Carrawen
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Isle of Carrawen Í Chnáʿon | |
---|---|
Crown dependency | |
Carrawen (red), with Ireland for reference | |
Sovereign State | United Kingdom |
Phoenician settlement | 6th century BCE |
Norse-Gaelic hegemony | 9th century CE |
de facto Independence | 2 July 1266 |
English control | 17 May 1756 |
Capital and largest city | Ármhaid |
Official languages | English Carrawenian |
Religion | largely Roman Catholicism |
Demonym(s) | Carrawenite |
Government | Parliamentary democratic constitutional monarchy |
• Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Imogen Caistlean | |
• Shofeit | George Glass |
Area | |
• Total | 248 km2 (96 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 2010 estimate | 27,046 |
• 2018 census | 28,276 |
• Density | 109/km2 (282.3/sq mi) |
Carrawen (/kær.ə.wɛn/,Carrawenian: Cnáʿon [kɾˠaːən̪ˠ]), officially the Isle of Carrawen (Carrawenian: Í Chnáʿon [iː xɾˠaːən̪ˠ]), is a self-governing British Crown dependency situated in the Bay of Donegal, about fifty kilometres west of Rossan Point. The head of state, Queen Elizabeth II, holds the title Lady of Carrawen (Ráibe Chnáʿon, masculine equivalent Ráibh Chnáʿon) and is represented by a lieutenant governor. The United Kingdom holds responsibility for the island's defence.
Humans have continuously inhabited the island of Carrawen since the 6th century BC, when Phoenician explorers and traders established a far-flung trading post in order to trade textiles, glass, chased metal goods (including bronze, iron, and gold), and ivory with the indigenous people of Ireland. With the arrival of the Gaels in the Iron Age, the Semitic dialect spoken on the isle came under significant Goidelic influence; by the early middle ages, it had developed into Classical Carrawenian, the ancestor of the modern Carrawenian language.