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==Etymology==
==Etymology==
The name ''Kitaubani'' derives from a Watuajua-language phrase. Following the Bahian consolidation during the Houregic Age, an expedition led by ''mfalme'' Mataka, landed on the shores of Kitaubani at the site of modern-day Gashi. Mataka had fled his homeland of modern-day Maucha both to escape violence at home and to re-establish his wealth through new economic holdings. After a long journey fraught with adverse conditions, conflicts with local authorities, and other innumerable hardships, was the island of Kitaubani: according to popular folklore, in his relief at completing his journey, Matake proclaimed the site ''kituo wa pwani'', or the Coast of Respite. As Mataka carries an almost-mythified status in Kitauban consciousness as one of the first kings of the island, this story has persisted and grown to be the most popular folk etymology for the name of the country. The name ''Kitaubani'' can apply both to the country and to the larger island within the country; the latter is frequently termed "Kitaubani Island" or "the Isle of Kitaubani" to avoid confusion.
The name ''Kitaubani'' likely derives from a Watuajua-language phrase, though it has been altered to fit Hausa language phonology. Following the Bahian consolidation during the Houregic Age, an expedition led by ''mfalme'' Mataka, landed on the shores of Kitaubani at the site of modern-day Gashi. Mataka had fled his homeland of modern-day Maucha both to escape violence at home and to re-establish his wealth through new economic holdings. After a long journey fraught with adverse conditions, conflicts with local authorities, and other innumerable hardships, was the island of Kitaubani: according to popular folklore, in his relief at completing his journey, Matake proclaimed the site ''kituo wa pwani'', or the Coast of Respite. As Mataka carries an almost-mythified status in Kitauban consciousness as one of the first kings of the island, this story has persisted and grown to be the most popular folk etymology for the name of the country. The name ''Kitaubani'' can apply both to the country and to the larger island within the country; the latter is frequently termed "Kitaubani Island" or "the Isle of Kitaubani" to avoid confusion.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 17:21, 18 August 2023

Template:Region icon Kylaris

Kingdom of Kitaubani
Masarautar Kitaubani (Hausa)
Flag of Kitaubani
Flag
of Kitaubani
Coat of arms
Motto: Umoja katika Utofauti
Unity in Diversity
Anthem: "Local name"
"O, Kitaubani"
MediaPlayer.png
Kitaubani (dark green) within the Congress of Bahian States (light green) in Bahia
Kitaubani (dark green) within the Congress of Bahian States (light green) in Bahia
LocationBahia
CapitalKwamuimepe
LargestGashi
Official languagesHausa, Watuajua
Ethnic groups
(2023)
List
Religion
(2023)
List
Demonym(s)Kitauban
GovernmentUnitary constitutional monarchy
• Queen
Medare I
• Premier
Balarabe Zango
Independence from Werania
Area
• 
259,786.24 km2 (100,304.03 sq mi)
Population
• 2023 estimate
21,974,231
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$371,210,684,283
• Per capita
$16,893
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$143,667,522,278
• Per capita
$6,538
CurrencyKitauban Wuri (₩) (KBW)
Time zoneUTC+3 (BST)
(Khardjiba Island: +4)
Driving sideright
Calling code+27
Internet TLD.kb

Kitaubani, known officially as the Kingdom of Kitaubani, is a sovereign state located off the coast of Bahia. An island nation, it shares a maritime border with Asase Lewa and Sabaw to the southeast. The current population of 21,974,231 people is spread across 259,786 square kilometers, making Kitaubani one of the more moderately-dense nations in Bahia at 84 persons per square kilometer.

The islands presently known as Kitaubani were inhabited since ancient times by numerous groups, such as the Hausa and the Tamasheq. These groups frequently associated with one another and with their cohorts on the Bahian mainland through a cross-channel trade network. City-states were beginning to form on the coasts, which interfaced with the more nomadic groups in the hinterlands through trade, diplomatic marriage and warfare. These patterns of interaction were interrupted in the early Houregic Period. In the mid-eleventh century CE, a Watuajua ruler known as Mataka fled warfare in his home in modern-day Maucha. Mataka's arrival in Kitaubani presaged many of his followers', which included a significant merchant caste that soon dominated the city of Gashi. For around a century, Gashi operated indistinctly from other coastal Kitauban city-states. By the end of the twelfth century, however, Gashi's Watuajua rulers had begun attacking neighboring city-states, either to annex them or force them into tributary status. This eventually transformed into the elite of Gashi holding at least nominal control of most of the Kitauban islands by the 1500s. To this day, Mataka's initial takeover of the village of Gashi is seen as the direct predecessor of the modern Kitauban state, and Mataka himself is considered in the popular consciousness as the first mfalme, or Watuajua ruler of Kitaubani.

Presently, the Kingdom of Kitaubani is ruled as a constitutional monarchy under the guiding principle of parliamentary sovereignty. The government retains moderately low corruption and high transparency scores. It is a member of the Congress of Bahian States, the Community of Nations, the Council for Mutual Development and the International Forum for Developing States. Kitaubani maintains one of the stronger economies in Bahia, benefitting from a growth in urban manufacturing and its influence in the global shipping industry. Its nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the second-largest per capita in Bahia after Sabaw.


Etymology

The name Kitaubani likely derives from a Watuajua-language phrase, though it has been altered to fit Hausa language phonology. Following the Bahian consolidation during the Houregic Age, an expedition led by mfalme Mataka, landed on the shores of Kitaubani at the site of modern-day Gashi. Mataka had fled his homeland of modern-day Maucha both to escape violence at home and to re-establish his wealth through new economic holdings. After a long journey fraught with adverse conditions, conflicts with local authorities, and other innumerable hardships, was the island of Kitaubani: according to popular folklore, in his relief at completing his journey, Matake proclaimed the site kituo wa pwani, or the Coast of Respite. As Mataka carries an almost-mythified status in Kitauban consciousness as one of the first kings of the island, this story has persisted and grown to be the most popular folk etymology for the name of the country. The name Kitaubani can apply both to the country and to the larger island within the country; the latter is frequently termed "Kitaubani Island" or "the Isle of Kitaubani" to avoid confusion.

History

Geography

Climate

Administrative divisions

Demographics

Ethnicity

Language

Hausa and Watuajua, through their historical prominence, have retained their positions as dual linguae francae across the island. Some students elect to learn Weranian as a foreign language, though for many decades this was discouraged due to political reasons.

Education

Religion

Government

Culture