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'''Pulacan''', officially the '''Republic of Pulacan' | '''Pulacan''', officially the '''Republic of Pulacan''' ([[wikipedia:Tswana_language|Setswana]]: ''Riphaboliki ya Bopulacan'', [[wikipedia:Huasteca Nahuatl|Nahuatl]]: ''Tlacatlahtohcayotl Pulacan''), is a sovereign country in eastern [[Ajax#Malaio|Malaio]]. It straddling the continent between the Vespanian Ocean and the Ozeros Sea on its north and south respectively, and borders [[Zanzali]] in the east and [[Pulau Keramat]] in the northeast. The current population of 46,442,816 people is spread across x square kilometers, making the nation one of the least population-dense on the continent. The arid plains in the south of the nation are divided from the fertile forests and coastal savannahs of the north by a large section of mountains and plateaued highlands that dominate the country. For centuries, political power has been concentrated in these highlands, lording over the two coasts. The distribution of ethnic groups in Pulacan is heavily influenced by this geography; Nahuatl peoples, the former elites in Zacapine colonial times, reside mainly on the southern coasts, while large populations of Wampar and other related groups dominate the north. Tswana and mixed Tswana-Nahuatl peoples are by far the most populous groups in the nation, with populations spread throughout, but mostly concentrated in the center of Pulacan. Small populations of mostly-nomadic Khoisan peoples exist in protected areas in the hinterlands of the country. | ||
The Khoisan peoples were the first to arrive in what is now Pulacan, living in hunter-gatherer societies for thousands of years before their way of life was hampered by the arrival of sedentary Bantu peoples in the 7th century CE. | The Khoisan peoples were the first to arrive in what is now Pulacan, living in hunter-gatherer societies for thousands of years before their way of life was hampered by the arrival of sedentary Bantu peoples in the 7th century CE. | ||
In the modern day, Pulacan rests on | In the modern day, Pulacan rests on |
Revision as of 20:30, 1 February 2022
Pulacan
Republic of Pulacan | |
---|---|
Motto: Pula e ne (Setswana) We will be blessed with rain | |
Capital | Tepetenxipaltlan (executive) Thabamouwane (legislative) Shalebolemo (judicial) Amaticuiloatlan (administrative) |
Largest city | Tepetenxipaltlan |
Official languages | Setswana, Pulatec Nahuatl |
Recognised national languages | Khoisan languages |
Ethnic groups (2020) |
|
Religion | Secular state |
Demonym(s) | Pulatec, Pulatl |
Government | Unitary parliamentary republic with an executive presidency |
• President | Coyotl Gontebanye |
• Chief Minister | Moctezuma Tshireletso |
• Chief of the Ntlo ya Dikgosi | Kȍhà ǂToma |
• Chief Surveyor | Tlaloc Xochiquetzal |
Legislature | Pan-National Assembly of Pulacan |
House of Survey | |
Ntlo ya Dikgosi House of Delegates | |
Establishment | |
• First cave paintings | c. 73,000 BCE |
• Arrival of Bantu tribes | c. 600 CE |
• Arrival of first Nahua peoples | c. 1150 CE |
• Itzcoatl's conquest | 1476 CE |
• Return to Zacapine control | 1544 CE |
Population | |
• 2020 estimate | 46,442,816 |
GDP (nominal) | 2020 estimate |
• Total | $714,373,343,528 |
• Per capita | $21,468.51 |
Currency | Pulatec Pula (PLP) |
Time zone | UTC+2 (Central Malaio Time) |
Date format | dd/mm/yyyy (CE) |
Driving side | right |
Calling code | +254 |
Internet TLD | .pl |
Pulacan, officially the Republic of Pulacan (Setswana: Riphaboliki ya Bopulacan, Nahuatl: Tlacatlahtohcayotl Pulacan), is a sovereign country in eastern Malaio. It straddling the continent between the Vespanian Ocean and the Ozeros Sea on its north and south respectively, and borders Zanzali in the east and Pulau Keramat in the northeast. The current population of 46,442,816 people is spread across x square kilometers, making the nation one of the least population-dense on the continent. The arid plains in the south of the nation are divided from the fertile forests and coastal savannahs of the north by a large section of mountains and plateaued highlands that dominate the country. For centuries, political power has been concentrated in these highlands, lording over the two coasts. The distribution of ethnic groups in Pulacan is heavily influenced by this geography; Nahuatl peoples, the former elites in Zacapine colonial times, reside mainly on the southern coasts, while large populations of Wampar and other related groups dominate the north. Tswana and mixed Tswana-Nahuatl peoples are by far the most populous groups in the nation, with populations spread throughout, but mostly concentrated in the center of Pulacan. Small populations of mostly-nomadic Khoisan peoples exist in protected areas in the hinterlands of the country.
The Khoisan peoples were the first to arrive in what is now Pulacan, living in hunter-gatherer societies for thousands of years before their way of life was hampered by the arrival of sedentary Bantu peoples in the 7th century CE.
In the modern day, Pulacan rests on