Æonara and History of Faneria: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox islands
| name            = Æonara
| native name      =
| native name link =
| sobriquet        =
| image            = [[File:Æonara New Map.PNG|250px]]
| image name      =
| image size      =
| image caption    =
| image alt        =
| locator map      =
| locator map size =
| map caption      =
| location        = East Crona Sea, [[Ixnay]]
| coordinates      =
| archipelago      =
| waterbody      = Æonara Sound
| total islands    = 7
| major islands    = 2
| area km2        = 420,420
| area footnotes  =
| rank            =
| length km        = <!-- or length m -->
| length footnotes =
| width km        = <!-- or width m -->
| width footnotes  =
| coastline km    =
| coastline footnotes =
| elevation m      =
| elevation footnotes =
| highest mount    = <!--name-->
| Country heading  =
| country          =
| country admin divisions title    = [[:Category:Federal subjects of the Kiravian Federacy|States]]
| country admin divisions          = [[North Æonara]]<br>[[Central Æonara]]<br>[[Eriada]]<br>[[Liberantia]]
| country admin divisions title 1  = [[:Category:Federal subjects of the Kiravian Federacy|Territories]]
| country admin divisions 1        = [[Snávin]]<br>[[West Æonara]]<br>[[South Æonara]]
| country admin divisions title 2  =
| country admin divisions 2        =
| country capital                  =
| country largest city              = Portmore
| country largest city population  = 1,240,420
| country leader title              =
| country leader name              =
| demonym          = Æonaran
| population      = 69,180,000
| population as of = 21207
| density km2      =
| density footnotes =
| ethnic groups    = 64.4% [[Coscivian civilisation#People|Coscivian]] (Æonaran, Umcaran, other)<br>24.5% [[Æonara#Demographics|Sinyolan]]
| timezone        = Valēka Standard Time
| additional info  =
}}


'''Æonara''' is a {{wp|continental island}} off the northeastern coast of [[Crona]] in [[Ixnay]]. Along with its smaller sister island of Snávin, Æonara was colonised by [[Coscivian civilisation|Coscivians]] from 20762 and has been governed in its entirety by the Kiravian Federacy and its predecessors since the 20780s. The island is divided among the Kiravian states of Central Æonara, North Æonara, South Æonara, and West Æonara, as well as the Kiravian territories of Snávin, Eriada, and Liberantia.


==Geography==
Æonara is laid out roughly in the form of a {{wp|scalene triangle}}, extending from the Kanaveron Peninsula in North Æonara south to Xsādiróva, West Æonara and southeast to Kesta Kobra, Liberantia Territory. Snávin lies just to the southeast of the main island, separated by the Snávin Strait. The most prominent landforms on the island are two mountain ranges, the Emerald Mountains, which trace along the northern and western coast, and the Jade Mountains, which rise near the geographic centre of Æonara and continue in a southeasterly direction toward Kesta Kobra.


Æonara is well within the tropical belt has a tropical climate overall, though with altitudinal variation. Many lowland areas east of the Jade and Emerald mountains (i.e. in Central Æonara and Eriada) have a {{wp|tropical maritime climate}}, as do some areas directly on the southern coast. Other lowland areas generally have a more classical {{wp|Tropical savanna climate|tropical wet-and-dry climate}}. Upland areas exhibit variations on a {{wp|Oceanic_climate#Subtropical_highland_variety_(Cfb,_Cwb)|subtropical highland climate}} with more moderate temperatures. Locally there are three customatry gradations of the different {{wp|life zones}} resulting from this altitudinal variation, known in Æonaran Coscivian as the ''bréaśad'' ("hot land"), ''lúaśad'' ("mild land"), and ''thóaśad'' ("cool land").
=Pre-Christian Era (Antiquity-some year)=


Important cities in Æonara include Portmór, Sar-i-Paul (Saripáuv), Prevarda, Saravena, Vaśyansar, and Ærhorn.


[[File:Near Xinlong, Hainan - 01.JPG|300px|float=left|Rural inland Eriada]]
[[File:Bald Hill, overlooking Stanwell Park.jpg|300px|float=left|Rural inland Eriada]]
[[File:Kendall Dadeland ramp.jpg|300px|float=left|Idk]]


==History==
=Principalities Era (some year-1398)=
Æonara was already known to Coscivian cartographers by {{H:title|1387 AD|20567}}. The first Coscivian settlement, a coastal stockade, was built in {{H:title|1581 AD|20761}} near what is now [PLACE], [STATE]. [Confer with Bolis' history to construct framework and dates for settlement]. 1800s AD for second wave of settlement?
1364: Prince Ruaridh Màrtainn of Mhartainnvail inherits the titles of Connsmonan, Cheatharnaich, and Itheachan from an uncle and father killed in a hunting accident/skirmish/'highway robbery'; Initially a chance conglomeration of a few choice titles under a particularly lucky/skilled prince, who didn't particularly like the idea of having his territories not being contiguous; basically fumbled/scraped his way into a position where his only son could actually enforce a tentative claim to kingship


<s>In [DATE], the Æonara Territory was split into five separate territories: Central, North, South, East, and West Æonara. Central Æonara became a state in 211XZ, followed by North Æonara in 211XA. South and East Æonara were further divided to create the new territories of Eriada, Liberantia and Snávin. Eriada and Liberantia became states in 211XB.</s>


===Government-in-Exile===
=Early Royal Era (1398-1906)=
When the [[Kirosocialist Party]] promulgated a [[Constitutional_History_of_Kiravia#Constitution_of_the_Kiravian_Union|new constitution]] establishing single-party rule, opposition forces denounced the new constitution as illegitimate, and non-Kirosocialist Delegates led by the [[Renaissance Party]] convened a rump Stanora in Vaśyansar, North Æonara. With the backing of conservative elements in the Kiravian armed forces and civil service who refused to serve the new régime on the mainland, as well as partisan militia, the rump Stanora organised a government-in-exile in Æonara under the leadership of [Whoever the Fuck] as Prime Executive.
1398: the Kingdom of the Fhainn proper is founded by Rih (King) Rethys Màrtainn, who immediately begins eating up smaller independent cities and minor noble holdings along with one or two serious wars against challengers to his claim of kingship, one of which he was by all rights assumed to be the loser against a coalition but won due to organizational and cavalry reforms, dumb luck in maneuvering, and catching enemy orders - 'perfect storm'


==Politics and Governance==
1471: last major challenger to the throne in southern regions kneels, a few weaker principalities in the north remain but get swallowed up through marriage or outright invasion by 1500
Æonara is divided among six Kiravian federal subjects: Four states (Central Æonara, North Æonara, South Æonara, and West Æonara) and three territories (Eriada, Liberantia, and Snávin). A Pan-Æonaran Conference based in Portmór facilitates coöperation among the several federal subjects. The seven state/territorial defence forces in Æonara are in the process of organising into an Æonaran Battlegroup with a joint command structure.


Æonara is regarded as a solidly conservative region that has historically rejected revolutionary movements such as Bannerism, Novialism, [[Kirosocialism]], communism, and the national-revolutionary [[Restarkism]] prevailing in its neighbour, [[the Cape]]. Æonara reliably elects slates of Delegates that sit with the [[Shaftonist-Republican Alliance]] and [[Caucus of Justice|Reservatives-Conformists]] caucuses in the [[Federal Stanora]].
===First Princes' War===
Main Article: [[First Princes' War]]


==Society and Culture==
1519-1545: First Princes' War: a few kings (Caerls Màrtainn, Bronwyn Màrtainn, Rhys Wydd-Màrtainn) worth of fighting, and for their victory they end up with the authority to elect the King similar to the HLE's collegial electorate
The Æonaran Coscivians, who trace their ancestry back to the first and (to a lesser degree) second waves of Coscivian settlers, form the largest ethnic group on the island. They share most of their culture in common with the Umcaran Coscivians. Their language, Æonaran Coscivian, is characterised by many archæic and divergent features that differentiate it from modern Kiravic Coscivian (with which it is not mutually intelligible), as well as by a great many loanwords from local Cronan languages. It is an official language in all states of Æonara; and is spoken natively by an outright majority of the population in South Æonara. The second largest Coscivian ethnic group on the island are the closely related Umcaran Coscivians.


<s>The Snávian or Sinyolan peoples (Snávic: ''Sanyao-lako'') are the autocthonous Cronite inhabitants of Æonara, tracing their ancestry to before Coscivian colonisation. Homogeneous Snávian communities are mostly found in lowland areas and on the island of Snávin, though just under half of the ethnic Snávian population is urbanised and lives in Coscivian cities and towns at higher elevations. Snávians are considered to have been absorbed into [[Coscivian civilisation]] centuries ago, having adopted the Coscivian script and adapted their language to Coscivian literary culture by the XXXXXs. Most Snávians living in Æonara consider themselves non-Coscivian and distinguish themselves sharply from the Æonaran Coscivians, Umcaran Coscivians, and "Mainlanders" (more recent immigrants from [[Great Kirav]] or other parts of the Coscivian world). However, most Snávians living elsewhere in the Federacy consider themselves Coscivians and are accepted as such. They are classified as a Coscivian people for most purposes by the federal government, but not by the governments of the states and territories that make up Æonara.</s>
the king who lost the war though continues on until 1557 and then he dies and his son presses hereditary claim, and while the vicars do elect him they say "shit let's not make a habit of this"


The Æonara Migration Act of 211XX gave the Æonaran territorial governors authority to grant expedited sponsorship of 3,000 guest worker and medium-term residency permits annually to eligible [[The Cape|Capetian]] citizens wishing to settle in Æonara and Snávin, exempting them from normal immigration procedures. The Capetian population is concentrated in West Æonara, South Æonara, Snávin, Eriada, and Liberantia, making up 14% of the total population in South Æonara and 19% in Liberantia.
he reigns and the same thing happens on his (Cledwyn Wydd-Màrtainn) death maybe 1570 or so


[[File:15-09-26-RalfR-WLC-0056.jpg|thumb|Whiskey-cola is recognised by law as the official drink of every federal subject in Æonara]]
except the vicars refuse and the second vicarial(?) war begins
<br>
<br>
After Capetians, Pauldustllahanis account for the majority of foreign nationals living and working in Æonara. Pauldusllahani is the most widely-spoken foreign language among Æonarans after Portuguese and along with it is the language taught in schools, whereas in most other parts of the Federacy Latin or Lebhan are preferred. In Sar-i-Pául, the largest city of West Æonara, some 72% of Coscivian-Kiravian (including <s>Sinyolan</s>) residents reported having a "good command" of Pauldustllahani or better. The total percentage of residents speaking Pauldustllahani is estimated to be around 90-94%, accounting for Pauldustlaahani nationals living in the city and Kiravian citizens of Pauldustllahani origin or ethnicity.


There is a substantial [[Lusophone]] population in [[Æonara]], which includes Lusonic-speaking Capetians, [[Tryhstian Littoral|Tryhstians]], [[Cartadanians]]. The Lusophone community is mainly urban, but there are some rural settlements in South and West Æonara populated by Lusophone guest workers from mainland Cronan countries.
===Second Princes' War===
Main Article: [[Second Princes' War]]


==Art & Architecture==
1571-1583: Second Prince's War:  this second one is very bloody and just an overall mess, whole dynastic noble local families are wiped out, at least one king (Conan Wydd-Màrtainn, Ruaridh Sutharlan, Banrih (Queen) Cailean Suthar-Màrtainn) of fhanrrenenoit4hlwtf is killed in battle; it ends in a brokered peace; the king's election will continue, but the vicars will also be elected by local nobles, and since so many local families died, the right to appoint new local nobility reverts to the King (Donan Sutharlan-Màrtainn), who begins to solely grant lifetime peerages, i.e., no hereditary succession for the local holdings. typically he will continue to appoint from one family, but they now remain local to the crown - while the king could appoint hereditary nobility, none do because that's a stupid move, and so the local nobles (appointed by the king) begin electing as vicar basically anyone the king wants to keep their power in the family - this allows titles to be sold by the crown, too
Art Deco is big in Æonara.
[[File:WestPalmBeachFL Architecture.JPG|thumb]]
[[File:Casa La Amistad, Havana (8698026386).jpg|thumb]]


===Religion===
===Croprot Famines===
Coscivian Orthodoxy is the largest religion in Æonara by number of adherents, followed by Lutheranism. Æglasta-i-Xristul, an {{wp|Adoptionism|Adoptionist}} denomination founded in Æonara, also has a significant presence. Other religions with a significant presence in Æonara include Roman Catholicism, Ruricanism, and Reformed Orthodoxy.


Æonara has a large Protestant population, composed mostly of Lutheran Umcarans and <s>Sinyolans </s>of various denominations, including Methodists, Lutherans, [Some Paulreich denomination], and Adventists. The [[Mormon Church]] has a long history of missionary activity on the island, and has left a significant Mormon population, especially among the indigenous. <s>There is also a visible {{wp|Eastern Orthodox|Cronan Orthodox}} presence, due to the influence of nearby [[Cronzcovina]], escpecially in North Æonara.</s>


==Economy==
Nicknamed ''Nassán Sorolá'' ("{{wp|continental island|[Continental] Island}} of Abundance") since the 207th century, Æonara is the Federacy's wealthiest and most productive overseas region, boasting a diversified and developed economy with high growth rates driven by multiple sectors. Industrial and commercial development in Æonara occured around the same time as in the Cape, [when??]. However, the biggest boon to the island's economy came during the government-in-exile period when Æonara became the principal destination for {{wp|capital flight}} from Great Kirav in the wake of the Kirosocialist takeover and absorbed much of Kiravia's financial, technical, and mercantile élite who fled the régime. This massive influx of human and financial capital spurred rapid growth and transformed Æonara into a sophisticated modern economy. The restoration of constitutional rule in Great Kirav and the repatriation of the federal government and many business enterprises caused a significant economic downturn for Æonara, though recovery therefrom came relatively quickly as Æonara was well-positioned to benefit from the mainland's economic transition, trade liberalisation, and a real-estate boom precipitated by the widening availability of {{wp|air conditioning}}.


The island's most important economic asset, however, is its strategic position <s>between Great Kirav and the Cronan mainland</s>, which has made Æonara a major conduit for commerce between Kiravia and its major trading partners on Crona, <s>most importantly Pauldustllah and Umcara</s>. The highly-developed Saripául-Portmór Corridor between the island's two principal ports, also known as the "Whiskey-Cola Road", links the cities of the Kiravian West Coast to [Paulreich city across the strait].<s> An estimated 32% of direct trade between Pauldustllah and Kiravia travels along this route.</s>
=High Royal Era (1603-1830)=


[[Imperial Cola]] vending machines are ubiquitous throughout the island, located in nearly all employee breakrooms, waiting rooms, apartment complexes, schools, transit stations, laundromats, and even churches. Snávin has the highest level of Imperial Cola consumption per capita of any Kiravian federal subject at 822 standard eight-ounce cans per person in 211206.
===Great Quake of 1664===
Main Article:


==Gallery==
===First Kin War===
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
Main Article:  
| [[File:La salvajina.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
| [[File:Tota Lake 1.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
| [[File:La Machonta - panoramio (1).jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|-
|[[File:San Mateo alrededores.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|[[File:Cabaña en lago de Tota - panoramio.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|[[File:Lago de Tota 03.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|-
|[[File:Mirador de la piedra del Peñol.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|[[File:Santuario de las Lajas Kolumbien 13.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|[[File:Glasgow Finnieston area.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=idk, some shit|H]]
|}


[[Category:Kiravian islands]]
===Second Kin War===
[[Category:KRV]]
Main Article:  


[[Category:IXWB]]
===Third Kin War===
Main Article:
 
===Tundra Wars (1676-1712)===
Main Article: [[Tundra Wars]]
 
===Sutharine Succession Crisis (1712-1717)===
Main Article: [[Sutharine Succession Crisis]]
 
===Constitution of the State===
-year  1830
 
-shift of Fhainnlannachaeran from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 1830, when Rih Luthais Suthar-Màrtainn chose to put a clause in the new constitution which would force the Throne to address the issue of allowing the suffrage of landed male voters for Vicarial seats in 1900. In the immediate term, the document allowed local officials to be elected, but Vicars remained an appointed rank rather than elected.
 
-also banned serfdom in the remaining feudal regions in Lyukquar and reformed the administration into a semicentralized government, removing the last technical attachment of Vicars to olf feudal lines, but in practice leaving the same families in power at least until elections were supposed to begin
 
 
 
=Late Royal Era=
in the 1850s or so there should be a pretty large reform movement saying yes, the monarchy is great, but we should expand who can vote for the vicar besides local royal appointees - every property owning male, perhaps. which obviously every royalist says no to, but this idea of a "Liberal Vicariate" basically becomes a major political fixation and for a couple years it's "yes, but what if the vicariate also had power to do X", "yes, but what if they could also do Y, have oversight of Z, etc" - The main rub being nobody could agree on exactly how to work out what the vicars or a theoretical representative government (at the time still a fringe movement) would work in particular, as you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back, but the liberal vicariate idea remains the "respectable" liberal opposition idea
 
===Fourth Kin War===
 
===1888 Factory Riots===
 
===Constitutional Crisis of 1903===
 
 
 
=Republican Era (1906-present day)=
 
===Fhainnin Civil War===
Main Article: [[Fhainnin Civil War]]
1906, one of the reformist factions finally managed to blow up the king (Ruaridh Sutharlan) and a couple key throne supporters at once, which kicked off a civil war between socialist, monarchist, and republican factions, with the republicans and socialists allying and said socialists immediately getting shanked in the back
 
maybe the direct reason for the bombing of the king in 1906 is after a year and a half of major tumult, riots, etc, he finally decides to concede but only on the original point of landed male suffrage for the vicars, and when the vicars get together and say "we would like to also have authority over X, Y, and Z" - he says no, which is the breaking point for most radicals
 
 
===Eight Years' Terror===
 
===Great War===
Main Article: [[Great War]]
 
===Lean Years===
Main Article: Fhainnin Lean Years
 
===Vandarch Canal Crisis===
Main Article: [[Vandarch Canal Crisis]]
 
===Modern Century===
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
a 'vicar' is a kind of viceroy administrator of what end up being the provinces (originally the inherited territories), streamlining national administration somewhat but also decentralizing power as the kingdom grew
''
1364: Prince Ruaridh Màrtainn of Mhartainnvail inherits the titles of Connsmonan, Cheatharnaich, and Itheachan from an uncle and father killed in a hunting accident/skirmish/'highway robbery'; Initially a chance conglomeration of a few choice titles under a particularly lucky/skilled prince, who didn't particularly like the idea of having his territories not being contiguous; basically fumbled/scraped his way into a position where his only son could actually enforce a tentative claim to kingship
 
 
1398: the Kingdom of the Fhainn proper is founded by Rih (King) Rethys Màrtainn, who immediately begins eating up smaller independent cities and minor noble holdings along with one or two serious wars against challengers to his claim of kingship, one of which he was by all rights assumed to be the loser against a coalition but won due to organizational and cavalry reforms, dumb luck in maneuvering, and catching enemy orders - 'perfect storm'
 
 
''Ethnically, there is tension especially at the time between Slavs in the north and fringes of the western coast and Gaels in the south, which also plays in to resistance as the slavs were previously dominant due to having open access to the seas and the new state was not in any way slavic or pluralist''
 
 
1471: last major challenger to the throne in southern regions kneels, a few weaker principalities in the north remain but get swallowed up through marriage or outright invasion by 1500
 
 
1519-1545: First Princes' War: a few kings (Caerls Màrtainn, Bronwyn Màrtainn, Rhys Wydd-Màrtainn) worth of fighting, and for their victory they end up with the authority to elect the King similar to the HLE's collegial electorate
 
the king who lost the war though continues on until 1557 and then he dies and his son presses hereditary claim, and while the vicars do elect him they say "shit let's not make a habit of this"
 
he reigns and the same thing happens on his (Cledwyn Wydd-Màrtainn) death maybe 1570 or so
 
except the vicars refuse and the second vicarial(?) war begins
 
 
1571-1583: Second Prince's War:  this second one is very bloody and just an overall mess, whole dynastic noble local families are wiped out, at least one king (Conan Wydd-Màrtainn, Ruaridh Sutharlan, Banrih (Queen) Cailean Suthar-Màrtainn) of fhanrrenenoit4hlwtf is killed in battle; it ends in a brokered peace; the king's election will continue, but the vicars will also be elected by local nobles, and since so many local families died, the right to appoint new local nobility reverts to the King (Donan Sutharlan-Màrtainn), who begins to solely grant lifetime peerages, i.e., no hereditary succession for the local holdings. typically he will continue to appoint from one family, but they now remain local to the crown - while the king could appoint hereditary nobility, none do because that's a stupid move, and so the local nobles (appointed by the king) begin electing as vicar basically anyone the king wants to keep their power in the family - this allows titles to be sold by the crown, too''
 
this system continues until the 1690s when the kings (Sean Suthar-Màrtainn) begin to realize hey, we can just buy off the still remaining hereditary local lords
 
 
External conflicts and relative stability here
 
 
by 1760 or so something like, i don't know,  87% of eligible nobility voting for the vicar have been appointed by the king (Cywir Suthar-Màrtainn). so what you have in place is kind of a centralist monarchy with a nominal election system that is really just trading favors with prominent families
 
so the Vicariate, once a powerful institution, is basically a succession rubber stamp by that 1760 date - essentially reduced from local princes to appointed governors
 
This is all about on track with what I'm thinking, as by 1775 there should be no more direct ties between officers and their noble status, at least in terms of laws banning commoners or reserving positions. in practice most officers will still be educated nobles
 
 
''in the 1850s or so there should be a pretty large reform movement saying yes, the monarchy is great, but we should expand who can vote for the vicar besides local royal appointees - every property owning male, perhaps. which obviously every royalist says no to, but this idea of a "Liberal Vicariate" basically becomes a major political fixation and for a couple years it's "yes, but what if the vicariate also had power to do X", "yes, but what if they could also do Y, have oversight of Z, etc" - The main rub being nobody could agree on exactly how to work out what the vicars or a theoretical representative government (at the time still a fringe movement) would work in particular, as you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back, but the liberal vicariate idea remains the "respectable" liberal opposition idea''
 
 
the 1860s and 70s saw a dramatic rise in lower class and middle class movements
 
i don't know if you're familiar with how the french revolution went down ca 1787/1788
 
but convening the estates general was viewed as a panacea, a solution to all problems
 
but consequently meant different things to different people
 
As you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back
 
here the liberal vicariate is that idea
 
and a lot of self interested rich locals could say "what if we just made it like how it was in the 1500s"
 
 
''1906, one of the reformist factions finally managed to blow up the king (Ruaridh Sutharlan) and a couple key throne supporters at once, which kicked off a civil war between socialist, monarchist, and republican factions
 
with the republicans and socialist allying and said socialists immediately getting shanked in the back
 
 
maybe the direct reason for the bombing of the king in 1906 is
 
after a year and a half of major tumult, riots, etc, he finally decides to concede but only on the original point of landed male suffrage for the vicars
 
and when the vicars get together and say "we would like to also have authority over X, Y, and Z"
 
he says no
 
which is the breaking point for most radicals
''
 
And to note, the previous culture across both major ethnicities was very much family-focused, organicist, and morally absolutist, which should heavily clash with a wave of actualism, mathematicism, and maybe even finitism (the idea of a non-omnipitent God) creating a philosophical rift between the gentry and the growing educated middle class
 
[[Category:Fhainnaeran]]
[[Category:History]]

Revision as of 00:41, 11 February 2021


Pre-Christian Era (Antiquity-some year)

Principalities Era (some year-1398)

1364: Prince Ruaridh Màrtainn of Mhartainnvail inherits the titles of Connsmonan, Cheatharnaich, and Itheachan from an uncle and father killed in a hunting accident/skirmish/'highway robbery'; Initially a chance conglomeration of a few choice titles under a particularly lucky/skilled prince, who didn't particularly like the idea of having his territories not being contiguous; basically fumbled/scraped his way into a position where his only son could actually enforce a tentative claim to kingship


Early Royal Era (1398-1906)

1398: the Kingdom of the Fhainn proper is founded by Rih (King) Rethys Màrtainn, who immediately begins eating up smaller independent cities and minor noble holdings along with one or two serious wars against challengers to his claim of kingship, one of which he was by all rights assumed to be the loser against a coalition but won due to organizational and cavalry reforms, dumb luck in maneuvering, and catching enemy orders - 'perfect storm'

1471: last major challenger to the throne in southern regions kneels, a few weaker principalities in the north remain but get swallowed up through marriage or outright invasion by 1500

First Princes' War

Main Article: First Princes' War

1519-1545: First Princes' War: a few kings (Caerls Màrtainn, Bronwyn Màrtainn, Rhys Wydd-Màrtainn) worth of fighting, and for their victory they end up with the authority to elect the King similar to the HLE's collegial electorate

the king who lost the war though continues on until 1557 and then he dies and his son presses hereditary claim, and while the vicars do elect him they say "shit let's not make a habit of this"

he reigns and the same thing happens on his (Cledwyn Wydd-Màrtainn) death maybe 1570 or so

except the vicars refuse and the second vicarial(?) war begins

Second Princes' War

Main Article: Second Princes' War

1571-1583: Second Prince's War:  this second one is very bloody and just an overall mess, whole dynastic noble local families are wiped out, at least one king (Conan Wydd-Màrtainn, Ruaridh Sutharlan, Banrih (Queen) Cailean Suthar-Màrtainn) of fhanrrenenoit4hlwtf is killed in battle; it ends in a brokered peace; the king's election will continue, but the vicars will also be elected by local nobles, and since so many local families died, the right to appoint new local nobility reverts to the King (Donan Sutharlan-Màrtainn), who begins to solely grant lifetime peerages, i.e., no hereditary succession for the local holdings. typically he will continue to appoint from one family, but they now remain local to the crown - while the king could appoint hereditary nobility, none do because that's a stupid move, and so the local nobles (appointed by the king) begin electing as vicar basically anyone the king wants to keep their power in the family - this allows titles to be sold by the crown, too

Croprot Famines

High Royal Era (1603-1830)

Great Quake of 1664

Main Article:

First Kin War

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Second Kin War

Main Article:

Third Kin War

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Tundra Wars (1676-1712)

Main Article: Tundra Wars

Sutharine Succession Crisis (1712-1717)

Main Article: Sutharine Succession Crisis

Constitution of the State

-year 1830

-shift of Fhainnlannachaeran from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy in 1830, when Rih Luthais Suthar-Màrtainn chose to put a clause in the new constitution which would force the Throne to address the issue of allowing the suffrage of landed male voters for Vicarial seats in 1900. In the immediate term, the document allowed local officials to be elected, but Vicars remained an appointed rank rather than elected.

-also banned serfdom in the remaining feudal regions in Lyukquar and reformed the administration into a semicentralized government, removing the last technical attachment of Vicars to olf feudal lines, but in practice leaving the same families in power at least until elections were supposed to begin


Late Royal Era

in the 1850s or so there should be a pretty large reform movement saying yes, the monarchy is great, but we should expand who can vote for the vicar besides local royal appointees - every property owning male, perhaps. which obviously every royalist says no to, but this idea of a "Liberal Vicariate" basically becomes a major political fixation and for a couple years it's "yes, but what if the vicariate also had power to do X", "yes, but what if they could also do Y, have oversight of Z, etc" - The main rub being nobody could agree on exactly how to work out what the vicars or a theoretical representative government (at the time still a fringe movement) would work in particular, as you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back, but the liberal vicariate idea remains the "respectable" liberal opposition idea

Fourth Kin War

1888 Factory Riots

Constitutional Crisis of 1903

Republican Era (1906-present day)

Fhainnin Civil War

Main Article: Fhainnin Civil War 1906, one of the reformist factions finally managed to blow up the king (Ruaridh Sutharlan) and a couple key throne supporters at once, which kicked off a civil war between socialist, monarchist, and republican factions, with the republicans and socialists allying and said socialists immediately getting shanked in the back

maybe the direct reason for the bombing of the king in 1906 is after a year and a half of major tumult, riots, etc, he finally decides to concede but only on the original point of landed male suffrage for the vicars, and when the vicars get together and say "we would like to also have authority over X, Y, and Z" - he says no, which is the breaking point for most radicals


Eight Years' Terror

Great War

Main Article: Great War

Lean Years

Main Article: Fhainnin Lean Years

Vandarch Canal Crisis

Main Article: Vandarch Canal Crisis

Modern Century

a 'vicar' is a kind of viceroy administrator of what end up being the provinces (originally the inherited territories), streamlining national administration somewhat but also decentralizing power as the kingdom grew 1364: Prince Ruaridh Màrtainn of Mhartainnvail inherits the titles of Connsmonan, Cheatharnaich, and Itheachan from an uncle and father killed in a hunting accident/skirmish/'highway robbery'; Initially a chance conglomeration of a few choice titles under a particularly lucky/skilled prince, who didn't particularly like the idea of having his territories not being contiguous; basically fumbled/scraped his way into a position where his only son could actually enforce a tentative claim to kingship


1398: the Kingdom of the Fhainn proper is founded by Rih (King) Rethys Màrtainn, who immediately begins eating up smaller independent cities and minor noble holdings along with one or two serious wars against challengers to his claim of kingship, one of which he was by all rights assumed to be the loser against a coalition but won due to organizational and cavalry reforms, dumb luck in maneuvering, and catching enemy orders - 'perfect storm'


Ethnically, there is tension especially at the time between Slavs in the north and fringes of the western coast and Gaels in the south, which also plays in to resistance as the slavs were previously dominant due to having open access to the seas and the new state was not in any way slavic or pluralist


1471: last major challenger to the throne in southern regions kneels, a few weaker principalities in the north remain but get swallowed up through marriage or outright invasion by 1500


1519-1545: First Princes' War: a few kings (Caerls Màrtainn, Bronwyn Màrtainn, Rhys Wydd-Màrtainn) worth of fighting, and for their victory they end up with the authority to elect the King similar to the HLE's collegial electorate

the king who lost the war though continues on until 1557 and then he dies and his son presses hereditary claim, and while the vicars do elect him they say "shit let's not make a habit of this"

he reigns and the same thing happens on his (Cledwyn Wydd-Màrtainn) death maybe 1570 or so

except the vicars refuse and the second vicarial(?) war begins


1571-1583: Second Prince's War:  this second one is very bloody and just an overall mess, whole dynastic noble local families are wiped out, at least one king (Conan Wydd-Màrtainn, Ruaridh Sutharlan, Banrih (Queen) Cailean Suthar-Màrtainn) of fhanrrenenoit4hlwtf is killed in battle; it ends in a brokered peace; the king's election will continue, but the vicars will also be elected by local nobles, and since so many local families died, the right to appoint new local nobility reverts to the King (Donan Sutharlan-Màrtainn), who begins to solely grant lifetime peerages, i.e., no hereditary succession for the local holdings. typically he will continue to appoint from one family, but they now remain local to the crown - while the king could appoint hereditary nobility, none do because that's a stupid move, and so the local nobles (appointed by the king) begin electing as vicar basically anyone the king wants to keep their power in the family - this allows titles to be sold by the crown, too

this system continues until the 1690s when the kings (Sean Suthar-Màrtainn) begin to realize hey, we can just buy off the still remaining hereditary local lords


External conflicts and relative stability here


by 1760 or so something like, i don't know,  87% of eligible nobility voting for the vicar have been appointed by the king (Cywir Suthar-Màrtainn). so what you have in place is kind of a centralist monarchy with a nominal election system that is really just trading favors with prominent families

so the Vicariate, once a powerful institution, is basically a succession rubber stamp by that 1760 date - essentially reduced from local princes to appointed governors

This is all about on track with what I'm thinking, as by 1775 there should be no more direct ties between officers and their noble status, at least in terms of laws banning commoners or reserving positions. in practice most officers will still be educated nobles


in the 1850s or so there should be a pretty large reform movement saying yes, the monarchy is great, but we should expand who can vote for the vicar besides local royal appointees - every property owning male, perhaps. which obviously every royalist says no to, but this idea of a "Liberal Vicariate" basically becomes a major political fixation and for a couple years it's "yes, but what if the vicariate also had power to do X", "yes, but what if they could also do Y, have oversight of Z, etc" - The main rub being nobody could agree on exactly how to work out what the vicars or a theoretical representative government (at the time still a fringe movement) would work in particular, as you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back, but the liberal vicariate idea remains the "respectable" liberal opposition idea


the 1860s and 70s saw a dramatic rise in lower class and middle class movements

i don't know if you're familiar with how the french revolution went down ca 1787/1788

but convening the estates general was viewed as a panacea, a solution to all problems

but consequently meant different things to different people

As you'd have constitutional monarchists mixing with radicals and even a few revanchist wanting the old vicar's crown electorate back

here the liberal vicariate is that idea

and a lot of self interested rich locals could say "what if we just made it like how it was in the 1500s"


1906, one of the reformist factions finally managed to blow up the king (Ruaridh Sutharlan) and a couple key throne supporters at once, which kicked off a civil war between socialist, monarchist, and republican factions

with the republicans and socialist allying and said socialists immediately getting shanked in the back


maybe the direct reason for the bombing of the king in 1906 is

after a year and a half of major tumult, riots, etc, he finally decides to concede but only on the original point of landed male suffrage for the vicars

and when the vicars get together and say "we would like to also have authority over X, Y, and Z"

he says no

which is the breaking point for most radicals

And to note, the previous culture across both major ethnicities was very much family-focused, organicist, and morally absolutist, which should heavily clash with a wave of actualism, mathematicism, and maybe even finitism (the idea of a non-omnipitent God) creating a philosophical rift between the gentry and the growing educated middle class