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{{WIP}}
{{Infobox country
{{Infobox country
|conventional_long_name      = The Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria
|conventional_long_name      = Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria
| native_name = ''Regnum Nortiæ Gardoliæ et Hambriæ''
|common_name                = Great Nortend
|common_name                = Great Nortend
|image_flag                  = Flag of Great Nortend.png
|image_flag                  = Flag of Great Nortend.png
|image_coat                  = Erbonian Coat of Arms.png
|image_coat                  = Erbonian Coat of Arms.png
|symbol_type                = Coat of Arms
|symbol_type                = Coat of Arms
|motto                      = {{plainlist|* "Magnus Dominus mecum sit"
|motto                      = {{plainlist|* “Dominus Dominium dedit” (Royal motto)
* "Quoniam filii sactorum sumus"
* “Quoniam filii sactorum sumus” (Parliamentary motto)
}}
}}
|national_anthem            = "The King shall rejoice"
|national_anthem            = "[[Rex lætabitur in virtute tua]]"<br><small>(The King shall joy)</small>
|image_map                  = GNOrth.png
|image_map                  = GNOrth.png
|map_caption                = Great Nortend within Teudallum and Lorecia
|map_caption                = Great Nortend within [[Teudallum]] and [[Lorecia]]
|capital                    = [[Lendert-with-Cadell]]
|capital                    = [[Lendert-with-Cadell]]
|official_languages          =  
|official_languages          =  
|national_languages          = English
|national_languages          = Erbonian English
|ethnic_groups              = 86% Arlethian<br>8% Ethlorek<br>5% Other
|ethnic_groups              = 86% [[Arlethic peoples|Arlethian]]<br>8% [[Ethlorek peoples|Ethlorekoz]]<br>5% Other
|demonym                    =  
|demonym                    =  
|government_type            = Unitary Parliamentary Monarchy
|government_type            = Parliamentary Monarchy
|leader_title1              = Sovereign
|leader_title1              = [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign]]
|leader_name1                = [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Alexander II]]
|leader_name1                = [[Alexander II of Great Nortend|King Alexander II]]
|leader_title2              = Prime Minister
|leader_title2              = [[Lord High Treasurer of Great Nortend|Lord Treasurer<br><small>(Prime Minister)]]
|leader_name2                = [[Prime Minister of Great Nortend|The 8th Duke of Limmes]]
|leader_name2                = Sir Spencer de Stornton
|leader_title3              =
|leader_title3              = [[Church of Nortend|Lord Archbishop of Sulthey]]
|leader_name3                =  
|leader_name3                = Cardinal [[Sebastian Williams]]
|legislature                = The Royal High Court of Parliament
|legislature                = [[Parliament of Great Nortend|The High Court of the Parliament]]
|upper_house                = House of Lords
|upper_house                = House of Lords
|lower_house                = Houses of Commons<sup>a</sup>
|lower_house                = Houses of Commons<sup>a</sup>
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|established_event3          =
|established_event3          =
|established_date3          =
|established_date3          =
|area_km2                    = 190,542
|area_km2                    = 100,851.4865
|area_sq_mi                  =  
|area_sq_mi                  =  
|percent_water              =
|percent_water              =
|area_rank                  =  
|area_rank                  =  
|area_label2                =  
|area_label = Metric
|area_data2                 =  
|area_label2                = Catherinian
|population_estimate        = 32,102,002
|area_data2                 = {{Convert|34100|csqmi|cacre}}
|population_estimate_rank    =  
|population_estimate        = 10,002,017
|population_estimate_year    = 2017
|population_estimate_rank    =
|population_estimate_year    = 2019
|population_census          =  
|population_census          =  
|population_census_year      =  
|population_census_year      =  
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|population_densitymi²      =
|population_densitymi²      =
|population_density_rank    =  
|population_density_rank    =  
|GDP_PPP                    =  
|GDP_PPP                    = [[Pound marten|£]]5,678 million ($681,097 million)
|GDP_PPP_rank                =  
|GDP_PPP_rank                =  
|GDP_PPP_year                =
|GDP_PPP_year                = 2018
|GDP_PPP_per_capita          =  
|GDP_PPP_per_capita          = [[Pound marten|£]]284 ($34,051)
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank    =  
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank    =  
|GDP_nominal                = £1,600,000,000
|GDP_nominal                = [[Pound marten|£]]2,704 million ($324,332 million)
|GDP_nominal_rank            =  
|GDP_nominal_rank            =  
|GDP_nominal_year            =  
|GDP_nominal_year            = 2018
|GDP_nominal_per_capita      = £50
|GDP_nominal_per_capita      = [[Pound marten|£]]135 ($16,215)
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =  
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =  
|Gini                        =  
|Gini                        =  
Line 68: Line 69:
|HDI_change                  =  
|HDI_change                  =  
|currency                    = [[Pound marten]]
|currency                    = [[Pound marten]]
|currency_code              = GNR
|currency_code              = GNP
|time_zone                  = DMT
|time_zone                  = DMT
|utc_offset                  =  
|utc_offset                  = +0:30
|time_zone_DST              =  
|time_zone_DST              =  
|DST_note                    =  
|DST_note                    =  
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|drives_on                  = left
|drives_on                  = left
|date_format                = dd-mm-yyyy
|date_format                = dd-mm-yyyy
|cctld                      =
|calling_code                = [[Telephone numbers in Great Nortend|+37]]
|calling_code                = +37
|cctld                      = {{hlist|[[.gn]]}}
|cctld                      = {{hlist|[[.gn]]}}
|footnotes                  = <!--Insert footnote here-->
|footnotes                  = <!--Insert footnote here-->
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}}
}}


'''The Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria''', commonly known as Great Nortend or only Nortend, is an island nation in [[Astyria]] comprising of the three civil provinces of Nortend, Hambria and Cardoby. The main landmass of the Kingdom is formed of the islands of Greater and Lesser Erbonia. It has a population of around 32 million and is a predominantly pastoral country though with large swathes of forest, woodland, grassland, moor and heath. The Kingdom is mostly self-sustaining in terms of food production with exports of corn, wool and textiles also with a sizeable domestic industrial and manufacturing sector as well. The largest island in the Kingdom excluding the two main islands, is Cardoby, located off the coast of north-eastern Nortend.
'''Great Nortend''', formally known as the '''Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria''', is an island nation at the north-eastern tip of the [[Mederano Peninsula]] in [[Astyria]], comprising the three [[Great Nortend#Administrative divisions|civil provinces]] of Nortend, Hambria and Cardoby. It shares no land borders with any other country; however, it has a sea border with [[Nikolia]] to the south across the Duke of Yarron's Sea. To the west is the [[Mederano Sea]] and to the east the [[Wet Water]].


== Names and Gentilics ==
The main landmass of the Kingdom is formed of the islands of [[Great Nortend#Geography|Greater and Lesser Erbonia]]. The country has a population of around 32 million inhabitants and still predominantly pastoral with large swathes of woodland and uncultivated land. The largest island in the Kingdom excluding the two main islands, is Cardoby, located off the coast of north-eastern Nortend. Great Nortend is considered to be mostly self-sustaining in terms of food production with net exports of corn.  
The formal name for the country is the ''Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria''. Whilst the Kingdom's short name for diplomatic and poetic purposes is ''Erbonia'', from the Latin name of the isles, ''Insulæ Erboniæ'', ''Great Nortend'' is the common term for the entire country, encompassing the entire kingdom and inclusive of all islands and isles.  


''Nortend'' is derived from the Old English name, ''Nordenland'', meaning 'land of the Nords', the Nords being one of the major tribes that migrated from what is now [[Noordenstaat]], along with the Cardes and Sexers. The name ''Hoebrideland'' derives from the native Hoebric name for the land, ''Hoembride'', which means literally, 'The land of the Hoemus people'. ''Hoemus'' itself is thought to have derived from Greek, ''emos'', meaning mountain. Thus, the name ''Hoebrideland'' effectively means, 'Mountain [people] land land', a tautological construction. The more modern name for the province, ''Hambria'', comes from the re-Latinised form of Hoembride. The name ''Cardoby'' is derived from Old English as well, meaning the 'island of the Cardes', as the island was the location of a Gardolian kingdom of the Cardes. Nortend is often used to refer to what is really Great Nortend in error and should be avoided.
== Names ==
The formal name for the country is the „Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria”. The Kingdom's short name for diplomatic  purposes is „Erbonia”, which also refers to the islands of the archipelago as a whole, is from the Latin „''Erbonia'', a backformation of the longer „''Insulæ Erbonicæ'', which literally means the „Erebic Islands”. „Great Nortend” is a common general term for the entire country, encompassing the entire kingdom and inclusive of all islands and isles separate from the two main landmasses.  


A person from the province of Nortend is known as a ''Norchman''. ''Nortan'' is used as an adjective relating to Nortend. The gentilics of Hambria are Hambrian as an adjective and Hoebridman as a noun referring to persons. The adjectival form of Cardoby is ''Gardolian'' whilst a person from Cardoby is known as a ''Cardman''. The gentilic of Great Nortend is informally ''Nortan'' to refer to people as well as used as the adjective; however, the formal gentilic for both persons and the adjective is ''Erbonian'', as seen in the King's formal diplomatic title, His Erbonian Majesty.
„Nortend” is derived from the Erebic name „''Nordenland''”,  meaning „land of the Nords”, the Nords being one of the major tribes that migrated from what is now [[Noordenstaat]], along with the Cardes and Sexers. It thus could be said that both [[Noordenstaat]] and Nortend share the same name. The name „Nortend” is often used to refer to what is really Great Nortend. „Cardoby” is too derived from Erebic, meaning the „island of the Cardes”, as the island was the location of a Gardolian kingdom of the Cardes.
 
The name „Hoebrideland” derives from the Cothish name for the former Kingdom of Hambria „''Hoembride''” which means literally, „The kingdom (in the) mountain valleys”, a corruption of the Hoebric words for „mountain” (''perme'') and „valley” (''bul'') with the Cothish suffix for „kingdom” (''rice''). The modern Latin name for the province, „''Hambria''”, is a mediaeval Latinisation of Hoembride.
 
A person from Nortend is known as a „Nortchman”. „Nortish” is the main adjective relating to both Nortend and Great Nortend. The formal adjective for the kingdom, however, is „Erbonian”, as seen in the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign]]'s diplomatic style, ''His Erbonian Majesty'' and the names of more modern institutions such as the Royal Erbonian Airways and the Royal Erbonian Countryside Society. The gentilics of Hambria are „Hambrian” as an adjective and „Hoebridman” as a noun referring to persons. The adjectival form of Cardoby is „Gardolian” whilst a person from Cardoby is known as a „Cardishman”.  
 
The use of the root word „Nort” in „Great Nortend” and „Nortish” to refer to the whole country is controversial in some academic spheres, as it subsumes Hoebrideland and Cardoby under the banner of „Nortend”. On the other hand, it is argued that the entire Erbonian population is Nortish insofar as the Hoes by the 16th century had effectively assimilated into the dominant Nortch Arlethic society, something which had occured even earlier with the Cardes and Sexers.


== History ==
== History ==
{{main|History of Great Nortend}}
{{main|History of Great Nortend}}
===Antiquity===
===Antiquity and Arlethic Conquest===
The country has been settled since antiquity by the Hoes which were a group of Ethlorek tribes spread throughout the island. The population fluctuated greatly, however by 300 BC, a distinctive mix of Erbonian culture had emerged, speaking mostly a variety of Common Erebbonic, a variety of the [[Ethlorek languages|North Ethlorek language]].  
The Isles of Erbonia have been settled since antiquity by [[Ethlorek peoples|Ethlorek tribes]], which spread throughout the island in mostly disparate populations including the Hoes to the north and the Erebes to the south of the Monmorians, the large mountain range which separate modern-day Hambria from Nortend. By 300 BC, a distinctive Erebic culture had emerged in the south, speaking varieties of Common Erebbonic, a [[Ethlorek languages|North Ethlorek language]]. However, the Erebes peaked in unity in the 2nd century and by the 3rd century had become increasingly factionalised and weakend by infighting.
 
Lured by the fertile lands, the [[Arlethic peoples|Arlethic]] Nords, Sexers and Cardes from what is now [[Noordenstaat]] arrived in Lesser and Middle Erbonia and established settlements. Originally, there were only sparse coastal settlements however in the late 3rd century, an increasing number of Arlethians arrived, displacing and slaughtering the Erebes in the Arlethic Conquest. Around eight major Arlethic kingdoms were formed in the country which were, roughly from north to south :— Bissex, Norsax, Cardoby, Barard, Oscardes, Lanorts, Suthnorts and Dunricia. Whilst in Middle Erbonia the Sexers and Cardes mixed, Lesser Erbonia became purely Nortish.
 
===Early Middle Ages===
[[File:Clotilde_partageant_le_royaume_entre_ses_fils.jpg|thumb|250px|Edmund the Good and his four sons.]]Over the next few centuries, Lanort through marriage and conquest expanded, taking over Suthnort, Dunricia and Dorsex, forming the Kingdom of Nortend, speaking Low Erebic. Cardoby also took over Bissex and Norsax, forming the Lordship of Cardoby, speaking High Erebic. Barard and Almede fell to Nortend in the Barard-Nortish wars in the 6th century. Cardoby itself was conquered by Nortend in the late 7th century during the reign of Fredwin Longlobes; however, Norsax was lost to the Cothens under the reign of Oslac during a period of Cothen expansion. The Sexer Princes of the Cothens, now also controlling much of southern Hambria, were recognised as ''de facto'' suzerain by the northern Ethlorek Wignod and Tunel tribes by the early 8th century. They began to style themselves the ''King of Hoebride''.


The lands below the Monmorians that are now the civil province of Nortend was invaded by the XXX Empire and subsequently became the province of Erbonia, with the capital the prosperous riverine city of Lendartus. This led to around three centuries of Imperial rule. The wild lands of Hambria in the northern region of the islands, were until around 87 AD, left unconquered by the Imperial Army which did not see the need to pass through the rugged and desolate Monmorians, the large mountain range nowadays separating Hambria from Nortend. In AD 88, the Empire bypassed the mountains with the discovery of the Aparian Pass but after establishing only a few minor forts in Hambria, the military withdrew back to Nortend.
The Christian missionary, St. Laurence, arrived on the shores of Nortend in A. D. 744 during the reign of Egbert de Lanort by order of the {{wp|Pope Zachary I}} to convert the heathens. After Egbert died in 753 after being mortally wounded by an arrow during battle with the Cothens, the Christian prince [[Hartmold the Great|Hartmold de Mure]] took the Nortish throne after the War of the Interregnum. Through his reign and the consecutive reigns of Æthelfrey, Erwin and Edmund the Good, Christianity spread through the Kingdom. Under the rule of Edmund, who styled himself as ''King of Nortend and Lord of Cardoby'', the Nortish armies conquered the remaining kingdom of Oscardes and reclaimed Norsax, until the entire country south of the Monmorians was united in one single Christian Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby. Edmund the Good died in the Wars of the Monmorians, in 894, fighting the Cothens, and was recognised almost immediately as a martyr of the church.


===Middle Ages===
-- Nicolian invasion? --
The Imperial military withdrew from Nortend in the late fourth century. By this time, Barardian and other Erbo-Latinate languages had begun to develop within the country, though not fully ousting the Ethlorek Hoebrian tongues. Without the deterrent of the Imperial armies, the Arlethian tribes of the Nords, Sexers and Cardes from what is now [[Noordenstaat]] landed on the shores of Lesser Erbonia and settled. Originally, there were only sparse settlements however in the late 3rd century, an increasing number of Norts and Cardes arrived. By the late 4th century, the Arlethians had settled in various areas, mainly with the northern regions by the Sexers, north-eastern and western by the Cardes and the southern and central by the Nords, thereby displacing the remaining Ethlorek Hoes.


Around eight major Arlethian kingdoms were formed in the country by this time, which were, roughly from north to south: Bissex; Norsax; Cardoby; Barardia; Iscardes; Lanorts; Suthnorts; Dunricia. Smaller kingdoms included Almede around modern-day Heymeadshire and Almeshire, and Wennord in the west of Lesser Erbonia. Whilst the Cardes and Sexers settled in what is now the Nortan portion of Greater Erbonia, the Nords, later known as the Norts, almost completely took over the entirety of Lesser Erbonia. Over the next few centuries, owing to poor military tactics on the part of others, the Kingdom of the Norts, comprising the Lanots, Suthnorts and Dunricia, managed to take control of nearly the entire country excepting a few small kingdoms which stood fast their ground.
===High Middle Ages===
[[File:Archives_de_l'Etat_de_Neuchâtel,_Archives_seigneuriales,_1296_(AS-I5.10_f1).jpg|thumb|250px|The only surviving portion of the ''[[Carta Erboniæ Libertatum]]'' which was issued by Edward I in 1052 to appease the Kingdom.]] The House of Barmast claimed the throne of Nortend and Cardoby in 973 under Gerolph. The 11th century brought conflict to the northern regions of Nortend during the Peasant's Rebellion from 1034 to 1036 against increasingly high royal taxes. Jane ordered the execution of peasant villagers as punishment for their tax resistance; however, her barons and the Church refused to kill their tenants, as it would lead to their loss of their own income and reduce the value of their land. Jane relented, and reduced taxes.


The Christian missionary, St Laurence, arrived on the shores of Nortenland in AD 744 during the reign of Egbert, by order of the Pope Zachary I, in a quest to convert the Kingdom. Though Christianity had first been introduced during the XXX Empire, the old pagan religions still held sway over the invading tribes. St Laurence founded Sulthey Cathedral on the Isle of Sulthey in 749, the year which is now generally considered the start of the Roman Christian Church in Great Nortend, and served for over thirty years as the Apostle to All Nortend.  
In response to Jane's poor reputation and continued disquiet amongst the population, her successor Edward I in 1052 issued the ''[[Carta Erboniæ Libertatum]]'' which made several promises, including importantly a provision promising that future taxes would be approved by the King's barons. The Charter was affirmed by his successor, Richard I and successive kings until Stephen refused to so do. After he unilaterally raised taxes in 1122, he was assassinated by Matthew de Chepingstow. His successor, Richard III, was forced to swear an oath to abide by the Charter prior to his coronation.


From the late 7th to 8th centuries, the Hambrian people of the Wignod and Tunel tribes had grown to recognise the King of the Cothens as suzerain de facto, and the King of Cothens began to style himself therefore as ''King of the Hoes''. Under the rule of the Christian Edmund the Good, who styled himself with the more modern King of Nortend and Lord of Cardoby, the Nortan Kingdom progressively conquered the remaining kingdoms of Iscardes and Norsax, until the entire country south of the Monmorians was united in one single Christian Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby. Edmund the Good died in the Battles of the Monmorians, in 894, fighting the Cothens of Hoebrideland, and was recognised almost immediately as a martyr of the church.  
Following the Battle of Rodchester, the House of Dester gained the throne in 1267.  By the form of the Charter sworn to by Eltbold at his coronation in 1268, Eltbold 'voluntarily' disclaimed his power to create laws in certain privileged matters without the consent of the ''Curia Regis''. Though he still had the power to create laws, and to issue writs, commissions &c. in other matters, this provision in the Charter severely restricted the independence of the King to create laws without the consent of his courtiers and powerful officers of state.


By the twelfth century, new trade laws and statutes had opened up the economy and meant the country prospered financially. Lendert became a large port for the trade of especially Nortan wool, but also of corn, linen and dyestuffs. The House of Barmast took the throne in 973 under King Gerulf the Peaceful. The House of Dester claimed the throne with the coronation of Ecgbald. The radical changes brought to the country during the Dester period included the establishment of the doctrine of ''brevis auctoritas''. This established the ''Curia Regis'', who were an assembly of the King's barons, courtiers and favourites. Its function was to advise the King in the matters pertaining to the operations of the Kingdom. Most importantly, this role permitted to propose new statutes to the King, who would either assent or place it aside. The legislative proposal functions of the Curia Regis later evolved into the present Parliament whilst the Privy Council to-day serves as the advisory body to and executive body of the Crown.  
Frustrated in his attempts to pass statutes, Charles I increasingly began to summon all of his barons (rather than only the more powerful) and representatives of the clergy, commons and boroughs to his court, to override the increasingly stubborn and rebellious ''Curia Regis''. As assent was obtained by majority vote of those present at Court, the increased number of commoners wishing to curry favour with the Crown allowed Charles to pass statutes without breaking his oath. Under this new raft of statutes, Nortend prospered financially. By the 13th century, [[Lendert-with-Cadell|Lendert]] had become a large port for trade, especially of wool, corn, linen and dyestuffs.


The Destern period was marked by the Battle of Travlesea in 1455, when two factions of the House of Dester, lead by Abern and David respectively, claimed the throne after the passing of King Charles II in a hunting accident. Though Abern's forces vanquished David's, Abern being crowned in 1456, the reign of the House of Dester ended when King Albert died in 1518 without any heirs. The title of king thence passed to King Edmund V, of the House of Anthord, crowned in 1519. The House of Anthord remains to this day the ruling house of the Kingdom. Beginning in the 16th century, Nortend increased in size her army and navy in principle, developing stronger merchant shipping fleets with the newly discovered New World. Research into history and the sciences increased with the founding of the King's Circle, the King's Society and the Royal College.
===Late Middle Ages===
The Dester period was marked by the Battle of Travlesea in 1455, when two factions of the House of Dester, lead by Peter III and Geoffrey respectively, claimed the throne after the passing of Charles II in a hunting accident. Peter's forces overcame Geoffrey's and Peter was crowned in 1456. However, the dynasty ended when Peter IV died in 1518 without any heirs. He had been highly unpopular owing to a series of failed military campaigns and lavish spending which had substantially drained the coffers of the Treasury and resulted in the necessary levying of excessive taxes by the Parliament.  


In 1571, the future Charles III married the queen regnant of Hambria, Clenancy of Rhise, of the House of Cothens, which had ruled effectively the entirety of Hambria since the 8th century. After Charles III's death in 1599, Clenancy became Queen Dowager of Nortend and Cardoby, whilst remaining Queen of Hambria. Clenancy died in 1623 and her son, the then Alexander I of Nortend and Cardoby, became King of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria.
The title of king thence passed to William II of the [[House of Anthord]] in 1519 in a transfer of power which involved numerous interested parties. The House of Anthord spoke the then minority language of Old English, owing to their [] roots. This influenced the shift of the common language from Erebian to {{wp|Middle English}}. William began to appoint the senior or esteemed members of the ''Curia'' to his ''Privatum Consilium'' or 'Privy Council', to advise him privately on matters of state. They soon gained powers to act on the Sovereign's behalf. As Nortend increased the size of her army and navy, developing greater merchant shipping fleets, William needed to make a strategic marriage for his son, George. Thus, he arranged a marriage with XX of [[Aquitayne]], who married the future King George I in 1522 in a lavish ceremony. As a dowry, YY of Aquitayne granted to William the islands of [[Hastica]] far off the coast of [[Ceria]], becoming the first and only overseas possessions of the House of Anthord.


[[File:King_George_II_by_Charles_Jervas.jpg|thumbnail|left|Alexander I is often considered the Father of the Nation.]]In 1614, Alexander I rejected the supremacy of the Pope and established the Church of Nortend as an independent national church. The King appointed himself as the Supreme Governour of the Church Mundane. It was an incredibly controversial decision amongst the clergy and pious, but relatively popular amongst the nobility and common man who had long resented the siphoning of money away to Rome.
===Union, Schism and Cleaving===
{{See also|Church of Nortend#Great Schism}}
[[File:Kurfürst_Friedrich_V._von_der_Pfalz_als_König_von_Böhmen.jpg|thumbnail|250px|Alexander I is considered the Father of the Nation for his Three Great Statutes of Limmes, Supremacy and Cleaving.]]In 1571, the future Charles III married the Princess of the Cothens, Clenancy de Cothen a Rhise, heir apparent to the Hambrian throne. After Charles III's early death in 1599, Clenancy became Queen of Hambria. Clenancy died in 1623 and her son, Alexander I, became King of Nortend and Cardoby and King of Hambria. Despite the personal union, Hambria continued to function separately from Nortend and Cardoby, with its own currency, weights and measures (the pound of Rhise or ''libra Cothenorum''), social customs, languages (Cothish), legislature (the Curage of Rhise) and judicial system.


After eighteen years of personal union, the Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby, and the now established Kingdom of Hoebrideland were joined in the Acts of Cleaving of 1642. Rebellion in Hambria ensued after the excessive taxes of 5 per cent on tithable revenues were levied by Lendert. The so-called Hambrian Rebellion culminated in the Battle of Borlockton in 1646; however, the Nortan Army subdued the peasants, and the rebellion ended with the signing of the Treaty of Rhise granting power to the old Hambrian Curage of Rhise, still operating from Lendert, for the setting of taxes and other matters.
In 1614, Alexander I rejected the supremacy of the Pope in the ''Proclamation of Manfarnham'', and established the [[Church of Nortend]] as an independent national church by the ''Statute of Limmes''. In 1615, he by the ''Statute of Supremacy'' appointed himself the Supreme Governour of the Church Mundane. Though this “Great Schism” was a controversial move amongst the clergy, it was supported by the nobility and commoners suspicious of Rome. This act escalated tensions between the [[Empire of Exponent|Exponential Empire]] and Nortend, leading to the Battle of Hastica of 1650 which led to the loss of [[Saint Parth and Hastica|Hastica]].


===Early Modern period===
After eighteen years of personal union, the Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby and the Kingdom of Hambria were joined in the Statute of Cleaving of 1642 whereby Nortish law and bodies replaced or subsumed their Hambrian counterparts. Rebellion in Hambria ensued after the excessive taxes of 5 per cent on tithable revenues were levied by Lendert. The so-called Hambrian Rebellion culminated in the Battle of Borlockton in 1646; however, the Nortish Army subdued the peasants, and the rebellion ended with the signing of the Treaty of Rhise granting power to the old Hambrian Curage of Rhise, though sitting in Lendert, for the setting of taxes and other matters.
The Early Modern period beginning in the 18th century saw the influence of the Kingdom expand in its region. The tiny islands of St. Parth and Hastica were colonised by Great Nortend as well, to this day remaining the only colonies of the Kingdom.


The industrial revolution spread across Great Nortend slowly during the end of the 18th century and throughout the 19th, initially with the rapid building of canals and digging of coal mines with railways in the mid-19th century. The various Combination Acts ended the historical system of feudal open strip-farming for much of Great Nortend by establishing conterminous fields under the control of a single tenant, thereby increasing efficiency and yields significantly, as well as reducing the number of people required for agricultural purposes from nearly 90 per cent of the population to less than two-thirds.  
===Modern times===
[[File:Maria_Amalia_of_Austriakaiserin.jpg|thumb|250px|Mary's reign marked the beginning of the Modern Era of the history of Great Nortend.]]
It is commonly reckoned that modern times began with the accession of Mary in 1736. The [[Church of Nortend#The Olnite Matter|Olnite Matter]] regarding her marriage to the Roman Catholic Earl of Scode in 1740 set in motion the origins of the modern political system. The marriage also brought about a dramatic improvement in Great Nortend's relations with the [[Empire of Exponent|Exponential Empire]] which led to the return of [[Hastica]] in 1743. It also signalled the demise of the strongly Lutheran Protestant faction of [[Church of Nortend]], which turned towards a more orthodox, albeit reformed, theology after the Akeeper Settlement.


Though trade grew increasingly domestic, coal became a dominant export, although wool and grains still remained important. Nortend's plentiful anthracite, however, was prohibited for export and instead was and is still to-day kept for domestic use. The continuation of the legal doctrine of no-fault liability severely hambered further economic and industrial growth in the increasingly dangerous workplace. Hence, steam power never fully supplanted wind and water power in factories, however became widespread in use the collieries and mines for draining water more effectively, replacing the windmills used thitherto. Water power continued to power the village blacksmiths' trip hammers, though mass production of iron and steel stock developed strongly in centralised smelters.
The industrial revolution spread across Great Nortend slowly during the end of the 18th century and through the 19th, initially with the rapid building of canals and opening of coal mines followed by the rapid expansion of the railways from the mid-19th century. The various ''Combination Acts'' ended the historical system of feudal open strip-farming over much of Nortend and lowland Hambria by establishing conterminous fields under the control of a single tenant, thereby increasing efficiency and yields significantly. This reduced the number of people required to work the land from nearly 90 per cent of the population to less than two-thirds.  


===Modern day===
In response to the rapid changes brought on by industrialisation, foreign trade and modernity, various reactionary movements arose. The Romantic and Nationalist movements spread, advocating for a return to supposed feudal values of loyalty, hard work and faith over profit, convenience and materialism. This developed into the [[Nationalist conservatism|nationalist conservative]] movement in the 20th century, and continues to inform contemporary politics and social values to-day. [[The Coalition (Great Nortend)|The Coalition]] has been dominant in Erbonian politics with a majority in [[Parliament of Great Nortend|Parliament]] since the treasurership of [[Henry de Foide|Sir Henry de Foide]].
[[File:Houses_at_foot_of_Gallons_Steps,_Knaresborough_(5081638353).jpg|thumbnail|right|120px|An old laneway in Chepingstow.]]Great Nortend remains lethargic in technological development since the early 20th century, hampered by the continuation of the doctrine of no-fault liability in tort and the general lack of societal desire for change. The economy of Great Nortend went into a serious decline after its hey-day in the early 19th century, and has only regained some of its losses in the last few decades. Electricity is slowly gaining ground in the country, being widely generated by specialised generator mills or as a side product of traditional water and wind mills. The majority of electrical use in the cities and towns is for lighting, the telephone, and the wireless, with electric appliances quite rare. Villagers often still rely on oil lamps and even candles and rushlights in the remotest regions.  


Compared with modern, highly-industrialised countries, Great Nortend is very traditionalist. It uses the Carolinian system of weights and measures rather than the metric SI system, as well as a non-decimal currency, with twelve pennies to a shilling and twenty shillings to a pound, along with numerous other denominations, as well as 'wetch' as well. Having no national electrical grid, access to the Internet is restricted and thus the telegramme, telephone and postal networks remain heavily used and contribute a significantl portion to the domestic economy.
Great Nortend continues to have a highly reactionary society, remaining lethargic in social and technological change since the early 20th century. The Erbonian oeconomy declined from its heights in the 19th century, and has only regained some of its losses in the last few decades. It uses the Catherinian system of weights and measures rather than the internationall widespread {{wp|metric system}}. Despite some opposition, electricity is gaining ground in the country, although widely generated by specialised generator mills or as a side product of traditional water and wind mills. However, access to the Internet remains limited to official use, and the country is heavily reliant on the telegraphic, telephone and postal networks.


== Geography ==
== Geography ==
[[File:GlarusAlps.jpg|thumb|250px|An alpine meadow in autumn in the Monmorians.]]Erbonia is the general name for all of the islands and isles that make up the domestic realm or dominion of Great Nortend, excluding the colonial islands of St Parth and Hastica. Of the around twenty-three islands and isles thereof, the three major islands are Lesser Erbonia, Greater Erbonia, and Cardoby.  The landmass, including all associated islands and isles, has a total area of approximately 190,542 square kilometres, 64,423 square [[Catherinian_units|Catherinian miles]] or 73,569 square Imperial miles. The country has no land borders with any other nation, but is separated from [[Nikolia]] by the Yarron Strait. It is located off the main land-mass of [[Teudallum]], specifically the [[Mederano Peninsula]], and is to the west of the northern end of the Putin Strait.
Approximately 35% of Erbonia's land is forested, of which 32% is managed woodland. Around 3·5% is built-up, with the rest being either cultivated or uncultivated land such as pastures, alpine meadows, hay meadows, wetlands, peat bogs and marshes. Erbonia's only substantially mountainous areas lie above the area known as the Medden lowlands in Greater Erbonia, including the Monmorians, Elps and Hambrian uplands. The Monmorians are a mountain chain spanning the width of Greater Erbonia, where they separate the civil province of Nortend from Hambria. They include the highest peak in Great Nortend, [[Gorblanhail]], which is 8,792 [[Catherinian units|ft]] (2,625 m) above sea level. The chain is part of the larger mountainous alpine region of the Elps. A smaller latitudinal hilly belt in the centre of Lower Erbonia is known as the Central Welds; however, it is mainly characterised by steeply rolling hills. The rest of the isles is mostly arable or forested lowlands, with areas of polderland in the south in Walecester and Swent.
In terms of geological resources, Erbonia has rich coal deposits, mainly in Lesser Erbonia and south-eastern Greater Erbonia. Lead, copper and tin are found in some regions too. Hambria possesses emerald-bearing rock in some regions of the Elps, whence Hambrian emeralds are mined.


=== Climate ===
=== Climate ===
[[File:Efteraar.JPG|330px|thumbnail|Deciduous, evergreen and mixed woods make up over 30 per cent of the total land of Great Nortend.]]Great Nortend has a cool-temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb), influenced by its geography as a collection of islands. There is a significant temperature difference between the seasons, and snowfall is very common during winter, especially in Hambria. Much of Great Nortend is known for its habitual 'sun-showers', wherein light rain falls during an otherwise sunny day. There is an average monthly precipitation level of around 2 inches.
[[File:GNClimate.png|250px|thumbnail|Köppen-Geiger map of Great Nortend.]]The majority of Great Nortend has a cool-temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb), influenced by its geography as a collection of islands. The upland regions surrounding of the Monmorians and highlands north thereof have a subpolar oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfc) whilst the mountain ranges themselves have a subarctic climate (Köppen: Dfc) with polar tundras at their peaks (Köppen: ET). There is a significant temperature difference between the seasons, and snowfall is very common during winter, especially in Hambria. Much of Great Nortend is known for its habitual 'sun-showers', wherein light rain falls during an otherwise sunny day. There is an average monthly precipitation level of around two inches.
 
===Flora===
The isles of Erbonia have a wide range of vascular plant species. Both islands of Lesser and Greater Erbonia have a large number of native or historically introduced trees, including alder, apple, ash, beech, birch, box, cherry, chestnut, cyprus, elm, hawthorn, lime, maple, oak, pear, poplar, sycamore and yew. A number of these are important wood, coppicing or orchard species. The broad elm is the most common species of tree in Great Nortend, with a wide range spreading across the country below the Monmorians. It is the oak, however, which is considered the national tree.
 
The islands also has a wealth of wildflower species, widespread across the entire country. As most weedkillers, insecticides and pesticides are not legal in agriculture, species such as cornflowers, poppies, clover, daisies, tulips, foxgloves, violets, heather, gorse, buttercups, primroses, daffodils, anemones and orchids are common and widespread.
 
== Politics ==
{{Main|Government of Great Nortend}}
[[File:PrinceAlexanderII.png|thumb|250px|[[Alexander II of Great Nortend]].]]
Great Nortend is a unitary semi-constitutional monarchy. The state is embodied in the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Crown]], which is represented by the Sovereign, who is currently [[Alexander II of Great Nortend|Alexander II]], King of Nortend and Hambria and Lord of Cardoby. The Sovereign by convention takes a less active rôle in policy-making, although he retains wide-ranging semi-absolute powers. The day-to-day government is headed by the [[Lord High Treasurer of Great Nortend|Lord High Treasurer]] who is appointed by the King from the ranks of [[Parliament of Great Nortend|House of Lords]], although commoners are often elevated to the House of Lords for the purpose of being appointing Lord Treasurer.<ref>Cf. [[Henry de Foide|Sir Henry de Foide]], Sir Benjamin de Davies, Sir Spencer de Stornton, & al.</ref> The office is equivalent to that of a Prime Minister. However, unlike in a Westminster Parliament, the Lord Treasurer is not always the leader of the largest party in the lower house, which since the 1950s has always been the [[Company of Scodeliers]].
 
===Executive===
{{Main|Ministry of Great Nortend}}
[[File:AndrewHault.jpg|250px|thumbnail|The former Lord High Treasurer, the Duke of Limmes.]] The [[Great Council of Great Nortend|Great Council]], consisting of the King and his Counsellours, is the full ''Curia Regis'' of the Kingdom. However, in practice, executive power is mostly delegated to the smaller [[Privy Council of Great Nortend|Privy Council]] and the [[Ministry of Great Nortend|Ministry]] which includes [[Ministry_of_Great_Nortend#Cabinet|Cabinet]] ministers as well as the [[Ministry of Great Nortend#Utter Ministry|Utter Ministry]]. The functioning executive of Great Nortend is directed by the King and the Cabinet, the latter headed by the [[Lord High Treasurer of Great Nortend|Lord High Treasurer]], who as the head of H. M. Treasury and Exchequery, is ''primus inter pares'' and ''de facto'' head thereof.
 
Formally, the most senior ministers in Great Nortend are the seven Lord Officers of State. These form the ceremonial core of the Privy Council and Cabinet and are either hereditary, indicated with an asterisk in the list below, or appointments for life, excepting that of the Lord High Treasurer. They are, in order of precedence, the :—
 
* '''Lord High Steuard'''*: The head of the Royal Household. Also the speaker of the House of Lords and the senior-most judge under the King, deputising for the King in the [[Courts of Great Nortend#Court of Counsellours|Court of Counsellours]]. Held by The Earl of Barminster.
* '''Lord High Chancellour''': The deputy speaker of the House of Lords and head of H. M. Chancery responsible for administration of the courts. Keeper of the Great Seal of the Realm. Administrator of the [[Church of Nortend]]. Held ''ex officio'' by the Lord Bishops of [[Chepingstow]], who delegates to the Bishop of Laveshot most of his ecclesiastical and religious duties.
* '''[[Lord High Treasurer of Great Nortend|Lord High Treasurer]]''': The head of H. M. Treasury and Exchequery, and principal minister of the Government. Held by Sir Spencer de Stornton.
* '''Lord High Chamberlain'''*: Deputy in charge of the Royal Household, as well as responsible for organising ceremonial occasions such as state visits and weddings, and also serves as the King's representative in the House of Lords. Also serves as the [[Courts of Great Nortend#Court of the Ermine Office|Chief Justice of the Court of the Ermine Office]]. Held by The Earl of Godsucham.
* '''Lord High Admiral'''*: The Admiral of the Fleet, the ceremonial head of the [[Navy Royal (Great Nortend)|Navy Royal]]. Held by The Duke of Derham.
* '''Lord High Constable'''*: Originally the commander of the [[Royal Army (Great Nortend)|Royal Army]]. Nowadays, the ceremonial King's Marischal thereof and also the Chief Justice of the Court of the Marischal and Constable. Held by The Margrave of Lasmere.
* '''Lord High Equerry''': Originally responsible for the running of the Royal Mews. Now holds the office of Lord Master of Trade. Held by The Baron de Stanfield. He appoints a deputy, the Master of the Mews, to manage the day-to-day running of the Royal Mews, assisted by the Crown Equerries.
 
Other senior political Government cabinet-level positions are listed below :—
 
* '''Comptroller of the Exchequery''': Deputy to the Lord High Treasurer, he is in charge of the Exchequer, that is, of collecting taxation, duties and levies, raising revenue for the Treasury. Held by Sir Martin Fitzgerald.
* '''King's Clerk''': Minister in charge of home affairs, policing, national security, fire brigades, the constabularies and other domestic matters, who heads the Clerk's Office. Held by Sir Aaron Billings.
*''' Foreign Clerk''': Minister in charge of foreign affairs and foreign diplomacy, who heads the Foreign Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir George Drachington.
* '''War Clerk''': Minister in charge of the [[HM War Office (Great Nortend)|War Office]]. Held by Frederic Hondle.
* '''Serjeant General at Law''': Chief law advisor to the Crown, and also has control over most prosecutions by the Crown, and heads the Serjeant General's Office under the Chancery. Held by Sir Peter Finch.
* '''Postmaster General''': Minister in charge of the running of and the head of the [[General Post Office (Great Nortend)|General Post Office]] under the Clerk's Office. Held by James Kinson.
* '''Master of the Board of Education''': Responsible for schools, universities, educational standards and colleges who heads the Board of Education under the Clerk's Office. Held by Dr. Thomas Wolfuller.
* '''Lord Master of the Board of Agriculture''': Responsible for management of agricultural practice, enclosure and surveys parishes by productivity. Held by The Lord Baker.
* '''Master of the Board of Health''': Responsible for health services, hospitals, nursing and social care. Held by James Kinson.
 
=== Legislature ===
{{Main|Parliament of Great Nortend}}
{{See also|Courts of Great Nortend}}
[[File:GNKingEntrance.png|thumb|250px|The King's Entrance to the Castle of Lerdenstone.]]The [[Parliament of Great Nortend|Parliament]], known formally as the  High Court of the Parliament, is both the legislature as well as the highest court in Great Nortend. It is theoretically a tetracameral body, made up of the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign]] and four houses of estate: the House of Knights, of the county knights sent from each county or “county equivalent district”; the House of Burgesses, of the burgesses sent from chartered borough towns and cities; the House of Clergy, of the clergymen elected by their peers to represent their dioceses; and the House of Lords, of the lords [[Church of Nortend#Lords spiritual|spiritual]] and [[Nobility of Great Nortend|temporal]]. However, in practice it is bicameral as the Houses of Knights and Burgesses sit together as the Houses of Commons, and the House of Clergy mostly only ceremonially. Additional members of Parliament include the Scholars of Commons, attached to the House of Burgesses, and the two MPs representing the Armed Forces in the House of Knights.
 
The Parliament meets at the Castle of the Lerdenstone, located between the Calbend, the River Hame, South Street and the Little Ditch Street within the Inner Ward of [[Lendert-with-Cadell|Cadell]]. Therein, the Houses of Commons sit in the Common Hall, a large chamber which dates from the 13th century and was originally the library of the Great Council, which became the present Library of Commons. It is distinctive having a blue ceiling, blue carpet and dark wood panelling and cabinetry with ornate plasterwork. The House of Lords meanwhile meets in the Great Chapel, a larger, more decorative chamber officially named the Chapel of St. Giles, with a scarlet or sanguine and gold colour tone with rich mahogany panelling and woodwork. The House of Clergy meet in the Chapter House of St. Giles, a semi-circular stone room. It is also the location of where the chapter of the College of St Giles meet.
 
Legislative and judicial bills are presented to both houses for debate and voting, and must be assented to by a majority in the Houses of Commons and the House of Lords before they are presented to the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign]] for his ''[[Parliament of Great Nortend#Assentus Regis|Assentus Regis]]'', or Royal Assent.


=== Administrative divisions ===
=== Administrative divisions ===
Great Nortend is split into three parts, being Nortend, Hambria and the Lordship of Cardoby, which are collectively known as civil provinces. These are administrative regions and should not to be confused with the ecclesiastical Province of Limmes.
<div style="float:right">{{GNMap}}</div>
Great Nortend is split into four civil provinces, being the Province of Nortend, the Province of Hambria, the Lordship of Cardoby and the County of [[Hastica]]. These are administrative regions and should not to be confused with the [[Church of Nortend#Structure|ecclesiastical provinces]].
 
Each province, except for Hastica, is divided up into a varying number of counties, which are known as duchies in Cardoby and as marches on the border between Nortend and Hambria, owing to their status as counties palatine where a duke and marquess hold power. Other current counties palatine include Sulthey and County Yeartey wherein the Archbishop of Sulthey and the Bishop of St Cleaves hold certain powers. The Province of the County of Hastica is comprised only of the County of Hastica.
 
The three counties of Larkshire, Teyshire and Enley are known as the 'Close Counties' as they enclose and fully surround [[Lendert-with-Cadell]]. Lendert-with-Cadell itself is a ''sui generis'' area exempt from any county by Royal warrant. The [[Geography of Lendert|Greater Lendert]] area, however, is often considered a ''de facto'' county.


Each province is divided up into a varying number of counties, which are known as duchies in Cardoby and as marches on the border between Nortend and Hambria, owing to their status as counties palatine where a duke and marquess hold power. Other current counties palatine include Sulthey and County Yeartey wherein the Archbishop of Sulthey and the Bishop of St Cleaves hold certain powers.
Each county has a King's Lieutenant appointed, in Hastica known as the Viceroy-Governour, who as viceroy represents the King in his constitutional rôle. Therefore, the Lieutenant in theory commands the county militia and regiments, issues writs in the King's name, promulgates proclamations, prosecutes crimes, dispenses the King's justice and manages the county gaols, constabulary and prisons. He is assisted by a Sheriff who has main responsibility for the Lieutenant's judicial functions.


'''Counties in the Province of Nortend'''
====Counties in the Province of Nortend====
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible collapsed autocollapse" style="font-size:90%;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:2px"
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible collapsed autocollapse" style="font-size:90%;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:2px"
|-
|-
Line 152: Line 221:
| AX
| AX
| Acingham
| Acingham
| Largest county by area. See AXE, AXN and AXS
| From ''Auscardescir'', from the ancient Kingdom of Oscards. Largest county by area. Split into four Annerings.
|-
|-
| Almeshire
| Almeshire
| AM
| AM
| Metthews
| Metthews
|  
| From ''Almedescir'', from the ancient Kingdom of Almede.
|-
|-
| Barard
| Barard
| BR
| BR
| Bailmorden
| Bailmorden
|  
| Final remnants of the ancient Kingdom of Barard.
|-
|-
| Barminstershire
| Barminstershire
| BA
| BA
| Barminster
| Barminster
|  
| Shired lands in the ancint Kingdom of Suthnorts.
|-
| Bellshire
| BL
| Bellingford
|
|-
|-
| Bentshire
| Bentshire
| BE
| BE
| Abeningham
| Abeningham
|  
| From ''Bendnætscir'', apparently meaning “Bound Net Shire”. As with Swent, ''Sweartnæt'', what “Net” refers to is unknown.
|-
| Corrishire
| CO
| Truttermary
|
|-
|-
| Dershire
| Dunhamshire
| DE
| DE
| Derham
| Dunham
|  
| From ''Dunenhamscir'', meaning “Shire of the estate of the Duns”.
|-
| Durmenshire
| DU
| Durmen on the Sands
|
|-
|-
| Eamshire
| Eamshire
| EA
| EA
| Eamsford
| Eamsford
|  
| From ''Ausalmedescir'', meaning East Almedeshire, likely influenced by the name of the River Eams, from another root.
|-
| Eastannering
| AXE
| Yettergate
| See AX, AXN and AXS
|-
|-
| Enley
| Enley
| EN
| EN
| Sulhampton
| Sulhampton
| Royal county
| From ''Elnenege'', meaning “Isle of Eln”, with {{wp|metathesis}}.
|-
|-
| Essingfordshire
| Essingfordshire
| ES
| ES
| Essingford
| Essingford
|  
| Shired land in the ancient Kingdom of Suthnorts.
|-
|-
| Fawnshire
| Fawnshire
| FW
| FW
| Faunslaughter
| Faunslaughter
|  
| From ''Feaneslahtreowenscir'', meaning “Shire of Feane's sloe tree”.
|-
|-
| Gortland
| Gortland
| GO
| GO
| Elmstone
| Elmstone
|  
| From ''Gortenland'', named after the River Gort.
|-
| Haxoshire
| HA
| Boucester
|
|-
|-
| Harvickshire
| Harvickshire
| HV
| HV
| Harvick
| Harvick
|  
| From ''Hearwewicscir'', meaning “Harrow Wick Shire”.
|-
|-
| Herstlow
| Herstlow
| HE
| HE
| Tretford
| Tretford
|  
| From ''Hyrstenlogland'', meaning the “Hurst Lows”.
|-
|-
| Heymeadshire
| Heymeadshire
| HY
| HY
| Heymead
| Heymead
| See HYN and HYS
| From ''Heahalmedescir'', meaning “High Almedeshire”. Split into Northeymeadshire and Southeymeadshire.
|-
|-
| Igoddal
| Igoxeter
| IG
| IG
| Igoxeter
| Igoxeter
|  
| From ''Igganceaster'', meaning fortified town on the Igg.
|-
|-
| Larkshire
| Larkshire
| LA
| LA
| Limmes
| Limmes
| Contains exclave in SP
| From ''Limesricscir'', meaning “Shire in the Limmes Region”.
|-
|-
| Leaton
| Leaton
| LE
| LE
| Downingham
| Downthorp
| Smallest county by area
| From ''Leaten'', meaning “People of Leat”, either from the town named Leat or the Leat people from whence the town is named.
|-
|-
| Merst
| Merst
| ME
| ME
| Mast
| Mast
|  
| From ''Mairicesæt'', meaning “Inhabitants of the kingdom of the Mai”.
|-
|-
| Narland
| Narland
| NA
| NA
| Chepingstow
| [[Chepingstow]]
|  
| From ''Nærland'', meaning “Near Land”; possible referring to its proximity with the Kingdom of Nortend in Dorsex.
|-
|-
| Norsax (Loweshire)
| Norsax (Loweshire)
| NO
| NO
| Lowesk
| Lowesk
|  
| From ''Norþseaxan'', the ancient Kingdom of Norsax.
|-
| Northannering
| AXN
| Acingham
| See AX, AXE and AXS
|-
| North Heymeadshire
| HYN
| Oxley
| See HY and HYS
|-
|-
| Poltland
| Poltland
| PO
| PO
| Polton
| Polton
|  
| From ''Poltesland'', meaning “Land of the Polts”.
|-
|-
| Redwickshire
| Redwickshire
| RC
| RC
| Redwick
| Redwick
|  
| Shired land in the ancient Kingdom of Bissex.
|-
|-
| Seffet
| Seffet
| SF
| SF
| Nailbridge
| Nailbridge
|
| Unknown etymology.
|-
| Southannering
| AXS
| Gibbingham
| See AX, AXE and AXN
|-
| South Heymeadshire
| HYS
| Southeymead
| See HY and HYN
|-
|-
| Sulthey
| Sulthey
| SU
| SU
| Sulthey
| Sulthey
| County palatine of the Archbishop of Sulthey
| from ''Sulþesege'', meaning “Isle of the Sulths”.
|-
| Suthrepourdeland
| SP
| Bellingford
| From ''Suþernubreoteland'', meaning “Land of the Southern Road” likely referring to the ancient [[Ritway]].
|-
|-
| Swent
| Swent
| SW
| SW
| Lostwin
| Mooping
| Split into 4 Fathings
| From ''Sweartnæt'', apparently meaning “[[Erbonian English|Swart]] Net”. As with Bentshire, ''Bendnætscir'', what “Net” refers to is unknown. Split into 4 Fathings.
|-
| Suthrepourdeland
| SP
| Chollmouth
|
|-
|-
| Walecestershire
| Walecestershire
| WA
| WA
| Walecester
| Walecester
|  
| From ''Walceasterscir'', meaning “Shire of the fortified town of the Wals”. In the ancient Kingdom of Dunricia.
|-
| Teyshire
| TE
| Mooping
|
|-
|-
| Towshire
| Towshire
| TO
| TO
| Tow
| Tow
|  
| From ''Togscir'', meaning “Shire of Tow”. In the ancient Kingdom of Suthnorts.
|-
| County Yearty
| YE
| Quarry on Sea
| County palatine
|-
|-
|}
|}


'''Duchies in the Province of Cardoby'''
====Duchies in the Province of Cardoby====
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|-
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! class="unsortable" | Additional information
! class="unsortable" | Additional information
|-
|-
| Allells
| County Allells
| AL
| AL
| Staithway
| Staithway
|  
|  
|-
|-
| County Cardenbridge
| CB
| Cardenbridge
| Cardenbridge
| CB
| Bailmorden
|  
|  
|-
|-
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|}
|}


'''Counties in the Province of Hambria'''
====Counties in the Province of Hambria====
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible collapsed autocollapse" style="font-size:90%;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:2px"
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible collapsed autocollapse" style="font-size:90%;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:2px"
|-
|-
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| BI
| BI
| Crandale
| Crandale
|  
| From ''Biseaxan''.
|-
| Cothen-Wainsey
| CW
| Rhise
| From ''Wæganiscege'', meaning the “Isle of the Way”.
|-
|-
| Eastlord
| Eastlord
| EL
| EL
| Fivewells
| Fivewells
|
|-
| Despenshire (Longant)
| LG
| Stadell
|  
|  
|-
|-
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| Ganningshire
| Ganningshire
| GG
| GG
| Rhise
| Ganning
| Contains the capital city
|-
| Longantshire
| LG
| Stadell
|  
|  
|-
|-
| Marcastershire
| Westmarch
| MR
| MR
| Marcaster
| Marcaster
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| Minnerland
| Minnerland
| MN
| MN
| Onlingham
| Hexmeadbay
|  
|  
|-
|-
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|  
|  
|-
|-
| Toleshire
| Tolland
| TL
| TL
| Harringow
| Tollsea
|  
|  
|}
|}


Counties and divisions are divided into hundreds, also known as wards or hathings. A hundred is a grouping of a number of parishes, usually around 10, and owned by the same person, and corresponds to a deanery in the ecclesiastical sense. Most hundreds in Great Nortend have passed into private ownership of earls and viscounts, however there remain a number owned outright by the Crown. Hundreds are subdivided into parishes. Parishes, which are also known as manors, are controlled by the parish vestry which has a large remit of adminstrative responsibility. They are often further subdivided locally into tithings, also known as borows, boroughs and borgows, which is a grouping of around ten households.
=== Law and Justice ===
{{Main|Law of Great Nortend|Judiciary of Great Nortend}}
The law of Great Nortend is founded upon a mixture of customary law, chamber law and statute law, and administered by semi-feudal “sessions” courts as well as royal “chamber” courts. Judges are appointed by the Crown to serve at its pleasure. The Erbonian legal system differentiates between criminal law, common or civil law, admiralty law, martial law and ecclesiastical or canon law.


== Politics ==
=== Military ===
Great Nortend is a unitary Parliamentary democratic monarchy. The state is embodied in the [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Crown]], which is represented by the Sovereign, who is currently Alexander II, King of Nortend and Hambria and Lord of Cardoby. The Sovereign by convention takes a back-seat in the day-to-day operations of the country, the government whereof being headed by the [[Prime Minister of Great Nortend|Lord High Treasurer]], who is appointed by the King from his peers. The position is commonly known as the Prime Minister, being the minister with the most effective power and ''primus inter pares'' amongst the Cabinet.
{{Main|War Office (Great Nortend)|Royal Erbonian Army|Erbonian Navy Royal|l1=War Office|l2=Royal Army|l3=Navy Royal}}
[[File:GNArmyParade1.jpg|thumbnail|250px|right|The Earl of Barminster's Own Regiment of Foot (33th) on parade in Barminster.]]
The [[War Office (Great Nortend)|Armed Forces]] of Great Nortend is split into two branches, being the Royal Army and Navy Royal, administered by the [[War Office (Great Nortend)|War Office]]. There is no standalone air force in Great Nortend; however, the Air Division of the Navy Royal operates more or less independently of the Sea Divisions, simply as a practical matter.  


=== Government ===
The manpower of the [[War Office (Great Nortend)|Armed Forces]] is provided mainly by conscription by [[Muster Service (Great Nortend)|Muster Service]] where most Erbonian male [[Subjectship of Great Nortend|subjects]] at the age of 18 are required to serve in either the [[Royal Army (Great Nortend)|Royal Army]] or [[Navy Royal (Great Nortend)|Navy Royal]] if they do not enlist voluntarily. Muster Service involves three months of initial training and then posting within the country or abroad for nine months, with both military and labour duties.
[[File:GNInformalPM.png|230px|thumbnail|left|The current Lord High Treasurer and Prime Minister, the Most Noble Duke of Limmes PC.]]The functioning government of Great Nortend consists of the King and the Cabinet, headed by the Lord High Treasurer. The Privy Council, consisting of the King and his Privy Counsellours, is the formal executive body of the Kingdom, but in practice, this executive power is delegated to the Cabinet except for certain serious matters and ceremonial purposes.


The most important officers of state in Great Nortend are the seven Great Officers of State. These form the core of the Privy Council and are either hereditary, indicated with an asterisk, or appointments for life. They are, in order of precedence, the:
Mustermen are usually assigned to a regiment of a corps of the Royal Army according to their parish, with all men from a given parish being conscripted together. The Navy does accept a limited number of mustermen with links to the naval or air professions. University students may train as and be commissioned as an officer during their degree. After their year of full-time Muster Service, mustermen are required to serve in the [[Home Service (Great Nortend)|Home Service]] for another eight years before full discharge.


* Lord High Steuard*: The speaker of the House of Lords and the senior-most judge under the King, deputising for the King in the Court of the King-in-Council, as well as presiding in impeachment cases in the Court of the Noble Lords. Held by The Earl of Barminster.
== Œconomy ==
* Lord High Chancellour*: The deputy speaker of the House of Lords and head of the Court of Chancellery and the Court of the Noble Lords. Administratour of church lands and funds and Keeper of the Great Seal of the Realm, and responsible for administrating the courts. Held by the Bishops of Chepingstow, who appoints a Vicar-General to manage his ecclesiastical and religious duties.
{{See also|Taxation in Great Nortend|Agriculture in Great Nortend}}
* Lord High Chamberlain*: The head of the Royal Household, and in charge of the Royal palaces and castles, as well as organising ceremonial occasions such as state visits and weddings, and also serves as the King's representative in the House of Lords. Also serves as the Chief Justice of the Court of the Ermine Office. Held by The Earl of Godsucham.
[[File:Farmhouse_at_Beckermonds._-_geograph.org.uk_-_285530.jpg|250px|thumbnail|right|A typical rural farm in Great Nortend, with the often substantial farm-house.]]The œconomy of Great Nortend is heavily agrarian, which provides the livelihood for around half of the population, and localised, with a domestic semi-regulated market œconomy favouring isolationist mercantilism. The workforce is almost evenly split into thirds, with one third of the workforce employed in each of the primary, secondary and tertiary sectors.
* Lord High Treasurer: The controller and official head of the King's Treasury and Exchequer, and Prime Minister of the Government. Held by The Duke of Limmes.
* Lord High Admiral: Political and professional head of the Navy Royal. Held by The Duke of Derham
* Lord High Constable and the King's Marischal*: Originally the commander of the royal armies. Nowadays, the Chief Justice of the King's Marischal and Constable's Court, and Field Marshal of the Royal Army. Held by The Marquess of Lasmere
* Lord Master of the Horse: Responsible for the running of the Royal Mews, hound kennels, stud farm, coaches, carriages and all other equine matters. His remit has expanded into the realm of trade and transport infrastructure in general, and is also ex officio the Lord Master of Trade. Held by The Baron de Stanfield. He appoints a deputy, the Gentleman of the Horse, to manage the day-to-day running of the Royal Mews.
All eight are cabinet level positions and holders are always Privy Counsellours and peers. Other senior political Government cabinet-level positions are listed below.


* Comptroller of the Exchequer: Deputy to the Lord High Treasurer, he is in charge of the Exchequer, that is, of collecting taxation, duties and levies, raising revenue for the Treasury. Nowadays, he also controls the fiscal policy of the Government. Held by the Rt. Hon. Peter Hofton.
Agriculture is somewhat developed helped by generally fertile soils, a temperate climate and plentiful rainfall which provides for excellent cropping for numerous small mixed farms. Great Nortend grows a wide variety of produce, and is mostly self-sufficient in terms of food.
* King's Clerk: Minister in charge of home affairs, policing, national security, fire brigades, the constabularies and other domestic matters, who heads the Clerk's Department. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir Aaron Billings.
* Attorney General: Chief law advisor to the Crown, and also has control over most prosecutions by the Crown, and heads the Attorney General's Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir Peter Finch.
* Foreign Secretary: Minister in charge of foreign affairs and foreign diplomacy, who heads the Foreign Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir George Drachington.
* Secretary at War: Minister in charge of the administration and organisation of the Royal Army, who heads the War Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Frederic Hondel.
* Postmaster General: Minister in charge of the running of and the head of the General Post Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir Lachlan James.
* Master of the Board of Education: Responsible for schools, universities, educational standards and colleges who heads the Board of Education. Held by the Rt. Hon. Dr Thomas Wolfuller.
* Lord Master of the Board of Agriculture: Responsible for management of agricultural practice, enclosure and surveys parishes by productivity. Held by the Rt. Hon. The Lord Baker.
* Master of the Board of Railways: Responsible for the railways, and Second Lord of Trade. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir William Gouldon.
* Master of the Board of Health: Responsible for health services, hospitals, nursing and social care. Held by the Rt. Hon. James Kinson.
* Surveyour General of Forests and Woods: Responsible for the administration of Crown land and the Royal Forests who heads the Surveyour General's Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Jonathan Hall.


=== Legislature ===
The local œconomies in Great Nortend are mostly centred around the county and hundred, especially the market towns established under charter. Weekly or fortnightly markets held in these towns form the backbone of local agricultural œconomies along with the commercial sector of tradesmen and merchants. More locally, parochial rates raised from the populace are used to further the parish's infrastructure, services and development.
Parliament, known formally as the Royal High Court of the Parliament, is the common law-making body and most supreme court in Great Nortend. It is theoretically a tetracameral legislature, including the King and four houses: the House of Knights, comprising the knights-of-the-shire sent from each county or county equivalent district; the House of Burgesses, comprising burgesses sent from certain chartered borough towns and cities; the House of Clergy, comprising of clergymen elected by their peers to represent their diocese; and the House of Lords, comprising the peers of the realm, archbishops, bishops and senior abbots. Additional members include the Scholars of Commons, attached to the House of Burgesses, and the two MPs representing the Armed Forces. The House of Clergy only has jurisdiction over theological issues relating to the canon law.


The Parliament sits at the Castle of the Lerdenstone, located between the Calbend, the River Hame, South Street and the Little Ditch Street within the Inner Ward of Cadell. The current structures mostly date from the 12th and 13th centuries, with later additions from the 16th and 19th centuries as the modern Government evolved into one similar to the Westminster system.
Œconomic growth in the manufacturing and service sectors is minimal, owing to isolationist policies and low levels of imports. The Government's policy is to levy high tariffs on incoming goods whilst levying lower tariffs on exported goods, which are mainly raw materials. Imports are mainly of iron ore, steel, copper and sand, as well as petroleum fuels and pharmaceuticals. Another growing focus is on tourism, which is becoming increasingly popular owing to the scenic natural landscapes the Erbonian countryside offers, as well as historical cities, towns and villages.  


The two Houses of Commons sits in the Common Hall, a large chamber which dates from the 13th century and was originally the library of the Royal Council, which became the present Library of Commons. It is distinctive having a blue ceiling, blue carpet and deeply coloured wooden panelling and cabinetry with ornate plasterwork. The chamber still retains shelving on the walls of the hall which currently hold copies of most acts currently in force. Each chamber, in addition, has its own chambers though these are no longer used except during the Opening of the Court. The presiding member of the House of Burgesses and the speaker of the combined Houses of Commons is known as the Speaker (addressed as Mr Speaker). The deputy speaker is known as the Knight-Lieutenant (addressed as Mr Lieutenant), and is also the speaker of the House of Knights.
===Gross domestic product===
The nominal gross domestic product in the 2017-2018 tax year (same as the [[Civil year of Great Nortend|civil year]]) was around [[Pound marten|£]]2,704 million in nominal terms, and in purchase power parity terms around £5,678. The nominal GDP is broken down into £1,350 million in private household consumption, £500 million in private investment, £700 million in government spending, £314 million in exports and minus £160 million in imports.  


The House of Lords meets in the Great Chapel, a larger, more decorative chamber officially named the Chapel of St Giles, with a scarlet or sanguine and gold colour tone with rich mahogany panelling and woodwork. The chamber is still a royal collegiate chapel however the daily offices are dispensed with normally. The speaker is the Lord High Steuard, except when the King sits in, which since the 17th century have been the Earls Steuard of Barminster, in fact raised to the dukedom in 1833.
The GDP per capita for the 20 million [[Subjectship of Great Nortend|subjects]] is around £135 or approximately 16,125 US dollars although in PPP terms £284 or $34,051.


The House of Clergy meet in the Chapter House of St Giles, a semi-circular stone room. It is also the location of where the chapter of the College of St Giles meet. The speaker for the House of Clergy is the Dean of St Giles, the Very Rev'd John Wenland.
===Infrastructure===


Bills are presented to both houses for debate and voting, and must be assented to by a majority in the combined Houses of Commons and by a majority in the House of Lords before they may be presented to and then assented to by Sovereign in order to become law. The ceremony of Royal Assent is held in the House of Lords' chamber and occurs eight times a year.
== Demographics ==


=== Law and criminal justice ===
{| class="wikitable sortable zebra" style="{{float left}}"
Great Nortend has a legal system founded upon Nortan customary law, Hambrian customary law, court law and Anglo-Saxon law. The system is split into customary and court law, canon law and martial and admiralty law which is administered by a group of twenty types of court. Historically, justice was dealt by hundreds of courts convened by feudal lords, the remnants of which still remain today in the form of the manor courts and the courts of the Gardolian duchies. Courts nowadays are established according to statute law, including the Royal Courts Act as well as numerous charters for local courts.
! Rank
! Borough
! Population
! Shire
|-
| 1 ||[[Lendert-with-Cadell|Greater Lendert]]|| align="right" | 2,132,000 ||Greater Lendert
|-
|2 ||Rhise ||align="right"| 563,000 ||Ganningshire
|-
| 3 ||Faunslaughter|| align="right" | 423,000 || Faunshire
|-
|4||Limmes ||align="right"| 372,000 ||Larkshire
|-
|5 ||Polton ||align="right"| 181,000 ||Poltland
|-
|6 ||Southeymead ||align="right"| 155,600 ||Southeymeadshire
|-
|7 ||Mooping ||align="right"| 135,900 ||Teyshire
|-
|8 ||Tretford ||align="right"| 125,000 ||Herstlow
|-
|9 ||Walecester ||align="right"| 122,200 ||Walecestershire
|-
|10||Eamsford ||align="right"| 120,000 ||Eamshire
|-
|11 ||Durmen-on-Sea ||align="right"| 120,000 ||Durmenshire
|-
|12||Essingford ||align="right"| 107,400 ||Essingfordshire
|-
|13 ||Sulhampton ||align="right"| 104,400 ||Enley
|-
|14||Gibbingham ||align="right"| 102,900 ||Southannering
|-
|15||Downwich ||align="right"| 100,700 ||Leaton
|}
[[File:GNDemog.png|right|thumb|400px|Population age distribution in 2018. Note the stationary shape.]]As of the census survey taken in 2018, the estimated population of Great Nortend is 20,002,017, a mere 0·3 per cent increase from 2015. Approximately 92 per cent of the population is [[Arlethic peoples|Arlethic]].


The normal system of law as practised in the criminal and civil courts is a form of the adversarial system where barristers, advocates and sergeants-at-law present arguments which is then decided by a jury or in the case of appeals courts or senior courts, by the bench. The judge's main role is to sentence and to control the court's proceedings.  
Official Government policy as to generational replacement, taken in the 1980s to ensure national stability under the Steady State Policy, aims for a 0 per cent growth rate. Thus, the Government recommends a maximum of three children per family, although there is no prohibition on more. The crude birth rate is approximately 18·11 births per 1000 people, equivalent to just over the {{wp|Total_fertility_rate#Replacement rates|replacement rate}} of 2·11 births per woman.


Criminal cases are prosecuted by the Crown or a private subject against a defendant, known as the accused or prisoner (when in court or in custody). The prosecutor, normally the Attorney General on behalf of the Crown, will deliver either a bill of presentment or a bill of indictment to the petty sessions in the former case and to the quarter sessions in the latter case. A private subject would instead make an appeal of felony to a justice of the King's Chamber in court. A private subject may not prosecute a misdemeanour.
The vast majority of the population, over 65 per cent thereof, live outside of towns and cities, and over 40 per cent are engaged directly in the agricultural industry. The largest city is [[Lendert-with-Cadell]], along with its surrounding urbanised region, having a population of 4·33 million people.  


For all temporal criminal cases, there can be one of five outcomes. The main verdicts are that the defendant is found to be filed convict, filed acquit, clean acquit, and judged by God alone. There may also be a no verdict at all. All but 'filed convict' are acquittals. In ecclesiastical and admiralty cases, the verdicts used are pronounced by the judge, and are either 'guilty' or 'not guilty'. In the coroner's court, there are many verdicts as to the cause of death, including death by unlawful death, lawful death, suicide, act of God, old age, misadventure or neglect. Coroners may also declare verdicts open. In cases of treasure, or deaths of royal animals, the coroner may return verdicts as pertinent.
Unemployment of working-age able-bodied men of the lower and middle classes is low, at around 1·04 per cent. Average annual income of the lower and middle classes is in the region of £200 in the lower end and £500 in the higher end.  


For a civil case, no case can begin without the King's writ except in the manor courts. A plaintiff in personal cases or a demandant in real cases must obtain a writ from the Chancery to begin an action against the defendant or tenant. The result of a civil trial, is typically either that the defendant has good cause and reason or no good cause or reason, in response to the writ of action which all require that the defendant either do some act or attend court to show good cause and reason why he has not done so.
Greater mobility through cheap railway travel have been tempered by complicated feudal and tenure restrictions on the transfer and conveyancing of property leading to less of the rise of cities and large towns than in other countries.  


=== Military ===
=== Language ===
{{Main|Military of Great Nortend}}
The predominant language spoken in Great Nortend is English, which is the de facto national language. Over 95 per cent of the population hold English as their mother tongue, with less than 5 per cent claiming some proficiency with other languages.
The military is split into two branches, being the Navy Royal (NR) and the Royal Army (RA) respectively relating to naval (and air) warfare and land or terrestrial warfare. The Navy Royal is considered to be the superior service, owing to its more illustrious history, yet the Royal Army is larger in size by far.
 
The manpower of the armed forces of Great Nortend is mainly supplied by conscription and impressment. All male Erbonian subjects over the age of 17, having finished their secondary education and found fit for duty, are required to serve a minimum one year of national service followed by a ten year obligation in the reserve militia.
 
====Navy Royal====
The Navy Royal is the senior service of Erbonian military. It comprises of two divisions, being the Sea division and the Air division. The latter serves as the equivalent in Great Nortend of an air force.
 
The Sea Division has around 10,234 sailors and officers, including national servicemen, and 13,234 naval reservists, most of whom are seamen and officers in the merchant navy. The Air Division has 1,563 ordinary airmen and officers and 134 reservists, most being pilots for Royal Airways, the national flag carrier. The Navy Royal presently has 40 commissioned ships, 36 aircraft and numerous other smaller water craft and vessels.
 
====The Royal Army====
The Royal Army is by far the largest service of two. Its manpower is around 24,388 regular soldiers, 10,482 officers, 620,140 national servicemen and militia reservists, and 2,760 reserve officers on half pay. There are 112 regiments of foot, 16 artillery batteries, 23 cavalry and yeomanry regiments, and a number of other auxilliary or administrative corps.


====National Service====
The English used in Great Nortend is known as [[Erbonian English]] and slowly became widespread after the rise of the [[House of Anthord]] to the throne in the 16th century. Even nowadays, Erebian is spoken by people in the provinces of Cardoby and Hambria, as well as the shires of County Yeartey, Igoddal and Towshire in Nortend. Erebian, which like English is an [[Mede-Lorecian languages|Athlethic language]], is to an extent mutually intelligible with English. Its vocabulary is a base of Arlethic with a large number of Latin words interposed to a far greater extent than in English, retaining in many cases forms of the Latinate declensions and conjugations.
The National Service scheme requires most Erbonian male subjects over the age of 17 to enter either the Royal Army or Navy Royal as a national serviceman, if they do not enlist already voluntarily. National Service involves three to four months of initial training and then posting within the country or abroad for seven to eight months, with two one month breaks around the important holidays. National Service can be deferred until a man's 23rd birthday, after which criminal proceedings may be brought. This is common for those undertaking an apprenticeship and automatic for those studying for a degree at university.


Though national servicemen are usually assigned to a regiment of the Royal Army, the Navy does accept a limited number of national servicemen, mainly from coastal towns and villages, as well as those persons with existing links to the Navy Royal or merchant navy.
[[Court Latin]] is another important language in Great Nortend, being the official written language of law and the ''Curia Regis''. As such, all official statutes, writs and decrees are in Latin, though the oral language is English. When an official written text is to be read out, such as for a proclamation, an English translation, known as the „teller copy” is provided and read from. Latin is almost never spoken, except in Court in certain set phrases or in scholarly settings.


Regular national servicemen enter the armed forces as a private or seaman after completing basic training. Those persons who excelled in the General Examinations, or have otherwise have been able to secure the privilege, are able to attend the Royal Army College at Marse Dartson or the Royal Naval College at Canesea to be commissioned as an officer.
===Women===
 
Great Nortend is a heavily patriarchial society. It is often criticised abroad for maintaining traditional male and female roles in society where women are considered to have their responsibilities in “Children, Chambers and Church”. As such, there is no female representation in most Erbonian professional or official institutions, which are ''de facto'' or ''de jure'' male only.
After their active service, national servicemen are required to remain on the militia or naval reserve lists for at least ten years, being recalled at least three times yearly for training.
 
== Economy ==
{{See also|Taxation in Great Nortend}}
[[File:Farmhouse_at_Beckermonds._-_geograph.org.uk_-_285530.jpg|330px|thumbnail|right|A typical rural farm in Great Nortend, with an often substantial farm-house.]]The economy of Great Nortend is heavily agrarian, which provides the livelihood for around half of the population, and localised, with a domestic semi-regulated market economy favouring isolationist mercantilism. Agriculture is well-developed to early-modern levels, with the highly fertile soil, temperate climate and plentiful rainfall providing excellent cropping for numerous small mixed farms. Great Nortend grows a wide variety of produce, and is effectively entirely self-sufficient in terms of food.
 
The local economies in Great Nortend are mostly centred around the county and hundred, especially the market towns established under charter. Weekly or fortnightly markets held in these towns form the backbone of local agricultural economies along with the commercial sector of tradesmen and merchants. More locally, parochial rates raised from the populace are used to further the parish's infrastructure, services and development.
 
Greater mobility through cheap railway travel have been tempered by complicated feudal and tenure restrictions on the transfer and conveyancing of property leading to less of the rise of cities and large towns than in other countries. This is further controlled by the national policy of advocating for a replacement rate of births, with two children recommended per family, in an attempt to control overpopulation of the country.
 
Economic growth in the commercial and trade sectors is slow, owing to isolationist policies and low levels of imports. The Government's policy is to levy high tariffs on incoming goods whilst levying lower tariffs on exported goods, which are mainly raw materials in the form of wool, linen, cloth and some grain and meat, which is well-regarded by many. Imports are mainly of iron ore, steel, copper and sand, as well as petroleum fuels and pharmaceuticals. Another growing focus is on tourism, which is becoming increasingly popular owing to the scenic natural landscapes the Erbonian countryside offers, as well as historical cities, towns and villages. As a result, the Nortan economy has been most self contained, with injections of foreign currency from exports and tourists, and with a constant outflow of money to pay for those goods which Great Nortend is unable to produce by itself.
 
The nominal gross domestic product in the 2017-2018 tax year (same as the civil year) was around £1,600,000,000, though the PPP GDP is considered to be somewhat greater. The nominal GDP is broken down into £1,025 million in private household consumption, £158 million in private investment, £300 million in government spending, £231 million in exports and minus £108 million in imports. The GDP per capita for the 32 million subjects is around £50 or approximately 6,000 US dollars however does not reflect that general unemployment of married women in Great Nortend, and of non-monetary compensation for many domestic servants.
 
Unemployment of working-age able-bodied men of the lower and middle classes is low, at around 1·04 per cent. Average annual income of the lower and middle classes is in the region of £200 in the lower end and £400 in the higher end. Around 31 per cent of the population live in large towns and cities, with a majority of people residing in agrarian communities and around 40 per cent directly involved in the agricultural industry.
 
== Demographics ==
As of the census survey taken in 2018, the estimated population of Great Nortend is 32,102,002, a mere 0·3 per cent increase from 2015. This is a result of the official Government policy as to generational replacement, taken in the 1980s to ensure the continued viability of the Erbonian way of life. The vast majority of the population, over 65 per cent thereof, live outside of borough towns or cities, and over 40 per cent are engaged directly in the agricultural industry. The largest city is Lendert, along with its surrounding urbanised region, having a population of 4·33 million people.
 
=== Language ===
{{See also|Barardian|Murish}}
The predominent language spoken in Great Nortend is English, which is the de facto national language. Over 95 per cent of the population list English as their mother tongue, with less than 5 per cent claiming the native languages of Murish or Barardian which are still spoken by the rural peasantry around Mure and Barard respectively.
 
Latin is another important language in Great Nortend, being the official language used by the Church of Nortend. Around 42 per cent of people claim some ability to understand the language, the skill being higher in males than in women. Over the years, the use of Latin in the official church liturgy has declined drastically, but in more recent years there has been a shift back to the greater use of liturgical Latin.


=== Religion ===
=== Religion ===
{{main|Religion in Great Nortend}}{{See also|Church of Nortend}}
{{See also|Church of Nortend}}
{{Pie chart
{{Pie chart
  |thumb = right
  |thumb = right
| caption=Religion in Great Nortend as of 2017.
| caption=Religion in Great Nortend as of 2017.
  | label1 = Church of Nortend
  | label1 = Church of Nortend
  | value1 = 90.2 | color1 = blue
  | value1 = 94.9 | color1 = #323ea8
  | label2 = Other Protestant
  | label2 = Other Christian
  | value2 = 3.6 | color2 = red
  | value2 = 2.1 | color2 = #e93629
  | label3 = Judaism
  | label3 = Irreligious
  | value3 = 2.2 | color3 = yellow
  | value3 = 1.3 | color3 = #8C8C8C
  | label4 = Roman Catholicism
  | label4 = Jewish
  |value4 = 2.1 | color4 = orange
  |value4 = 0.9 | color4 = #FFD700
  | label5 = Irreligious
  | label5 = Other
  | value5 = 1.8 | color5 = purple
  | value5 = 0.8 | color5 = white
|label6 = Other
|value6 = 0.1 | color6 = white
  }}
  }}
[[File:SultheyCathedral.jpg|230px|thumbnail|left|The Cathedral and Abbey Church of St Laurence, commonly known as Sulthey Cathedral, is the seat of the Archbishop of Sulthey, the Primate of Erbonia.]]The Church of Nortend is the established state church of Great Nortend following an Orthodox-Catholic-Protestant blend of Christianity known as Cardicanism. It is consequently the largest church in Great Nortend, with over 90 per cent of Erbonian subjects in communion at least nominally with it. Other religions in Great Nortend are quite minor, and include to an extent other Protestant denominations, Judaism and Roman Catholicism and Judaism. Atheism or irreligiosity is extremely low, and is estimated to afflict less than 2 per cent of the population.
[[File:Ely_Cathedral_from_Quanea_Drove_C.jpg|250px|thumbnail|left|Sulthey Abbey, founded by St. Lawrence in 730, is the seat of the Lord Archbishop of Sulthey, the Primate of Erbonia.]]The Church of Nortend is the established state church of Great Nortend following a denomination of Christianity known as Cardicanism. It is consequently the largest church in Great Nortend, with over 90 per cent of [[Subjectship of Great Nortend|Erbonian subjects]] in communion at least nominally with it. The state church enjoys special privileges in Great Nortend, and being a Cardican is a prerequisite for many public occupations and offices. The [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign of Great Nortend]] is by law the Supreme Governour Mundane of the Church and titled the Vicar of Christ.


The state church enjoys special privileges in Great Nortend, and being a Cardican is a prerequisite for many public occupations and offices. The [[Monarchy of Great Nortend|Sovereign of Great Nortend]] is by law the Supreme Governour Mundane of the Church and titled the Vicar of Christ.
Other religions in Great Nortend are quite minor, and include to an extent other Protestant denominations, Judaism and Roman Catholicism and Judaism. Atheism or irreligiosity is extremely low, and is estimated to afflict less than 2 per cent of the population. There is discrimination against other religions both in law and socially. For example, those of other religions cannot hold public worship services except in specially licensed buildings, of which only one may be founded in any city or town, such as at the Great Synanogue in [[Lendert-with-Cadell]].


Great Nortend prohibits the practice of certain religions under the [[Religion in Great Nortend#Prohibitions|Prohibitions Act, 13 Cath. II.]]. These include Islam and Scientology, which have been deemed 'heretical cults'. Recent changes in the law have made the practice of the former permissible in certain cases.
Great Nortend prohibits the practice of certain religions under the ''Prohibitions Act''.<ref>''Prohibitions Act'', 13 Cath. II.</ref> These have included "Mohammedanism” (Islam) and Scientology, which have been deemed 'heretical cults'. Recent changes in the law in 2019 have made the practice of Mohammendanism permissible in certain cases.<ref>''Prohibitions Act Amendment Act''.</ref>


=== Education ===
=== Education ===
Education in Great Nortend is compulsory and effectively universal for children aged between six and fourteen, normally through either a state or independent junior school and senior school. Schooling through tutelage, known as private schooling, with a governess is relatively common for the upper classes during the younger years; however, schooling in the regimented public schooling system (c.f. private schooling) is de rigeur over around the age of twelve. The system is split between state schools and independent schools, which are further split into the common schools, cathedral schools and new schools.  
{{Main|Education in Great Nortend}}
Education in Great Nortend is divided into four stages :— infant (2–6), junior (6–10), middle (10–14) and senior (14–18). Junior and middle schooling are compulsory and universal for all children.<ref>''Schooling Act''.</ref>  The schooling system is split between state and independent schools. Education through tutelage, known as private education, is permitted but rare.


====Primary education====
====Primary education====
Primary education ideally begins at the age of five and ends at the age of eleven. The year levels in most schools are termed Infants, Lower or Bottom Junior, Second Junior, Third Junior and Upper or Top Junior respectively, corresponding to Reception to Year Six in another countries.  
{{See also|Education in Great Nortend#Junior }}
[[File:GNSm.png|thumb|250px|A school master in academic dress.]]
Primary education begins at the age of six and ends at the age of ten. The year levels in most schools are termed Lower or Bottom Junior, Second Junior, Third Junior and Upper or Top Junior respectively, corresponding to Year Two to Year Five in another countries.  


The recommended curriculum produced by the Board of Education includes studies in mathematics, English, history, geography, art and music, with introduction to Latin and French by Third Junior for boys and girls respectively. In all state schools and in most independent schools, attendance at chapel is compulsory at least once a week, usually on Wednesdays, and is taken by the local parson if possible. Religious instruction occurs usually during chapel services. Organised sports and games are also considered an important part of primary education.
The National Curriculum issued by the Board of Schooling includes studies in mathematics, English, history, geography, art and music, with introduction to Latin by Third Junior. In all state schools and in most independent schools, attendance at chapel is compulsory at least thrice a week, usually on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and is taken by the local parson or a school chaplain. Religious instruction occurs usually during chapel services. Organised sports and games are also considered an important part of primary education.


====Secondary education====
====Secondary education====
{{See also|General Examinations}}
{{See also|Education in Great Nortend#Senior}}
Secondary education begins typically at the age of twelve in what is known at most state schools as First Form. Thence, pupils progress form by form until Fifth Form. The state secondary school system practises grade retention, meaning pupils who have failed to master the prescribed studies in the end-of-year examinations risk being unable to advance form unless he passes at the start-of-year examinations.
Secondary education begins with middle schooling typically at the age of ten in what is known as First Form. Thence, pupils progress to the Second Form, and then to the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms. Thereafter, pupils at independent schools may progress to senior schooling, in the Fourth Form, the Fifth Form and the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms.


The recommended curriculum for secondary education includes more advanced subjects such as algebra, trigonometry, calculus, ancient history, literary exegesis, rhetoric, theology &c. whilst continuing studies in music, art, Latin and French. Service in the cadet corps is often compulsory for boys from Second Form to Third Form. At the end of Third Form, pupils choose their supplementary subjects for the General Examination, which is held at the end of Fifth Form. Girls conclude their studies in Fifth Form whilst boys wishing to attend university will continue on for another years or two in the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms.
The national curriculum for middle and senior schooling includes more advanced subjects such as algebra, trigonometry, calculus, ancient history, literary exegesis, rhetoric, theology &c. whilst continuing studies in music, art, Latin and French. Boys are be required to join the [[King's Cadet Corps|Cadet Corps]] during the First Form. At the end of the Second Form, pupils choose their supplementary subjects for the [[Education in Great Nortend#General Examinations|General Examinations]], which are held at the end of the Upper Third Form. Those continuing in senior schooling will study for the Exhibition Examinations, held at the end of the Upper Sixth Form.


====Tertiary education====
====Tertiary education====
{{See also|Education in Great Nortend#Further education|University of Aldesey}}
The tertiary education sector is made up of sundry and varied providers, including the three ancient universities, various teaching and practical colleges, apprenticeships and informal on-the-job training.
The tertiary education sector is made up of sundry and varied providers, including the three ancient universities, various teaching and practical colleges, apprenticeships and informal on-the-job training.


Line 574: Line 582:


=== Cuisine ===
=== Cuisine ===
The cuisine of Great Nortend is strongly influenced by its agrarian pastorality, which led to the development of the cookery traditions of the country. There tends to be an emphasis on meats over the more humble vegetable, with the focus of most dishes being on a type of meat with vegetables used to enhance the flavour of, or to complement the main meat dish.  
{{Main|Erbonian cuisine}}
[[File:Steak_pie_with_veg_and_gravy.JPG|thumb|250px|An individual steak pie is often served at inns in Great Nortend.]]The cuisine of Great Nortend is regional and intimately connected with the local land. “High cookery” is the form of Erbonian cuisine perfected by the Compagnie of Cooks, which is mostly an elaboration and refinement of traditional regional dishes.  


The most common meats are pork, beef, mutton or lamb and chicken, in order of popularity. Pork is the most extensively used meat, and nearly the entirety of the pig is used as a component of some dish. Traditional cooking methods include roasting, baking, braising, stewing, boiling and frying, often with the liberal use of fragrant vegetables, herbs and spices. Preservation techniques have also lent a distinctive character to the Nortan culinary culture, with sausages, hams, puddings, pies and potted meats being particularly popular.
Overall, there tends to be an emphasis on meats over the vegetable, with the focus of most meals being on one or more meats or fish with vegetables used to enhance or complement. The most common meats are beef, pork, mutton or lamb, and chicken, in order of popularity. Nearly the entirety of most animals are used as a component of some dish. Fish and seafood is very common given the widespread observation of [[Church of Nortend#Fasting|fast days]]. Traditional cooking methods include roasting, baking, braising, stewing, boiling and frying, often with the use of fragrant vegetables, herbs and spices. Preservation techniques are also part to the Erbonian cookery. Sausages, hams, puddings, pies and potted meats are particularly popular.


=== Sports ===
=== Games and Sports ===
Games and sports are distinguished in Great Nortend principally by their nature. A „game” is commonly defined as an activity played for competitive amusement, whereas a „sport” is an activity practised ''per se''. Many sportsmen are similarly good players of games, and ''vice versa''.
 
====Games====
{{See also|Stinning}}
{{See also|Stinning}}
Sports in Great Nortend are mostly home-grown, albeit with a presence of international sports such as football and cricket. The alpine regions in the Monmorians are well-suited to alpine skiing, known in country as skedding, during the winter season.  
Games in Great Nortend include home-grown games as well as international games such as football and cricket.
 
The two most popular team games in Great Nortend are stinning and cricket. The former is a form of football and similar somewhat to rugby union or Australian rules, played with two teams on a round, oval-shaped turfed pitch known as the green with goal-posts at either end, split into three sections longitudinally. Cricket is played in Great Nortend in accordance with the Laws of Cricket as promulgated by the Royal Causildon Club, which manages both stinning and cricket in Great Nortend. Traditionally, stinning is played in the winter and cricket in the summer on the same green, by the same team, both games having 11-a-side teams.
 
Other popular team games include hockey, whelts and rounders, as well as other competitive games such as (lawn) bowls and tennis.
 
====Sports====
{{See also|Nortish decathlon}}
There is a rich history of various sports being practised in Great Nortend, including athletics, swimming, rowing, fencing, hunting and shooting. Deer, boar and fox hunting with hounds is a traditional formal sport, whilst shooting is a common week-end pasttime for the upper classes. Horse riding is popular as well, intimately connected with the widespread use of horses in everyday life. The alpine regions in the Monmorians are well-suited to alpine skiing, known in the country as sleighing, during the winter season.  


The two most popular team sports in Great Nortend are stinning and cricket. The former is a form of football and similar somewhat to rugby union, played with two teams on a round, oval-shaped turfed pitch known as the ''green'' with goal-posts at either end, split into three sections longitudinally. Cricket is played in Great Nortend in accordance with the international Laws of Cricket, and the domestic laws as promulgated by the Royal Causildon Club, which manages both stinning and cricket in Great Nortend.
The [[Nortish decathlon]] combines ten common sports into a single programme, and is fairly popular in Great Nortend.


Traditionally, stinning is played in the winter and cricket in the summer on the same green, by the same team, both sports having 11-a-side.
==References==
{{Reflist}}


Other popular team sports include Allord game, whelts, rowing (boating) and rounders, as well the other competitive games such as (lawn) bowls, real tennis and athletics. Great Nortend has a long tradition of horse-back riding as well, intimately connected with the widespread use of horses in everyday life.
{{GNC}}


{{Great Nortend}}
{{Arlethic peoples}}[[Category:Countries]][[Category:Countries_in_Astyria]][[Category:Absolute monarchies]]
[[Category:Great Nortend]][[Category:Astyria]]

Latest revision as of 07:18, 2 January 2023

Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria
Regnum Nortiæ Gardoliæ et Hambriæ
Motto: 
  • “Dominus Dominium dedit” (Royal motto)
  • “Quoniam filii sactorum sumus” (Parliamentary motto)
Anthem: "Rex lætabitur in virtute tua"
(The King shall joy)
Great Nortend within Teudallum and Lorecia
Great Nortend within Teudallum and Lorecia
CapitalLendert-with-Cadell
Recognised national languagesErbonian English
Ethnic groups
86% Arlethian
8% Ethlorekoz
5% Other
GovernmentParliamentary Monarchy
• Sovereign
King Alexander II
Sir Spencer de Stornton
Cardinal Sebastian Williams
LegislatureThe High Court of the Parliament
House of Lords
Houses of Commonsa
Area
• Metric
100,851.4865 km2 (38,938.9766 sq mi)
• Catherinian
34,100 square Catherinian miles (158,000,000 Cath. acres)
Population
• 2019 estimate
10,002,017
GDP (PPP)2018 estimate
• Total
£5,678 million ($681,097 million)
• Per capita
£284 ($34,051)
GDP (nominal)2018 estimate
• Total
£2,704 million ($324,332 million)
• Per capita
£135 ($16,215)
CurrencyPound marten (GNP)
Time zoneUTC+0:30 (DMT)
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideleft
Calling code+37
Internet TLD
  1. Formed of the House of Burgesses and House of Knights.

Great Nortend, formally known as the Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria, is an island nation at the north-eastern tip of the Mederano Peninsula in Astyria, comprising the three civil provinces of Nortend, Hambria and Cardoby. It shares no land borders with any other country; however, it has a sea border with Nikolia to the south across the Duke of Yarron's Sea. To the west is the Mederano Sea and to the east the Wet Water.

The main landmass of the Kingdom is formed of the islands of Greater and Lesser Erbonia. The country has a population of around 32 million inhabitants and still predominantly pastoral with large swathes of woodland and uncultivated land. The largest island in the Kingdom excluding the two main islands, is Cardoby, located off the coast of north-eastern Nortend. Great Nortend is considered to be mostly self-sustaining in terms of food production with net exports of corn.

Names

The formal name for the country is the „Kingdom of Nortend, Cardoby and Hambria”. The Kingdom's short name for diplomatic purposes is „Erbonia”, which also refers to the islands of the archipelago as a whole, is from the Latin „Erbonia”, a backformation of the longer „Insulæ Erbonicæ”, which literally means the „Erebic Islands”. „Great Nortend” is a common general term for the entire country, encompassing the entire kingdom and inclusive of all islands and isles separate from the two main landmasses.

„Nortend” is derived from the Erebic name „Nordenland”, meaning „land of the Nords”, the Nords being one of the major tribes that migrated from what is now Noordenstaat, along with the Cardes and Sexers. It thus could be said that both Noordenstaat and Nortend share the same name. The name „Nortend” is often used to refer to what is really Great Nortend. „Cardoby” is too derived from Erebic, meaning the „island of the Cardes”, as the island was the location of a Gardolian kingdom of the Cardes.

The name „Hoebrideland” derives from the Cothish name for the former Kingdom of Hambria „Hoembride” which means literally, „The kingdom (in the) mountain valleys”, a corruption of the Hoebric words for „mountain” (perme) and „valley” (bul) with the Cothish suffix for „kingdom” (rice). The modern Latin name for the province, „Hambria”, is a mediaeval Latinisation of Hoembride.

A person from Nortend is known as a „Nortchman”. „Nortish” is the main adjective relating to both Nortend and Great Nortend. The formal adjective for the kingdom, however, is „Erbonian”, as seen in the Sovereign's diplomatic style, His Erbonian Majesty and the names of more modern institutions such as the Royal Erbonian Airways and the Royal Erbonian Countryside Society. The gentilics of Hambria are „Hambrian” as an adjective and „Hoebridman” as a noun referring to persons. The adjectival form of Cardoby is „Gardolian” whilst a person from Cardoby is known as a „Cardishman”.

The use of the root word „Nort” in „Great Nortend” and „Nortish” to refer to the whole country is controversial in some academic spheres, as it subsumes Hoebrideland and Cardoby under the banner of „Nortend”. On the other hand, it is argued that the entire Erbonian population is Nortish insofar as the Hoes by the 16th century had effectively assimilated into the dominant Nortch Arlethic society, something which had occured even earlier with the Cardes and Sexers.

History

Antiquity and Arlethic Conquest

The Isles of Erbonia have been settled since antiquity by Ethlorek tribes, which spread throughout the island in mostly disparate populations including the Hoes to the north and the Erebes to the south of the Monmorians, the large mountain range which separate modern-day Hambria from Nortend. By 300 BC, a distinctive Erebic culture had emerged in the south, speaking varieties of Common Erebbonic, a North Ethlorek language. However, the Erebes peaked in unity in the 2nd century and by the 3rd century had become increasingly factionalised and weakend by infighting.

Lured by the fertile lands, the Arlethic Nords, Sexers and Cardes from what is now Noordenstaat arrived in Lesser and Middle Erbonia and established settlements. Originally, there were only sparse coastal settlements however in the late 3rd century, an increasing number of Arlethians arrived, displacing and slaughtering the Erebes in the Arlethic Conquest. Around eight major Arlethic kingdoms were formed in the country which were, roughly from north to south :— Bissex, Norsax, Cardoby, Barard, Oscardes, Lanorts, Suthnorts and Dunricia. Whilst in Middle Erbonia the Sexers and Cardes mixed, Lesser Erbonia became purely Nortish.

Early Middle Ages

Edmund the Good and his four sons.

Over the next few centuries, Lanort through marriage and conquest expanded, taking over Suthnort, Dunricia and Dorsex, forming the Kingdom of Nortend, speaking Low Erebic. Cardoby also took over Bissex and Norsax, forming the Lordship of Cardoby, speaking High Erebic. Barard and Almede fell to Nortend in the Barard-Nortish wars in the 6th century. Cardoby itself was conquered by Nortend in the late 7th century during the reign of Fredwin Longlobes; however, Norsax was lost to the Cothens under the reign of Oslac during a period of Cothen expansion. The Sexer Princes of the Cothens, now also controlling much of southern Hambria, were recognised as de facto suzerain by the northern Ethlorek Wignod and Tunel tribes by the early 8th century. They began to style themselves the King of Hoebride.

The Christian missionary, St. Laurence, arrived on the shores of Nortend in A. D. 744 during the reign of Egbert de Lanort by order of the Pope Zachary I to convert the heathens. After Egbert died in 753 after being mortally wounded by an arrow during battle with the Cothens, the Christian prince Hartmold de Mure took the Nortish throne after the War of the Interregnum. Through his reign and the consecutive reigns of Æthelfrey, Erwin and Edmund the Good, Christianity spread through the Kingdom. Under the rule of Edmund, who styled himself as King of Nortend and Lord of Cardoby, the Nortish armies conquered the remaining kingdom of Oscardes and reclaimed Norsax, until the entire country south of the Monmorians was united in one single Christian Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby. Edmund the Good died in the Wars of the Monmorians, in 894, fighting the Cothens, and was recognised almost immediately as a martyr of the church.

-- Nicolian invasion? --

High Middle Ages

The only surviving portion of the Carta Erboniæ Libertatum which was issued by Edward I in 1052 to appease the Kingdom.

The House of Barmast claimed the throne of Nortend and Cardoby in 973 under Gerolph. The 11th century brought conflict to the northern regions of Nortend during the Peasant's Rebellion from 1034 to 1036 against increasingly high royal taxes. Jane ordered the execution of peasant villagers as punishment for their tax resistance; however, her barons and the Church refused to kill their tenants, as it would lead to their loss of their own income and reduce the value of their land. Jane relented, and reduced taxes.

In response to Jane's poor reputation and continued disquiet amongst the population, her successor Edward I in 1052 issued the Carta Erboniæ Libertatum which made several promises, including importantly a provision promising that future taxes would be approved by the King's barons. The Charter was affirmed by his successor, Richard I and successive kings until Stephen refused to so do. After he unilaterally raised taxes in 1122, he was assassinated by Matthew de Chepingstow. His successor, Richard III, was forced to swear an oath to abide by the Charter prior to his coronation.

Following the Battle of Rodchester, the House of Dester gained the throne in 1267. By the form of the Charter sworn to by Eltbold at his coronation in 1268, Eltbold 'voluntarily' disclaimed his power to create laws in certain privileged matters without the consent of the Curia Regis. Though he still had the power to create laws, and to issue writs, commissions &c. in other matters, this provision in the Charter severely restricted the independence of the King to create laws without the consent of his courtiers and powerful officers of state.

Frustrated in his attempts to pass statutes, Charles I increasingly began to summon all of his barons (rather than only the more powerful) and representatives of the clergy, commons and boroughs to his court, to override the increasingly stubborn and rebellious Curia Regis. As assent was obtained by majority vote of those present at Court, the increased number of commoners wishing to curry favour with the Crown allowed Charles to pass statutes without breaking his oath. Under this new raft of statutes, Nortend prospered financially. By the 13th century, Lendert had become a large port for trade, especially of wool, corn, linen and dyestuffs.

Late Middle Ages

The Dester period was marked by the Battle of Travlesea in 1455, when two factions of the House of Dester, lead by Peter III and Geoffrey respectively, claimed the throne after the passing of Charles II in a hunting accident. Peter's forces overcame Geoffrey's and Peter was crowned in 1456. However, the dynasty ended when Peter IV died in 1518 without any heirs. He had been highly unpopular owing to a series of failed military campaigns and lavish spending which had substantially drained the coffers of the Treasury and resulted in the necessary levying of excessive taxes by the Parliament.

The title of king thence passed to William II of the House of Anthord in 1519 in a transfer of power which involved numerous interested parties. The House of Anthord spoke the then minority language of Old English, owing to their [] roots. This influenced the shift of the common language from Erebian to Middle English. William began to appoint the senior or esteemed members of the Curia to his Privatum Consilium or 'Privy Council', to advise him privately on matters of state. They soon gained powers to act on the Sovereign's behalf. As Nortend increased the size of her army and navy, developing greater merchant shipping fleets, William needed to make a strategic marriage for his son, George. Thus, he arranged a marriage with XX of Aquitayne, who married the future King George I in 1522 in a lavish ceremony. As a dowry, YY of Aquitayne granted to William the islands of Hastica far off the coast of Ceria, becoming the first and only overseas possessions of the House of Anthord.

Union, Schism and Cleaving

Alexander I is considered the Father of the Nation for his Three Great Statutes of Limmes, Supremacy and Cleaving.

In 1571, the future Charles III married the Princess of the Cothens, Clenancy de Cothen a Rhise, heir apparent to the Hambrian throne. After Charles III's early death in 1599, Clenancy became Queen of Hambria. Clenancy died in 1623 and her son, Alexander I, became King of Nortend and Cardoby and King of Hambria. Despite the personal union, Hambria continued to function separately from Nortend and Cardoby, with its own currency, weights and measures (the pound of Rhise or libra Cothenorum), social customs, languages (Cothish), legislature (the Curage of Rhise) and judicial system.

In 1614, Alexander I rejected the supremacy of the Pope in the Proclamation of Manfarnham, and established the Church of Nortend as an independent national church by the Statute of Limmes. In 1615, he by the Statute of Supremacy appointed himself the Supreme Governour of the Church Mundane. Though this “Great Schism” was a controversial move amongst the clergy, it was supported by the nobility and commoners suspicious of Rome. This act escalated tensions between the Exponential Empire and Nortend, leading to the Battle of Hastica of 1650 which led to the loss of Hastica.

After eighteen years of personal union, the Kingdom of Nortend and Cardoby and the Kingdom of Hambria were joined in the Statute of Cleaving of 1642 whereby Nortish law and bodies replaced or subsumed their Hambrian counterparts. Rebellion in Hambria ensued after the excessive taxes of 5 per cent on tithable revenues were levied by Lendert. The so-called Hambrian Rebellion culminated in the Battle of Borlockton in 1646; however, the Nortish Army subdued the peasants, and the rebellion ended with the signing of the Treaty of Rhise granting power to the old Hambrian Curage of Rhise, though sitting in Lendert, for the setting of taxes and other matters.

Modern times

Mary's reign marked the beginning of the Modern Era of the history of Great Nortend.

It is commonly reckoned that modern times began with the accession of Mary in 1736. The Olnite Matter regarding her marriage to the Roman Catholic Earl of Scode in 1740 set in motion the origins of the modern political system. The marriage also brought about a dramatic improvement in Great Nortend's relations with the Exponential Empire which led to the return of Hastica in 1743. It also signalled the demise of the strongly Lutheran Protestant faction of Church of Nortend, which turned towards a more orthodox, albeit reformed, theology after the Akeeper Settlement.

The industrial revolution spread across Great Nortend slowly during the end of the 18th century and through the 19th, initially with the rapid building of canals and opening of coal mines followed by the rapid expansion of the railways from the mid-19th century. The various Combination Acts ended the historical system of feudal open strip-farming over much of Nortend and lowland Hambria by establishing conterminous fields under the control of a single tenant, thereby increasing efficiency and yields significantly. This reduced the number of people required to work the land from nearly 90 per cent of the population to less than two-thirds.

In response to the rapid changes brought on by industrialisation, foreign trade and modernity, various reactionary movements arose. The Romantic and Nationalist movements spread, advocating for a return to supposed feudal values of loyalty, hard work and faith over profit, convenience and materialism. This developed into the nationalist conservative movement in the 20th century, and continues to inform contemporary politics and social values to-day. The Coalition has been dominant in Erbonian politics with a majority in Parliament since the treasurership of Sir Henry de Foide.

Great Nortend continues to have a highly reactionary society, remaining lethargic in social and technological change since the early 20th century. The Erbonian oeconomy declined from its heights in the 19th century, and has only regained some of its losses in the last few decades. It uses the Catherinian system of weights and measures rather than the internationall widespread metric system. Despite some opposition, electricity is gaining ground in the country, although widely generated by specialised generator mills or as a side product of traditional water and wind mills. However, access to the Internet remains limited to official use, and the country is heavily reliant on the telegraphic, telephone and postal networks.

Geography

An alpine meadow in autumn in the Monmorians.

Erbonia is the general name for all of the islands and isles that make up the domestic realm or dominion of Great Nortend, excluding the colonial islands of St Parth and Hastica. Of the around twenty-three islands and isles thereof, the three major islands are Lesser Erbonia, Greater Erbonia, and Cardoby. The landmass, including all associated islands and isles, has a total area of approximately 190,542 square kilometres, 64,423 square Catherinian miles or 73,569 square Imperial miles. The country has no land borders with any other nation, but is separated from Nikolia by the Yarron Strait. It is located off the main land-mass of Teudallum, specifically the Mederano Peninsula, and is to the west of the northern end of the Putin Strait.

Approximately 35% of Erbonia's land is forested, of which 32% is managed woodland. Around 3·5% is built-up, with the rest being either cultivated or uncultivated land such as pastures, alpine meadows, hay meadows, wetlands, peat bogs and marshes. Erbonia's only substantially mountainous areas lie above the area known as the Medden lowlands in Greater Erbonia, including the Monmorians, Elps and Hambrian uplands. The Monmorians are a mountain chain spanning the width of Greater Erbonia, where they separate the civil province of Nortend from Hambria. They include the highest peak in Great Nortend, Gorblanhail, which is 8,792 ft (2,625 m) above sea level. The chain is part of the larger mountainous alpine region of the Elps. A smaller latitudinal hilly belt in the centre of Lower Erbonia is known as the Central Welds; however, it is mainly characterised by steeply rolling hills. The rest of the isles is mostly arable or forested lowlands, with areas of polderland in the south in Walecester and Swent.

In terms of geological resources, Erbonia has rich coal deposits, mainly in Lesser Erbonia and south-eastern Greater Erbonia. Lead, copper and tin are found in some regions too. Hambria possesses emerald-bearing rock in some regions of the Elps, whence Hambrian emeralds are mined.

Climate

Köppen-Geiger map of Great Nortend.

The majority of Great Nortend has a cool-temperate oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb), influenced by its geography as a collection of islands. The upland regions surrounding of the Monmorians and highlands north thereof have a subpolar oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfc) whilst the mountain ranges themselves have a subarctic climate (Köppen: Dfc) with polar tundras at their peaks (Köppen: ET). There is a significant temperature difference between the seasons, and snowfall is very common during winter, especially in Hambria. Much of Great Nortend is known for its habitual 'sun-showers', wherein light rain falls during an otherwise sunny day. There is an average monthly precipitation level of around two inches.

Flora

The isles of Erbonia have a wide range of vascular plant species. Both islands of Lesser and Greater Erbonia have a large number of native or historically introduced trees, including alder, apple, ash, beech, birch, box, cherry, chestnut, cyprus, elm, hawthorn, lime, maple, oak, pear, poplar, sycamore and yew. A number of these are important wood, coppicing or orchard species. The broad elm is the most common species of tree in Great Nortend, with a wide range spreading across the country below the Monmorians. It is the oak, however, which is considered the national tree.

The islands also has a wealth of wildflower species, widespread across the entire country. As most weedkillers, insecticides and pesticides are not legal in agriculture, species such as cornflowers, poppies, clover, daisies, tulips, foxgloves, violets, heather, gorse, buttercups, primroses, daffodils, anemones and orchids are common and widespread.

Politics

Great Nortend is a unitary semi-constitutional monarchy. The state is embodied in the Crown, which is represented by the Sovereign, who is currently Alexander II, King of Nortend and Hambria and Lord of Cardoby. The Sovereign by convention takes a less active rôle in policy-making, although he retains wide-ranging semi-absolute powers. The day-to-day government is headed by the Lord High Treasurer who is appointed by the King from the ranks of House of Lords, although commoners are often elevated to the House of Lords for the purpose of being appointing Lord Treasurer.[1] The office is equivalent to that of a Prime Minister. However, unlike in a Westminster Parliament, the Lord Treasurer is not always the leader of the largest party in the lower house, which since the 1950s has always been the Company of Scodeliers.

Executive

The former Lord High Treasurer, the Duke of Limmes.

The Great Council, consisting of the King and his Counsellours, is the full Curia Regis of the Kingdom. However, in practice, executive power is mostly delegated to the smaller Privy Council and the Ministry which includes Cabinet ministers as well as the Utter Ministry. The functioning executive of Great Nortend is directed by the King and the Cabinet, the latter headed by the Lord High Treasurer, who as the head of H. M. Treasury and Exchequery, is primus inter pares and de facto head thereof.

Formally, the most senior ministers in Great Nortend are the seven Lord Officers of State. These form the ceremonial core of the Privy Council and Cabinet and are either hereditary, indicated with an asterisk in the list below, or appointments for life, excepting that of the Lord High Treasurer. They are, in order of precedence, the :—

  • Lord High Steuard*: The head of the Royal Household. Also the speaker of the House of Lords and the senior-most judge under the King, deputising for the King in the Court of Counsellours. Held by The Earl of Barminster.
  • Lord High Chancellour: The deputy speaker of the House of Lords and head of H. M. Chancery responsible for administration of the courts. Keeper of the Great Seal of the Realm. Administrator of the Church of Nortend. Held ex officio by the Lord Bishops of Chepingstow, who delegates to the Bishop of Laveshot most of his ecclesiastical and religious duties.
  • Lord High Treasurer: The head of H. M. Treasury and Exchequery, and principal minister of the Government. Held by Sir Spencer de Stornton.
  • Lord High Chamberlain*: Deputy in charge of the Royal Household, as well as responsible for organising ceremonial occasions such as state visits and weddings, and also serves as the King's representative in the House of Lords. Also serves as the Chief Justice of the Court of the Ermine Office. Held by The Earl of Godsucham.
  • Lord High Admiral*: The Admiral of the Fleet, the ceremonial head of the Navy Royal. Held by The Duke of Derham.
  • Lord High Constable*: Originally the commander of the Royal Army. Nowadays, the ceremonial King's Marischal thereof and also the Chief Justice of the Court of the Marischal and Constable. Held by The Margrave of Lasmere.
  • Lord High Equerry: Originally responsible for the running of the Royal Mews. Now holds the office of Lord Master of Trade. Held by The Baron de Stanfield. He appoints a deputy, the Master of the Mews, to manage the day-to-day running of the Royal Mews, assisted by the Crown Equerries.

Other senior political Government cabinet-level positions are listed below :—

  • Comptroller of the Exchequery: Deputy to the Lord High Treasurer, he is in charge of the Exchequer, that is, of collecting taxation, duties and levies, raising revenue for the Treasury. Held by Sir Martin Fitzgerald.
  • King's Clerk: Minister in charge of home affairs, policing, national security, fire brigades, the constabularies and other domestic matters, who heads the Clerk's Office. Held by Sir Aaron Billings.
  • Foreign Clerk: Minister in charge of foreign affairs and foreign diplomacy, who heads the Foreign Office. Held by the Rt. Hon. Sir George Drachington.
  • War Clerk: Minister in charge of the War Office. Held by Frederic Hondle.
  • Serjeant General at Law: Chief law advisor to the Crown, and also has control over most prosecutions by the Crown, and heads the Serjeant General's Office under the Chancery. Held by Sir Peter Finch.
  • Postmaster General: Minister in charge of the running of and the head of the General Post Office under the Clerk's Office. Held by James Kinson.
  • Master of the Board of Education: Responsible for schools, universities, educational standards and colleges who heads the Board of Education under the Clerk's Office. Held by Dr. Thomas Wolfuller.
  • Lord Master of the Board of Agriculture: Responsible for management of agricultural practice, enclosure and surveys parishes by productivity. Held by The Lord Baker.
  • Master of the Board of Health: Responsible for health services, hospitals, nursing and social care. Held by James Kinson.

Legislature

The King's Entrance to the Castle of Lerdenstone.

The Parliament, known formally as the High Court of the Parliament, is both the legislature as well as the highest court in Great Nortend. It is theoretically a tetracameral body, made up of the Sovereign and four houses of estate: the House of Knights, of the county knights sent from each county or “county equivalent district”; the House of Burgesses, of the burgesses sent from chartered borough towns and cities; the House of Clergy, of the clergymen elected by their peers to represent their dioceses; and the House of Lords, of the lords spiritual and temporal. However, in practice it is bicameral as the Houses of Knights and Burgesses sit together as the Houses of Commons, and the House of Clergy mostly only ceremonially. Additional members of Parliament include the Scholars of Commons, attached to the House of Burgesses, and the two MPs representing the Armed Forces in the House of Knights.

The Parliament meets at the Castle of the Lerdenstone, located between the Calbend, the River Hame, South Street and the Little Ditch Street within the Inner Ward of Cadell. Therein, the Houses of Commons sit in the Common Hall, a large chamber which dates from the 13th century and was originally the library of the Great Council, which became the present Library of Commons. It is distinctive having a blue ceiling, blue carpet and dark wood panelling and cabinetry with ornate plasterwork. The House of Lords meanwhile meets in the Great Chapel, a larger, more decorative chamber officially named the Chapel of St. Giles, with a scarlet or sanguine and gold colour tone with rich mahogany panelling and woodwork. The House of Clergy meet in the Chapter House of St. Giles, a semi-circular stone room. It is also the location of where the chapter of the College of St Giles meet.

Legislative and judicial bills are presented to both houses for debate and voting, and must be assented to by a majority in the Houses of Commons and the House of Lords before they are presented to the Sovereign for his Assentus Regis, or Royal Assent.

Administrative divisions

Great Nortend is split into four civil provinces, being the Province of Nortend, the Province of Hambria, the Lordship of Cardoby and the County of Hastica. These are administrative regions and should not to be confused with the ecclesiastical provinces.

Each province, except for Hastica, is divided up into a varying number of counties, which are known as duchies in Cardoby and as marches on the border between Nortend and Hambria, owing to their status as counties palatine where a duke and marquess hold power. Other current counties palatine include Sulthey and County Yeartey wherein the Archbishop of Sulthey and the Bishop of St Cleaves hold certain powers. The Province of the County of Hastica is comprised only of the County of Hastica.

The three counties of Larkshire, Teyshire and Enley are known as the 'Close Counties' as they enclose and fully surround Lendert-with-Cadell. Lendert-with-Cadell itself is a sui generis area exempt from any county by Royal warrant. The Greater Lendert area, however, is often considered a de facto county.

Each county has a King's Lieutenant appointed, in Hastica known as the Viceroy-Governour, who as viceroy represents the King in his constitutional rôle. Therefore, the Lieutenant in theory commands the county militia and regiments, issues writs in the King's name, promulgates proclamations, prosecutes crimes, dispenses the King's justice and manages the county gaols, constabulary and prisons. He is assisted by a Sheriff who has main responsibility for the Lieutenant's judicial functions.

Counties in the Province of Nortend

Duchies in the Province of Cardoby

Counties in the Province of Hambria

Law and Justice

The law of Great Nortend is founded upon a mixture of customary law, chamber law and statute law, and administered by semi-feudal “sessions” courts as well as royal “chamber” courts. Judges are appointed by the Crown to serve at its pleasure. The Erbonian legal system differentiates between criminal law, common or civil law, admiralty law, martial law and ecclesiastical or canon law.

Military

The Earl of Barminster's Own Regiment of Foot (33th) on parade in Barminster.

The Armed Forces of Great Nortend is split into two branches, being the Royal Army and Navy Royal, administered by the War Office. There is no standalone air force in Great Nortend; however, the Air Division of the Navy Royal operates more or less independently of the Sea Divisions, simply as a practical matter.

The manpower of the Armed Forces is provided mainly by conscription by Muster Service where most Erbonian male subjects at the age of 18 are required to serve in either the Royal Army or Navy Royal if they do not enlist voluntarily. Muster Service involves three months of initial training and then posting within the country or abroad for nine months, with both military and labour duties.

Mustermen are usually assigned to a regiment of a corps of the Royal Army according to their parish, with all men from a given parish being conscripted together. The Navy does accept a limited number of mustermen with links to the naval or air professions. University students may train as and be commissioned as an officer during their degree. After their year of full-time Muster Service, mustermen are required to serve in the Home Service for another eight years before full discharge.

Œconomy

A typical rural farm in Great Nortend, with the often substantial farm-house.

The œconomy of Great Nortend is heavily agrarian, which provides the livelihood for around half of the population, and localised, with a domestic semi-regulated market œconomy favouring isolationist mercantilism. The workforce is almost evenly split into thirds, with one third of the workforce employed in each of the primary, secondary and tertiary sectors.

Agriculture is somewhat developed helped by generally fertile soils, a temperate climate and plentiful rainfall which provides for excellent cropping for numerous small mixed farms. Great Nortend grows a wide variety of produce, and is mostly self-sufficient in terms of food.

The local œconomies in Great Nortend are mostly centred around the county and hundred, especially the market towns established under charter. Weekly or fortnightly markets held in these towns form the backbone of local agricultural œconomies along with the commercial sector of tradesmen and merchants. More locally, parochial rates raised from the populace are used to further the parish's infrastructure, services and development.

Œconomic growth in the manufacturing and service sectors is minimal, owing to isolationist policies and low levels of imports. The Government's policy is to levy high tariffs on incoming goods whilst levying lower tariffs on exported goods, which are mainly raw materials. Imports are mainly of iron ore, steel, copper and sand, as well as petroleum fuels and pharmaceuticals. Another growing focus is on tourism, which is becoming increasingly popular owing to the scenic natural landscapes the Erbonian countryside offers, as well as historical cities, towns and villages.

Gross domestic product

The nominal gross domestic product in the 2017-2018 tax year (same as the civil year) was around £2,704 million in nominal terms, and in purchase power parity terms around £5,678. The nominal GDP is broken down into £1,350 million in private household consumption, £500 million in private investment, £700 million in government spending, £314 million in exports and minus £160 million in imports.

The GDP per capita for the 20 million subjects is around £135 or approximately 16,125 US dollars although in PPP terms £284 or $34,051.

Infrastructure

Demographics

Rank Borough Population Shire
1 Greater Lendert 2,132,000 Greater Lendert
2 Rhise 563,000 Ganningshire
3 Faunslaughter 423,000 Faunshire
4 Limmes 372,000 Larkshire
5 Polton 181,000 Poltland
6 Southeymead 155,600 Southeymeadshire
7 Mooping 135,900 Teyshire
8 Tretford 125,000 Herstlow
9 Walecester 122,200 Walecestershire
10 Eamsford 120,000 Eamshire
11 Durmen-on-Sea 120,000 Durmenshire
12 Essingford 107,400 Essingfordshire
13 Sulhampton 104,400 Enley
14 Gibbingham 102,900 Southannering
15 Downwich 100,700 Leaton
Population age distribution in 2018. Note the stationary shape.

As of the census survey taken in 2018, the estimated population of Great Nortend is 20,002,017, a mere 0·3 per cent increase from 2015. Approximately 92 per cent of the population is Arlethic.

Official Government policy as to generational replacement, taken in the 1980s to ensure national stability under the Steady State Policy, aims for a 0 per cent growth rate. Thus, the Government recommends a maximum of three children per family, although there is no prohibition on more. The crude birth rate is approximately 18·11 births per 1000 people, equivalent to just over the replacement rate of 2·11 births per woman.

The vast majority of the population, over 65 per cent thereof, live outside of towns and cities, and over 40 per cent are engaged directly in the agricultural industry. The largest city is Lendert-with-Cadell, along with its surrounding urbanised region, having a population of 4·33 million people.

Unemployment of working-age able-bodied men of the lower and middle classes is low, at around 1·04 per cent. Average annual income of the lower and middle classes is in the region of £200 in the lower end and £500 in the higher end.

Greater mobility through cheap railway travel have been tempered by complicated feudal and tenure restrictions on the transfer and conveyancing of property leading to less of the rise of cities and large towns than in other countries.

Language

The predominant language spoken in Great Nortend is English, which is the de facto national language. Over 95 per cent of the population hold English as their mother tongue, with less than 5 per cent claiming some proficiency with other languages.

The English used in Great Nortend is known as Erbonian English and slowly became widespread after the rise of the House of Anthord to the throne in the 16th century. Even nowadays, Erebian is spoken by people in the provinces of Cardoby and Hambria, as well as the shires of County Yeartey, Igoddal and Towshire in Nortend. Erebian, which like English is an Athlethic language, is to an extent mutually intelligible with English. Its vocabulary is a base of Arlethic with a large number of Latin words interposed to a far greater extent than in English, retaining in many cases forms of the Latinate declensions and conjugations.

Court Latin is another important language in Great Nortend, being the official written language of law and the Curia Regis. As such, all official statutes, writs and decrees are in Latin, though the oral language is English. When an official written text is to be read out, such as for a proclamation, an English translation, known as the „teller copy” is provided and read from. Latin is almost never spoken, except in Court in certain set phrases or in scholarly settings.

Women

Great Nortend is a heavily patriarchial society. It is often criticised abroad for maintaining traditional male and female roles in society where women are considered to have their responsibilities in “Children, Chambers and Church”. As such, there is no female representation in most Erbonian professional or official institutions, which are de facto or de jure male only.

Religion

Religion in Great Nortend as of 2017.

  Church of Nortend (94.9%)
  Other Christian (2.1%)
  Irreligious (1.3%)
  Jewish (0.9%)
  Other (0.8%)
Sulthey Abbey, founded by St. Lawrence in 730, is the seat of the Lord Archbishop of Sulthey, the Primate of Erbonia.

The Church of Nortend is the established state church of Great Nortend following a denomination of Christianity known as Cardicanism. It is consequently the largest church in Great Nortend, with over 90 per cent of Erbonian subjects in communion at least nominally with it. The state church enjoys special privileges in Great Nortend, and being a Cardican is a prerequisite for many public occupations and offices. The Sovereign of Great Nortend is by law the Supreme Governour Mundane of the Church and titled the Vicar of Christ.

Other religions in Great Nortend are quite minor, and include to an extent other Protestant denominations, Judaism and Roman Catholicism and Judaism. Atheism or irreligiosity is extremely low, and is estimated to afflict less than 2 per cent of the population. There is discrimination against other religions both in law and socially. For example, those of other religions cannot hold public worship services except in specially licensed buildings, of which only one may be founded in any city or town, such as at the Great Synanogue in Lendert-with-Cadell.

Great Nortend prohibits the practice of certain religions under the Prohibitions Act.[2] These have included "Mohammedanism” (Islam) and Scientology, which have been deemed 'heretical cults'. Recent changes in the law in 2019 have made the practice of Mohammendanism permissible in certain cases.[3]

Education

Education in Great Nortend is divided into four stages :— infant (2–6), junior (6–10), middle (10–14) and senior (14–18). Junior and middle schooling are compulsory and universal for all children.[4] The schooling system is split between state and independent schools. Education through tutelage, known as private education, is permitted but rare.

Primary education

A school master in academic dress.

Primary education begins at the age of six and ends at the age of ten. The year levels in most schools are termed Lower or Bottom Junior, Second Junior, Third Junior and Upper or Top Junior respectively, corresponding to Year Two to Year Five in another countries.

The National Curriculum issued by the Board of Schooling includes studies in mathematics, English, history, geography, art and music, with introduction to Latin by Third Junior. In all state schools and in most independent schools, attendance at chapel is compulsory at least thrice a week, usually on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and is taken by the local parson or a school chaplain. Religious instruction occurs usually during chapel services. Organised sports and games are also considered an important part of primary education.

Secondary education

Secondary education begins with middle schooling typically at the age of ten in what is known as First Form. Thence, pupils progress to the Second Form, and then to the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms. Thereafter, pupils at independent schools may progress to senior schooling, in the Fourth Form, the Fifth Form and the Lower and Upper Sixth Forms.

The national curriculum for middle and senior schooling includes more advanced subjects such as algebra, trigonometry, calculus, ancient history, literary exegesis, rhetoric, theology &c. whilst continuing studies in music, art, Latin and French. Boys are be required to join the Cadet Corps during the First Form. At the end of the Second Form, pupils choose their supplementary subjects for the General Examinations, which are held at the end of the Upper Third Form. Those continuing in senior schooling will study for the Exhibition Examinations, held at the end of the Upper Sixth Form.

Tertiary education

The tertiary education sector is made up of sundry and varied providers, including the three ancient universities, various teaching and practical colleges, apprenticeships and informal on-the-job training.

Culture

Cuisine

An individual steak pie is often served at inns in Great Nortend.

The cuisine of Great Nortend is regional and intimately connected with the local land. “High cookery” is the form of Erbonian cuisine perfected by the Compagnie of Cooks, which is mostly an elaboration and refinement of traditional regional dishes.

Overall, there tends to be an emphasis on meats over the vegetable, with the focus of most meals being on one or more meats or fish with vegetables used to enhance or complement. The most common meats are beef, pork, mutton or lamb, and chicken, in order of popularity. Nearly the entirety of most animals are used as a component of some dish. Fish and seafood is very common given the widespread observation of fast days. Traditional cooking methods include roasting, baking, braising, stewing, boiling and frying, often with the use of fragrant vegetables, herbs and spices. Preservation techniques are also part to the Erbonian cookery. Sausages, hams, puddings, pies and potted meats are particularly popular.

Games and Sports

Games and sports are distinguished in Great Nortend principally by their nature. A „game” is commonly defined as an activity played for competitive amusement, whereas a „sport” is an activity practised per se. Many sportsmen are similarly good players of games, and vice versa.

Games

Games in Great Nortend include home-grown games as well as international games such as football and cricket.

The two most popular team games in Great Nortend are stinning and cricket. The former is a form of football and similar somewhat to rugby union or Australian rules, played with two teams on a round, oval-shaped turfed pitch known as the green with goal-posts at either end, split into three sections longitudinally. Cricket is played in Great Nortend in accordance with the Laws of Cricket as promulgated by the Royal Causildon Club, which manages both stinning and cricket in Great Nortend. Traditionally, stinning is played in the winter and cricket in the summer on the same green, by the same team, both games having 11-a-side teams.

Other popular team games include hockey, whelts and rounders, as well as other competitive games such as (lawn) bowls and tennis.

Sports

There is a rich history of various sports being practised in Great Nortend, including athletics, swimming, rowing, fencing, hunting and shooting. Deer, boar and fox hunting with hounds is a traditional formal sport, whilst shooting is a common week-end pasttime for the upper classes. Horse riding is popular as well, intimately connected with the widespread use of horses in everyday life. The alpine regions in the Monmorians are well-suited to alpine skiing, known in the country as sleighing, during the winter season.

The Nortish decathlon combines ten common sports into a single programme, and is fairly popular in Great Nortend.

References

  1. Cf. Sir Henry de Foide, Sir Benjamin de Davies, Sir Spencer de Stornton, & al.
  2. Prohibitions Act, 13 Cath. II.
  3. Prohibitions Act Amendment Act.
  4. Schooling Act.