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[[File:Flag of Chanwa.png|250px|thumb|Flag of the former Chanwan republic, commonly used by Chanwan nationalists]] | |||
'''Chanwa''' ({{wp|Burmese language|Chanwan}}: '''ချိုင့်ဝှမ်'''; ''Hkyao ng wham'') is a geo-cultural region in south central [[Coius]] where the [[Chanwan people]] form a pluarity or majority of the population. Stretching across southern [[Zorasan]], northern [[Xiaodong]] and western [[Tinza]] the territory is defined by its steppe culture similar to other nations in the [[Great Steppe|region]]. Its population predominantly speak the {{Wp|Burmese language|Chanwan language}} and practice a mixture of [[Badi]], shamanism, and [[Satyism]] (particularly the [[Antargat]] sect). Chanwan nationalists often aspire for the region to become its own, unified state. The Chanwan people have historically been seen as nomadic although this tradition has been on the decline for the last five centuries. | '''Chanwa''' ({{wp|Burmese language|Chanwan}}: '''ချိုင့်ဝှမ်'''; ''Hkyao ng wham'') is a geo-cultural region in south central [[Coius]] where the [[Chanwan people]] form a pluarity or majority of the population. Stretching across southern [[Zorasan]], northern [[Xiaodong]] and western [[Tinza]] the territory is defined by its steppe culture similar to other nations in the [[Great Steppe|region]]. Its population predominantly speak the {{Wp|Burmese language|Chanwan language}} and practice a mixture of [[Badi]], shamanism, and [[Satyism]] (particularly the [[Antargat]] sect). Chanwan nationalists often aspire for the region to become its own, unified state. The Chanwan people have historically been seen as nomadic although this tradition has been on the decline for the last five centuries. | ||
Revision as of 12:50, 26 February 2021
Chanwa (Chanwan: ချိုင့်ဝှမ်; Hkyao ng wham) is a geo-cultural region in south central Coius where the Chanwan people form a pluarity or majority of the population. Stretching across southern Zorasan, northern Xiaodong and western Tinza the territory is defined by its steppe culture similar to other nations in the region. Its population predominantly speak the Chanwan language and practice a mixture of Badi, shamanism, and Satyism (particularly the Antargat sect). Chanwan nationalists often aspire for the region to become its own, unified state. The Chanwan people have historically been seen as nomadic although this tradition has been on the decline for the last five centuries.
Chanwan regions have varying levels of autonomy from a high amount in Tinza, a nominally moderate but in practice restricted amount in Xiaodong and a low amount in Zorasan.