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Razan

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State of Razan
ᛒᚣᛩᚮᛌ ᚢᛚᚢᛌ
Büqoş Uluş (Chal)
Flag of Razan
National flag
Symbol of Razan
Symbol
Anthem: "Even Blossoms Eventually Scatter"
CapitalShaghirsenir
Largest citySekizbulut
Official languagesChal
Recognised national languages
Ethnic groups
(2023)
20% Chals
20% Altiqors
14% Chaburs
various others
Religion
(2023)
65% Gregorianism
20% Tahir
2% Sendou
various others
Demonym(s)Razanite
GovernmentFederal parliamentary republic
• President
 
 
LegislatureCongress of Razan
Senate
House of Representatives
Formation
• Independence
1785
Area
• Total
6,587,948 km2 (2,543,621 sq mi)
Population
• 2023 estimate
160.0 million (2nd)
• Density
24.29/km2 (62.9/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$4.48 trillion (2nd)
• Per capita
$28,000
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$1.92 trillion (7th)
• Per capita
$12,000
Gini39.2
medium
HDI0.81
very high
CurrencyX (X, RZN)
Time zoneUTC-2 to -5
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+937

Razan (Chal: ᛒᚣᛩᚮ, hernicized: Büqoş), officially the State of Razan (Chal: ᛒᚣᛩᚮᛌ ᚢᛚᚢᛌ, hernicized: Büqoş Uluş), is a sovereign state in northern Abaria, and the largest country in the world by land area. It borders the Tayan Sea to the east, the Glacian Ocean to the north, and Yingok to the west. Its capital is Shaghirsenir and its largest city is Sekizbulut. With a population of approximately 160 million people, it is also the second-most populous country in the world.

Before the first millenium CE, southern Razan was dominated by the cities of the Tissic Sargian civilization, an entrepot for trans-Abarian trade, while north-central Abaria was presumably populated by Paleo-Cascay speakers and the east by Madic speakers such as Lunts and Yougs. The Berkic migration first introduced Berkic ruling elites to these regions in the 8th century, and with time displaced or assimilated existing cultures. Several major states including both sedentary and nomadic empires were established by the Berks, the most powerful of which was the Artuchid Empire that dominated the Abarian continent in the 14th century following the Catabole and the subsequent crisis. From 1444 onwards, it fragmented into several successor states.

The east coast of Razan, which hosted Calesian commercial outposts since antiquity, came under stronger control by the Waldish predecessor state of Jarnland in the 17th century, culminating in the establishment of the Triumvirate of Razan in 1683, which organized local allies of the Jarnish East Abaria Company, mainly the Chals, against regional rivals such as the Saqlaganid Empire. Tensions between the Triumvirate and the Jarnish during the 18th century resulted in a declaration of independence in 1785, followed by the Tayan War, which successfully expelled Jarnish forces with assistance and recognition from other Calesian powers.

Perceiving itself as a state rooted in and hinged upon the Calesianization of Abaria, Razan undertook campaigns of expansion against its post-Artuchid neighbors and north-western frontiers in the 19th century, defeating the Saqlaganids in the 1810s, expanding across the Cascay onto the borders of Yingok by the 1840s, and annexing central Abaria by the 1870s. The country's rapid expansion emboldened its entry into the Great War as a Sydenham Power, in which it was defeated by the war's end in 1940, though the internal ouster of the wartime government and the recognized value of its influence in Abaria secured a relatively lenient settlement. Post-war Razan experienced alternating periods of authoritarian rule and unstable democracy; the last dictatorship ended in 1992, inaugurating a relatively free and stable dominant-party political system that prevails to today.

Razan is one of the world's great powers and a superpower of the Abarian continent alongside Yingok, its reliable ally since the establishment of the latter's modern government; it also has a close relationship with Calesian powers such as Waldrich. Its developing country economy is the world' second-largest one by PPP and the seventh-largest one by Template:Nominal GDP. It is a member state of the United Congress, the Abarian Regional Forum, and the X.

Etymology

'Razan' is a Tissic term related to the root *raȷ́ʰ- "to abandon, free", likely connected to northern Abaria's position relative to ancient Tissic civilization. The Berkic endonym is 'Büqoş', originally büyük-qoş or 'great pair'.

History

Ancient Razan (—700)

Early Berkic era (700—1350)

Artuchid empires (1350—1600)

Early modern Razan (1600—1785)

Independent Razan (1785—present)

Beacon of Abaria (1785—1875)

Freed from restraint by the Jarnish and now party to a grand entente of more aggressive Calesian interests in eastern Abaria, newly-independent Razan focused its efforts south on defeating the Saqlaganid Empire. In 1811, a Razanite incursion into Saqlaganid territory triggered Yedibelgi's War, which ended in 1817 with the ouster of the Saqlaganids and the division of their empire into Danash, Osershan, and Matar under joint Razanite and Calesian protection. Although there were consistent efforts to wrest influence over and eventually annex the post-Saqlaganid states in the south, it was not until the outbreak of the War of the Backdoor in 1838 that Razan was able to do so in the name of supporting a liberal revolution in Matar and defending it against Calesian intervention.

The more highlighted efforts of Razan's territorial expansion from the 1820s were focused on incorporating larger territories in the Cascay. The nomadic states of the continental interior were enticed with trade and protection to mostly submit peacefully, but some such as the Arkanjak Khanate offered stubborn resistance and were only annexed after bloody conquest. By the 1840s, with the annexation of the Narsuren, Razan's territory extended to border Yingok.

Razan also projected its influence toward the sedentary kingdoms of central Abaria such as Karadala, Aqqush, and Selgan, which by the 1840s had fallen into its sphere of influence. Razan was content to maintain them as independent client states, but the spread of liberal political ideas destabilized their societies with pro-Razan republican dissent, and expansionist movements agitated for their incorporation and 'elevation' along Calesian standards. In 1862 the outbreak of civil war in Karadala initiated the Razanite conquest of Central Abaria, as both filibusters and federal troops, emboldened by the experience of the War of the Backdoor, intervened to install revolutionary republics by 1869. However, the federal government's disagreements with the revolutionary governments delayed the latter's accession: reversionist radicalism among the revolutionaries was feared to upset the political situation in Razan's heartland, and the political establishment wanted to avoid legitimizing their agenda.

In 1872, the revolutionaries governing the central Abarian republics purged sympathizers of the Razanite government and united into the Artuchian Federation. In response, the Razanite government initiated the Southwestern War in 1873, conquered central Abaria with federal troops, and at last acceded the central Abarian states in 1875. With this, all the broad constitutive regions of Razan today became part of the federation; agreements and conventions to limit expansion in Abaria between the Calesian powers meant Razan would no longer conduct large annexations.

Champion of Abaria (1875—1940)

The conquest of central Abaria marked the shift of Razan into a country and power with an Abarian rather than Calesian self-identity. As had been demonstrated in the liberal revolutionary wars, Pan-Abarianism became increasingly influential, and participation in federal politics by the newly incorporated regions was increasingly united by the ideology of Abarian empowerment. Meanwhile, Razan's territorial expansion now made it a rival rather than partner of Calesian agendas in Abaria, leading to a vicious cycle of confrontation in eastern and southern Abaria where their spheres of influence abutted. Although the political establishment attempted to shut out the seemingly dangerously radical pan-Abarian 'Young Berks' on one hand and maintain goodwill with Calesia on the other, the exertions Razan made in continental politics to prove this ultimately further emboldened the former while consternating the latter.

Emergency powers the government appropriated in the Southwestern War became permanent as it sought to commit 'reconstruction' in central Abaria and suppress radical ideologies such as reversionism more broadly. Controversy over these new powers was appeased through the development of patronage networks and political machines, often backporting the authoritarian reconstruction efforts in central Abaria to other parts of the federation, which redrew the Razanite political scene and its key participants. From 1895 to 1912 Razan was under the Cervine Party, a big-tent ruling clique with an authoritarian, technocratic governing style that pushed through major reforms, culminating in an attempt to dissolve itself and 'restore' parliamentarianism. The post-Cervine period however was mired by discoordination in the political elite and led to increasing military intervention in politics.

In 1936 Razan joined the Great War on the side of the Sydenham Powers, expecting to establish its hegemony across the entire Abarian continent. However, its opportunistic incursions in Abaria were poorly coordinated with its supposed allies such as Falland, and after the frontline stagnated from 1937 participation in the war became widely criticized. In late 1940 the war government was overthrown after Transmedan forces entered Razan, and a new administration organized by parties that had made overtures to the Transmedan powers in advance declared an immediate surrender. For this, Razan was able to negotiate very favorable terms for a major defeated power, avoiding occupation and preserving its pre-war territories.

Post-war Razan (1940—1992)

The post-war government organized a one-party state centred on the National-Civic Party, which instituted authoritarian rule and public mobilization in the name of purging the former administration's corruption and promoting democracy. This, combined with the party's composition of ultranationalists and national syndicalists, who had been sidelined by the wartime government and who in turn recanted their foreign policy opportunistically to seize power, made Razan widely described as a national syndicalist regime that survived, if not was ironically created by, defeat in the war.

In 1950, an internal power struggle caused the unceremonious dissolution of the NCP and a period of competition between its three successors, which campaigned through various local mobilization organisations known as Wolfpacks that formed a kind of Razanite activist civil society. Wolfpacks of competing ideologies and alignments often engaged in street violence and even terrorism, becoming a focus of public anxiety and political contention, but also a central element of local and everyday politics. In 1962, rioting during elections provoked a coup that brought the Constitutional Union to power, which sought a longer-lasting one-party regime under the mandate of suppressing pan-Berkism and revolutionary socialism, but it was undermined by challenges from its own internal factions and Wolfpacks. Protests ended the CU government in 1972, which was succeeded by a series of short-lived governments by increasingly ephemeral coalitions; from 1975 to 1978 Razan experienced the longest government shutdown in its history.

In 1980, the Society for Action, centred on a network of security officials and business interests formed initially to support Razanite interventions in the Yinese Civil War, was brought to power in a coup. Major political renegotiations were made under the Society, which cultivated a clientelistic base of support in the Wolfpack-weary provincial areas, and by 1992 it was able to resume free elections that it won.

Contemporary Razan (1992—)

Politics

Economy

Demographics

Culture