Kingdom of Anglia and Lechernt: Difference between revisions
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Settlement by anatomically modern humans of what was to become the United Kingdom started around 35,000 years ago. By the end of the region's prehistoric period, the population is thought to have belonged mainly to a culture of Celtic ethnic origin. | Settlement by anatomically modern humans of what was to become the United Kingdom started around 35,000 years ago. By the end of the region's prehistoric period, the population is thought to have belonged mainly to a culture of Celtic ethnic origin. | ||
The beginning of the Bronze Age in A&L is believed to have begun around 2200 BCE with the appearance of bronze objects and tools. The Bronze Age saw a shift of emphasis from the communal to the individual, and the rise of increasingly powerful tribes whose power came from their prowess as hunters and warriors and their controlling the flow of precious resources to manipulate tin and copper into highly valued bronze objects. New bronze tools and weapons identified with this age were also brought over from other emerging cultures in Septentrion. Some skeletal remains recovered from burial sites from the Bronze Age are different in shape and structure from previous ages. This would suggest that new ideas and new blood were brought over from the region notably from the lands that | The beginning of the Bronze Age in A&L is believed to have begun around 2200 BCE with the appearance of bronze objects and tools. The Bronze Age saw a shift of emphasis from the communal to the individual, and the rise of increasingly powerful tribes whose power came from their prowess as hunters and warriors and their controlling the flow of precious resources to manipulate tin and copper into highly valued bronze objects. New bronze tools and weapons identified with this age were also brought over from other emerging cultures in Septentrion. Some skeletal remains recovered from burial sites from the Bronze Age are different in shape and structure from previous ages. This would suggest that new ideas and new blood were brought over from the region notably from the lands that would become Sieuxerr and Bataviae. | ||
During these times the lands were inhabited by many warring tribes such as the Fenryka, Unberogen, Teutogens, Jeutones, Tyrani, Bretoni and hundreds of minor tribes. The tribes were often at war with one another, raiding for anything they needed or just to establish their power in the region. Some tribes already forged strong links with one another, but they were never fully united under one banner centuries later. | During these times the lands were inhabited by many warring tribes such as the Fenryka, Unberogen, Teutogens, Jeutones, Tyrani, Bretoni and hundreds of minor tribes. The tribes were often at war with one another, raiding for anything they needed or just to establish their power in the region. Some tribes already forged strong links with one another, but they were never fully united under one banner centuries later. |
Revision as of 17:34, 14 October 2020
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The United Kingdom of Anglia and Lechernt | |
---|---|
Motto: "Nemo me impune lacessit" "No one provokes me with impunity" | |
Anthem: "God Save the King" | |
Capital | Hadaway |
Largest city | Halifax |
Official languages | Anglian |
Recognised regional languages | Gaelic Merovingian Dutch Letnian |
Ethnic groups | White 86.03% |
Demonym(s) | Anglian . Tyrannian |
Government | Unitary parliamentary Constitutional Monarchy |
• Monarch | King Edward III |
• Prime Minister | Johnathan Holt |
Legislature | Parliament |
House of Lords | |
House of Commons | |
Establishment | |
• Kingdom of Tyran | 550 |
• Union of the Crowns | 24 March 1603 |
• Acts of Union | 14 May 1701 |
Area | |
• Total | 443,160.51 km2 (171,105.23 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 2017 estimate | 58,380,152 |
• Density | 103.8/km2 (268.8/sq mi) |
GDP (PPP) | 2017 estimate |
• Total | $2.313 trillion |
• Per capita | $39,619 |
GDP (nominal) | 2017 estimate |
• Total | $1.917 trillion |
• Per capita | $32,826 |
Gini (2017) | 29.5 low |
HDI (2017) | 0.920 very high |
Currency | Casaterran Credit |
Date format | dd.mm.yyyy |
Driving side | left |
Internet TLD | .uk |
Etymology
History
Early History
The earliest known occupation and settlement of the United Kingdom by humans is much debated to this day. As this period saw many changes in the environment, encompassing several glacial and interglacial episodes greatly affecting human settlement in Anglia and Lechernt. Providing data for this distant period is difficult and contentious. The inhabitants of the region at this time were mostly merely bands of hunter-gatherers who roamed the region following herds of animals, or who supported themselves by fishing. But there is archaeological evidence from bones and various flint tools found in coastal deposits near the city of Alrington that early humans were present in what is now the United Kingdom at least 200,000 years ago. Other sites across the nation illustrate that these early peoples made primitive tools such as hand axes and hunted the large native mammals of this period.
Settlement by anatomically modern humans of what was to become the United Kingdom started around 35,000 years ago. By the end of the region's prehistoric period, the population is thought to have belonged mainly to a culture of Celtic ethnic origin.
The beginning of the Bronze Age in A&L is believed to have begun around 2200 BCE with the appearance of bronze objects and tools. The Bronze Age saw a shift of emphasis from the communal to the individual, and the rise of increasingly powerful tribes whose power came from their prowess as hunters and warriors and their controlling the flow of precious resources to manipulate tin and copper into highly valued bronze objects. New bronze tools and weapons identified with this age were also brought over from other emerging cultures in Septentrion. Some skeletal remains recovered from burial sites from the Bronze Age are different in shape and structure from previous ages. This would suggest that new ideas and new blood were brought over from the region notably from the lands that would become Sieuxerr and Bataviae.
During these times the lands were inhabited by many warring tribes such as the Fenryka, Unberogen, Teutogens, Jeutones, Tyrani, Bretoni and hundreds of minor tribes. The tribes were often at war with one another, raiding for anything they needed or just to establish their power in the region. Some tribes already forged strong links with one another, but they were never fully united under one banner centuries later.