther Metropolitan Transport Consortium"), under the ownership of the Hendalarskara Transport Commissariat but subject to the political control of the FVL (Frehmenwerthre Verkehrsleiterei, "Frehmenwerther Transport Directorate"). As a publicly-owned company, FMVV's profits are typically reinvested in the network's own infrastructure and maintenance, although 35% (higher than the 20% typical elsewhere in Hendalarsk) of profits are reserved as dividends at the disposal of the Frehmenbund. The head of FMVV is both nominated and appointed by the Frehmenbund, although in practice this typically involves consultation with key stakeholders in FMVV such as trade unions to secure a consensus candidate.

FMVV operates an integrated transport network in Frehmenwerth, in which tickets can be used across all FMVV services (U-Bán, trams, buses, commuter rail and ferries across the Zalgis). Tickets are available for individual or a set number of journeys, as well as single-day, three-day, weekly and monthly tickets. The most popular class of ticket, however, is FMVV-365, a yearly ticket which originally cost 365 HGT when introduced in 1994. Subsequent price rises, although held at or below inflation, have seen the price of an FMVV-365 reach 807 HGT in 2033, a price which at a mere 67 HGT a month for all transport within the city nevertheless substantially contributes to Frehmenwerth's unusually low cost-of-living. Studies carried out by academics from the Maximilianic University's Economics Department have also suggested that FMVV's low fares aid both service use and fare compliance, with evasion estimated at only 0.9% (in comparison to an average of roughly 3-4% on most other public transport networks in the developed world), which in turn mitigates the financial impact on public finances of maintaining artificially low fares.[2]

Culture

Religion

Frehmenwerth is the seat of the Thearch of the Hendalarskara Catholic Church, the supreme ecclesiastical authority of the Frehmenwerther faith. Sankt-Nikolaus-Kirche is the cathedral church of the Archdiocese of Frehmenwerth, and the Thearch is thus often referred to as the Archbishop of Frehmenwerth. Conclaves to elect a new Thearch are likewise held in the church upon the previous incumbent's death, resignation or deposition, and pilgrims flock to Frehmenwerth from across the nation for open-air services in the adjoining Maximilian's Square at key occasions in the ecclesiastical calendar such as Christmas, Good Friday, Easter Sunday and the Day of the Waters.

Sport

Frehmenwerth is the association footballing capital of Hendalarsk, home to three established Bundesliga sides and many additional lower-division teams. Khunyeria Vrémenverda, often known as Khunyeria for short, represent the city's prominent Khunyer minority, while Frehmenwerther Kickers and Rapid-Frehmenwerth are two of the most successful sides in the country's history, regularly qualifying for continental competition and challenging for major honours. Their rivalry, contested in the Capital Derby, is arguably the league's fiercest, while both clubs also maintain a friendlier rivalry with Khunyeria. FK-FK-Arena, Frehmenwerther Kickers' stadium, is additionally one of the largest sporting venues in the country, and is home to many of the male and female national teams' fixtures.

Other sports, while not as popular as football, enjoy some popularity in the capital. Baseball does not have the same domestic prominence as in other Levantine nations like Urcea, but the Frehmenwerther Phalanx are the most well-supported team in the country.

Notes

  1. As with many other cities in Hendalarsk, like Schullerhausen, Frémenwerd was officially (re)named during a period in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when it was considered more prestigious to name cities after an imagined pan-Gothic ideal; authorities have generally opted to stick with these older names even as their pronunciation in standard Hendalarskisch has dramatically diverged.
  2. A. Becker et al., "Fraschtlose Fárerei: éne Untersuchung der Prése FMVVs und Íre Folgen", Maximilianische Ökonomische Zeitschrift 107.4 (2029), S.317-353