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{{Infobox country
{{Region_icon_Ajax}}
|native_name                = [[File:Chiqanyachisqa Kayahallpa Suyu.png|270px]] <br>{{resize|11pt|''Chiqanyachisqa Kayahallpa Suyu''}} <span style="font-weight: normal;">{{resize|9pt|({{wp|Southern Quechua|Kaya Simi}})}} </span>
{{Infobox royalty
|conventional_long_name      = Sacred Kayahallpan State
| name                 = Tupaq Yupanki III
|common_name                 = Kayahallpa (Wari)
| image                = Tupaq Yupanki script.svg
|image_flag                  = KayahallpaFlag.png
| image_size = 200
|alt_flag                    =
| caption              = Name written in [[Kaya script]]
|image_coat                  =  
| succession = [[Sapa Inka]]
|alt_coat                    =  
| moretext =  
|symbol_type                =
| reign = 27th April 1953 – 14th May 1956
|national_motto              = Sakwi, Mama Llaqta, Kururay <br><small>"[[White Path|Sakbe]], The Nation, Progress"</small>   
| coronation = 22nd June 1959
|national_anthem            = Wari Llaqta Takin <br><small>"National Anthem of Wari"</small>   
| predecessor = Titu Rimachi II
|royal_anthem                =  
| cor-type      =
|other_symbol_type          =
|suc-type    = {{nowrap|Heir{{nbsp}}}}
|other_symbol                =
|successor  = Kuntur Rimachi
|image_map                  = KayahallpaLocation.png
|reg-type    =  
|alt_map                    =  
|regent      =  
|map_caption                = Location of Kayahallpa in Oxidentale
| succession2 =  
|image_map2                  =  
| moretext2 =
|alt_map2                    =
| reign2 =
|map_caption2                =  
| predecessor2 =  
|capital                    = [[Tupawasi]]
|suc-type2    =
|largest_city                = Tupaq Churan City
|successor2  =
|largest_settlement          =  
|reg-type2    =  
|largest_settlement_type    =  
|regent2      =  
|languages_type = Official language
|reg-type3    =
|languages                  = {{wp|Southern Quechua|Kaya Simi}}
|regent3      =
|languages_sub              =  
<!--Personal-->
|languages2_type            = Locally recognized languages
| spouse              = {{marriage|Mama Kusi Quya|24 January 1948}} {{wp|Polygyny|and others}}
|languages2                  = {{wp|Aymara language|Warin}}<br>{{wp|Mapuche language|Richi}}<br>{{wp|Arawakan languages|Aruk}}<br>{{wp|Guarani language|Apa}}<br>{{wp|Urarina language|Itukali}}<br>[[Kayahallpa#Languages|various others]]
| issue                = 34
|languages2_sub              =  
| full name            =
|ethnic_groups               =  
| house                = Qhapaq Dynasty
{{ublist |item_style=white-space:nowrap;
| father               = Titu Rimachi II
  | {{wp|Quechua people|Kayans}}
| mother              = Mama Uqllu Quya
  | {{wp|Aymara people|Warins}}
| birth_date          = {{birth date and age|1926|5|13|df=y}}
  | {{wp|Mapuche people|Richians}}
| birth_place          = [[Tupawasi]], [[Kayahallpa]]
  | {{wp|Guarani people|Apans}}
| death_date  = {{Death date and age|2022|3|24|1926|5|13|df=y}}
  | others
| death_place =  Tupawasi
}}
| place of burial = Qhapaq Pikchu, Tupawasi Suyu
|ethnic_groups_year          =  
| religion             = [[White Path#Yuyaqpi|Yuyaqpi Sakbeism]]
|religion = [[White Path|Sakbe]]    
|}}
|demonym                    = Kayahallpan, Kayan, Warian
[[Category:Royalty]]
|government_type            = [[Pitiy Achtil|Achtilist]] {{wp|theocratic}} {{wp|technocratic}} [[White Path|Sakbeist]] {{wp|republic}}
[[Category:Kayahallpa]]
|leader_title1              = Kamasqa
[[Category:People]]
|leader_name1                = [[Qaparipuyll Wuluk]]
[[Category:People (Ajax)]]
|leader_title2              = Great State Council
'''Tupaq Yupanki III''' (''Sapan Inka Tupaq Yupanki''; born 13 May 1926, died 24 March 2022) was the last [[Sapa Inka]] of [[Kayahallpa]], having ascended to the throne some time after the death of his father, the previous Sapa Inka Titu Rimachi II in April 1953. Chosen according to {{wp|Sapa_Inca#Choosing_the_Inca|traditional Kayahallpan ascension procedures}}, he was the 7th eldest son and 12th eldest child of Titu Rimachi II. He served as the head of Kayahallpa's greatly weakened monarchy for slightly over three years until 1956, when the monarchy was finally abolished in national leader Kaman Yashakphi's {{wp|self-coup}}. Typified as a political and social traditionalist, he resented the changes to the Kayahallpan Constitution which had stripped the royalty and nobility of their powers, inevitably bringing him into conflict with Yashakphi's increasingly socialist Kayan Workers' Party. After being deposed, he and his immediate family and relatives lived in several countries until they were invited back in 1985, several years after the 1960 Kayahallpan Revolution which established a [[White Path|Sakbeist]] republic. Faced with a greatly diminished political capital, most of his activities went into his various attempts at recovering the vast former properties of the Sapa Inkas, to little avail. He was also entirely unsuccesful in his pleas to restore the monarchy after the revolution, as the first Kamasqa, [[Pitiy Achtil]], viewed the monarchy as the ultimate source of all evil in Kayahallpan society. Tupaq Yupanki's health began to seriously decline in the late 1990s, and he mostly likely lied in a {{wp|vegetative state}} between December 2007 and his death in March 2022, when his death was announced by Kayahallpan media.
|leader_name2                = 26 members
|leader_title3              =  Willaq Umu
|leader_name3                = Katunha Mayun
|leader_title4              =  Suyupa Rantin
|leader_name4                = Ishili Ch'ap'
|legislature = Chosen Court
|sovereignty_type            = Formation
|established_event1          = Chincha civilization
|established_date1          = 4000 BCE
|established_event2          = Wari federation
|established_date2          = 480 CE
| established_event3        = Warisuyu
| established_date3        = 1045
| established_event4    = New Kayamucha
| established_date4      = 1434
| established_event5        = Restoration of New Kayamucha
| established_date5      =  1818
|established_event6          = Constitutional Reformation
|established_date6          = 1927
|established_event7          = Socialist Coup
|established_date7          = 1956
|established_event8          = Kayahallpan Revolution
|established_date8          = 1960
|area_rank                  =
|area_magnitude              =
|area                        =
|area_km2                    = 1414464
|area_sq_mi                  =
|area_footnote              =
|percent_water              = 1.2
|area_label                  =
|area_label2                =
|area_dabodyalign            =
|population_estimate        =
|population_estimate_rank    =
|population_estimate_year    =
|population_census          = 64,226,754
|population_census_year      = 2020
|population_density_km2      = 45.5
|population_density_sq_mi    =
|population_density_rank    =
|GDP_PPP                    =
|GDP_PPP_rank                =
|GDP_PPP_year                =
|GDP_PPP_per_capita          =
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank    =
|GDP_nominal                = $919.8 billion
|GDP_nominal_rank            =
|GDP_nominal_year            = 2020
|GDP_nominal_per_capita      = $14,321
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =
|Gini =                        41.6
|Gini_rank =
|Gini_year = 2020
|HDI_year =          2021
|HDI =                0.722
|HDI_change =        increase
|HDI_rank =
|currency                    = Qullqi
|currency_code              =
|time_zone                  =
|utc_offset                  =
|time_zone_DST              =
|date_format                = dd/mm/yyyy (Kayan {{wp|Maya calendar|Calendar Round}})
|DST_note                    =
|utc_offset_DST              =
|drives_on                  = right
|cctld                      =.ky
|iso3166code                =KY
|calling_code            = 36
}}


'''Kayahallpa''' ({{wp|Southern Quechua|Kaya Simi}}: ''Kayahallpa'' {{wp|Help:IPA/Quechua|[kæjæˈhæʎpæ]}}), and officially the '''Sacred Kayahallpan State''' or '''Wari''', is a country in western [[Ajax#Oxidentale|Oxidentale]]. It borders the [[Mutul]] to the north, [[Sante Reze]] and [[Yadokawona]] to the east, [[Aztapamatlan]] to the south-east and the Makrian Ocean to the west. The country has three constitutionally defined capital cities: the "greater capital" of [[Tupawasi]] in central Kayahallpa, and the "lesser capitals" of Tupaq Churan City in the north and Huirquihui in the south. It has a population of near 65 million and its largest city is Tupaq Churan City.
Tupaq Yupanki was born in the capital city [[Tupawasi]] inside the Imperial Palace to the previous Sapa Inka, Titu Rimachi II and his first wife Mama Uqllu Quya on the 13th of May 1926. He spent much of his upbringing at the Temple of {{wp|Chac|Chak}}, a religious structure and organization near the city of Sarallaqta.
 
Kayahallpa has been home to many cultures stretching back at least 6000 years including the coastal Chincha civilization, the old Nahuas, the highland Warisuyu Empire, and the current Kayan society. While its history has been shaped by a number of global powers, Kayahallpan territory has almost always been ruled by Oxidentalese states.
 
The modern state of Kayahallpa traces its origin to the ancient Kayans, who migrated from [[Ajax#Norumbia|Norumbia]] due to the 14th century socio-economic collapse of the [[Kayamuca Empire]] and waged war against the native Warisuyu Empire. After the Warisuyu collapsed with the 1376 Fall of Tupawasi, the competing Kayan clans fought for supremacy with the Wiraqucha Clan ultimately winning and establishing the New Kayamucha in 1434 CE. The New Kayamucha lasted until the advent of the 17th century, when the rise of the Mutuleses colonial empire brought with it incursions into the Kayahallpan coast. A series of wars brought Kayan power into a steady decline, which never recovered. Under the influence of Mutunese-educated rulers, most of Kayahallpa was converted to [[White Path|Sakbeism]] during the Kayan religious revolution with heavy influences from {{wp|Inca religion|the traditional faith}}. Beginning in 1791, the post-Kayamuchan ruler Tupaq Churan launched a series of military campaigns and fought against the Mutulese and their subjects, officially restoring the New Kayamucha. The inability of his descendants to reconcile internal frictions and avoid costly wars led to the 1924-1927 Kayahallpan Spring, a period of rapid internal changes which led to democratic reforms. The Kayan Workers' Party dominated elections and led the country into a profound wave of industrialization and liberalization, but also provoked the ire of traditionalist and nationalist factions. In the late 1950s, KWP leader Kaman Yashakphi began to centralize power under a one-party {{wp|state socialism|ordosocialist}} system and expelled the last [[Sapa Inka|monarch]], [[Tupaq Yupanki III]]. Yashakphi was overthrown in the 1960 Kayahallpan Revolution, which established a 'revolutionary and divine republic' under ''Kamasqa'' (Divine Priest) [[Pitiy Achtil]], followed by a decade of unrest as the communist [[People's Army for the Revolution|RAA]] launched a guerilla campaign against the Kamasqic regime.
 
The Government of Kayahallpa is a Sakbeist theocracy, spiritually and temporally led by the Kamasqa, with notable {{wp|technocratic}} elements and weaker {{wp|democratic}} ones. The current Kamasqa since 2005 is [[Qaparipuyll Wuluk]], who exerts power with the Great State Council. There is a {{wp|legislature}}, which has for all meaningful purposes remained subservient to the ruling forces since the early revolution. It is a developing country with medium-high human development levels and a moderately complex economy largely dominated by the {{wp|copper}} industry. Much of Kayahallpa is arid, with large plateaus and mountain ranges covering most of its land area. While the country has a long coastline, much of it is sparsely populated desert, occasionally broken up by heavily populated river basins and mist oases. Large parts of the country are irrigated for agricultural production. At 1.412 million square kilometers in area, it is the fourth largest country in Oxidentale. Sante Reze and the Mutul are Kayahallpa's largest trade partners and have been its closest allies after the Kayahallpan Revolution. Kayahallpa is a member of the [[Common Congress of Oxidentale and Norumbia|Common Congress]] and the [[Forum of Nations]], among other international organizations.
 
The people of Kayahallpa come from a variety of backgrounds, mainly indigenous to Oxidentale as well as significant numbers of Norumbian and Malaioan descent. {{wp|Southern Quechua|Kaya Simi}} is the national language, and co-official with a local language in most regions. Increases in agricultural efficiency and the abolition of settlement restrictions facilitated rapid urbanization in the mid to late 20th century, which transformed the political, social, cultural, and economic landscape of the country.
 
==Etymology==
The oldest known geographical term used for the entire area of and around the Antis mountains of western Oxidentale is ''Wari'', from an ancient highland city of the same name, attested in records around 480 CE. Wari has continued in usage as a term for the general region in the modern day, and was introduced as the co-official name of the country during the Democratic Constitutional era. Between 1434 and 1926, the name of the state was the New Kayamucha, derived from the historical maritime Norumbian-Oxidentalese [[Kayamuca Empire]]. The name Kayahallpa was not coined before the 18th century, when it was introduced as a nationalistic rallying cry against the country's [[Mutul|Mutulese rulers]], combining the ancient empire's name with the Kaya Simi word for land, ''hallpa''. There are two hypotheses for the origin of the name ''kaya'' itself, either being a loaned term appropriated during the age of the Kayamuca, or stemming directly from {{wp|Quechua languages|Proto-Kayaic}}.
 
==History==
===Ancient Era===
Prehistory (8000? BCE - 4000 BCE), Chincha (4000-1750 BCE), post-Chincha cultures (several centuries after), early Antis culture and old Nahua migrants (1400-??? BCE), early Wari (480 CE)
===Classical Era===
Warisuyu (1045 CE), Intermediate period (1376-1434), original New Kayamucha (1434-16th century)
===Mutulese Era===
Early period (16th century), middle period and religious revolution (17th century), late period and Resurgence (18th century)
===Independence Era===
Restored New Kayamucha, wars with Mutul, internal consolidation and centralization (19th-early 20th century), Kayahallpan Spring, democratic Constitutional era and Yashakphi's socialist regime (1924-1960), Kayahallpan Revolution and Sakbeist theocracy (post-1960)
 
==Government and politics==
The Politics of Kayahallpa is regulated by the post-revolutionary 1960 Kayahallpan Constitution, which established a theocracy with elements of technocracy and a limited democracy. Ultimate political authority is constitutionally defined as originating from the Gods of the Sakbeist religion, and the official Kayan Priesthood is charged with approving the Kamasqa, the nation's leader, and members to the Great State Council, the highest state organ. The Kamasqa wields complete parastatal power as their decisions canned be amended or stopped, and they are actively involved in the daily operations of the country. The Kayan Priesthood is legally based from the {{wp|closed city|Sakbeist-only}} and {{wp|holy city}} of Qusqu; most of the government is based in the greater capital, [[Tupawasi]], with smaller representation in Tupaq Churan City and Huirquihui. Kayahallpa operates as a partially {{wp|devolution|devolved state}} where local administrative units have some political authority to enact their own legislation, the country remaining ''de jure '' unitary.
 
===Kamasqa===
The government's central figure is the Kamasqa (officially ''Qhapaq Kamasqa'', the Great Kamasqa), also known as the Divine Priest or Supreme Leader, chosen from the uppermost ladder of Kayahallpan Sakbeist leaders. The Kamasqa is the country's head of state and leads the polytheistic Sakbeist faith in Kayahallpa. The Kamasqa serves for life once elected by the upper Kayan Priesthood and wields unquestionable authority across all spheres of Kayahallpan politics, making judgements on all matters of government in the Sacred State. [[Qaparipuyll Wuluk]] succeeded [[Ruqa Qepayariyam]] as Kamasqa in 2005. Qepayariyam in turn succeeded [[Pitiy Achtil]], the first Kamasqa, in 1986. The Kamasqa is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, has control of the strategic military intelligence and security operations and wields the power to declare war or peace. All three Kamasqas have formented and wielded a powerful {{wp|cult of personality}} around themselves which encourages unabiding loyalty to their will, and all media coverage of the Kamasqa in the nation is extremely tightly controlled.
 
===State===
The most central government organs below the Kamasqa are the technocratic Great State Council, the religious Kayan Priesthood, and the democratically elected Chosen Court. The Great State Council is composed of engineers and other technical experts who are given a constitutional mandate to deliberate on various aspects of day-to-day government, most importantly to coordinate economic policy, regulate development, plan civil infrastructure, iron out labor policy, and organize regulations for Kayahallpan universities. Decisions made by the council can be delayed, but not overturned, by the Chosen Court; the Kamasqa and the priesthood can veto any of its decisions. The appointment of members to the council is controlled by the Kayan Priesthood, which is mainly tasked with maintaining the religious-ideological system of the Sacred State, ensuring it stays adhered to its Sakbeist foundations. The chairman of the Priesthood is the Willaq Umu. The Chosen Court is the national legislature of Kayahallpa and of its representatives, 75% are democratically elected by the people, with the remaining 25% appointed by the Priesthood. The Suyupa Rantin functions as President of the Court. Factions of the legislature are typically positioned on a traditionalist-reformist spectrum; there is heavy systematic bias against reformist politicians, with biased media reports and state-organized political violence being common, and reports have been made of extortion, psychological torture, house arrests, and unwarranted imprisonment against people critical of the regime.
 
===Law===
The Kayahallpan legal system is based on a modern Kayahallpan interpretation of Sakbeist scripture, largely inspired by the works of authors in early modern Kayahallpa, the Mutul, and the [[Mutulese Ochran]], and the writings of modern Kamasqas, as outlined in the writings of the Constitution. The Kamasqa appoints the head of the judiciary. There are several types of courts, including public courts for civil and criminal cases, and special ''Courts of Sakwi'' which deal with certain types of offenses, such as crimes against "the character of the Sakbeist revolution". The education of judges is based on a combination of religious dogma for ethical matters and secular civil law for technical ones. The {{wp|death penalty}} is legal and may be used for a variety of crimes including murder, treason, and blasphemy; the number of executed people or even death sentences is considered a state secret, but is likely to be hundreds of persons a year. It is not known what percentage of death sentences is actually carried out, as some of them are remitted to life imprisonment or forced labor.
 
==Geography==
[[File:Central Andes Mountains, Salar de Arizaro, Argentina.jpg|180px|thumbnail|right|The arid, mountainous landscape of central Kayahallpa as seen from space]]
Kayahallpa is located in western [[Ajax|Oxidentale]] in the {{wp|subtropics}}, straddling the coast of the South Makrian Ocean and extending several hundred kilometers inland. With an area of 1,414,464 square kilometers (546,128 sq mi), it is the fourth largest in Oxidentale. Located entirely in the {{wp|southern hemisphere}}, the {{wp|Tropic of Capricorn}} passes through the middle of the country only a few miles south of [[Tupawasi]].
 
Kayahallpa is geographically divided into three zones: the High Antis, the Sub-Antis, and the Lowlands. The High Antis is located above 3,000 meters (9,800 ft) altitude and covers roughly 40% of Kayahallpa. The Sub-Antis surrounds the High Antis; together, they form the core of Kayahallpa's inland regions, with the exception of the far north and south, where hills gradually give way to the Lowland region's narrow, but flat coastal plains. The Lowlands contain most of the areas suitable for agriculture while the Antis is most notable for its mineral wealth.
 
==Demographics==
The population of Kayahallpa was counted at 64,226,754 in the 2020 census by the Kayahallpan Statistics Agency, an increase from 56,922,691 in the 2010 census giving an annual population growth rate of 1.12% in that decade. Roughly 70.6% of them live in urban areas, up from 68.4% in 2010.
 
===Languages===
The {{wp|official language}} is {{wp|Southern Quechua|Kaya Simi}}, which is by far the most spoken {{wp|Quechua|Kayaic language}} in the world with an estimated 75 million speakers. In Kayahallpa, it is spoken as a {{wp|first language}} by roughly 50 million of the nation's almost 65 million people. The most commonly studied foreign languages are [[Mutli]] and Rezese.
 
===Education===
Attending school is not mandatory for children in Kayahallpa, but nearly all parents still send them in order to improve the career opportunities of their children. Primary education is divided in two parts: religious education, which teaches in proper faith and practice of the Sakbeist religion and grooms the future clergy, and modern civil education which is largely based on contemporary Oxidentalese systems.
 
The wearing of a {{wp|school uniform}} is mandatory in all levels of education, the clothes almost universally provided by the educational institution or the state. Designs are standardized and are based primarily on traditional attire of the High Antis area, accomodated to modern needs and differing climates where necessary.
 
===Religion===
{{wp|Freedom of religion}} is nonexistent in Kayahallpa; the Constitution declares that all rights are granted to man through the worship of Sakbeism alone. There are no legal protections for non-Sakbeists, nor are they recognized to exist within Kayahallpa's borders. Kayahallpan Sakbeists are mostly followers of the Yuyaqpi school, a descendant of colonial-era movements that held Chak-Wiraqucha as the nation's patron god. The polytheistic [[White Path|White Path (Sakbe)]] faith is the only permitted religion in the country and completely dominates every stage of daily life, as all citizens are officially registered into the religion at birth. {{wp|Apostasy}}, conversion to another religion, attempting to convert a citizen to any other faith or bringing forbidden religious material into the country is illegal and may result in imprisonment, deportation (for foreign citizens) or, in especially egregious cases, capital punishment. Small communities of people who follow other faiths exist in complete secrecy, mostly {{wp|Christians}} which practice in anonymity. While foreigners are generally allowed to practice their beliefs in private if they do not otherwise violate any laws, they still face intense societal opposition; no churches, mosques or any other non-Sakbeist religious institutions exist.
 
==Culture==
Kayahallpan culture is mainly founded on native Western Oxidentale influences, the ancient Kayan heritage from [[Belfras|Southern Norumbia]] and the societies that interacted with the [[Mutulese Ochran]]. It has played a unique and powerful role throughout its long history, contrasting with the rest of [[Ajax|Oxidentale]] due to the nation's mythology, political structure, economic dynamics, nature, and tradition. Kayahallpan art, whose aesthetic is largely dictated by the state, is dominated by the systematic combination and co-existence of the ancient Wari style and newer Kayan, Mutunese, and Ochranese styles, interpreted through modern methods and design philosophies.
 
===Literature===
{{main|Kaya script}}
[[File:Inca Quipu.jpg|300px|thumbnail|left|A ''khipu'', recording device from strings used throughout Kayahallpa until the late 1600s]]
The territory that now forms Kayahallpa has seen a number of writing systems used through its ancient history, some indigenous such as the {{wp|khipu}} string system, others foreign. Modern Kayans universally use the [[Kaya script]] which was originally developed from Mutuleses and southern Ochranese influences. The Kaya script is an {{wp|abugida}} where each glyph represents either a consonant, consonant-vowel pair or an independent vowel. It arose in the 1500s during the final decades of the First Empire as Mutuleses scribes brought their knowledge of the {{wp|Maya script|Tz'ib'najal}} and began to transcribe the local languages with it, which replaced the khipu and other native writing systems due to the rise of the Mutul's political and economic dominance. As the vocabulary, structure and phonology of the "Southern tongues" they encountered were vastly different from their own, an intellectual movement to change and adapt it was born that would eventually make it radically different from its predecessors. After centuries of mostly uncontrolled linguistic and aesthetic evolution it was eventually officially regulated in 1912, standardizing the vast amount of geographic and social variations in usage into a single, universal system. The {{wp|Latin script}} is only commonly used for uses such as communication with foreigners, learners' material, and devices that do not support the Kaya script.
 
===Cuisine===
 
Modern Kayahallpan cuisine contains chiefly Oxidentalese, West Scipian, and Ochran-Malaio influences. The {{wp|potato}} serves as a {{wp|staple crop}} for much of the High Antis' rural population, of which several thousand sorts are grown in Kayahallpa in a stunning variety of shapes, colors, and sizes. {{wp|Maize}}, {{wp|squash}} and {{wp|beans}} are commonly grown in irrigated fields of the northern {{wp|tropical}} lowlands, while {{wp|wheat}}, {{wp|oats}}, and {{wp|grapes}} are the main crops of the more temparate southern coastal region. Important sources of meat include {{wp|fish}}, harvested in massive quantities thanks to the cold {{wp|ocean currents}} off Kayahallpa's coast, {{wp|llamas}}, and {{wp|poultry}}.
 
===Sports===
{{see also|Kayahallpa national pitz team}}
[[File:Mixco Viejo 10.JPG|300px|thumbnail|right|An ancient ballcourt for the ballgame near Kashamarka city]]
The heart and soul of Kayahallpa is by all accounts that of the {{wp|Mesoamerican ballgame|Oxidentalese ballgame}}, being both the most-played and most-watched family of sports in the country with traditions stretching over a thousand years. While originally developed in the [[Mutul]], its history in Kayahallpa precedes even the Wari era, and the many indigenous {{wp|Mesoamerican ballcourt|courtstyles}} and playing variants are especially cherished. It has served a variety of cultural, social, and political uses since its introduction, perhaps most notably as a mechanism for diffusing conflict. Rather than amassing manpower-costly armies, chieftains and kings of the Classical Era instead spent their wealth in maintaining the best ballgame team, with the winning sponsor of the often brutal matches claiming the right to power. Such practice lost its relevancy after the Kayan migrations but the ballgame competition between regions continues in the [[Wari Tournament]], a {{wp|professional sports league organization}} which operates several leagues for the different disciplines of the Oxidentalese ballgame.
 
Though the internationally-used [[Pitz|Pitzalk'in Ruleset]] (locally known as ''pitsi'') is today the most popular ballgame, especially after the Kayahallpan national team achieved international success in the 20th century, the "native games" thrive in traditional ceremonies. Common themes in native games include the use of a wooden stick, a playstyle similar to {{wp|field hockey}}, and the lack of any ring for which to score through, rings being a later Mutulese innovation. Ballcourts range in size from the Qusqu Divine Court at 160 meters length to primitive small mounds found in urban backyards.
 
===Cinema===
Kayahallpan cinema is dominated by the state's official cinematic production company, the Revolutionary Kayahallpan Motion Picture Association, which is a conglomeration of all studios based in the country. Being a more recent phenomenon than music or the visual arts, film was (and in some regards still is) considered an unusually open industry where the struggles of everyday Kayans could be portrayed in striking and realistic fashion, particularly in the Democratic Constitutional era. Several film studios are almost entirely dedicated to the production of {{wp|propaganda}}, which are broadcast and distributed for free. These often contain heavy {{wp|historical negationism}} around past events in Kayahallpa, inaccurate portrayals of living conditions (at home and abroad), and frequently feature extreme political sentiments.
 
==Sandbox==
Categories: Ajax | Countries (Ajax) | Countries | Republics (Ajax) | Republics | Kayahallpa | Theocracies

Revision as of 21:22, 24 March 2022

Tupaq Yupanki III
Tupaq Yupanki script.svg
Name written in Kaya script
Sapa Inka
Reign27th April 1953 – 14th May 1956
Coronation22nd June 1959
PredecessorTitu Rimachi II
Heir Kuntur Rimachi
Born (1926-05-13) 13 May 1926 (age 98)
Tupawasi, Kayahallpa
Died24 March 2022(2022-03-24) (aged 95)
Tupawasi
Burial
Qhapaq Pikchu, Tupawasi Suyu
Spouse
Mama Kusi Quya (m. 1948)
and others
Issue34
HouseQhapaq Dynasty
FatherTitu Rimachi II
MotherMama Uqllu Quya
ReligionYuyaqpi Sakbeism

Tupaq Yupanki III (Sapan Inka Tupaq Yupanki; born 13 May 1926, died 24 March 2022) was the last Sapa Inka of Kayahallpa, having ascended to the throne some time after the death of his father, the previous Sapa Inka Titu Rimachi II in April 1953. Chosen according to traditional Kayahallpan ascension procedures, he was the 7th eldest son and 12th eldest child of Titu Rimachi II. He served as the head of Kayahallpa's greatly weakened monarchy for slightly over three years until 1956, when the monarchy was finally abolished in national leader Kaman Yashakphi's self-coup. Typified as a political and social traditionalist, he resented the changes to the Kayahallpan Constitution which had stripped the royalty and nobility of their powers, inevitably bringing him into conflict with Yashakphi's increasingly socialist Kayan Workers' Party. After being deposed, he and his immediate family and relatives lived in several countries until they were invited back in 1985, several years after the 1960 Kayahallpan Revolution which established a Sakbeist republic. Faced with a greatly diminished political capital, most of his activities went into his various attempts at recovering the vast former properties of the Sapa Inkas, to little avail. He was also entirely unsuccesful in his pleas to restore the monarchy after the revolution, as the first Kamasqa, Pitiy Achtil, viewed the monarchy as the ultimate source of all evil in Kayahallpan society. Tupaq Yupanki's health began to seriously decline in the late 1990s, and he mostly likely lied in a vegetative state between December 2007 and his death in March 2022, when his death was announced by Kayahallpan media.

Tupaq Yupanki was born in the capital city Tupawasi inside the Imperial Palace to the previous Sapa Inka, Titu Rimachi II and his first wife Mama Uqllu Quya on the 13th of May 1926. He spent much of his upbringing at the Temple of Chak, a religious structure and organization near the city of Sarallaqta.