Haveno Sekura
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Confederacion of Haveno Sekura Konfederacio Haveno Sekura | |
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Flag | |
Motto: "Mondaj vokoj komunaj" "The world's voices in common" | |
Capital and largest city | Haveno Sekura City |
Official languages | Esperanto |
vernacular minority languages | Havnes, Hafendeitsch, Geilg |
Demonym(s) | Kohosa |
Government | Libertarian socialist federal semi-direct democracy |
Klaŭdino Lefevro | |
Ignaco Baŭero | |
Legislature | Confederal Council |
Establishment | |
• Kingdom of Havre-Segur established | 1236 |
• Proclamation of the Confederation | 20th March 1919 |
Population | |
• 2016 census | 8,387,484 |
Currency | Arĝento (ⱥ) |
The Confederation of Haveno Sekura (Esperanto: Konfederacio Haveno Sekura), also known as Haveno Sekura or Kohoso (from the Esperanto pronunciation of the initials KHS), is an Esperantist socialist state in Esquarium. Located on the west coast of [WHATEVER THE CELTIC BIT IS IF IT ISN'T CONITIA], the state encompasses the land surrounding the mouth of the River X. Kohosa society is multilingual; Geilg, Template:Occitan language and Hafendeitsch have been spoken in the region since antiquity, and since Esperanto was made the official language it has become the native language of an increasing proportion of the population; other languages from across Esquarium are spoken by immigrant communities.
History
Antiquity
- Celtic tribe in prehistory?
- Southern bank of river colonised by whoever the not!Romans were
- Germanic tribes migrated to land north of river
Kingdom of Havre-Segur
- Latinised Germanic chief united land north and south of river
- Settled in Latin city of Havre-Segur, named realm after capital
- Havrois mostly spoken in cities, Hafendeitsch in rural areas
The 19th century
- Industrialisation - Hafendeitsch and Geilg peasants moved to Havrois cities
- Rise of nationalism - growing tension between Germans, Celts and Latins
- Esperanto invented somewhere else - gained followings across Esquarium
- Adopted by workers' movement to end sectarianism between German and Latin workers
- Growing literacy in Esperanto language among working-class