Duran: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 76: Line 76:
===Coup and Xiaodongese suzerainty===
===Coup and Xiaodongese suzerainty===
===Post-Great War period===
===Post-Great War period===
[[File:Reverent gathering at a Monastery in Sikkim listen as Dalai Lama tells them to follow the Buddhist principles of love and nonviolence.jpg|200px|thumb|A mass {{wp|sit-in}} staged by supporters of the [[Duranian Popular Republican Movement]], 1938.]]The period which followed the [[Treaty of Keisi]] was one of significant unrest in Duran. Dorji's return to power was accompanied by a purging of collaborationist officials and nobles, and many {{wp|Chinese people|Shangean}} merchants and traders were disposessed of their assets. Violent [[1935 Chenpodrang riots|rioting]] erupted in the capital city, as Shangean businesses were targetted by mobs of nationalists who claimed vengeance for the occupation. The north of the country, dominated by {{wp|Hmong people|Hua}} [[Hipp tribes of Duran|hill tribes]], was in a state of anarchy and controlled largely by autonomist militias who had resisted {{wp|sinification|Shangeanisation}}. While much of the population welcomed the return of Dorji and ''{{wp|de facto}}'' independence, elements of Duranian society had grown disillusioned with the monarchy in general and staged protests against its return. Inspired by the [[Green Pardals]] in [[Satria]], a group of radicals under the leadership of [[Ugyen Lhundrub]] founded the [[Duranian Popular Republican Movement]]. This group promised a {{Wp|socialist}} government which would bring {{wp|democracy}} and an end to the inequalities which were omnipresent in the country. This group was initially peaceful, holding major sit-ins in public places across the country and spreading its message to the countryside where living conditions were especially poor. Two months after assuming governance, Dorji passed away and his eldest son [[Kalsang Jigme Namgyal]] ascended to power. Seeing opportunity, the socialists held major rallies hoping to prompt his abdication. Instead, the [[Royal Guard (Duran)|Royal Guard]] were instructed to fire upon the crowd, killing 50 and injuring countless others.
[[File:1950年中国人民解放军-西藏.png|200px|thumb|left|DPRM forces advance during the [[Cagmo offensive]], 1951]]
Now disillusioned with peaceful action, the DPRM began to advocate a {{wp|people's war}} in order to gain power. Armed cadres lauched attacks on {{wp|police}} and {{wp|army}} installations, as well as establishing rural areas which they controlled. The new Zhabrung found himself in a difficult position, with large swathes of his country in the hands of rebels, and was forced to look abroad for aid. In 1948, troops entered the country from INSERT and helped to reassert the royal government's control of major urban centers. In rural areas the conflict continued unabated, with both the [[Royal Duranian Armed Forces]] and Duranian Popular Republican Movement being accused of brutal massacres. The conflict in the north of the country was especially bloody, presenting a three-way clash between the Chenpodrang government, DPRM insurgents, and local {{wp|militias}}, which varied from self-defence militias to those which advocated for Hua national self-determination. In 1951, the DPRM initiated the [[Cagmo Offensive]], a major military campaign which aimed to take control of the country through simultaneous attacks on major settlements, {{wp|general strike|strikes}}, and protests. Once again, the government was forced to lean upon foreign support to maintain power, with several cities coming under socialist control. However, aided by INSERT forces, the king was able to reassert control and the DPRM's gains had been lost.
Part of the success of the Cagmo offensive was the apathy of a large portion of the urban population towards the rebels, who had not resisted against the guerillas. The Cagmo offensive's successes had convinced the royal government that some form of political reform would be needed, and in October 1951 Zhabrung Kalsang Jigme Namgyal announced reforms to the government's structure. Duran's government had consisted of the [[Zhabrung of Duran|Zhabrung]] and [[Kashag]], a {{wp|consultative assembly}} composed of {{wp|Tibetan people|Nampa}} {{wp|aristocrats}}, with no constitutional controls over the monarch's power or democratic representation. Under [[Kalsang's constitution]], the Kashag was reformed into a {{wp|bicameral}} {{wp|legislature}} composed of the [[Assembly of Elders (Duran)|Assembly of Elders]], unelected nobles and {{wp|clergy}}, and the [[Assembly of Commoners (Duran)|Assembly of Commoners]] which was elected directly. The position of [[Nam Desi of Duran|Nam Desi]] was also created, similar to the position of {{wp|Prime Minister|Premier}} in other nations. {{wp|Political parties}} were legalised, though under the condition that they could not be involved in {{wp|republicanism}} or possess an {{wp|armed wing}}. This announcement weakened the DPRM, as many of the movement's more moderate members broke away to form the [[Duranian Socialist Democratic Party]]. The first elections were held in 1952, and despite violence by the DPRM were considered successful. Kalsang now turned his attention to the situation in the Hua-majority regions, signing the [[Vuantoo accords]] with several major militia leaders. The Vuantoo accords allocated several seats in the Assembly of Elders to Hua customary chiefs, and guaranteed voting rights to Hua. It also established the [[Dratsung system]], which permitted autonomous governance in Hua areas to protect their traditional cultures and ways of life.
* War with Ajahadya?
* Socialist insurgency slowly dies out, but Shangeans start being a pain
* Modern day developments, Hua protests and stuff
==Geography==
==Geography==



Revision as of 00:43, 17 June 2021

Kingdom of Duran
ནམྱུལགྱལཁ
Namyul Gyal Khap
Flag of Duran
Flag
Coat of arms of Duran
Coat of arms
Motto: འབངས་བདེ་སྐྱིད་ཉི་མ་ཤར་བར་ཤོག་།།
Bang deki nyima shâwâsho
May the Sun of Peace and Happiness shine over all people
Anthem: བསྟན་འགྲོའི་ནོར་འཛིན་རྒྱ་ཆེར་སྐྱོང་བའི་མགོན།
Tendroe Nordzin Gyache Kyongwae Gön

MediaPlayer.png
Location of Duran in Coius
Location of Duran in Coius
Capital
and largest city
Chenpodrang
Official languagesNamkha
Recognised regional languagesHua
Ethnic groups
(2020)
Hua 31%
Nampa 26%
Shangeans 14%
Lhopa 7%
Thopa 6%
Yagpa 4%
Others 4%
Demonym(s)Duranian
GovernmentFederal parliamentary semi-constitutional monarchy
• Zhabrung
Namgyal Gyemtsen
• Pönchen
Tsering Gyatso
• Nam Desi
Xia Kha Yia
LegislatureKashag
Assembly of Elders
Assembly of Commoners
Area
• Total
681,891.84 km2 (263,279.91 sq mi)
• Water (%)
0.380
Population
• 2020 estimate
28,424,000
• Density
168/km2 (435.1/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2016 estimate
• Total
$ 454.64 billion
• Per capita
$ 15,995
GDP (nominal)2015 estimate
• Total
$179.49 billion
• Per capita
$6,315
HDI (2020)0.708
high
CurrencyDuranian Gormo (DRG)
Internet TLD.du

The Kingdom of Duran (Namkha: ནམྱུལགྱལཁཔ ​Namyul Gyal Khap), commonly known as Duran, is a sovereign state in Coius. It shares land borders with Ajahadya to the north, Shangea to the south, and Baekjeong to the east. It is entirely landlocked. As of 2017, Duran's population was approximately 28 million. Its capital city is Chenpodrang, which is also the largest city in the country.

Continuous habitation within the area of modern Duran began in the neolithic era, with the Matu culture being the first emergence of what is commonly considered to be a proto-Hua ethnic group in the Lhochum valley in approximately 3000 BCE. The first of the Duranic groups arrived in the sixteenth century BCE, during the Shango-Duranic migration. These two peoples would live reasonably peacefully, primarily establishing small scale agricultural livelihoods. Several polities arose between the two, and there were multiple wars which eventually resulted in the Nampa state gaining political prominence. Under the Xiang dynasty, Shangean control over the fertile Lhochum valley area was first extended, settling Shangean peoples in several urban areas. These Shangeans would come to dominate the nation’s urban economy, leaving the king dependent on them as merchants. Namqu, as the region was referred to by the Shangeans, became a nominal protectorate of the central Xiao state and, despite periods of extended independence, would eventually grow closer to its cultural and political sphere. By 1882, king Namgyal Dorji was so dependent on Shangean support that he was deposed in a palace coup by a group of powerful Shangean merchants in favour of his daughter Lhamo, who had been educated in Shangea and was married to a Shangean. Dorji fled to Ajahadya, where he unsuccessfully petitioned the Raj for military help, before fleeing to Euclea in exile. Meanwhile, Lhamo began a campaign of Shangeanification and modernisation of Duranese society. During the great war, the exiled Dorji’s lobbying of several great powers was enough to have Duran granted independence in the Treaty of Keisi.

Since independence, Duran has been weakened by tensions within its society. Though much of the traditional elite had welcomed the return of Dorji, the Shangean population wished to be integrated into Shangea. The Turpa hill tribes, who had been targeted during Lhamo’s modernisation campaigns, were in a state of revolt and it was not until the institution of the Dratsung system which granted autonomy to many rural hill tribes and mountain peoples in terms of local administration and education. Despite this system, there are still major differences between the levels of development. While National Principlism is officially banned, the Shangea-friendly Co-Prosperity Party operates legally and while it has never reached government remains a significant presence. Duran is a close strategic partner of Senria, and a member of its alliances.

Etymology

The name Duran is an exonym of uncertain origins. One potential etymology has been derived from the Parbhan word द्वार dvāra, meaning door or gate, in reference to the nation's position guarding the main land entrance to Shangea from Satria. This would then have passed through Old Pardarian, becoming دواران Dvārān or "land of the door", entering into Euclean languages. Another etymology is from the Pardarian word دورا dûra, meaning "far away". The official name of Duran is Namyul (ནམྱུལ​ Namyul), literally meaning "land of the sky", or more symbolically "Heavenly Realm". Duran and its derivatives are only used in correspondance in other languages. In Shangean, Duran has historically been referred to as Namu (纳姆 Nàmǔ) and Beishan (北山 Běishān).

History

Prehistory

Namrong Kingdom

Xiang Dynasty

Namkha state emergence

Coup and Xiaodongese suzerainty

Post-Great War period

A mass sit-in staged by supporters of the Duranian Popular Republican Movement, 1938.

The period which followed the Treaty of Keisi was one of significant unrest in Duran. Dorji's return to power was accompanied by a purging of collaborationist officials and nobles, and many Shangean merchants and traders were disposessed of their assets. Violent rioting erupted in the capital city, as Shangean businesses were targetted by mobs of nationalists who claimed vengeance for the occupation. The north of the country, dominated by Hua hill tribes, was in a state of anarchy and controlled largely by autonomist militias who had resisted Shangeanisation. While much of the population welcomed the return of Dorji and de facto independence, elements of Duranian society had grown disillusioned with the monarchy in general and staged protests against its return. Inspired by the Green Pardals in Satria, a group of radicals under the leadership of Ugyen Lhundrub founded the Duranian Popular Republican Movement. This group promised a socialist government which would bring democracy and an end to the inequalities which were omnipresent in the country. This group was initially peaceful, holding major sit-ins in public places across the country and spreading its message to the countryside where living conditions were especially poor. Two months after assuming governance, Dorji passed away and his eldest son Kalsang Jigme Namgyal ascended to power. Seeing opportunity, the socialists held major rallies hoping to prompt his abdication. Instead, the Royal Guard were instructed to fire upon the crowd, killing 50 and injuring countless others.

DPRM forces advance during the Cagmo offensive, 1951

Now disillusioned with peaceful action, the DPRM began to advocate a people's war in order to gain power. Armed cadres lauched attacks on police and army installations, as well as establishing rural areas which they controlled. The new Zhabrung found himself in a difficult position, with large swathes of his country in the hands of rebels, and was forced to look abroad for aid. In 1948, troops entered the country from INSERT and helped to reassert the royal government's control of major urban centers. In rural areas the conflict continued unabated, with both the Royal Duranian Armed Forces and Duranian Popular Republican Movement being accused of brutal massacres. The conflict in the north of the country was especially bloody, presenting a three-way clash between the Chenpodrang government, DPRM insurgents, and local militias, which varied from self-defence militias to those which advocated for Hua national self-determination. In 1951, the DPRM initiated the Cagmo Offensive, a major military campaign which aimed to take control of the country through simultaneous attacks on major settlements, strikes, and protests. Once again, the government was forced to lean upon foreign support to maintain power, with several cities coming under socialist control. However, aided by INSERT forces, the king was able to reassert control and the DPRM's gains had been lost.

Part of the success of the Cagmo offensive was the apathy of a large portion of the urban population towards the rebels, who had not resisted against the guerillas. The Cagmo offensive's successes had convinced the royal government that some form of political reform would be needed, and in October 1951 Zhabrung Kalsang Jigme Namgyal announced reforms to the government's structure. Duran's government had consisted of the Zhabrung and Kashag, a consultative assembly composed of Nampa aristocrats, with no constitutional controls over the monarch's power or democratic representation. Under Kalsang's constitution, the Kashag was reformed into a bicameral legislature composed of the Assembly of Elders, unelected nobles and clergy, and the Assembly of Commoners which was elected directly. The position of Nam Desi was also created, similar to the position of Premier in other nations. Political parties were legalised, though under the condition that they could not be involved in republicanism or possess an armed wing. This announcement weakened the DPRM, as many of the movement's more moderate members broke away to form the Duranian Socialist Democratic Party. The first elections were held in 1952, and despite violence by the DPRM were considered successful. Kalsang now turned his attention to the situation in the Hua-majority regions, signing the Vuantoo accords with several major militia leaders. The Vuantoo accords allocated several seats in the Assembly of Elders to Hua customary chiefs, and guaranteed voting rights to Hua. It also established the Dratsung system, which permitted autonomous governance in Hua areas to protect their traditional cultures and ways of life.

  • War with Ajahadya?
  • Socialist insurgency slowly dies out, but Shangeans start being a pain
  • Modern day developments, Hua protests and stuff

Geography

Climate

Environment

Politics and Government

Military

Foreign Relations

Economy

Energy

Industry

Infrastructure

Transport

Demographics

Education

Religion

Culture

Music and Art

Cuisine

Sports