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==Etymology==
==Etymology==
Long standing names for the region in the far south of Oxidentale were ''Tsakapuka'' (or ''Tzaqapuqa''), meaning the "Land of Stones", and the Nahuatl ''Huitztlan'', simple meaning the south. The territory was never called Aztapamatlan at any point prior to the rise of the empire by the same name, and indeed Aztapamatlan to refer to the region itself rather than the state did not emerge as a common expression until the mid 11th century, many hundreds of years after the emergence of the empire. ''Aztapamatlan'' breaks down into ''Aztapamitl'' or "heron feather banner", itself a compound noun made up of ''Aztatl'' or "heron" and ''Pamitl'' or "banner", and the locative suffix ''-matlan'' meaning "underneath" or "in the grasp". Put together, the composite noun Aztapamatlan can be translated as "Under the heron-feather banner". {{wp|Herons}} and their feathers are closely associated with the god [[Xiuhtecuhtli|Curicaueri-Xiuhtecuhtli]], patron deity to the Purépecha which subsequently became the {{wp|henotheism|henotheistic}} god-head of the Aztapaman imperial cult. A standard made of white heron feathers was the symbol of religious fervor and military might in the Aztapamatlan state, closely tied with this dominant political order and thereby lending its name to the new multiethnic empire.
Long standing names for the region in the far south of Oxidentale were ''Tsakapuka'' (or ''Tzaqapuqa''), meaning the "Land of Stones", and the Nahuatl ''Huitztlan'', simple meaning the south. The territory was never called Aztapamatlan at any point prior to the rise of the empire by the same name, and indeed Aztapamatlan to refer to the region itself rather than the state did not emerge as a common expression until the mid 11th century, many hundreds of years after the emergence of the empire. ''Aztapamatlan'' breaks down into ''Aztapamitl'' or "heron feather banner", itself a compound noun made up of ''Aztatl'' or "heron" and ''Pamitl'' or "banner", and the locative suffix ''-matlan'' meaning "underneath" or "in the grasp". Put together, the composite noun Aztapamatlan can be translated as "Under the heron-feather banner". {{wp|Herons}} and their feathers are closely associated with the god [[Xiuhtecuhtli|Curicaueri-Xiuhtecuhtli]], patron deity to the Purépecha which subsequently became the {{wp|henotheism|henotheistic}} god-head of the Aztapaman imperial cult. A standard made of white heron feathers was the symbol of religious fervor and military might in the Aztapamatlan state, closely tied with this dominant political order and thereby lending its name to the new multiethnic empire.
==Economy==
===Energy===
{{Pie chart
|other = yes
|value1 = 75
|label1 = {{wp|Nuclear power|Nuclear}}
|value2 = 11
|label2 = {{wp|Hydroelectricity|Hydroelectric}}
|value3 = 7
|label3 = {{wp|gas-fired power plant|Natural gas}}
|value4 = 3
|label4 = {{wp|Wind power|Wind}}
|value5 = 2
|label5 = {{wp|Solar power|Solar}}
}}
Aztapaman electric power is a valuable local export in southern Oxidentale, where it is sold across the northern border to Kayahallpa and in particular Yadokawona. Electricity generation in the CTA is centralized under [[Cenikpitikayotl|Cenikpitikayotl corporation]], an {{wp|S.A. (corporation)|anonymous limited company}} under majority ownership by the government of Aztapamatlan. Cenikpitikayotl does not have a total monopoly in the energy sector in Aztapamatlan, but remains the largest energy corporation by far in part thanks to government subsidies for its operations. Electricty arrived in Aztapamatlan relatively late, first appearing in the 1890s and still not reaching many rural regions of the mountainous interior until the mid 1940s. When it finally began to expand, the electrification of the country was accomplished thanks to coal and gas-fired power stations. Coal stations would fall in popularity as the coal supply was prioritized for industrial uses, while natural gas popularity would decline severely following the [[1969 Angatahuaca Blackout]] and the global oil crisis of the early 1970s which drove electricty prices in Aztapamatlan to astronomical levels. After these crises, companies like Cenikpitikayotl received major financial incentive to establish alternative power infrastructure for which nuclear was favored as a stable, year round source of energy which could increase or reduce production based on market conditions rather than being reliant on environmental conditions like other renewables. The first nuclear reactor, the now famous Angatahuaca-Chapulco Power Station, began operation in 1981 and would soon be joined by dozens more supplying the enormous energy demands of the large coastal urban centers of the CTA. Today, there are a total of 61 nuclear power plants in Aztapamatlan. Hydroelectricty takes up the position of distant second in terms of power generation in Aztapamatlan and is especially common in the north and interior regions where it is based on small hydroelectric dams in the high altitude valleys which supply power to otherwise isolated regions that are too sparsely populated to justify an independent nuclear station and too geographically isolated by difficult terrain to rely entirely on grid connections from elsewhere which could be severed. The mountain dams themselves also serve to regulate the flow of seasonal snow melt and rainwater downstream and supply fresh water to the environs year round.
Electricty from the grid is widely used to power transportation systems such as metros, trams and both passenger and freight trains which have undergone sweeping conversion from diesel to electric over efficiency concearns. Aztapamatlan is an outlier of Oxidentale in that its motor vehicles, namely cars and trucks, continue to operate gasoline and diesel engines as opposed to the electric vehicles commonplace elsewhere on the continent. This is primarily due to the high cost of lithium which makes the powerful batteries of electric vehicles prohibitively expensive for the Aztapaman market. Vehicle owners in Aztapamatlan continue to show preference to gas and diesel powered personal vehicles due to their low cost and longevity compared to expensive electric vehicles which often have a shorter shelf life. Because of this, the scheme of energy used for transport is a mixture of electric powered freight, passenger rail and urban public transportation, contrasted with urban and rural personal transportation which relies more on hydrocarbon fuels. Due in part to this latter demand, some domestic companies have emerged to supply bio-diesel produced from sorghum, corn and miscellaneous plant matter produced by the agricultural sector. Biodiesel has in the past served as an attractive and domestically made alternative to foreign petroleum fuels, particularly when market disruptions cause international oil prices to fluctuate. The biofuels sector also serves to meet demand for heating, which has remained largely based on gas or gas-alternative biofuel rather than the more expensive electric heating alternative.

Revision as of 19:13, 9 March 2022

United Republics of Aztapamatlan
Cepan Tlacatlatocayotl Aztapamatlan
Iámendu Uniachá Astapamatan
Flag of Aztapamatlan
Flag
State Emblem of Aztapamatlan
State Emblem
Location of Aztapamatlan
CapitalQuitzapatzaro
Largest cityAngatahuaca
Official languagesNahuatl
Purépecha
Ethnic groups
Demonym(s)Aztapaman, Aztapamitec
LegislatureNecentlatiloyan
Area
• Total
1,845,600 km2 (712,600 sq mi)
Population
• 2022 census
70,103,619
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Per capita
$30,031
HDI (2019)Increase 0.888
very high
CurrencyAmatl
Driving sideright

The United Republics of Aztapamatlan (Nahuatl: Cepan Tlacatlatocayotl Aztapamatlan, CTA; Purépecha: Iámendu Uniachá Astapamatan, IUA), also known as the United Republics or as Aztapamatlan, is a country located in southern Oxidentale bordered to the north by Kayahallpa and Yadokawona, to the east by the Ooreqapi ocean, to the south by the Amictlan ocean, and to the west by the Makrian ocean. It is a federation of twenty-two constituent republics governing a population of 70 million inhabiting a territory of 1.8 million square kilometers across the southern reaches of the continent and several outlying islands and archipelagos. The national and constituent governments of Aztapamatlan are categorized as democratic kritarchies, also called Judicates, in which the government is formally controlled by the courts and the leading judges of the country while sustaining democratic means of political participation and redressement of grievances. Aztapamatlan operates under a unique economic system called Calpollism, a system that has been called a hybrid of capitalism and communalism.

Aztapamatlan first emerged as a rising imperial power in the south of Oxidentale in the 8th century and made its mark on the region as a fanatically religious and militantly expansionist power. The territory that would become Aztapamatlan had been settled by more than ten thousand years prior, and occupied by many kingdoms and petty empires through the millenia. However, Aztapamatlan became the first ever state to unify the entire region by the end of the 10th century. Following the taming of the rugged interior of the country, the Aztapamatlan state began to sponsor maritime endeavors and oceanic exploration which would culminate in the discovery of a eastward route across the ocean to the continent of Malaio. Begining in the 15th century, Aztapamatlan governed regions of Malaio through a system of mixed vassals and areas of direct rule. The country retains some influence in this region by way of its cultural, religious and economic ties to Malaio, many of which are more recent relationships established long after the mid 18th century decline of the Aztapamatlan transoceanic empire. Periods of turmoil, cloistered isolationism and violent political revolution followed the decline of the empire and would centuries later culminate in the establishment of the United Republics government over the country in 1904 and the ascent to power of the Judicates in 1924 which would see the establishment of the modern state.

The chief ethnic groups of the country are the Nahuas who are the majority ethnicity found all across the region, and the Purépechas who have been historically dominant in the Aztapamatlan empire. However, Aztapamatlan is extremely ethnically diverse with ten more formally recognized native ethnities and countless more unrecognized trbes and nations inhabiting the country alongside many groups who have migrated to the country from overseas. Although nahuatl was the lingua franca and is now the primary official language of the CTA, assimilation by the ethnocultural plurality never took place despite more than a century of near continuous rule by a Purépecha-Nahua state. This is in part due to the mountainous and difficult terrain of the Aztapaman hinterland which allowed the many nations inhabiting the interior to remain partially autonomous in spite of the imperial conquest many centuries ago. The religious situation in the country is similarly diverse, with many competing religious doctrines alongside foreign faiths primarily introduced by immigrants to the country.

The Calpollist economy of Aztapamatlan is considered to be heavily industrialized with a major investment in the secondary and tertiary sectors, generally industrial manufacturing and a nascent service economy. Production of heavy machinery, machine components, and some high tech products such as semiconductor chips used in high tech manufacturing make up the bulk of the modern Aztapaman economy, although many finished products and some consumer products are also produced in the country. Financial and business services have gradually emerged in the modern Calpollist economy, forming the vanguard of a growing service sectory that spans entertainment, tourism and communications and software. Significant disparity exists between the Republics in the realm of economic development however, some regions of the country's interior may still function under an agrarian economy largely unchanged for centuries while the wealthy and populous coastal cities have become internationally significant centers of science, technology and commerce.

Etymology

Long standing names for the region in the far south of Oxidentale were Tsakapuka (or Tzaqapuqa), meaning the "Land of Stones", and the Nahuatl Huitztlan, simple meaning the south. The territory was never called Aztapamatlan at any point prior to the rise of the empire by the same name, and indeed Aztapamatlan to refer to the region itself rather than the state did not emerge as a common expression until the mid 11th century, many hundreds of years after the emergence of the empire. Aztapamatlan breaks down into Aztapamitl or "heron feather banner", itself a compound noun made up of Aztatl or "heron" and Pamitl or "banner", and the locative suffix -matlan meaning "underneath" or "in the grasp". Put together, the composite noun Aztapamatlan can be translated as "Under the heron-feather banner". Herons and their feathers are closely associated with the god Curicaueri-Xiuhtecuhtli, patron deity to the Purépecha which subsequently became the henotheistic god-head of the Aztapaman imperial cult. A standard made of white heron feathers was the symbol of religious fervor and military might in the Aztapamatlan state, closely tied with this dominant political order and thereby lending its name to the new multiethnic empire.

Economy

Energy

  Nuclear (75%)
  Hydroelectric (11%)
  Natural gas (7%)
  Wind (3%)
  Solar (2%)
  Other (2%)

Aztapaman electric power is a valuable local export in southern Oxidentale, where it is sold across the northern border to Kayahallpa and in particular Yadokawona. Electricity generation in the CTA is centralized under Cenikpitikayotl corporation, an anonymous limited company under majority ownership by the government of Aztapamatlan. Cenikpitikayotl does not have a total monopoly in the energy sector in Aztapamatlan, but remains the largest energy corporation by far in part thanks to government subsidies for its operations. Electricty arrived in Aztapamatlan relatively late, first appearing in the 1890s and still not reaching many rural regions of the mountainous interior until the mid 1940s. When it finally began to expand, the electrification of the country was accomplished thanks to coal and gas-fired power stations. Coal stations would fall in popularity as the coal supply was prioritized for industrial uses, while natural gas popularity would decline severely following the 1969 Angatahuaca Blackout and the global oil crisis of the early 1970s which drove electricty prices in Aztapamatlan to astronomical levels. After these crises, companies like Cenikpitikayotl received major financial incentive to establish alternative power infrastructure for which nuclear was favored as a stable, year round source of energy which could increase or reduce production based on market conditions rather than being reliant on environmental conditions like other renewables. The first nuclear reactor, the now famous Angatahuaca-Chapulco Power Station, began operation in 1981 and would soon be joined by dozens more supplying the enormous energy demands of the large coastal urban centers of the CTA. Today, there are a total of 61 nuclear power plants in Aztapamatlan. Hydroelectricty takes up the position of distant second in terms of power generation in Aztapamatlan and is especially common in the north and interior regions where it is based on small hydroelectric dams in the high altitude valleys which supply power to otherwise isolated regions that are too sparsely populated to justify an independent nuclear station and too geographically isolated by difficult terrain to rely entirely on grid connections from elsewhere which could be severed. The mountain dams themselves also serve to regulate the flow of seasonal snow melt and rainwater downstream and supply fresh water to the environs year round.

Electricty from the grid is widely used to power transportation systems such as metros, trams and both passenger and freight trains which have undergone sweeping conversion from diesel to electric over efficiency concearns. Aztapamatlan is an outlier of Oxidentale in that its motor vehicles, namely cars and trucks, continue to operate gasoline and diesel engines as opposed to the electric vehicles commonplace elsewhere on the continent. This is primarily due to the high cost of lithium which makes the powerful batteries of electric vehicles prohibitively expensive for the Aztapaman market. Vehicle owners in Aztapamatlan continue to show preference to gas and diesel powered personal vehicles due to their low cost and longevity compared to expensive electric vehicles which often have a shorter shelf life. Because of this, the scheme of energy used for transport is a mixture of electric powered freight, passenger rail and urban public transportation, contrasted with urban and rural personal transportation which relies more on hydrocarbon fuels. Due in part to this latter demand, some domestic companies have emerged to supply bio-diesel produced from sorghum, corn and miscellaneous plant matter produced by the agricultural sector. Biodiesel has in the past served as an attractive and domestically made alternative to foreign petroleum fuels, particularly when market disruptions cause international oil prices to fluctuate. The biofuels sector also serves to meet demand for heating, which has remained largely based on gas or gas-alternative biofuel rather than the more expensive electric heating alternative.