Quincy: Difference between revisions

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|status =            Sovereign State
|status =            Sovereign State
|image_flag =        [[File:FlagoftheUnitedStatesofQuincy.png|200px|]]
|image_flag =        [[File:FlagoftheUnitedStatesofQuincy.png|200px|]]
|image_coat = [[File:Coat_of_Arms_USQ.png|200px]]
|flag_border =        yes
|flag_border =        yes
|national_motto =    God Save Quincy, Our Homeland
|national_motto =    God Save Quincy, Our Homeland

Revision as of 02:39, 5 March 2023

Quincyball.png
Message from The United States Federal Government: This article is undergoing heavy construction; if certain details are missing, they shall be added at a suitable date.
The United States of Quincy
Les États-Unis de Quincey (French) The Quincois States (Colloquial Use)
FlagoftheUnitedStatesofQuincy.png
Flag
Coat of Arms USQ.png
Coat of arms
Motto: God Save Quincy, Our Homeland
Anthem: When Johnny Comes Marching Home
StatusSovereign State
CapitalBoston
42.3601° N, 71.0589° W
Largest cityBoston
Official languagesNone
Recognised national languagesEnglish, French
Recognised regional languagesHaudenosaunee
Ethnic groups
Quincois, Quebecois, Canadian, Haudenosaunee, etc
Demonym(s)Quincois
GovernmentFederal Republic
• President
Arnold Landon
• Vice President
Pense Wells
• Speaker of the House
Miranda Huron
• Chief Justice
Tim Gerald
LegislatureCongress of the United States of Quincy (Congress)
Senate
House of Representatives
Independence from the United States of America
• Independence and dissolution of the United States of America
July 2nd, 1786
• Quinque-Publica Pax
1796-1860
• Continental War
1860-1865
• First Quintus Postbellum
1865-1916
• World War I involvement
1916-1918
• Second Quintus Postbellum
1919-1931
• Jacques Street Crash
October 25th-December 15th, 1931
• August 17th Bombings
August 17th, 1940
• Entry into World War II
August 17th, 1940, 9:30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
• Cold War
1945-1990
• Reclassification to United States
September 29, 2033
Area
• 
138,808 km2 (53,594 sq mi) (83rd)
Population
• 2030 estimate
9.6 million (122nd)
• 1790 census
1.45 million
• Density
543.9/km2 (1,408.7/sq mi)
Gini13.245
low (98)
HDI0.985
very high (5)
CurrencyQuincois Dollar
Time zoneUTC -05:00/Eastern Standard Time
Date formatmm/dd/yyyy
Driving sideright (side of road)

Quincy, officially the United States of Quincy (Kwin-zee) [French: Les États-Unis de Quincey] [Colloquial: The Quincois States], is a nation comprised of 5 states in New England. It is bordered to the north and northeast by the Commonwealth of Canada and to the south and southwest by Connecticut and the Haudenosaunee Confederation.

Etymology

Potential Ideas for Origin

It is unknown exactly where the name Quincy originated, but the most commonly and historically accepted origin is that it comes from the former French North American colony of Quincey, an archaic form of the word. The area applied to the word, however, has shifted much more southwards than it originally was intended, as it once meant the area around Montreal and Quebec City, whereas post-Revolutionary War it was applied to Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhodes. The word fell out of use from 1763-1785, but it picked up relevance again that year and was adopted as the name of the now world-renowned United States of Quincy.

Theories Around Its Original Meaning

Quincy as a name originates in the Latin term "Quintus", or Fifth-Born. The connection to this meaning is rather hotly debated among Quincois etymologists, but no concrete or overall opinion exists as to how the connection could play into any majorly significant meaning. Despite this, some persist with theories, a few of which, delve into more conspiratorial elements.

Conspiracies

There are two very well known conspiracies that have circulated around the origin of the name of Quincy, one being that the name originates from a Viking name, "Fimmtibarn", or Fifth-born, a literal translation of the name of Quincy from Latin. This suggestion has, however, received no genuine trend since the mid-1800s, as it lacks virtually any holding in historical truth.

The second theory, however, has a much higher number of proponents. The theory goes that, during the Crusades, Emperor Henry VI (April 14 1191-September 28 1197) of the Holy Roman Empire, in a conversation with his advisors, spoke the words "Vunf naht, vunf naht har din geben tau werdan." ("Five nights, five nights you have to born."), of which many attribute the portmanteau Vunfwerdan as an incredibly early form of the word Quincy. However, in recent years, fact checks and genuine delves into historical records of Henry VI have turned up nothing of this quote ever having been attributed to him.

History

Prehistory

Columbian Age

Discovery of America

Foundations of Quincy

Thirteen Colonies and British North America

United States of America

Following its victory in the American Revolutionary War of Independence, the United States of America was doomed to fail from its very start, as soon after the Treaty of Paris, the country began to unravel from the inside. Due to its being a confederate system of government, it was bound to break apart if it did not act quickly to federalize. However, by the time plans for a Constitutional Convention were planned, it was already too late as the Southern American states began to break away from the United States, beginning the very quick dissolution of the new nation.

Dissolution of the U.S.A. and aftermath

On July 2nd, 1786, a few months following the departure of Georgia, North and South Carolina, and Virginia from the U.S, the nation was officially dissolved by its last remaining states of Pennsylvannia, Delaware, Maryland, Connecticut, New York, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachussetts, and Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (present-day Rhodes); the latter 5 of which formed together to create the then-known Allied States of Quincy. Afterwards, the...

Quinque Publica-Pax

Continental War

World War I

Jacques Street Crash and Interwar

World War II

Cold War

Collapse of the Imperial Pact and the End of the Cold War

21st Century

Geography

Demographics

Largest Cities

Government

Military

Culture

Quincois

Cuisine

Sports

Energy

Infrastructure