Behera: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox country | {{Infobox country | ||
|conventional_long_name = Beheran Republic <br> {{wpl|French language|Gaullican}}: ''République Béhèraise'' <br> {{wpl|Arabic language|Rahelian}}: | |conventional_long_name = Beheran Republic <br> {{wpl|French language|Gaullican}}: ''République Béhèraise'' <br> {{wpl|Arabic language|Rahelian}}: الجمحرورية البحيرية <br> ''al-Jumhūriyyah al-Buhayriyyah'' | ||
|native_name = <!--Country's name (usually full name) in its native language, hence in italics (double quotemarks)--> | |native_name = <!--Country's name (usually full name) in its native language, hence in italics (double quotemarks)--> | ||
|common_name = Behera | |common_name = Behera | ||
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|footnotes = <!--For any generic non-numbered footnotes--> | |footnotes = <!--For any generic non-numbered footnotes--> | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Behera''' ({{wpl|Arabic language|Rahelian}}: | '''Behera''' ({{wpl|Arabic language|Rahelian}}: البحيرة, ''Al-Buhayra'', {{wpl|French language|Gaullican}}: ''Béhère''), officially the '''Beheran Republic''' ({{wpl|Arabic language|Rahelian}}: الجمحرورية البحيرية, ''al-Jumhūriyyah al-Buhayriyyah'', {{wpl|French language|Gaullican}}: ''République Béhèraise'') is a landlocked nation located in north central [[Coius]]. It shares land borders with six countries; x to the northeast, [[Bamvango]] to the east, [[Yemet]] to the southeast, [[Mabifia]] to the south, [[Zorasan]] to the southwest, [[Tsabara]] to the west, and [[Sohar]] to the north. At over 955,000 square kilometres, Behera is the largest landlocked nation in the world. It has a diverse population of 16.8 million inhabitants from nine different ethnic groups according to the 2018 census. A significant proportion of the inhabitants reside within the capital and largest city, [[Amassine]]. | ||
Inhabited since {{wpl|Neolithic}} times, much of northern Behera was inhabited by nomadic peoples, predominantly {{wpl|Berber|Amazigh}} whose domain consisted of the northern half of what is today modern Behera. One of the longest-lasting polities was the [[Kingdom of Afrara]], centred on the city of the same name in the north-eastern part of Behera on the [[Khasiba River]], which lasted from the third centiry BCE into the seventh century CE, when the northern semi-arable savannas of the north began to suffer from increasing {{wp|desertification}}. During this period, Afrara traded with the {{wpl|Jews|Atudites}} and later, {{wpl|Romans|Solarians}}, with Solarian coins found in northern and northeastern areas of Behera. | Inhabited since {{wpl|Neolithic}} times, much of northern Behera was inhabited by nomadic peoples, predominantly {{wpl|Berber|Amazigh}} whose domain consisted of the northern half of what is today modern Behera. One of the longest-lasting polities was the [[Kingdom of Afrara]], centred on the city of the same name in the north-eastern part of Behera on the [[Khasiba River]], which lasted from the third centiry BCE into the seventh century CE, when the northern semi-arable savannas of the north began to suffer from increasing {{wp|desertification}}. During this period, Afrara traded with the {{wpl|Jews|Atudites}} and later, {{wpl|Romans|Solarians}}, with Solarian coins found in northern and northeastern areas of Behera. |
Revision as of 07:06, 9 May 2021
Flag | |
Anthem: الله أكبر "God is the Greatest" | |
Capital and | Amassine |
Official languages | Gaullican Rahelian |
Recognised national languages | Tamazight |
Recognised regional languages | Beja Djenné Houmbouri Masa |
Demonym(s) | Beheran |
Government | Presidential republic |
Sadid Bassou Sharifi | |
Bizar Basim Ziani | |
Legislature | Parliament |
National Council | |
People's Assembly | |
Establishment | |
3rd century BCE | |
707 CE | |
1572 | |
1607 | |
1617 | |
1890 | |
1912 | |
1935 | |
• Independence from Werania | June 15, 1948 |
October 1, 1960 | |
November 9, 2001 | |
Area | |
• | 955,414 km2 (368,887 sq mi) |
Population | |
• December 2020 estimate | 37,414,900 |
• 2018 census | 36,926,086 |
GDP (PPP) | estimate |
• Total | $369.99 billion |
• Per capita | $9,889 |
GDP (nominal) | estimate |
• Total | $111.98 billion |
• Per capita | $2,993 |
Currency | Beheran dinar (BHD) |
Time zone | UTC+1 |
Date format | dd-mm-yyyy |
Driving side | right |
Calling code | +166 |
Internet TLD | .bh |
Behera (Rahelian: البحيرة, Al-Buhayra, Gaullican: Béhère), officially the Beheran Republic (Rahelian: الجمحرورية البحيرية, al-Jumhūriyyah al-Buhayriyyah, Gaullican: République Béhèraise) is a landlocked nation located in north central Coius. It shares land borders with six countries; x to the northeast, Bamvango to the east, Yemet to the southeast, Mabifia to the south, Zorasan to the southwest, Tsabara to the west, and Sohar to the north. At over 955,000 square kilometres, Behera is the largest landlocked nation in the world. It has a diverse population of 16.8 million inhabitants from nine different ethnic groups according to the 2018 census. A significant proportion of the inhabitants reside within the capital and largest city, Amassine.
Inhabited since Neolithic times, much of northern Behera was inhabited by nomadic peoples, predominantly Amazigh whose domain consisted of the northern half of what is today modern Behera. One of the longest-lasting polities was the Kingdom of Afrara, centred on the city of the same name in the north-eastern part of Behera on the Khasiba River, which lasted from the third centiry BCE into the seventh century CE, when the northern semi-arable savannas of the north began to suffer from increasing desertification. During this period, Afrara traded with the Atudites and later, Solarians, with Solarian coins found in northern and northeastern areas of Behera.
Between the 7th and the 12th centuries CE, Behera was ruled by a series of disjointed polities, with the former Kingdom of Afrara broken up into areas ruled by warlords in almost perpetual conflict against the spread of Rahelian settlements across northern and central Behera. Southern Behera came under the influence of traders and polities of the razzia states in northern and central Mabifia, and it was from here that Irfan became firmly established within Behera. Local polities such as the Kingdoms of Daira and Minamare gradually coalaesced into a larger entity, forming the Muharamite Confederation, the name derived from the class of warrior priests to spread Irfan among the other people groups to the north, having conquered most of Behera by the 7th century. The Muharamites consolidated their power and became one of the first great polities of Behera. The Confederation was highly decentralised and trade flourished among them, as well as the neighbouring hourege states within western Bahia. Although lacking any central authority, the Muharamites created a period of stability and growth within Behera which lasted for over eight and a half centuries, until a civil war between rival clans destroyed the Muharamites and resulted in the ascension of the Amassinids.
The Amassinids, named from the ruler who emerged from the civil war that ended the Muharamites, Amessan II, resulted in the first polity that spanned all of Behera with a central authority and control over most of its territory. It was also the first time that the country came under rule by the Amazigh since antiquity. The Amassinids positioned themselves as facilitators of trade, occupying crucial trade routes between Bahia in the southeast and east, Rahelia in the west, and northern Coius. Through this, the Amassinids became very wealthy, but were subject to various wars and invasions from neighbouring polities seeking to control the important trade routes of the Amassinids. The city of Afrara was rebuilt and became the centre of learning and political power within the kingdom, and one of the centres in north-central Coius. With the advent of the Amassinids came the Rule of the Three Dynasties, with Amassinid rule lasting until 1612, when King Ayrad V was overthrown and replaced with the first king of the Irnuhani dynasty, Irnuhani I. Little changed under the Irnuhanis, although Behera began to lose influence as a political and economic force within central Coius, hastened by the rise of the Usemid dynasty in western Behera, who grew enough to directly threaten and overthrow the Irnuhanis. Behera would enter into a period of significant decline as the centre of the continent began to become
The Usemid dynasty was named after King Usem I, who quickly laid claim to the lands to the east and south under the rule of the Irnuhanis. Usem I claimed to be the rightful ruler of all Beheran lands and those territories controlled by the Irnuhanis. Usem I would die in 1636 and replaced by his son, Usem II. It would take half a century until the first Rahelian king, Abdellah I, challenged the Irnuhani rule. Although the First Dynastic War was inconclusive, the Irnuhani's control over central Behera was challenged. Several more conflicts were fought, before the Irnuhanis were finally defeated in 1774 under King Qamar I. Under Qamar, the capital was moved to Amassine in north-central Behera, as it was closer to Afrara and also enabled the better control over the predominantly Amazigh north. Amassine also lay at the centre of Behera's trade network. Ammassine was redeveloped with large palaces and other important government buildings, which took several decades. Although Qamar I would die before his capital was completed, his son Qamar II would finish the work. The Usemids would also continue to influence western parts of Bahia, participating in the slave trade throughout the final period. Qamar II would also popularise the use of the term sultan to refer to himself, and future rulers of Behera would use the term into the modern era. A caste system would develop throughout the unified period under Usemid rule, with Rahelians concentrating political power and wealth in themselves, and non-Rahelians forming the majority of the workers, peasants, and artisans who helped the sultanate function. The Amazigh were regarded as himji, or "wild", and the subject of a number of costly subjugation campaigns.
Euclean influences and interests in the region grew considerably during the late 18th century and early 19th century, with both Estmere and Gaullica competing for influence in northern Coius. Behera had lost much of the wealth and influence it had enjoyed in earlier dynasties, and thus was initially passed up by Estmere in terms of concentration. Gaullica did not make many inroads into Behera, preferring to instead utilise Behera as a buffer state between it's Bahian and Rahelian possessions and Estmerish colonies to the north. As the colonies developed, Gaullica took a particular interest in Behera as a more direct pathway for the Trans-Bahian Railway. The Beheran sovereign, Qamar VI, resisted outside interference and influence within the kingdom, with the Gaullicans forging a series of incidents along the border between Beheran and Gaullican colonial forces. This precipitated the War of the Desert, in which a Gaullican army invaded from the west, supported by incursions and expeditions from Gaullica's Bahian colonies. The War of the Desert lasted for three years between 1887 and 1890 and resulted in the establishment of a new puppet regime led by Amzîn ait Ibrahim Ahmadi, founding the Ahmadi sultanate in 1890.
The Ahmadi Sultanate was nominally a protectorate of the Gaullican Empire, but due to its location acted almost independently. The Sultan essentially ruled with impunity, supported by Gaullican colonial forces based at important installations and forts along the Trans-Bahian Railway, in addition to colonial soldiers based in the neighbouring colony of Hamada. This state of affairs continued until the Great War in 1936, when Behera was invaded and occupied by Estmerish colonial forces. After the war, Werania was granted the mandate over Behera, although Behera still enjoyed significant autonomy.
It was invaded again, this time by Etrurian colonial forces during the Solarian War, in which the Etrurians attempted to cut the Trans-Bahian Railway. Behera suffered significant damage and destabilisation during the war, which resulted in the government losing much of its political influence and control over the interior, especially in the north, where various Amazigh tribal confederations rebelled in the Jabali and Shioua regions. This rebellion occurred after independence, and became one of the longest-lasting conflicts within Behera, and contributed to the overthrow of the sultanate. In a precarious position financially and in terms of internal stability, the military lead by Ghumer Safar, overthrew the sultanate on October 1, 1960 in the October Revolution.
The October Revolution lead to the creation of the Socialist Republic of Behera was the second socialist state established in the broader Rahelia region, after Tsabara, and quickly formed close relationships with the Tsabaran and Mabifian socialist states. The period between 1960 and 1978 became known as the National Development Era, in which the state instituted singificant land and economic reforms. Unusually, these reforms included a free and regulated market in which workers cooperatives could compete, the country seeing substantial economic growth as well as improvements in literacy, healthcare, and standards of living. It also saw a resolution to the end of the Shioua conflict, and a return to peace and stability in Behera. It also lead to the creation of Behera's ethnic autonomous regions, many of which surrounded enclaves of linguistic and ethnic groupings.
Safar was overthrown in 1978 due to his favouring of Amazigh and Rahelians at the expense of other of Behera's people groups, and was replaced with an interim military leader, before Ismail Ali Hamadou assumed power in February 1979. Hamadou restored aspects of the former socialist republic, and adopted a new constitution, allowing for limited democratic reform, in addition to guaranteed representation within the People's Assembly of Behera's ethnic and religious minorities. The republic faced its most significant crisis with the beginning of the Djafra Uprising in 1992 that contributed to the downfall of Hamadou, and a return to military government. A civil war broke out between largely Kushitic peoples in the northeast and south of Behera and the central government, which was backed by Zorasan and other states. Although a ceasefire was arranged, and a peace agreement by the principal groups signed in 2001, an insurgency continues within Behera to this day.
Behera is a member of several supranational organisations, including the Community of Nations, and has participated in a number of peacekeeping missions and initiatives within northern Coius. It is also an observer or member of several regional economic, political, and cultural organisations. Behera has been noted throughout its history for its authoritarian rule and low civil liberties.