Urcean people: Difference between revisions

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{{Main|Language in Urcea}}
{{Main|Language in Urcea}}
[[Urcea]] has three officially recognized languages, [[Julian Ænglish]], {{wp|Ecclesiastical Latin|Latin}}, and [[Lebhan language|Lebhan]], of which only Julian Ænglish is spoken on a regular basis by a vast majority of the population, used in business, personal, and official contexts. Abroad, Urceans speak Julian Ænglish, and their presence has made it an important language of diplomacy and business in [[Crona]] and especially in the [[Nysdra Sea Treaty Association]] states.
[[Urcea]] has three officially recognized languages, [[Julian Ænglish]], {{wp|Ecclesiastical Latin|Latin}}, and [[Lebhan language|Lebhan]], of which only Julian Ænglish is spoken on a regular basis by a vast majority of the population, used in business, personal, and official contexts. Abroad, Urceans speak Julian Ænglish, and their presence has made it an important language of diplomacy and business in [[Crona]] and especially in the [[Nysdra Sea Treaty Association]] states.
===Naming conventions===
== Religion ==
== Religion ==
Being a member of the [[Catholic Church]] - practicing or otherwise - is considered to be a vital part of Urcean identity, so much so that {{wp|Protestant}} and other faith Urcean nationals have assumed a completely different ethnic identity over the past five centuries known as [[Cisionian people]]. Cisionians assumed their identity not only from Urcean external views but from internal identity realization based on centuries of cultural isolation. Accordingly, Catholicism and elements of it permeate every part of the culture of Urceans, ranging from pop culture references of {{wp|scripture}}, to popular legends of {{wp|Saints}}, to the legal and cultural structuring of the week around Sunday, the day when many Urceans attend {{wp|Mass}}.
Being a member of the [[Catholic Church]] - practicing or otherwise - is considered to be a vital part of Urcean identity, so much so that {{wp|Protestant}} and other faith Urcean nationals have assumed a completely different ethnic identity over the past five centuries known as [[Cisionian people]]. Cisionians assumed their identity not only from Urcean external views but from internal identity realization based on centuries of cultural isolation. Accordingly, Catholicism and elements of it permeate every part of the culture of Urceans, ranging from pop culture references of {{wp|scripture}}, to popular legends of {{wp|Saints}}, to the legal and cultural structuring of the week around Sunday, the day when many Urceans attend {{wp|Mass}}.