Sainte-Mélitine

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United Phalansteries of Sainte-Mélitine
Phalanstères-Unis de Sainte-Mélitine
Phalanstéria-Petéïna Karaïpire-Mélitine
Flag of Sainte-Mélitine
Sainte-Mélitine flag reverse.svg
Flag
Emblem of Sainte-Mélitine
Emblem
Motto: "Joie, Fidélité, Droit"
"Via, Jérovia, Léï"
("Joy, Faith, Law")
Capital
and largest city
Tétan Marangatou
Official languagesPrincipean
Paurois
Tchatchais
Recognised regional languagesBlaykish
Runasimi
Tatinawa
Demonym(s)Melitinian
GovernmentSemi-theodemocratic kritarchic council republic
• High Elder
Marie-Proserpine Alençon-Dumas
• Vice High Elder
Maïnumpé Hôvuin
LegislatureAssembly of the Phalansteries
Establishment
• Colony of Sainte-Mélitine founded
November 2, 1566
• Belmont Revolution
September 30, 1796
• Melitinian secession
May 3, 1831
• United Phalanteries established
May 10, 1910
Area
• Total
1,799,184 km2 (694,669 sq mi)
• Water (%)
1.11
Population
• 2022 census
45,288,473
• Density
25.2/km2 (65.3/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)estimate
• Total
$2.062 trillion
• Per capita
$45,522.80
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$1.416 trillion
• Per capita
$31,279.12
Gini (2022)Negative increase 14.4
low
HDI (2022)Increase 0.790
high
CurrencyLivre tétanois (₶) (LTM)
Date formatyyyy-mm-dd, CE
Driving sideright
Calling code+20
Internet TLD.sm

The United Phalansteries of Sainte-Mélitine (Principean: Phalanstères-Unis de Sainte-Mélitine; Paurois: Phalanstéria-Petéïna Karaïpire-Mélitine), commonly known as Sainte-Mélitine, is a country in southern Marceaunia Minor. Bordered by Amandine to the north and Rocia to the northeast, Sainte-Mélitine covers an area of 1,799,184 km2 of diverse landscapes. Over 45 million people are citizens of Sainte-Mélitine, largely living in self-organized political units called "phalansteries". Each phalanstery is home to between 1,000 and 3,000 inhabitants and there are over 20,000 phalansteries in Sainte-Mélitine. The largest urban centre and political core of Sainte-Mélitine is Tétan Marangatou, an ancient fishing settlement that became the colonial capital of the region. The political system of Sainte-Mélitine is a council republic with socio-religious elders acting as representatives for their communities. While ostensibly a theocratic state, there is no state-enforced religion in Sainte-Mélitine, nor any requirement for worship or religious activity for political involvement.

Prior to Auressian colonization, the area of modern-day Sainte-Mélitine was inhabited by indigenous Paurois-, Tchatchais-, and Runasimi-speaking tribes. The indigenous societies cultivated maize, cassava, and yerba-mate, and established communalist agricultural societies across the region. In the 16th century CE, the Tchatcha kingdom of Calquouin was the predominant hegemonic power in the south of the continent. Auressian explorers made expeditions along the coasts of southern Marceaunia Minor in the first half of the 16th century, making contact with indigenous groups in the 1540s The colony of Terre-de-Sainte-Mélitine was established as a Blaco-Vervillian in 1566 CE, based in the stronghold of Fort Dumont. Throughout the early-17th century, Auressian influence in the south expanded through the seizure of arable land, displacing indigenous groups into the arid and mountainous interior. Indigenous persons were also enslaved in service of the planter economy, which was reliant on the cultivation of cash crops such as cotton, tobacco, and tea. In 1796, the Belmont Revolution initiated a series of wars of independence in the Auressian colonies, resulting in the foundation of the Confederation of Southern Marceaunia. In 1831, the planter aristocracy of the south seceded from the Confederation, founding the Republic of Sainte-Mélitine. By the turn of the 20th century, the Republic was embroiled in civil conflict between the planters and an alliance of indigenous tribes and adherents of the Sansseauist movement, culminating in the overthrow of the plants in 1910 and the foundation of the United Phalansteries.

Sainte-Mélitine has a developed late-industrial economy, though it retains a significant agricultural sector. In addition to acting as political administrative divisions, phalansteries are also core economic units in a market socialist economy. Leading exports include lithium, salt, textiles, garments, and heavy manufactured goods.

Etymology

The colony of Terre-de-Sainte-Mélitine was named for Saint Melitina, a Perendist saint of Savolian origin who became particularly venerated by a sect of sailors in Marbonne. The area of present-day Sainte-Mélitine was not known to the indigenous population by a single name. The Kingdom of Calquoin referred to the continent of Marceaunia Minor as "Bougouäpie-au-Houäpie", or "big island". Specific regions were generally known by geographic features and/or the tribes that inhabited them.

The term "phalanstery" was coined by Philippe Sansseau in 1877 as a portmanteau of "phalanx" and "monastery" as describing a planned utopian community centered on socialist labour and worship. While the specific forms of phalansteries have often diverged from the conceptions of Sansseau in the 19th century, the term encapsulates the basic political and economic units of Sainte-Mélitine.

History

Evidence of human habitation in southern Marceaunia Minor dates to the fourth millennium BCE, though it is likely that traces of material culture from earlier human societies have not survived to the present. Major ancient archaeological sites have been identified by middens along the eastern and western coasts of the continent. Mound-building activity in the interior region dates to the first millennium BCE with the Éleau culture. The Éleau culture inhabited the southwestern quadrant of modern-day Sainte-Mélitine where they left ruins of large-scale settlements, geoglyphs, and burial sites with mummified remains.

The Paura and Tchatcha societies emerged as distinct cultural-linguistic groups likely between the eighth and ninth centuries CE.

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