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Aklonaru

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People's Democratic Republic of Aklonaru
Kōmukä Rézpublōdaimokräto Aklonaio (Ovaric)
Flag of Aklonaru
Flag
Coat of arms of Aklonaru
Coat of arms
Motto: 
Aikīroti, Demokräto, Uvitai
"Liberty, Democracy, Unity"
Anthem: 
Ékōtu Aklonaio
"Song of Aklonaru"
CapitalKämuli
Largest citySokä
Official languageOvaric
Regional languagesSee Languages of Aklonaru
Ethnic groups
(2020)
Religion
(2020)
  • 69.6% Irreligion
  • 3.2% other
  • 8.1% unanswered
Demonym(s)Akloni
GovernmentFederal parliamentary republic
• President
Käsimzä Péluiti
Opailä Tōpakuo
LegislatureKōmukailōnä
Formation
14 October 366
2 February 1359
18 November 1509
4 April 1698
25 June 1741
3 July 1741
• Partition
1 December 1761
3 January 1806
21 March 1807
10 September 1859
15 June 1913
6 March 1938
2 February 1940
Population
• 2023 estimate
Neutral increase 108,001,213
• 2020 census
106,502,692
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
Increase $4.976 trillion
• Per capita
Increase $46,073
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
Increase $2.859 trillion
• Per capita
Increase $26,471
Gini (2021)Positive decrease 24.2
low
HDI (2021)Increase 0.930
very high
CurrencyDévedui (Đ) (AKL)
Date formatdd.mm.yyyy (CE)
Driving sideright
Calling code+36
Internet TLD.ak

Aklonaru (Ovaric: Aklonärū), officially the People's Democratic Republic of Aklonaru (Ovaric: Kōmukä Rézpublōdaimokräto Aklonaio), is a country in Eastern Armaghan. It borders Serabon and Hafa to the east, Oran to the south, Kihon and the Arol Gulf to the west, and the Dulmara Ocean to the north. It has a population of 106,502,692, making it the seventh-most populous country in Armaghan. Aklonaru is administratively divided into 18 states, each based around a cultural or historical region of the country. Its capital city is Kämuli and its largest city is Sokä. Other major cities include Meritsi, Atušaio, and Tōkōni-Sélan.

Etymology

History

Ancient history (before 366)

The Proto-Aklon people were the first humans to settle the area that is today Aklonaru. Historians speculate that the Proto-Aklons originated from Southern Darana and migrated southward during the last major ice age. The region of Aklonaru thus became a perfect place to settle, with a warmer climate and fertile coastal territory. Due to this, other prehistoric ethnicities began mass migrating to the region as well. The Ayko-Tajiriks, who migrated from Southern Armaghan, are a notable example. Aklonaru quickly developed agricultural technology, and became one of the most advanced agricultural societies of the time.

Over time, the Akloni civilization advanced technologically and socially. The huge prehistoric ethnic groups that had settled the region eventually collapsed into the ethnic groups of the region today. Eventually, the small chiefdoms and agricultural communities of the region united to become much larger states. The title of Kaho first entered use during classical antiquity. Soon, most monarchic states in Aklonaru were kahonates. Starting in around 6 CE, Kaho Pīrūtä the Conqueror of the small Kahonate of Débōn began a series of conquests of the neighboring states. He was wildly successful in his campaigns and propelled Débōn to the status of a large empire. He continued these conquests until his death in 23 CE, which triggered a crisis between his 5 brothers as to who would ascend to the throne. This led to the division of the Débōn Kahonate into 5 separate kahonates.

Kingdom of Ovä (366–1359)

Divided Kingdoms Era (1359–1509)

Kingdom of Pludavia (1509–1698)

Olonui Kingdom (1698–1741)

Peasants' Revolt (1741)

First Republic (1741–1761)

Partition (1761)

Post-Partition (1761–1806)

Solävū Rebellion (1806–1807)

Second Republic (1807–1859)

Akloni Fracture (1859–1913)

Third Republic (1913–1938)

Akloni Civil War (1938–1940)

Postwar period (1940–1990)

Contemporary period (1990–present)

Geography

Climate

Biodiversity

Politics

Administrative divisions

Law

Foreign relations

Military

Economy

Infrastructure

Tourism

Science and technology

Demographics

Ethnic groups

Languages

Religion

Major cities

Education

Health

Culture

Music

Art and architecture

Literature and philosophy

Media

Cuisine

Sports