Poldarias

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The Kingdom of Poldarias
de Koenigsa Poldarias
Flag of Poldarias
Alternative Flag of Poldarias and Palosia
Flag
Coat of arms of Poldarias.png
Coat of arms
Motto: Fau Gott, de Koenig und de Vollk
For God, the King, and the People
Map of Poldarias.jpg
CapitalLyceum
LargestAubard
Official languagesPoldarish
Ethnic groups
(2015)
97.6% Poldarion
1.8% Sudeeki
0.6% Aytherian
Religion
Kaloatism
Demonym(s)Poldarion
GovernmentUnitary semi-democratic constitutional monarchy
• King
Edward IX
• Lord of the Privy Council
Francis Verschovanet
• Imperial Minister
Thomas Beesley
• State Minister
Archibald Crawford
LegislatureThe Houses of Parliament
The House of the Privy Council
The House of the Common Chambers
Establishment
• Kingdom of Poldar
1 BC
Area
• Total Area
632,442 sq mi (1,638,020 km2)
Population
• 2020 estimate
142,109,783
• 2015 census
137,238,709
• Density
217/sq mi (83.8/km2)
GDP (PPP)2015 estimate
• Total
Ŧ7.318 Trillion
• Per capita
Ŧ53,323
GDP (nominal)2015 estimate
• Total
Ŧ4.219 Trillion
• Per capita
Ŧ30,742
Gini (2015)26.4
low
HDI (2015)Steady 0.930
very high
CurrencyThalar (THL)
Time zoneUTC+0 (PNT)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideleft


Etymology

The name Poldarias derives from the old Poldarish word 'Pold', meaning folk. This later developed into the inhabitants of the islands inhabitents referring to themselves, and in turn being refereed to as the Poldars. This too developed, with the island becoming known as Poldarias by the 11th century.

History

Pre-historic era (before the 6th century BC)

The earliest evidence of humans on Poldarias are footprints found to date from 500,000 years ago. In addition to these footprints, other evidence located has been concentrated in the southern regions and the Great Plains due to their more hospitable climate, with the earliest inhabitants being hunter-gatherers. Low sea-levels meant that Poldarias and Palosia were attached to the continent of Segoa for much of this pre-historic period, and varying temperatures meant that the islands have not always inhabited.

Since the end of the last ice age in around 9,000 BC and the beginning of the the Mesolithic era, Poldarias has been continuously inhabited. The end of the Ice age resulted in rapidly rising sea levels, destroying the thin land bridge which had connected Poldarias to Segoa, abd flooding thr Palosia Strait. The population by then was exclusively anatomically modern humans, and evidence suggests that their societies became increasingly complex and they were manipulating their environment and prey in new ways, possibly selective burning of then omnipresent woodland to create clearings for herds to gather and then hunt them. It is this which resulted in the Great Plains forming due to the large populous which resided in the area. Hunting was mainly done with simple projectile weapons such as javelin and possibly sling. Bow and arrow was known in Western Europe since least 9,000 BC. The climate continued to warm and the population probably rose.

The New Stone Age, or Neolithic era, began with the introduction of farming in around 4,000 BC. It is not known whether this was caused by a substantial folk movement or native adoption of foreign practices or both. People began to lead a more settled lifestyle. Monumental collective tombs were built for the dead in the form of chambered cairns and long barrows. Towards the end of the period, other kinds of monumental stone alignments begin to appear, such as Stonehenge; their cosmic alignments show a preoccupation with the sky and planets. Other discoveries have resulted in the theory that the population of Poldarias were already aware of god, or another similar being.

The Bronze Age began around 2,500 BC with the appearance of bronze objects. This coincides with the appearance of the characteristic Beaker culture; again this might have occurred primarily by folk movement or by cultural assimilation or both. The Bronze Age saw a shift of emphasis from the communal to the individual, with the rise of increasingly powerful elites whose power came from their prowess as hunters and warriors and their controlling the flow of precious resources to manipulate tin and copper into high-status bronze objects such as swords and axes. Settlement became increasingly permanent and intensive. Towards the end of the Bronze Age, many examples of very fine metalwork began to be deposited in rivers, presumably for ritual reasons which has facilitated their long term survival, giving historians a good understanding of the times.

Antiquity era (6th century BC–1st century AD)

Around 240 BC, the Segoan Empire invaded and occupied much of the island of Poldarias. Their occupation was characterized by brutal treatment of the natives, with many Poldarions being killed or taken as slaves. This resulted in many natives fleeing the towns in which the Segoans established and lived in. The occupation of the island also introduced Segoan culture to Poldarias.

During this period, Kaloatism began to rapidly spread. Poldarions performed rituals, asking god (referred to as Kaloat) to send someone to liberate them from the Segoans, whom had begun to hunt down Poldarions as their number of slaves dwindled. In 50 BC, a man who became known as Gregory the Prophet traveled to the thousands of native Poldarion settlements, which by now had been pushed to the northern mountains, to speak of the liberation of Poldarias. He carried 11 stone tablets with him, which depicted exactly when and where their help would arrive. These included a calendar, which became known as the Gregorian calendar. This counted down until the 25th December 1 BC.

Kaloat era (1st–5th century)

On the 25th December 1 BC, a large number of native Poldarions followed the north star up to the northern tip of Poldarias. There, they witnessed a farmers wife giving birth as the tablets of Gregory the prophet had said. They hailed him as Christian, King of the Poldars and bestowed him with the title of 'Jesus', meaning saviour.

Christian worked on his parents farm until he was around 15. After this he, and many other Poldarions, began training for combat so they would be able to attack and drive out the Segoans. In 25 AD the Kaloat War began, with Poldarions using guerrilla warfare to continuously strike the Segoan army and administration. Fire boats sunk the Segoan ships which carried food and reinforcements, and most arable earth was set alight, being aided by unusually hot and long summers.

The battle of Enda-Fassau in 50 AD was the final event of war, and despite Christians age he was still determined to participate. The battle resulted in a victory for the Poldarions, however Christian was gravely wounded. A procession guided by Gregory carried Christian on a cross back to the mountains, being led into the Cave in which Gregory said he came from and lived in. After leaving the two in the cave, neither were seen again. Before he had died, Christian had a child who was then crowned king.

After the Segoans left the island and Christian died, a power vacuum emerged with numerous other leaders trying to take control of individual regions of the Island. The Poldar kingdom was soon reduced to a minor portion of its original size.

Early Middle era (5th–10th century)

Late Middle era (10th–15th century)

Early modern era (15th–19th century)

Contemporary era (20th century–present)

Geography

Climate

The majority of Poldarias has a semi-continental climate (abnormal Cfb), however due to the size and landscape of the Island there are a number of nuances to this:

  • Areas on the western cost have a strictly oceanic climate (Cfb)
  • Palosia and the southern isles have a Mediterranean climate (Csa and Csb)
  • The mountain (or alpine) climates (Highlands: Dfb, Dfc and ET) are confined to the mountains in the north of Poldarias

Environment

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