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==Etymology==
==Etymology==
==History==
==History==
[[File:Bouteille_en_œuf_d'autruche_(Capsien).png|200px|thumb|right|Reconstruction of ostrich-egg bottle discovered at z city site]]
[[File:Bouteille_en_œuf_d'autruche_(Capsien).png|200px|thumb|left|Reconstruction of ostrich-egg bottle discovered at z city site]]
The area known today as Tyreseia was likely first inhabited by nomadic tribes around 5000 BCE. Farming techniques originating from western Scipia likely came soon after, with more peoples then settling both along the Periclean and in fertile river valleys. Very little is known about these first peoples of Tyreseia, as no writing system has ever been found predating the Aradian migration. Early sites at x and y contain both copper and ivory tools, indicating that these peoples engaged in trade with neighboring groups of people. Additional finds suggest a reliance on a diet of fish and cereals, supplemented by a meager supply of pastoral beef; this supply seems to have disappeared around the beginning of the Bronze Age.  
The area known today as Tyreseia was likely first inhabited by nomadic tribes around 5000 BCE. Farming techniques originating from western Scipia likely came soon after, with more peoples then settling both along the Periclean and in fertile river valleys. Very little is known about these first peoples of Tyreseia, as no writing system has ever been found predating the Aradian migration. Early sites at x and y contain both copper and ivory tools, indicating that these peoples engaged in trade with neighboring groups of people. Additional finds suggest a reliance on a diet of fish and cereals, supplemented by a meager supply of pastoral beef; this supply seems to have disappeared around the beginning of the Bronze Age.  



Revision as of 18:55, 28 June 2021

Workers' Federation of Tyreseia
Labōrātōrum Foederatio Tyreseiae (Latin)
Capitalnone specified
Largest cityNew Tyria
Official languagesnone at national level
Recognised national languagesTyrian, Latin, Tamaziɣt, Hebrew, Tamashek
Ethnic groups
(2020)
  • 44% Tyrian
  • 22% Latin
  • 15% Jewish
  • 7% Amaziɣ
  • 4% Imuhagh
  • 3% other
Religion
Secular state
Demonym(s)Tyreseian, Tyrian (outdated)
GovernmentSyndicalist directorial federation
• President of the Council of State
Hasdrubal Fulvius Crassus
• President of the Supreme Workers' Council
Yoana Wechsler
LegislatureSupreme Workers' Council
Establishment
Population
• 2020 estimate
33,275,404
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
$714,373,343,528
• Per capita
$21,468.51
CurrencyTyreseian piastre (TYP)
Time zoneUTC+1? (Central Scipian Time)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy (CE)
Driving sideright
Internet TLD.tyr

Tyreseia, formally known as the Workers' Federation of Tyreseia, is a sovereign state in northern Scipia, along the shores of the Periclean Sea. It borders that sea on the north, the Charnean Empire on the south, and Aɣmatia on the west. Tyreseia is a decentralized, worker-led federation laid out along syndicalist principles. The nation is home to a diverse number of ethnicities, religions and languages, all reflecting the various empires, kingdoms, tribes and other civilizations that have inhabited the region over millennia. In Tyreseia's north, large, bustling cities like New Tyria hug the coast, sandwiched between vineyards, farms, and drydocks. In the south, The xxx Mountains dominate the skyline and halt the encroaching desert, itself dotted with river valleys, oases, trade posts, and numerous nomadic tribes who make the hinterlands their home.

In antiquity, the region now known as Tyreseia was ruled by the Tyrian civilization, a conglomerate of city-states led by the eponymous Tyria. The Tyrians were known for their extensive thalassocracy and distinctive purple dye, which remains a symbol of the Tyreseian people to this day. After a fall from grace and a decline in Periclean trading power, the entire region was subsumed by the Latin Empire in the 2nd century BCE. Tyreseia fluorished again under Latin control and cultural influence until the Empire shrank away from the area under both internal and external pressure in the 5th century CE. Following this, the region fractured into various petty kingdoms, chiefdoms, merchant republics, and pirate havens, with a united Tyreseia not to be seen until the mid-19th century.

Over the intervening centuries, the Tyreseian region was plagued by disease, banditry, and factionalism punctuated by repeat Charnean invasions in a time known to Tyreseian historiographers as the Medieval Period or the Dark Ages. These times came to an end when intellectuals like Hinno of Tyria jumpstarted the Tyreseia Movement, a coffeehouse ideology that eventually formed the sociopolitical and philosophical basis for a modern-day Tyreseian state. In a period known as the Springtime of Tyreseia, a series of bloody wars and revolts of unification coincided with a mass resurgence in nearly-extinct Tyrian culture, culminating in the establishment of the Workers' Federation of Tyreseia at the National Proclamation of 1861.

Today, Tyreseia is a stable nation, weathering the transition to a post-industrial economy, fueled by an influx of tourism. Tyreseia is a member of the Forum of Nations and X Pact/Alliance, and engages regularly in international trade and diplomacy.

Etymology

History

Reconstruction of ostrich-egg bottle discovered at z city site

The area known today as Tyreseia was likely first inhabited by nomadic tribes around 5000 BCE. Farming techniques originating from western Scipia likely came soon after, with more peoples then settling both along the Periclean and in fertile river valleys. Very little is known about these first peoples of Tyreseia, as no writing system has ever been found predating the Aradian migration. Early sites at x and y contain both copper and ivory tools, indicating that these peoples engaged in trade with neighboring groups of people. Additional finds suggest a reliance on a diet of fish and cereals, supplemented by a meager supply of pastoral beef; this supply seems to have disappeared around the beginning of the Bronze Age.

The utter lack of solid evidence as to these early peoples' lives is likely compounded by their lifestyles. The site at z, 50 kilometers southeast of the modern-day city of z1, is likely the remnants of a Middle Bronze Age city.

Ancient Tyria

Archaeologists debate the circumstances and exact year in which the city-state of Tyria was founded. 814 BCE, 842 BCE, and 812 BCE have all been floated as possible founding dates, based on varying corroborations of archaeological digs and the testimonies of Tyro-Latin historians writing on the period. According to Tyrian myth, the city was founded

Latin Tyria

Dark Ages

See also: Dictators of Tyria

Reunification

Modern Period

Geography

Government

Economy

Culture

Religion

Language

Music

Entertainment

Sports