Alameda
Chênique Republic Name in national languages
| |||||||
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Capital | Ville de Augusta | ||||||
Largest city | Piscataquis City | ||||||
Official languages | Audonic Tsalagi Wôbanakiôdwawôgan | ||||||
Ethnic groups (2019) | Chênique | ||||||
Demonym(s) | Chênique | ||||||
Government | Federal parliamentary republic | ||||||
René Mitterrand | |||||||
Oconostota | |||||||
Senate of Chenes | |||||||
House of Chenique Delegates | |||||||
Establishment | |||||||
1625 | |||||||
March 1813 | |||||||
1824-1827 | |||||||
1914 | |||||||
Currency | Chênique Pehikan (CQP, P.) | ||||||
Date format | MM/DD/YYYY | ||||||
Driving side | right | ||||||
Calling code | +56 | ||||||
Internet TLD | .cq |
TheChênique Republic (Audonic: Chênique République; Anigiduwagi: ᎠᏓᏯᎯᎢᎾᎨᎢ, Adayahi Inagei; Alnôbaôdwawôgan: Wachilmezi) is a sovereign nation located in Norumbia. It borders the countries of Moxaney and Awasan to the north, Mniohuta to the west and Gristol-Serkonos to the south. Its eastern coastline leads to the North Thalassan Sea. The capital of Chenes is Ville de Augusta and the most populous city is Piscataquis City. Chênes has historically been divided into two divisions: West Chenes and East Chenes. These two areas differ in politics, culture, economics and language. The population of Chenes is approximately at 19.7 million people, with around 80% of which live in East Chenes. The majority of people within the country self-identify as Chênique.
Chenes has historically been inhabited since the last ice age, with evidence of inhabitation dating from 10,000 B.C.E. Chenes is considered the homeland of two Norumbrian groups, the Serkonian Anigiduwagi and the Kadowakan Wαpánahki. Much of these groups settled through small tribal systems which eventually devolved into two large, influential tribes that would influence events among over twenty-five different Anigiduwagi and Wαpánahki clans. The two largest tribes were the Anigiduwagi Quanassee and the Wαpánahki Androscoggin, both of which frequently fought over influence over tribes.
In 1625, a group of dissatisfied Audonic merchants and tradesmen formed the New Augusta Trading Company landed on the shore close to the site of contemporary Ville de Augusta. This new settlement was named Côte d'Augusta and would later be expanded and renamed to Ville de Augusta. The new settlers made contact and were initially welcomed by the Wαpánahki tribe of Winnibisauga, which was aligned with the Androscoggin. With the help of Winnibisauga and another Wαpánahki tribe, the Androscoggin-aligned Nashua; the Androscoggin were able to weather the harsh winters. Early Augustan commerce revolved around the use of wampum and trading fur, pelts and labor to the Winnibisauga and Nashua, in return for food and transportation inland. This commerce allowed for a flourishing of Audonic settlements, with the establishment of the villages of Ville de Amiens (then known as Côte d'Amiens) and Vignobles. Vignobles was established close to claimed land from the Wαpánahki tribe of Amaseconti, which were persuaded by Nashua delegates to allow the settlers to establish tradeposts and houses around them.
By 1775, Chenes had not become a unified entity. Some of the towns had faced issues in permenant settlement, the most obvious being Vignobles and Ville de Amiens. The Androscoggin-aligned Amaseconti were actively engaged in war with the Quanassee-aligned Anigiduwagi tribe of Kulsetsiyi. Ville de Amiens had been abandoned twice, once due to a devestating famine that forced people to flee southward from Amiens to Augusta. On the second time, the Quanassee-aligned Telliqo tribe invaded the town, in what is known as the Amiens Raid in 1808. The Amiens raid and subsequent requests to expansion eventually resulted in the Augusta Assembly being called to hold peace talks between the Androscoggin and Quanassee, and for the Audonic towns to seek unification. The Confederation of Chenes was created as a result, between the Chenique and Androscoggin. The Quanassee delegates and the majority of Quanassee-aligned tribes abandoned the assembly midway due to disagreements.
The Quanassee and the many smaller Tsalagi tribes later declared war on the Confederation of Chenes in the War of Androscoggin-Etinne in 1824. The war saw the eventual inclusion of the Quanassee and Tsalagi tribes under the Confederation with almost free-reigning autonomy. In 1914, the Penobscot Assembly was held which federalized the confederation and saw a stronger central government with weaker state governments. The Penobscot Assembly also resolves to recognize the Quanassee as a singular political entity that participated within the federal government and held free reign as an almost entirely separate country under the protection of Chenes.
Chenes is currently a federal legislative-dependent republic. The head of state and head of government are elected within the Senate of Chenes, the upper house in the Legislature of Chenes. The executive branch is the Executive Council of Chenes, which is led by the President of Chenes. Chenes is officially trilingual at a federal government level, with states being able to choose which languages to represent as their official language. Chenes has historically been a nation that focuses on railroad and transportation as an economic option, and is a founding member of the Commercial Railway Company that serves Moxaney and Gristol-Serkenos. Chenes is strictly an unaligned nation and refuses to engage with international conflicts that do not threaten Chenes. As a result, Chenes military is extremely small and only contains one branch, the Border Guard of Chenes.
Etymology
The term Chêne comes from the Audonic word for the oak tree. While the majority of wood that was used was pine tree wood, the oak tree was considered to be unique to the Audonic settlers. Many different trinkets or special things that were created by the Audonic settlers were made of oak, signifying its value to them.
The term Chênique was coined by René Sieyes during the Augusta Assembly in 1813, which caught in very quickly during the Penobscot Trade Revolution. The cultural and societal revolution sought better integration between the Audonic settlers and the Wαpánahki.
History
Pre-Audonic History
This section will serve to explain history of the Tsalagi before the introduction of the Audonic settlers. The general area this takes place is West Chenes with potential involvement of neighbors. Alongside this is a primary focus on the expansion of Tsalagi and their existence during the expansion of Chenes.
Audonic Colonization
This section will serve to explain history of the Audonics, a brief summary of their actions before leaving Belisaria and the afterwards sailing from any of the countries from Belisaria. The general area from there will be in East Chenes, specifically on the East Coast. Much of the colonization will further go into a large center, Ville de Augusta. Afterwards, different trade outposts will be set up along the East Chenes Coast and trading posts along the Sagadahoc network of roads.
Augusta Convention & Penobscot Mercantile Revolution
This section will serve to explain the Augusta Convention and the establishment of East Chenes. The cultural divide between the Sagadahoc-Chenique and the Maskwacis becomes more and more expanded, until the Penobscot Mercantile Revolution which serves to fully unify the Chenique and Sagadahoc as a single nation.
War of Androscoggin-Étienne
This section will serve as a brief explanation of the Maskwacis attack on the Chenes border as a reaction to what they believed to be a cultural invasion that violated the Agreement of Augusta, the only treaty that the Maskwacis, Sagadahoc and Chenique agreed to sign. Eventually the Maskwacis would attend the Penobscot Convention and the Penobscot Agreement as they began to lose different tribes in their alliance. They lost those allies to the Chenique and Sagadahoc during the war, and eventually they agreed to a ceasefire and seceded control and influence over several different eastern and central Tsalagi tribes.
Golden Era of the Merle
This section will serve as an explanation of the era, the Golden Era of the Merle, alternatively the Industrial Revolution.
Asherionic Wars
This section will serve as an explanation of Chenes during the Asherionic Wars and under Asherion's control. Under Asherion's control many of the Abenaki, Creole and Chenique communities suffered from the ordinances that were placed upon them, especially the Chenique.
Reformative Era
This section will serve as an explanation of Chenes in the aftermath of the collapse of Asherion's Empire. Much of Asherion's brief conquest embittered the Chenique and Creole factions who were subject to Asherion's relocation policy on children. Much of the Reformative Era is marked by quickly entering and exiting presidents, often without an election as Chenes attempts to reform their country.
Geography
Physical Geography, Geology & Hydrology
Chenes is bordered by Moxaney to the north, Awasin to the northwest, Mniohuta to the west, Gristol-Serkonos to the south, and the Thalassian Sea to the east. Chenes is divided primarily between West Chenes and East Chenes. West Chenes is divided into six states, while East Chenes is divided into twelve states.
Climate
Flora & Fauna
Government & Politics
Government
Chenes is a federal republic that utilizes a legislative-dependent system, similar to a semi-presidential system that awards more power to the Chenique Legislature. The Chenique government is divided into three branches: executive, legislative, and judicial. These consist of the Statesman Congress, led by the President of Chenes; the bicamerial Legislature of Chenes, and the Supreme Court of Chenes. All branches of government are headquartered and operate within Ville de Augusta in the Government Square. The only exception to this is the House of Delegates that operates with other government entities headquartered in the Merchants Square.
Chenes has historically invested the legal powers of government into the legislative branch and is considered to be an identifying value within Chenique government and politics. The Augusta Assembly was the first legal assembly within the country until its transition into the Unified Assembly of Chenes after the signing of the Treaty of Oaks and the establishment of the Union of Chenes. Historically in Chenique political history, the government has operated under a two-party system until XXXX. The two politically dominant parties have been the Chenique-Wαpánahki aligned Société des Commerçants and the politically neutral Comité des Indépendants. The political alignment between these two parties has generally been fluid. A third party, the Alliance de l'Ouest, rose in 1933 and turned the two-party system to a multi-party system and has orientated itself to aligning with the Anigiduwagi
The presidency of Jacques Champlain hosted the Penobscot Assembly after the 1912 Election of Chenes. The 1914 Constitution of Chenes was authored and signed during the Penobscot Assembly in response to the 1908 Chenes Civil War. The 1914 Constitution establishes the current form of a federated government, allowing more autonomy from the newly created subdivisions of West Chenes and East Chenes. Alongside this, lower-division units were standardized from the previous system, creating subdivisions from the two areas into states and subsequently into Departments. Continuining the traditions passed from the Augusta Assembly, the 1914 Constitution retained the legislative-dependent system. However, this was tampered with more authority given over the governments of West Chenes and East Chenes, alongside more power over their individual states.
The Government of West Chenes, typically referred to as the Quanassee Government, is governed tribally by ethnic Anigiduwagi. East Chenes is entirely bound to the 1914 Constitution of Chenes and is represented in the legislature by the General Assembly. East Chenes is bound to the national executive branch, the Executive Council and primarily consists of Chenique and Wαpánahki states. West Chenes governed by a tribal government, the Quanassee Government.
Legislature
Regional & State Government
Chenes is divided into
West Chenes
West Chenes is an autonomous part of Chenes that makes up one of the two large administrative divisions of Chenes. West Chenes is still considered to be governed by the 1914 Constitution, but has its own legal document that determines the full stretch of its autonomy. The 1915 Constitution of West Chenes is the full legal document that proscribes the powers of the autonomous division. West Chenes consists of the states of Quanassee, Sitigu, Talikwa, Esseneca, Chatuga, and Tuckasegee. All of these states are recognized to be ethnically and linguistically Tsalagi. West Chenes has been governed since the 1915 Constitution by the Government of Quanassee.
Administrative Division
Chenes is divided between West Chenes and East Chenes. The borders between the two were determined by the Penobscot Assembly and are governed separately. East Chenes is governed by the current government, and is subdivided by states. States do not have sovereignty but retain self-governship and are somewhat independent from the federal government. States are divided further into regions, and the subdivided into departments, which is the smallest level of local government. There are 18 different states, 12 states under the jurisdiction of East Chenes and 6 states under the jurisdiction of West Chenes.
Flag | State | Capital City | Largest City | Governor | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Augusta | Ville de Augusta | Ville de Augusta | Jacques Santerre | XXXX | |
Montgomery | Rennes | Rennes | Hélène Myriam | XXXX | |
Lanaudiere | New Calais | Machias | Donatien Ludovic | ||
Vignobles | Vignobles City | Vignobles City | Cédric Dieudonné | ||
Amiens | Ville de Amiens | Ville de Amiens | Barnabé Édouard | ||
Sarthe | Évreux | Évreux | Maxence Gauthier | ||
Ardèche | Épernay | Épernay | Éliane Simone | ||
Penobscot | Penobscot | Penobscot | TBD | ||
Androscoggin | Île de Androscoggin | Île de Androscoggin | TBD | ||
Winnibisauga | Île de Winnibisauga | Île de Winnibisauga | TBD | ||
Piscataquis | Île de Piscataquis | Mérignac | TBD | ||
Souhegan | Île de Souhegan | Périgueux | TBD | ||
Quanassee | TBD | TBD | TBD | ||
Sitigu | TBD | TBD | TBD | ||
Talikwa | TBD | TBD | TBD | ||
Esseneca | TBD | TBD | TBD | ||
Chatuga | TBD | TBD | TBD | ||
Tuckasegee | TBD | TBD | TBD |
Parties & Elections
Foreign Relations
Economy
Infrastructure
Transportation
Rail Industry
Energy
Water Supply
West Chenique Infrastructure
Demographics
Ethnic Groups
Language
Education
Health
Urbanization
Rank | State | Pop. | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Piscataquis City Ville de Augusta |
1 | Piscataquis City | Penobscot | 4,273,200 | Vignobles Ville de Amiens | ||||
2 | Ville de Augusta | Augusta | 614,300 | ||||||
3 | Vignobles | Vignobles | 556,200 | ||||||
4 | Ville de Amiens | Machias | 469,200 | ||||||
5 | Penobscot | Penobscot | 356,500 | ||||||
6 | Androscoggin | Androscoggin-Étienne | 263,200 | ||||||
7 | Tellico | Ardèche | 253,700 | ||||||
8 | New Calais | Lanaudiere | 237,900 | ||||||
9 | Citico | Augusta | 183,000 | ||||||
10 | Beausoleil | Souhegan | 153,300 |