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===Baoping Republic and Democratic People's Republic of Yudong===
===Baoping Republic and Democratic People's Republic of Yudong===
{{main|Second Republic of Yudong|Democratic People's Republic of Yudong}}
Following the [[1930 Toulogne Accords]], republican and international forces entered into Dongcheng, now divided in two and surrounded by the DPRY. The Republic of Yudong placed most of its administrative buildings and political institutions in [[Baoping]] due to the DPRY threat surrounding the old imperial city; because of this, the ROY became widely known as the Baoping Republic by the media. International presence in Dongcheng remained in place until 1940, year that was marked by the accords in order to reach a mutual agreement between the two entities; however, despite the special approaches, few agreements were possible and once Dongcheng was freed from its international settlements, the DPRY ceased its contacts with the southern portion of the city.
Following the [[1930 Toulogne Accords]], republican and international forces entered into Dongcheng, now divided in two and surrounded by the DPRY. The Republic of Yudong placed most of its administrative buildings and political institutions in [[Baoping]] due to the DPRY threat surrounding the old imperial city; because of this, the ROY became widely known as the Baoping Republic by the media. International presence in Dongcheng remained in place until 1940, year that was marked by the accords in order to reach a mutual agreement between the two entities; however, despite the special approaches, few agreements were possible and once Dongcheng was freed from its international settlements, the DPRY ceased its contacts with the southern portion of the city.


Still Virtually powerless outside urban centres and populated areas, the territory of Yudong was highly fragmented with control being exercised by {{wp|warlords}}. This proved as a valid reason for both the DPRY and the ROY to be established as authoritarian states in order to consolidate power in their territories. The DPRY soon became an authoritarian one-party state under the sphere of the [[Communist Party of Yudong]] while the ROY saw a large campaign of political censorship and repression in order to eliminate west's propaganda; in order to achieve this, the presidency of Chang Chek enabled the possibility of using {{wp|martial law}}, passed in 1932, to repress dissidences and political opponents. The ROY under Chang Chek exposed a range of instruments to boost {{wp|nationalism}} and {{wp|anti-communist}} sentiments in the population while the DPRY distanced from Kodeshi and Abramean lectures of socialism with the leadership of [[Zhu Hongbin]], who valued the importance of the countryside population over the industrial workers and gave the military a more participative role in the party and state organisation.
Still Virtually powerless outside urban centres and populated areas, the territory of Yudong was highly fragmented with control being exercised by {{wp|warlords}}. This proved as a valid reason for both the DPRY and the ROY to be established as authoritarian states in order to consolidate power in their territories. The DPRY soon became an authoritarian one-party state under the sphere of the [[Communist Party of Yudong]] while the ROY saw a large campaign of political censorship and repression in order to eliminate west's propaganda; in order to achieve this, the presidency of Chang Chek enabled the possibility of using {{wp|martial law}}, passed in 1932, to repress dissidences and political opponents during the Second Republic of Yudong. The ROY under Chang Chek exposed a range of instruments to boost {{wp|nationalism}} and {{wp|anti-communist}} sentiments in the population while the DPRY distanced from Kodeshi and Abramean lectures of socialism with the leadership of [[Zhu Hongbin]], who valued the importance of the countryside population over the industrial workers and gave the military a more participative role in the party and state organisation. The distances between Chang Chek and Zhu Hongbin were made more obvious over the years, as the two gained more control in their territories; however, the death of Chek was a ground-breaking factor in the future of the ROY, whose National Renewal became fragmented in their vision of Yudong.


===Reunification and contemporary history===
===Reunification and contemporary history===

Revision as of 17:13, 17 October 2021

Yudong
域东
(Yudongese)
Yùdōng
Flag of Yudong
Flag
Imperial Seal of Yudong
Coat of arms
Anthem: "卿雲歌"
"Qīng Yún Gē"
"Song to the Auspicious Cloud"
MediaPlayer.png
Seal of Yudong
"域东之璽"
"Seal of Yudong"
中華民國之璽.svg
Capital
and largest city
Dongcheng
Official languagesYudongese
Official scriptYudongese characters
Demonym(s)Yudongese
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional republic
• President
Lin Hanying
Teng Lingxin
LegislatureLegislative Yuan
Establishment
c. 200 BC
Population
• 2020 estimate
Steady 123,284,452
• 2018 census
123,274,320
GDP (PPP)2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $3.727 trillion
• Per capita
Increase $30,238
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
Increase $2.680 trillion
• Per capita
Increase $21,743
Gini (2017)Steady 33.1
medium
HDI (2020)Increase 0.910
very high
CurrencyYudongese Yuan (¥) (YYN)
Date formatYYYY/MM/DD
Driving sideright
Internet TLD.yg

Yudong (Yudongese: 域东; pinyin: Yùdōng) is a country in Pamira that borders clockwise Sumigen, Valimia, Chasun and the Pamiran Federation, while sharing maritime borders with Kenlong. It is the second-largest country in the world by territorial expansion and population, being home to approximately 123,284,452 inhabitants of which a majority lives in the coastal areas and the eastern regions. Yudong is officially divided in _ provinces and three cities of a special status; Dongcheng is the capital and largest city as well as one of the most populous metropolitan regions, while Baoping, Jiangping and Liaoping are considered important financial centres.

Yudong traces its origins back to some of the first civilizations in the world, when numerous dynasties ruled the territory under rigid power structures. It was near 200 BC when the expansion of the Mong Dynasty across the eastern regions and inland provoked the establishment of the Mong Emperor over the rest of the regional leaders under the structure of the Yudongese Empire. This period was severely marked by the creation of advanced technology, art and literature, which made its way to Berea through several commerce routes known as the Pearl Roads, from where knowledge and technology was also introduced to Yudong. Several civil wars against the ruling dynasty concluded with a new period of territorial fragmentation that expanded in several centuries through territorial disputes; with the flourishing of feudal societies, better agriculture and the advances on medicine, numerous dynasties surged and consolidated their power in Dongcheng over the years. During the early 17th century, the Fen Dynasty strengthened their power and introduced a strict isolationist policy that severely harmed Yudong and left it disarmed and technologically behind surrounding empires; with the Chasunese Empire at its height having conquered most northern Yudongese territories and with an important advance on its east, Yudong was forced to sign several commercial treaties to Berean powers in order to advance against the Charasŏn.

Between the late 17th and the 18th centuries, Yudong achieved a rapid restoration but civil unrest and political instability due to Fen's concessions to Bereans forced it back to a long period of isolation and restructuration of its political panorama. As a result, the society of Yudong grew reticent to Bereans until its longest isolation period was broken by a fleet from Sarrac, Lavaria and Mascylla, which forced a gradual and restricted opening of commerce in specified ports. During the 19th century, a rapid but scarce industrialisation process took over the largest cities and ports. At the start of the 20th century, Yudong fought alongside the Armala Coalition during the Great War, although it retired shortly before its formal cease of fire due to internal unrest, which forced the fall of the dynastic monarchy and the division of Yudong between the Republic of Yudong (ROY), also known as the Baoping Republic, and the socialist Democratic People's Republic of Yudong (DPRY) until the fall of the latter during the 1980s. This period was severely marked by Berean investment and a rapid economic boom in the Baoping Republic while the DPRY was under significant influence from Kodesh and Dulebia. During the Melasian Crisis, Yudong remained a key geopolitical partner of Mascylla and Falland in Pamira which it took to exercise influence against Cuthland in Melasia, Kenlong and Chasun.

Since the reunification of the two Yudongese republics, the country has advanced on its democratic quality and robust industrial economy. Yudong is considered a developed country and ranks high in different metrics like life expactancy, civil liberties, education and health care as well as in the Human Development Index. The country is one of the largest economies in the world and ranks near or at the top in nominal and PPP figures of gross domestic product. Yudong is a founding member of the Assembly of Nations and a strategic partner and observer of the Berean Defence Treaty Association.

Etymology

History

Prehistory and antiquity

Xiang era Guang used during rituals with rice wine, Dongcheng History Museum.

Yudongese civilizations are believed to have found their cradle on the eastern regions of the country. Although Homo Sapiens presence is dated from at least 35-30,000 years ago, records prove that the region has been inhabited by several other hominids before that continued their path towards the Chasunese peninsula and _ archipelago. Over the years, most fossils like the Dongcheng Man and Lin Woman have been found along the Tao River, the cradle of Yudongese civilization, which played a crucial role in the improvement of agriculture, rice farming and creation of technology over the next centuries.

Ancient records and excavations have concluded with the Xiang Dynasty being the first to have ruled a portion of Yudongese territory; although texts remain vague in the establishment of the Xiang, fossils and artefacts have shown the early existence of early markings of ancestral Yudongese characters and advanced methods to stop floods.

Mong Empire

Early dynastic rule

Xi dynasty

Fen dynasty

First Republic and civil war (1921-1930)

General Cheng Chak, republican figure from National Renewal and first President of Yudong.

Shortly after the end of the Great War, political influence from Berean powers became more explicit in Yudong; the country's participation in the conflict, its territorial and human losses turned the population to see the monarchs as accountable, while numerous movements started gaining social recognition reclaiming political participation. The country rapidly fell on a spiral of political violence, as republicans were violently repressed by imperial forces. However, the fall from the Charasŏn in the Chasunese Empire precipitated Dongcheng to restructure power; weakened in power, the Emperor _ of Yudong recognised the Republic and abdicated in 1921. The General Cheng Chak, a prominent military leader and republican from the later National Renewal political party, assumed the first Presidency and faced the rising Communist Party of Yudong, which had advanced during previous years in rural areas and had cooperated with National Renewal in the republican cause.

Republican forces in their return to Dongcheng after the partition of the city.

Although Cheng Chak had exhibited a nationalist doctrine rooted in Yudongese traditions, philosophy and religion, National Renewal remained with Mascylla, whose presence in the country remained after the Great War as part of the Treaty of Lehpold in former Dulebian ports. With a strong presence in urban centres and rural areas of the south and west of Yudong, National Renewal stood against the communist forces, which were largely backed by the Pamiran Federation and the Dulebian Federative Socialist Republic. The civil war in Yudong deepened the differences between communists and republicans, as it also played a crucial role in polarising the society. The country rapidly became divided into two portions, with their respective alignments projecting a strict control to repress dissidences and although several attempts of reconciliation and special approach were intended with the observation of foreign powers, massacres and military campaigns in the following years continued the civil war. In Berea, Yudong was seen as a geopolitical strategically nation, whose governance was important for the stabilisation of post-war commerce and finances, this led western powers to take action in the civil war in order to reach its end.

In 1930, the partition of the Yudongese territory was made effective with the signature of Cheng Chak and _ in Dongcheng. Although communists had forced the exile of republicans to Baoping, National Renewal continued being popular among the population of the imperial capital. The city had become part of the People's Republic of Yudong (DPRY) and while republicans constrained the end of the civil war to the international protection of the city and a portion of it to be under the control of the Republic of Yudong (ROY), the Communist Party feared a civil revolt that could destroy the DPRY from inside, allowing Dongcheng to be also divided into halves.

Baoping Republic and Democratic People's Republic of Yudong

Following the 1930 Toulogne Accords, republican and international forces entered into Dongcheng, now divided in two and surrounded by the DPRY. The Republic of Yudong placed most of its administrative buildings and political institutions in Baoping due to the DPRY threat surrounding the old imperial city; because of this, the ROY became widely known as the Baoping Republic by the media. International presence in Dongcheng remained in place until 1940, year that was marked by the accords in order to reach a mutual agreement between the two entities; however, despite the special approaches, few agreements were possible and once Dongcheng was freed from its international settlements, the DPRY ceased its contacts with the southern portion of the city.

Still Virtually powerless outside urban centres and populated areas, the territory of Yudong was highly fragmented with control being exercised by warlords. This proved as a valid reason for both the DPRY and the ROY to be established as authoritarian states in order to consolidate power in their territories. The DPRY soon became an authoritarian one-party state under the sphere of the Communist Party of Yudong while the ROY saw a large campaign of political censorship and repression in order to eliminate west's propaganda; in order to achieve this, the presidency of Chang Chek enabled the possibility of using martial law, passed in 1932, to repress dissidences and political opponents during the Second Republic of Yudong. The ROY under Chang Chek exposed a range of instruments to boost nationalism and anti-communist sentiments in the population while the DPRY distanced from Kodeshi and Abramean lectures of socialism with the leadership of Zhu Hongbin, who valued the importance of the countryside population over the industrial workers and gave the military a more participative role in the party and state organisation. The distances between Chang Chek and Zhu Hongbin were made more obvious over the years, as the two gained more control in their territories; however, the death of Chek was a ground-breaking factor in the future of the ROY, whose National Renewal became fragmented in their vision of Yudong.

Reunification and contemporary history

Geography

Climate

Politics and government

Yudong is a unitary parliamentary constitutional republic led by a Head of Sate, the President, and a Head of Government, the Prime Minister, whose sovereignty of both is vested on the Yudongese people as specified on the Constitution of Yudong. The power of the President is, in the practice, merely ceremonial and it is the Prime Minister who exercises most of executive duties. Yudong counts with one of the oldest constitutions and judicial structures, having been modified over the centuries by the numerous dynasties and democratic regimes; the last major reform concluded with the reunification between the Republic of Yudong and the Democratic People's Republic of Yudong, which set the bases for the current political system. Yudong's political scene has been largely dominated by the centre-right National Renewal and the centre-left Progressive-Liberal Alliance, although in recent years minor parties have achieved visibility and formed electoral coalitions in parliament and governments.

Based in the Three Principles of the People, power in Yudong is separated in five branches or Yuans (院) based in the imperial legacy of the nation with western elements:

  • Executive Yuan: ceremonially led by the President, commander-in-chief of the armed forces, who appoints the Prime Minister on behalf of the confidence of the Legislative Yuan and the members of the cabinet, which are proposed by the later and appointed by the former.
  • Legislative Yuan: consists in the bicameral legislature of Yudong, composed by 465 members on the lower chamber and 245 in the higher chamber; all of them elected directly by the population. The Legislative Yuan is tasked with making and passing laws, approving budgets, the interpellation of ministers and government officials, among others.
  • Judicial Yuan: refers to the judiciary of Yudong that is composed by a Constitutional Court, which interpretes the Constitution and impeaches Presidents, the ordinary courts (Supreme Courts, High Courts and District Courts) and the specialised courts in family, labour and others.
  • Control Yuan: is considered an investigatory and auditory branch; its main purpose is to adjudicate impeachments, censure government members and audit budgets.
  • Examination Yuan: is the civil service commission and is in charge of validating the qualifications of civil servants.

Foreign relations

Deng Zedong, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Yudong during a press conference of the BDTA in Falland.

Yudong has an active role in the foreign relations scenario and its presence in Pamira and the world in general are important to balance the power of the Mageiros League and Kodesh in a strategically important region. Its main allies are Falland, Sarrac and Mascylla, which have contributed militarily and financially before and after the reunification of Yudong; the country is a strategic ally of the Berean Defence Treaty Association and has multiple signed commercial agreements with its members.

In Pamira, Yudong maintains economic relations with most of the nations, although diplomatically, it faces strained relations with Chasun and Kenlong, due to their alignment with the Mageiros League, although in recent years, relations the former have improved significantly. Melasia remains a strategic partner and Yudong has supported its territorial claims against Kenlong; during the Melasian Crisis, Yudong played a crucial role supporting Mascylla and later in Kenlong to counter Cuttish influence in the country during a short period of time. Territorial disputes area major aspect in Yudongese foreign policy as the country claims several portions of land along its borders, including rocks and islands with Chasun and _ and others in the south. Since the reunification of Yudong during the 1980s, relations with the Pamiran Federation and Abramea have been fraught although with certain improvements in the last years, including state visits in 2018 and 2020.

Yudong is a signatory of the Treaty of Lehpold and a founding member of the Assembly of Nations, it has signed several security pacts with members of the Berean Defence Treaty Association and with _ in 2001 and _ in 2013. The country is also home to several foreign military bases that date from the pre-reunification period.

Administrative divisions

Military

YO Liaoping, is the leading helicopter carrier of the Republic of Yudong Navy.

The Republic of Yudong Armed Forces禹東共和國武裝力量— are composed by three branches; the ROY Army, the ROY Navy and the ROY Air Force. The forces are subordinated to the Commander-in-Chief, position held by the President, while both the Prime Minister and the Minister of Defence are the next executive authorities in line; the Minister is consider, in the practises, who exercises most of the decision-making and is responsible of maintaining a close contact with the forces staff. Defence policy is usually drafted in the National Security Council (缩写), composed by the three executive figures, the three authorities of the branches and the Minister of Foreig Affairs, the Ministrty of Infrastructure and Trade and the Minister of Interior and Communication. The defence policy of Yudong has historically been linked to its relations with the BDTA; the country plays a role in regional security and participates actively in joint exercises and deployments in the Iremic Ocean and the Sea of Saba.

During the 1990s, the country undergone several reforms on its military, aimed to reestructure the three forces and their relation with the general population. Yudong has not enforced conscription since 1990, although the constitution reserves the executive decision to reinforce it during war time or serious external threat. In 1992, the country celebrated the 1992 Nuclear Consensus, with which the country accelerated its denuclearisation of the armed forces and banned the use of nuclear weapons; however, the country has been recognised by the nuclear energy commission of the Assembly of Nations, to have the raw materials, technology and resources to re-initiate its nuclear program. Yudong has an approximate total personnel of around 256,400 including civilians active and reserve military.

Economy

Office buildings in Central Dongcheng overseeing the Imperial City.

Yudong is a developed, highly industrialised and high-income economy, ranked 1st in nominal GDP with $2.680 trillion and 7th in per capita GDP, which makes it the largest economy in Pamira and a leading one in the rest of the world. The country is often ranked at the top of near by metrices of competitiveness, economic freedom and low perception of corruption, which over the decades, have built a friendly environment for international and national companies. Yudongese most famous enterprises are often in the technological and automotive sector; the economy is highly reliant on the industrial sector, scientific research and technology production.

Labour market

Technology and science

Automotive industry

Infrastructure and tranport

Energy

Demographics

Largest cities

Education

Healthcare

Religion

Culture