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Spain immediately laid claim to the islands, in contravention of the 1494 {{wp|Treaty of Tordesillas}} which made the islands ''de jure'' Portuguese possessions. There were several failed ventures to colonize Costa Brava beginning as early as 1523. Only one such venture was undertaken prior to 1580, in which a flotilla of ships sailed from Seville in 1532 but failed to locate the islands.  
Spain immediately laid claim to the islands, in contravention of the 1494 {{wp|Treaty of Tordesillas}} which made the islands ''de jure'' Portuguese possessions. There were several failed ventures to colonize Costa Brava beginning as early as 1523. Only one such venture was undertaken prior to 1580, in which a flotilla of ships sailed from Seville in 1532 but failed to locate the islands.  


The {{wp|Iberian Union|union of the Portuguese and Spanish crowns}} in 1580 revived colonization efforts, still to the exclusion of Portuguese interests, and a colonizing expedition landed on Costa Brava on 8 December, 1580. The colonists founded a small village and port on the main island. This settlement was named Nuevo Puerto Hércules in honor of {{wp|Isabella Grimaldi}}, Lady of Monaco with whom the expedition leader Ignacio de Zárate was infatuated. Zárate had volunteered for the expedition to escape a death sentence for invading the Lady's bedchambers six months prior. A collection of love letters written by Zárate exhorting the Lady of Monaco to marry him and travel to Costa Brava—an impoverished, malarial colony—are today on display in the People's Museum.
The {{wp|Iberian Union|union of the Portuguese and Spanish crowns}} in 1580 revived colonization efforts, still to the exclusion of Portuguese interests, and a colonizing expedition landed on Costa Brava on 8 December, 1580. The colonists founded a small village on the east coast of the main island. This settlement was named Nuevo Puerto Hércules in honor of {{wp|Isabella Grimaldi}}, Lady of Monaco with whom the expedition leader Ignacio de Zárate was infatuated. Zárate had volunteered for the expedition to escape a death sentence for invading the Lady's bedchambers six months prior. A collection of love letters written by Zárate exhorting the Lady of Monaco to marry him and travel to Costa Brava—an impoverished, malarial colony—are today on display in the People's Museum.


Costa Brava encompassed an administrative unit consisting of all of Spain's possessions in the South Atlantic and Southern Indian Ocean. In this manner it was subaltern to the {{wp|Council of the Indies}}, the supreme colonial organ of the Spanish Empire. Costa Brava was organized as a {{wp|captaincy}} and {{wp|Audiencia Real|audiencia}} of the {{wp|Viceroyalty of Peru}}. Although nominally no different than his peers, the {{wp|Captain General}} of Costa Brava had significant autonomy similar to the {{wp|Captaincy General of Santo Domingo|Captain General of Santo Domingo}}.
Costa Brava encompassed an administrative unit consisting of all of Spain's possessions in the South Atlantic and Southern Indian Ocean. In this manner it was subaltern to the {{wp|Council of the Indies}}, the supreme colonial organ of the Spanish Empire. Costa Brava was organized as a {{wp|captaincy}} and {{wp|Audiencia Real|audiencia}} of the {{wp|Viceroyalty of Peru}}. Although nominally no different than his peers, the {{wp|Captain General}} of Costa Brava had significant autonomy similar to the {{wp|Captaincy General of Santo Domingo|Captain General of Santo Domingo}}.


One of the most powerful leaders of Spanish colonial Costa Brava, Captain General Nicolás Benalcazar, was a profligate issuer of letters of marque during his Captaincy from 1607 to 1617. His privateer fleet in the 1610s acted as commerce raiders against British {{wp|triangular trade}} ships. Benalcazar and the privateers received little recognition for their efforts and were even subject to punitive measures considering the extralegal nature of Benalcazar's letters of marque. This caused a rift between Costa Brava and {{wp|Philip III of Spain|the Crown}}, ultimately leading to a strong culture of privateering on the islands that the viceregal government could do nothing to prevent. Benalcazar was stripped of office in 1617, after which he became a successful pirate. The {{wp|Golden Age of Piracy}} was a high watermark in the early cultural history of Costa Brava. Costa Brava became a byword of a place of debauchery and murder. The "Cold Caribbean" was a moniker frequently applied to the islands.
One of the most powerful leaders of Spanish colonial Costa Brava, Captain General Nicolás Benalcazar, was a profligate issuer of letters of marque during his Captaincy from 1607 to 1617. His privateer fleet in the 1610s acted as commerce raiders against British {{wp|triangular trade}} ships. Benalcazar and the privateers received little recognition for their efforts and were even subject to punitive measures considering the extralegal nature of Benalcazar's letters of marque. This caused a rift between Costa Brava and {{wp|Philip III of Spain|the Crown}}, ultimately leading to a strong culture of privateering on the islands that the viceregal government could do nothing to prevent. Benalcazar was stripped of office in 1617, after which he became a successful pirate. The {{wp|Golden Age of Piracy}} was a high watermark in the early cultural history of Costa Brava. Costa Brava became a byword of a place of debauchery and murder. The "Cold Caribbean" was a moniker frequently applied to the islands.

Revision as of 06:49, 1 December 2019

Free State of Costa Bravo
Estado Libre de Costa Bravo
Flag of Costa Bravo
Flag
Motto: "Trabajadores, unite!"
Anthem: The Internationale/La Internacional
MediaPlayer.png
CapitalNuevo Puerto Hércules
Official languagesNone
Local languages
a la brava
Ethnic groups
(2019)
29.0% European
18.6% South Asian
16.0% African
10.9% Asian
9.6% Polynesian
8.9% West Asian
7.0% other
Religion
(2019)
33.1% Liberational Catholicism
20.8% Buddhism
13.0% Hinduism
10.4% Islam
10.4% no religion
7.6% Judaism
4.7% other
Demonym(s)Bravo
GovernmentDemocratic confederalism (Devolved council democracy government on a confederated model with syndicalist traditions)
Stages of sovereignty
• Discovery by Europeans
1522
• Colonization by Spain
1580
• Ceded to Great Britain
1714
• Independence
1812
• Abolition of the directory system
1991
Area
• Total
54,700 km2 (21,100 sq mi)
• Water (%)
6.9
Population
• 2019 census
5,001,250
• Density
98/km2 (253.8/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)estimate
• Total
ƒ800 billion
• Per capita
ƒ54,821
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
ƒ700 billion
• Per capita
ƒ35,934
GiniSteady .13
low
HDIIncrease 0.933
very high
CurrencyCosta Bravo Florín (ƒ) (FLO)
Time zoneUTC+3:00 (UTC)
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+666
Internet TLD.cb

Costa Bravo, officially the Free State of Costa Bravo or Estado Libre de Costa Bravo, is a confederal democracy located on a chain of islands spanning the South Atlantic and Southern Indian Ocean. Costa Bravo was formerly a colonial subject of Spain and Great Britain. It won independence from Britain in 1812. The current form of government dates to 1991 following a period of civil war.

Costa Bravo is governed from the ‘bottom-up’. Every community, ethnicity, culture, religious group, intellectual movement, and economic unit is autonomously organized as a political entity. All issues of daily life are decided on by the members of these organizations in consensus decision-making and direct democracy. Issues are put to the vote in an endless stream of referendums. This political apparatus is highly digital: votes are cast by citizens ‘on the go’ with their personal smart devices and computers. Political participation and voting are mandatory for all citizens. There is no head of state, but a ‘Representative’ may be provisionally appointed to conduct diplomacy on the people’s behalf (for example).

There is no official language. Media and daily conversations are in code-switched English and Spanish. This vernacular is called a la brava, or Bravo Spanglish.

The islands that are now part of Costa Bravo were colonized by Austronesian peoples between 500 to 1200 CE. Austronesian settlement lasted less than a century. Europeans independently discovered the islands on 1 April, 1522, when Juan Sebastián Elcano, the Basque Spanish explorer who completed the first circumnavigation of the world, was forced to shelter on Costa Bravo after being lost in a storm. The islands were claimed by Spain and colonization began in 1580.

Costa Bravo is the most remote nation in the world. In the 20th century, Costa Bravo played an outsize role in the Cold War as one of the leaders of the Third-World movement, a coalition of non-aligned countries in the Global South. By the end of the Cold War, Costa Bravo ranked as one of the most developed countries in the world, but to this day remains in the political sphere of developing countries.

Etymology

The name "Costa Bravo" is a corruption of the original name, which dates from the Spanish discovery of the archipelago during the first circumnavigation of the world. Noting the tumultuous waters and rocky coastline of the region's many islands, crewmember of the Victoria Antonio Pigafetta dubbed the place Costa Brava, Spanish for "furious coast". The name first appeared in Maximilianus Transylvanus's De Moluccis Insulis. The shift from Brava to Bravo occurred shortly after the British takeover in 1714, when the evolved form began began appearing in administration records. The original name continued in vernacular use until the early 19th century.

In 16th century Latin language accounts, the name is given as Ora Pravo, meaning "crooked coast" or "wicked coast".

Inhabitants of Costa Bravo are known as Bravoes.

History

Prehistory

The history of Costa Bravo prior to European discovery of the islands is imprecise on account of scarce archaeological remains. Estimated dates of initial settlement range from 500 to 1200 CE, approximately coinciding with the arrival of the first Austronesian peoples in Madagascar. These settlers came from Melanesia and Micronesia. The population size and specific cultural identities of the settlers are not precisely known. Only fragmentary skeletal and material remains have been uncovered. It is believed that settlement lasted for a few generations before collapse. Disease, political strife, or climate events have been hypothesized as the cause.

The Austronesian settlers are best known as the creators of the Satan Stone or Piedra de Satanás, a 3 meter tall oblate ovoid monolith carved from a silicate mineral meteorite. The stone was unearthed by farmers in the southern part of the main island in 1852. It has been on display at the People's Museum since 1900. The manner of its construction, its provenance, and the meaning of the glyphs covering its surface are all unknown. The glyphs are rendered in boustrophedonic text but resemble no other writing system in the world. None of the text is definitively understood. Some modern linguists argue it is not true writing but proto-writing, or even a more limited mnemonic device for genealogy, choreography, navigation, astronomy, or agriculture. There is continuing debate as to whether the glyphs are essentially logographic or syllabic, though they appear to be compatible with neither a pure logography nor a pure syllabary. The study of these glyphs, and the purpose of the Satan Stone itself, remains contentious to this day. The perception of the monolith as an object of Satanic power led to it almost being destroyed on two separate occasions in the 18th and 19th centuries.

European colonization

The islands were discovered on 1 April, 1522 by Juan Sebastián Elcano and the crew of the Victoria who completed the first circumnavigation of the world. In late March of 1522, the Victoria encountered a cyclone in the South Indian Ocean, which sent the ship into uncharted waters far to the south of her intended route. The crew chanced upon the archipelago now known as Costa Bravo, and there sheltered and provisioned for food and water. They remained on the islands from 1 April to 4 April 1522. The Venetian scholar Antonio Pigafetta wrote extensively of the wildlife and terrain of the islands. In his journal, Pigafetta christened the place Costa Brava and noted its approximate location. The Victoria arrived in Spain five months later.

Spain immediately laid claim to the islands, in contravention of the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas which made the islands de jure Portuguese possessions. There were several failed ventures to colonize Costa Brava beginning as early as 1523. Only one such venture was undertaken prior to 1580, in which a flotilla of ships sailed from Seville in 1532 but failed to locate the islands.

The union of the Portuguese and Spanish crowns in 1580 revived colonization efforts, still to the exclusion of Portuguese interests, and a colonizing expedition landed on Costa Brava on 8 December, 1580. The colonists founded a small village on the east coast of the main island. This settlement was named Nuevo Puerto Hércules in honor of Isabella Grimaldi, Lady of Monaco with whom the expedition leader Ignacio de Zárate was infatuated. Zárate had volunteered for the expedition to escape a death sentence for invading the Lady's bedchambers six months prior. A collection of love letters written by Zárate exhorting the Lady of Monaco to marry him and travel to Costa Brava—an impoverished, malarial colony—are today on display in the People's Museum.

Costa Brava encompassed an administrative unit consisting of all of Spain's possessions in the South Atlantic and Southern Indian Ocean. In this manner it was subaltern to the Council of the Indies, the supreme colonial organ of the Spanish Empire. Costa Brava was organized as a captaincy and audiencia of the Viceroyalty of Peru. Although nominally no different than his peers, the Captain General of Costa Brava had significant autonomy similar to the Captain General of Santo Domingo.

One of the most powerful leaders of Spanish colonial Costa Brava, Captain General Nicolás Benalcazar, was a profligate issuer of letters of marque during his Captaincy from 1607 to 1617. His privateer fleet in the 1610s acted as commerce raiders against British triangular trade ships. Benalcazar and the privateers received little recognition for their efforts and were even subject to punitive measures considering the extralegal nature of Benalcazar's letters of marque. This caused a rift between Costa Brava and the Crown, ultimately leading to a strong culture of privateering on the islands that the viceregal government could do nothing to prevent. Benalcazar was stripped of office in 1617, after which he became a successful pirate. The Golden Age of Piracy was a high watermark in the early cultural history of Costa Brava. Costa Brava became a byword of a place of debauchery and murder. The "Cold Caribbean" was a moniker frequently applied to the islands.