Omeria: Difference between revisions
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Omeria, officially known as the Sublime Omerian Federation (Omerian Turkic: ''Devlet Aliye-i Ömeriye''), is a transcontinental country encompassing the Lydian Peninsula, with a smaller portion on mainland !Europe. The Sublime Omerian Federation borders the ... Sea to the | Omeria, officially known as the Sublime Omerian Federation (Omerian Turkic: ''Devlet Aliye-i Ömeriye''), is a transcontinental country encompassing the Lydian Peninsula, with a smaller portion on mainland !Europe. The Sublime Omerian Federation borders the ... Sea to the Northwest, Khefanestan to the Northeast and East, ... to the South, the ... Sea to the Southeast, and ... to the West. Of the groups within the Federation, Turks currently comprise the largest of any group, but comprise only 42.8% of the total population, followed by Arabs at 18.7%, Kurds at 17.5%. and Greeks at 10.1%. Other groups include Armenians, Assyrians, Bulgarians, Laz, Circassians, Crimean Tartars, and Albanians. | ||
Many of the world's first civilisations have made their mark on modern day Omeria since the founding of agriculture along the ... and ... Rivers. These include the ..., Lidians, the ..., and the Greeks. The region became prominently under the influence of both eastern and western empires until the conquests of Kassander the Great, whose Hellenization of the region in 333 B.C paved the way for continual Greek control of the peninsula until the late 11th century AD, when Turkic groups migrated into the region following the Battle of .... The newly-formed Sultanate of Tiburum existed for several centuries after the Battle of ..., until it was shattered into a dozen feuding beyliks by an ... invasion. In the late 14th century, one of these beyliks, controlled by Ömer I, son of Alaeddin Bey, formed the Omerian Empire by conquering several of its rivals. Under Ömer's descendants such as Bayezid I and Osman II, the empire grew to control considerable parts of the Middle East, Northern Mauria, and the !Balkans, reaching its height in the reign of Bayezid III "the Magnificent" between 1521 and 1565. The Omerian Empire would continue to expand under Ömer III and Suleiman II, but a string of internal and external conflicts beginning with the reign of Ömer IV led to a decline that lasted for almost four hundred years. In this time, the Empire shrank, and many of its former holdings fell to external invasions or internal rebellions. Sultan Abdülsamet I instituted the Abdülsametian Reforms in the 1840s, an attempt to slow the decline and modernise the country, that would continue until the deposition of Abdülhamid and the crowning of the authoritarian Abdülhadi. Abdülhadi attempted to reverse many of the reforms made in the decades prior, but he was deposed in the Constitutional Revolution of 1905 which gave the throne to his reform-minded brother Abdülrahim III. | |||
==History== | ==History== |
Revision as of 11:33, 23 October 2021
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Sublime Omerian Federation Devlet Aliye-i Ömeriye (Omerian Turkic) | |
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Motto: "Devlet-i Ebed-müddet" "The Eternal State" | |
Anthem: Abdülsametiye Marşı ("March of Abdülsamet") | |
Map of the Sublime Omerian Federation showing regions | |
Capital | Balantiniyye |
Largest city | Balantiniyye |
Official languages | Omerian Turkic Arabic |
Recognised national languages | Kurdish Greek Armenian |
Ethnic groups (2019) | 42.5% Omerian Turkic 18.7% Arab 17.5% Kurdish 10.1% Greek 3.7% Armenian 7.5% Other |
Demonym(s) | Omerian |
Government | Federal constitutional monarchy |
• Sultan Ömerlı Padişahları | Şemseddin I Osman |
• Grand Vizier Vezir-i Azam | Alparslan Karan Taviloğlu Pasha |
Legislature | General Assembly Meclis-i Umumi |
Assembly of Notables Meclis-i Ayan | |
Chamber of Deputies Meclis-i Mebusan | |
Establishment | |
• Foundation of the Omerian Empire | 1300 |
• Height of the Omerian Empire | 1521-1565 (Reign of Bayezid the Magnificent) |
• Abdülsametian Reforms | 1838-1880 |
• Constitutional Revolution | 1905 |
• Reforms of Arslan Kılıç Ghazi Pasha | 1922-1924, 1924-1935 |
• Establishment of the Sublime Omerian Federation | 1940 |
Population | |
• 2019 census | 112,663,312 |
Currency | Omerian Lira (OML) |
Date format | dd/mm/yyyy (AD) |
Driving side | right |
Calling code | +86 |
ISO 3166 code | OMF |
Internet TLD | .ome |
Omeria, officially known as the Sublime Omerian Federation (Omerian Turkic: Devlet Aliye-i Ömeriye), is a transcontinental country encompassing the Lydian Peninsula, with a smaller portion on mainland !Europe. The Sublime Omerian Federation borders the ... Sea to the Northwest, Khefanestan to the Northeast and East, ... to the South, the ... Sea to the Southeast, and ... to the West. Of the groups within the Federation, Turks currently comprise the largest of any group, but comprise only 42.8% of the total population, followed by Arabs at 18.7%, Kurds at 17.5%. and Greeks at 10.1%. Other groups include Armenians, Assyrians, Bulgarians, Laz, Circassians, Crimean Tartars, and Albanians.
Many of the world's first civilisations have made their mark on modern day Omeria since the founding of agriculture along the ... and ... Rivers. These include the ..., Lidians, the ..., and the Greeks. The region became prominently under the influence of both eastern and western empires until the conquests of Kassander the Great, whose Hellenization of the region in 333 B.C paved the way for continual Greek control of the peninsula until the late 11th century AD, when Turkic groups migrated into the region following the Battle of .... The newly-formed Sultanate of Tiburum existed for several centuries after the Battle of ..., until it was shattered into a dozen feuding beyliks by an ... invasion. In the late 14th century, one of these beyliks, controlled by Ömer I, son of Alaeddin Bey, formed the Omerian Empire by conquering several of its rivals. Under Ömer's descendants such as Bayezid I and Osman II, the empire grew to control considerable parts of the Middle East, Northern Mauria, and the !Balkans, reaching its height in the reign of Bayezid III "the Magnificent" between 1521 and 1565. The Omerian Empire would continue to expand under Ömer III and Suleiman II, but a string of internal and external conflicts beginning with the reign of Ömer IV led to a decline that lasted for almost four hundred years. In this time, the Empire shrank, and many of its former holdings fell to external invasions or internal rebellions. Sultan Abdülsamet I instituted the Abdülsametian Reforms in the 1840s, an attempt to slow the decline and modernise the country, that would continue until the deposition of Abdülhamid and the crowning of the authoritarian Abdülhadi. Abdülhadi attempted to reverse many of the reforms made in the decades prior, but he was deposed in the Constitutional Revolution of 1905 which gave the throne to his reform-minded brother Abdülrahim III.