Nayonland: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox country | {{Infobox country | ||
| micronation = <!--yes if a micronation--> | | micronation = <!--yes if a micronation--> | ||
| conventional_long_name = | | conventional_long_name = Commonwealth of Nayonland | ||
| native_name = | | native_name = Komonwelt ng Lupangnayon ({{wp|Filipino language|Tagabay}}) <br/ > Mancomunidad de Terranayon ({{wp|Spanish language|Stillian}}) | ||
| common_name = Nayonland | | common_name = Nayonland | ||
| status = <!--Status of country--> | | status = <!--Status of country--> | ||
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}} | }} | ||
'''Nayonland''', officially the ''' | '''Nayonland''', officially the '''Commonwealth of Nayonland''' ({{wp|Filipino language|Tagabay}}: Komonwelt ng Lupangnayon; {{wp|Spanish language|Stillian}}: Mancomunidad de Terranayon), is an [[Iverica|Iverican]] overseas commonwealth republic in [[Alharu]]. The territory comprises Turtle Island, separated from the mainland continent by the Turtle Sea to the northwest and the Synthe Sea to the west. The capital city, [[Tondo]], was the second colonial settlement in the island founded in 1627 by [[Miguel de Legazpi]], the Stillian commander of the [[Armada de San Miguel]], during the [[Gran Viatge]]. They became the progenitors of the [[Kastila]] people. The first colony, [[Batagan]], predated Tondo in 1521, when it was founded by [[Great Anglia|Anglian]] explorer Sir Ferdinand Magline. | ||
The mountainous interior separated the two colonies, with Tondo in the western [[San Lazaro]] province and Batagan in the [[Eastern Shore]]. Its tallest peak, Mt. Bernardo Carpio, is located in the semi-arid [[Mountain Province]] south of San Lazaro. The settlement by Kastila and Iverican people drove the native [[Tagabay people]] away from the coast, relocating in the island's valleys, the largest being [[Marikina Valley]] in Eastern Shore. The Tagabay tribes from San Lazaro had to traverse the deadly [[Dunas de La Paz]] desert, covering nearly a quarter of Mountain Province, which has the developed to become the island's mining region, fueling Iverican industrialization in the 19th Century. The majority of the agricultural and industrial areas, dominated by the Anglian sugar and tobacco industries, span the coastal region. | The mountainous interior separated the two colonies, with Tondo in the western [[San Lazaro]] province and Batagan in the [[Eastern Shore]]. Its tallest peak, Mt. Bernardo Carpio, is located in the semi-arid [[Mountain Province]] south of San Lazaro. The settlement by Kastila and Iverican people drove the native [[Tagabay people]] away from the coast, relocating in the island's valleys, the largest being [[Marikina Valley]] in Eastern Shore. The Tagabay tribes from San Lazaro had to traverse the deadly [[Dunas de La Paz]] desert, covering nearly a quarter of Mountain Province, which has the developed to become the island's mining region, fueling Iverican industrialization in the 19th Century. The majority of the agricultural and industrial areas, dominated by the Anglian sugar and tobacco industries, span the coastal region. | ||
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In the [[Iverican-Anglian War]], the combined territories of northern Turtle Island were leased to the [[Compañía Ivericana de Alharu Ecuatorial]]. Its rule was authoritarian, controlling prices, regulating immigration, and monopolizing trade. The company started buying and expanding large sugar and tobacco plantations near the coast. To escape GAAC rule, the Anglians in the east started the [[Grand March]], a mass migration inland and claimed arable lands in the deeper valleys of Eastern Shore. The discovery of gold in Mountain Province created a rush, attracting Iverican, Kastila, and Anglian settlers to the center of the island. Violent Tagabay resistance to the rushers escalated into the 4-year Boondok Rebellion, starting in 1896 and ending in 1900. In 1901, the island was annexed by the Iverican government under the colony "Equatorial Alharu." | In the [[Iverican-Anglian War]], the combined territories of northern Turtle Island were leased to the [[Compañía Ivericana de Alharu Ecuatorial]]. Its rule was authoritarian, controlling prices, regulating immigration, and monopolizing trade. The company started buying and expanding large sugar and tobacco plantations near the coast. To escape GAAC rule, the Anglians in the east started the [[Grand March]], a mass migration inland and claimed arable lands in the deeper valleys of Eastern Shore. The discovery of gold in Mountain Province created a rush, attracting Iverican, Kastila, and Anglian settlers to the center of the island. Violent Tagabay resistance to the rushers escalated into the 4-year Boondok Rebellion, starting in 1896 and ending in 1900. In 1901, the island was annexed by the Iverican government under the colony "Equatorial Alharu." | ||
In 1916, the colony was granted autonomy. The new [[Batansan Pambansa#General Assembly|General Assembly]] was comprised of the members of the Anglian colonial [[Batasan Pambansa#Legislative Council]] and the Iverican counterpart [[Batasan Pambansa#Miembros dei Cámra]]. [[Andrés Soriano Sr.]], a Kastila mining mogul, become the first elected Nayongan prime minister. Suffrage was limited to the male, wealthy, and educated [[principalía]] (Kastila and Tagabay elite), Iverican, and Anglian residents, excluding much of the native Tagabays. A series of Tagabay-led plantation and mine revolts in the early 1920s encouraged the Kastila, Iverican, and Anglian communities to adopt segregationist rules in an attempt to control the violence. In 1934, a new constitution allowed greater Tagabay representation, granting power to the emerging native middle classes. It reserved the [[Council of State (Nayonland)#Board of Directors|Board of Directors]], the new upper house in the expanded bicameral General Assembly, to majority Tagabay and Alharun membership. It enabled the election of [[Datu Manuel Koe-sun]], a Nayongan-Fulgistani noble, leader of the [[Progresista Party]]. It was the largest opposition party from 1935 to 1946, when it was dissolved due to intense infighting. The pro-colony Principalía, Iverican, and Anglian factions founded the [[Unión Republicano Patriótica]] (URP). The nationalist Tagabay faction joined the [[Katipunan ng Manggagawag Katagabayon]] (KMK). | In 1916, the colony was granted autonomy. The new [[Batansan Pambansa#General Assembly|General Assembly]] was comprised of the members of the Anglian colonial [[Batasan Pambansa#Legislative Council|Legislative Council]] and the Iverican counterpart [[Batasan Pambansa#Miembros dei Cámra|Miembros dei Cámra]]. [[Andrés Soriano Sr.]], a Kastila mining mogul, become the first elected Nayongan prime minister. Suffrage was limited to the male, wealthy, and educated [[principalía]] (Kastila and Tagabay elite), Iverican, and Anglian residents, excluding much of the native Tagabays. A series of Tagabay-led plantation and mine revolts in the early 1920s encouraged the Kastila, Iverican, and Anglian communities to adopt segregationist rules in an attempt to control the violence. In 1934, a new constitution allowed greater Tagabay representation, granting power to the emerging native middle classes. It reserved the [[Council of State (Nayonland)#Board of Directors|Board of Directors]], the new upper house in the expanded bicameral General Assembly, to majority Tagabay and Alharun membership. It enabled the election of [[Datu Manuel Koe-sun]], a Nayongan-Fulgistani noble, leader of the [[Progresista Party]]. It was the largest opposition party from 1935 to 1946, when it was dissolved due to intense infighting. The pro-colony Principalía, Iverican, and Anglian factions founded the [[Unión Republicano Patriótica]] (URP). The nationalist Tagabay faction joined the [[Katipunan ng Manggagawag Katagabayon]] (KMK). | ||
The country experienced great economic growth in the 1950s. The expansion of social services, especially healthcare and education, increased living standards and literacy. Existing roads and rails were expanded to connect the growing number of industrial and mining towns. This prompted the prosperous Kastila and Anglian upper and middle classes to expand cities, build suburbs in extended city limits, and buy up real estate in the surrounding countryside. This often involved the forced displacement of Tagabays, who were already pushed out to live in the peripherals of the historical urban centers they once called their home. Many of them could not afford to buy property, which led to the proliferation of shantytowns infamously known as "boondoks." Although segregation was not enshrined in law, it has become commonplace in all sectors of society. Its institutionalization has been supported by the [[Nacionalista Party]], the colony's ruling party since 1949. They are mostly made up of Kastila principalía. | The country experienced great economic growth in the 1950s. The expansion of social services, especially healthcare and education, increased living standards and literacy. Existing roads and rails were expanded to connect the growing number of industrial and mining towns. This prompted the prosperous Kastila and Anglian upper and middle classes to expand cities, build suburbs in extended city limits, and buy up real estate in the surrounding countryside. This often involved the forced displacement of Tagabays, who were already pushed out to live in the peripherals of the historical urban centers they once called their home. Many of them could not afford to buy property, which led to the proliferation of shantytowns infamously known as "boondoks." Although segregation was not enshrined in law, it has become commonplace in all sectors of society. Its institutionalization has been supported by the [[Nacionalista Party]], the colony's ruling party since 1949. They are mostly made up of Kastila principalía. |
Latest revision as of 01:38, 16 November 2024
Commonwealth of Nayonland | |
---|---|
Motto: "Makatao at Makabansa" (Tagabay) "Por Gente y Pais" (Stillian) "For the People and the Nation" (Anglish) | |
Anthem: Marcha Nayona (Nayongan March) | |
Capital and largest city | Tondo |
Official languages | |
Ethnic groups | |
Demonym(s) | Nayona (female), Nayono (male), Nayongan, Nayonlander |
Government | Responsible government |
• Primo | Franso Deitorr |
• Governor-General | Sultan Sulayman VII |
• Prime Minister | Sarah Labuh |
Legislature | Batasan Pambansa |
Council of State | |
Kamara | |
Overseas Commonwealth Republic of Iverica | |
• Annexed by Iverica | May 23, 2017 |
• National Reconstruction Constitution | December 31, 2019 |
Area | |
• | 841,638 km2 (324,958 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Census | 14,904,421 |
GDP (nominal) | 2024 estimate |
• Total | $104.538 billion ($4,130) |
Gini | 59.1 high |
HDI | 0.610 medium |
Currency | Nayongan Velle |
Nayonland, officially the Commonwealth of Nayonland (Tagabay: Komonwelt ng Lupangnayon; Stillian: Mancomunidad de Terranayon), is an Iverican overseas commonwealth republic in Alharu. The territory comprises Turtle Island, separated from the mainland continent by the Turtle Sea to the northwest and the Synthe Sea to the west. The capital city, Tondo, was the second colonial settlement in the island founded in 1627 by Miguel de Legazpi, the Stillian commander of the Armada de San Miguel, during the Gran Viatge. They became the progenitors of the Kastila people. The first colony, Batagan, predated Tondo in 1521, when it was founded by Anglian explorer Sir Ferdinand Magline.
The mountainous interior separated the two colonies, with Tondo in the western San Lazaro province and Batagan in the Eastern Shore. Its tallest peak, Mt. Bernardo Carpio, is located in the semi-arid Mountain Province south of San Lazaro. The settlement by Kastila and Iverican people drove the native Tagabay people away from the coast, relocating in the island's valleys, the largest being Marikina Valley in Eastern Shore. The Tagabay tribes from San Lazaro had to traverse the deadly Dunas de La Paz desert, covering nearly a quarter of Mountain Province, which has the developed to become the island's mining region, fueling Iverican industrialization in the 19th Century. The majority of the agricultural and industrial areas, dominated by the Anglian sugar and tobacco industries, span the coastal region.
In the Iverican-Anglian War, the combined territories of northern Turtle Island were leased to the Compañía Ivericana de Alharu Ecuatorial. Its rule was authoritarian, controlling prices, regulating immigration, and monopolizing trade. The company started buying and expanding large sugar and tobacco plantations near the coast. To escape GAAC rule, the Anglians in the east started the Grand March, a mass migration inland and claimed arable lands in the deeper valleys of Eastern Shore. The discovery of gold in Mountain Province created a rush, attracting Iverican, Kastila, and Anglian settlers to the center of the island. Violent Tagabay resistance to the rushers escalated into the 4-year Boondok Rebellion, starting in 1896 and ending in 1900. In 1901, the island was annexed by the Iverican government under the colony "Equatorial Alharu."
In 1916, the colony was granted autonomy. The new General Assembly was comprised of the members of the Anglian colonial Legislative Council and the Iverican counterpart Miembros dei Cámra. Andrés Soriano Sr., a Kastila mining mogul, become the first elected Nayongan prime minister. Suffrage was limited to the male, wealthy, and educated principalía (Kastila and Tagabay elite), Iverican, and Anglian residents, excluding much of the native Tagabays. A series of Tagabay-led plantation and mine revolts in the early 1920s encouraged the Kastila, Iverican, and Anglian communities to adopt segregationist rules in an attempt to control the violence. In 1934, a new constitution allowed greater Tagabay representation, granting power to the emerging native middle classes. It reserved the Board of Directors, the new upper house in the expanded bicameral General Assembly, to majority Tagabay and Alharun membership. It enabled the election of Datu Manuel Koe-sun, a Nayongan-Fulgistani noble, leader of the Progresista Party. It was the largest opposition party from 1935 to 1946, when it was dissolved due to intense infighting. The pro-colony Principalía, Iverican, and Anglian factions founded the Unión Republicano Patriótica (URP). The nationalist Tagabay faction joined the Katipunan ng Manggagawag Katagabayon (KMK).
The country experienced great economic growth in the 1950s. The expansion of social services, especially healthcare and education, increased living standards and literacy. Existing roads and rails were expanded to connect the growing number of industrial and mining towns. This prompted the prosperous Kastila and Anglian upper and middle classes to expand cities, build suburbs in extended city limits, and buy up real estate in the surrounding countryside. This often involved the forced displacement of Tagabays, who were already pushed out to live in the peripherals of the historical urban centers they once called their home. Many of them could not afford to buy property, which led to the proliferation of shantytowns infamously known as "boondoks." Although segregation was not enshrined in law, it has become commonplace in all sectors of society. Its institutionalization has been supported by the Nacionalista Party, the colony's ruling party since 1949. They are mostly made up of Kastila principalía.
Student riots in the early 1960s demanded the end of minority rule and segregation. This prompted the Nacionalistas to start power-sharing negotiations with the Council of Cabezas de Barangay, the governing body of all Tagabay tribes. This later included the KMK. A constitutional conference was proposed to compile the agreed provisions, but the Iverican government insisted on a constitutional convention that represents everyone in Nayonland. The disagreements between the Iverican and Nacionalista governments created a deadlock, causing the civil unrest to continue. Six, consecutive Nacionalista governments collapsed, none lasting the Legislative Assembly's five-year term. In 1974, Governor-General Biel Deitorr y Suances appointed Gat Cesar Virata to lead a coalition government of pro-convention Nacionalista defectors, the KMK, and the URP. They scheduled the elections for the 1976 constitutional convention. It was marred by violence, vote-buying, and the assassination of Deitorr. The convention elections were suspended indefinitely. In 1979, the Nacionalistas returned to power under Elia Field.
To restore public order, Governor-General Felix Abello y Latorre proclaimed martial law at the request of the new government. Field directed the Nayongan Guardia Civil to arrest anti-government activist leaders, KMK politicians, and journalists designated as dangerous subversives by her Anti-Terrorism Council. In 1981, the National Renewal Scheme was introduced. Its aims included the removal of boondok settlements and the forced relocation of Tagabay squatters. It was met with mass protests. The brutal quelling by the RNC led to more than 1,500 people dead. In the Battle of Cementerio del Norte, 100 squatter residents and 20 RNC officers were killed in the clearing operations. In total, 600,000 squatters were relocated.
In 1984, the Iverican parliament passed the Nayonland Independence Act. A transition period of 10 years was going to occur before independence to allow more time for the Iverican and colonial governments to prepare Nayonland's economy. It scheduled elections in 1985 for a constitutional convention the following year. It was the first Nayongan election held with full suffrage. The new constitution introduced majority rule, the prohibition of racial segregation, and a proportional representation system in the legislature. In 1987, the constitution was approved by 64% in a national referendum. It never came into force due to the Terranayano Declaration of Independence.
Martial law continued in a period called the Reign of Terror between 1989 and 2010. Public criticism of the government was criminalized. More than 1,200 people disappeared. As a temporary solution to growing unemployment, the Terranayano government incentivized Overseas Tagabay Workers (OTW), negotiating with foreign governments to deploy skilled workers, and improving technical vocation education, marketing Terranayon as a "human-resource rich" country. The country experienced rapid brain drain and the Tagabay population shrunk from 80% in 1989 to 75% in 2005. There are nearly 1.2 million OTWs around the world.
In 2016, Nayonland was invaded by Iverica. The 1934 Constitution was restored until the enactment of the Junta of National Reconstruction, which finally established majority rule in Nayonland in 2019. The provisional constitution provided an indefinite transitional period for future independence.