Caponoirs: Difference between revisions

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| image            = Street view in Cap Haitien, Haiti.jpg
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| image_caption    = Street view in [[Setiba]]


| total            =  '''~5.5 million'''<br>'''4,098,791''' in [[Preisland]] <small>(2008 census)</small>
| total            =  '''~5.5 million'''<br>'''4,098,791''' in [[Preisland]] <small>(2008 census)</small><br>'''~1 million''' in [[Remeria]]
| total_year      =  <!-- year of total population -->
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| total_source    =  <!-- source of total population; may be ''census'' or ''estimate'' -->
| total_source    =  <!-- source of total population; may be ''census'' or ''estimate'' -->

Revision as of 14:53, 26 August 2020

Caponoirs
Street view in Cap Haitien, Haiti.jpg
Street view in Setiba
Total population
~5.5 million
4,098,791 in Preisland (2008 census)
~1 million in Remeria
Regions with significant populations
northern Preisland and northeast Remeria
Languages
Apelian (Cape Apelian), Cape Creole, Vierz
Religion
Wedianism

Caponoirs, also referred to as Apelian Preislanders (Apelian: Preislandiens apellais) or Caponese, are an ethnic group that reside in the northern region of Preisland and the northeastern region of Remeria around the Ondepper Cape. Most Caponoirs are identify by speaking Apelian as their first language, differentiating them most of the inhabitants of Veisic Artalia who speak Borish or Vierz. Caponoirs are not identified by race and instead come from many different racial backgrounds such as Tusolan, Patyrian, and indigenous peoples who mixed together during the colonization of the Artalias. Many Caponoirs can trace some ancestry back to Apelia during the period of Apelian colonization of South Artalia during the 16th and 17th centuries when thousands of Apelians came to the Artalias.

Etymology

The cape of northeastern South Artalia was named the Ondiepe Kaap (lit. "Deep Cape") by the Borish explorer Jan-Douwe Drost in 1502. The name was transliterated into Apelian as Cap Ondepoise. The word Caponoir was formed as a portmanteau, combining "cap" and "on" with the "-oir" suffix added.