Euclea
Euclea | |
---|---|
Area | 9,511,739 km² |
Population | Template:Euclea-pop |
Density | 77 people per km² |
GDP (nominal, millions) | $22,469,614 |
GDP per capita | $30,800 |
Time zones | UTC +2 to –4 |
Euclea is a continent located entirely in the Northern and Western Hemispheres of Kylaris. It is bordered to the north by the Pervovo Sea, Boreal Sea, Ghaillish Sea, and North Sea, to the east by the Florian Ocean and Gulf of Assonaire, to the south by the Solarian Sea and Mazdan Sea, and to the west by the Lumine Ocean. Coius lies to the south and east.
Euclea covers approximately one sixteenth of Kylaris's surface and is home to slightly over one fifth of its population. It is the world's second-most populous continent after Coius and is its richest on a gross GDP basis; nearly 40% of the world's aggregate GDP is generated in Euclea. Politically, Euclea is divided into approximately thirty states, twelve of which comprise the Euclean Community. Narozalica is the largest country in Euclea, and Gaullica is the most populous.
Etymology
The name Euclea comes from the ancient Piraean goddess Eukleia (Ευκλεια), the deity personifying glory and good repute.
History
Prehistory
Various species of hominids lived in Euclea as early as 1.3 million years ago. The oldest attested Euclean inhabitants that belonged to the genus Homo is the archaic Homo antecessor, whose fossils have been found in Carvagna, Eturia and other trace regions around the Solarian Sea. Homo erectus migrated into Euclea from Badawiya or Bahia. Sometime around 150,000 BC, Homo neanderthalensis (Neanderthals) appeared around Cislania in Werania. The Neanderthals disapeared sometime around 28,000 BC. Contemporainously, the first anatomically modern humans emerged on the Euclean continent around 35,000 BC. These first humans also migrated from Coius and supplanted the Neanderthals. DNA evidence suggests that early Euclean humans may have interbred with the Neaderthals, as well as other hominids. The earliest habitats of early Euclean humans are recorded around Palestrina (Eturia), Llerta (Auratia) and Monroial (Gaullica). These first people were hunter-gatherers and nomads reliant on stone tools. Humans spread across Euclea and reached the western reaches of Narozalica by 10,000 BC.
The Neolithic Revolution began in Euclea around the 8th millennium BC around Piraea and Etruria, influenced by agriculture's spread from Coius. During this time, many of Euclea's hunter-gatherer peoples became sedentary. Their lifestyles revolved around sowing and reaping crops as well as rearing domesticated animals. Around this time, Eucleans developed early social stratification and produced pottery. Large caches of Neolithic pottery dating to as late as 7,000 BC has been found in Werania and Azmara. This period also saw the development of primitive shipcraft that permitted the habitation of the Line Islands around 6,500 BC. Early Eucleans also built burial mounds (also known as kurgans) and megaliths (like dolmens).
The 5th century BC saw the migration of various peoples. The Satro-Euclean peoples migrated into Euclea around 4,000 BC and supplanted many indegenous peoples. Finno-Ugric peoples migrated into Caldia around 3,300 BC. They would later be supplanted by the Satro-Euclean Tenics around 1,000 BC. The last major expansion of prehistoric Euclean peoples occurred in 1,500 BC, when humans made landfall on the Geatish Islands.
Around 3,200 BC, bronze tools were spread from Coius to Euclea, beginning the Euclean bronze Age. The Euclean Bronze Age saw the rise of the Esorian civilization on the island of Emessa, described as the first true civilization of Euclean history. The Esorians developed an extensive trade network that linked Coius with Euclea. Merchants and traders would often make treatourous journies as far north as the tin mines in Werania to trade in the precious metal. The Minoans developed a heretofore undecifered writing system, a sui generis syllabary that was the first documented in Euclea. In Piraea, the Mycenaean civilization developed as an important trade route to West Euclea. Southern Euclea saw social statification comparible with that of the Ancient Near East, characterized by the development of primitive kingdoms with tribal, warrior, merchant and peasant castes. The Bronze Age of development and prosperity ended suddenly when mysterious seafaring peoples attacked various Aurean civilizations. The resultant collapse led to the Piraean Dark Ages and the cessation of international trade.
Classical antiquity
The Classical Age in Euclea began in the 8th century BC, when various city-states in modern-day Piraea were established and consolidated political power. This era is considered extremely formative in the development of democracy and political culture. The first democracy was established in the city-state of Lasithi, where all male citizens were permitted to vote and in the Agora. Furthermore, this period in Piraean history was formative in the foundation of philosophy, humanism, historiography, epic poetry and dramatic theater, all of which trace their origins to Piraean authors. Furthermore, Piraean authors were among the first to document the stars and medicine. Piraea also saw extensive political expansion. Lasithi emerged as a hegemon, presiding over the expansion of Piraean territory from Gaullica to Satria in Coius. At the same time, this period saw great infighting among the Piraean city-states. Extensive civil wars and feuding tore apart Piraean cities and relocated power among various city-states. The collapse of Prassan hegemony in 217 BC marked the end of a cohesive Piraea.
In the wake of Piraea, Solaria rose, continuing or altering many of Piraea's age-old traditions. Solaria was founded in 757 BC, originally as a monarchy. Inspired Piraean democracy, the Solarians overthrew their monarchical system and established an oligarchic republic in 511 BC. Contemporaneously with the rise of Solaria, the ancient city-state of Tyrrenhus rapidly grew in size. Solaria and Tyrrenheus were soon at loggerheads and fought numerous wars against each other. This period of aggression, known as the Wars of the Two Cities, ended in Solarian victory and the subjugation of Tyrrhenius in 256 BC. Solaria became the dominant power of of the Aurean region, though it often came under the sack of Tenics. By 200 BC, Solaria expanded across Southern Euclea and forayed into Gaullica.
The Solarian Republic came to an end in the first century AD, when power was consolidated in the lands of the first Solarian emperor. In the Pax Solariana, Solaria then embarked on expansion heretofore never seen in the world, blazing a trail through Estmere and Swetania in the north and modern-day Zorasan in the south. The Solarian Empire established a complex, intracite system of bureaucratic government and centralization. Neighboring tribes such as the Tenics or the Marolevs were conquered, displaced and integrated into the empire. By 318, Solaria became the largest empire in Euclean history. The empire's advanced road systems enabled for the spread of Sotirianity. A persecuted religion for most of its early history, Sotirianity gained prominence among the lower classes of Solaria. Persecution of Sotirians was lessened dramatically when Emperor Honorious declared the faith the official religion of Sotiria, sidelining the tradiitonal Solarian polytheistic religion. The Solarian Catholic Church consolidated Sotirian literature and dogma.
Weranic tribes, one of many displaced peoples in Solarian territory, began to menace Solarian authority These tribes were particularly troublesome in Solarian Gaullica. Economic troubles, overreliance on slave labor and government corruption had critically weakened the Sotirian Empire. Furthermore, the eruption of Mount Vecuvia led to the destruction of much of Solaria, the jewel in the empire's crown, in AD 395. The Heavenly Dominions rode roughshod over Solaria's territory in North Coius, while Weranic tribes threatened Solaria to the north. These events culminated in the collapse of the Solarian Empire by 424. In its over thousand years of existance, Solaria was crucial in the foundation of law, architecture, and engineering (particularly hydraulics). The language of Solaria, Latin is the ancestor of many of Euclea's most prominent languages, such as Gaullican or Etrurian.
Middle ages
Modern period
Geography
The Euclean climate is affected by warm currents that temper winters and summers for most of the continent, even at latitudes along which the climate elsewhere is severe. Seasonal differences are more noticeable farther inland than close to the coast.
Politics
Euclean is home to a number of regional organizations, most prominently the Euclean Community, which is currently the world's most fully realized supranational organization. Its member states have agreed to the free movement of goods, people, capital, and services, and have adopted a common currency, the euclo. Other major regional organizations include Samorspi, which brings together states that once comprised the Empire of Narozalica, the Aurean Forum, and the Northern Forum. The Community of Nations is headquartered in the Euclean country of Kesselbourg.
List of states and territories
Name | Capital | Population | Area (km²) | Head of State | Head of Government | Government type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aimilia | Kakzazna | 6,708,921 | 100,000 | Kabentim Teguzboded | Manham Batsatindim | Parliamentary republic |
Amathia | Arciluco | 35,852,332 | Area | Presidency of Amathia | Ramona Veleșean | Semi-presidential republic |
Auratia | Cienflores | 33,020,000 | 240,886 | Enrique Santos Domínguez | Germán del Caserío | Parliamentary republic |
Azmara | Aalmsted | 10,029,100 | 43,018 | Maarija Ryginsdohter | Eryk Jorśsun | Parliamentary republic |
Caldia | Spálgleann | 9,257,180 | 315,093 | Kenneth IV | Stiofán Mac Suibhne | Parliamentary constitutional monarchy |
East Miersa | Dyńsk | 21,740,000 | 197,568 | Anna Wlodarska | Council republic | |
Geatland | Blåstad | 6,192,106 | 90,819 | Brunhild | Karl Nilsson Jung | Parliamentary constitutional monarchy |
Emessa | Lyria | 6,369,584 | 22,487 | Lisandrina Orunesu | Xandru Grixti | Parliamentary republic |
File:Estmere.png Estmere | File:Estmere.png Ashcombe | 56,519,373 | Area | Alice Roberts | Reginald Wilton-Smyth | Parliamentary republic |
Etruria | Poveglia | 65,596,083 | 909,388 | Parliamentary republic | ||
Gaullica | Verlois | 87,176,289 | 1,149,240 | Jean Vallette | Hugo-Noël Devereaux | Semi-presidential republic |
Hennehouwe | s'Holle | 17,125,503 | 130,279 | Adriaan Wilhelm Paulus | Rupert van Bleiswijk | Parliamentary republic |
Kesselbourg | Kesselbourg City | 1,424,500 | 8,000 | William II | Emmanuel Schmit | Parliamentary constitutional monarchy |
Lemovicia | Topagunea | 2,502,577 | 41,834 | Presidency | Sergiusz Galecki | Parliamentary republic |
Montecara | Montecara | 1,801,328 | 1145.43 | Directorial republic | ||
Narozalica | Samistopol | 88,081,653 | 2,985,973 | Samuel Czenko | Presidential republic | |
Solstiana | Kvitastrott | 27,003,197 | 884,477 | Directorial republic | ||
Piraea | Alikianos | 13,284,889 | Area | Pavlos Kassapidis | Maria Theopeftatou | Parliamentary republic |
Radushia | Chrivotovo | 4,193,694 | 8,646 | Macarius II | Raman Yarmoshyn | Parliamentary constitutional theocracy |
Vedmed | Tsivebi | 10,578,243 | 149,023 | Erekle Botkoveli | Parliamentary republic | |
Werania | Westbrücken | 58,579,684 | Area | Charlotte | Otto von Hößlin | Parliamentary constitutional elective monarchy |
West Miersa | West Żobrodź | 16,419,000 | 203,965 | Sylwester Wrzesiński | Adrian Rozak | Authoritarian republic |