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Khijovia

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Ascended Kingdom of Khijovia
Khıjovïænne Æšcaēe Raēgə
AscendedKingdom.svg.svg
Flag
CoatOfArms.png
Coat of arms
Motto: 
"Seþþə vīəra Raehxxa nīəva Matrïænne jmørrə"
"Love of the Motherland is our only Law"
Anthem: 
Khıjovïænne Aemınə Hyjnnə
The Praeclarus Khijovian AnthemMediaPlayer.png
Lands and surroundings of the Ascended Kingdom of Khijovia, 1613 AR
Lands and surroundings of the Ascended Kingdom of Khijovia, 1613 AR
CapitalKleitore
LargestXoviah
Official languagesKhijovian
Recognised regional languagesTeutorian, Aldorian, Koritian
Ethnic groups
Humans (100%)
Religion
Aravianism
Demonym(s)Khijovian
GovernmentFeudalistic Constitutional Monarchy
• Ascended King of Khijovia
Arcadion II
• Ascended Queen of Khijovia
Carevia I
LegislatureRoyal Parliament
Establishment
• Foundation of the Ascended Kingdom
June 3, 1607 AR
Area
• Land Area
1,386,546 km2 (535,348 sq mi)
• Water (%)
3,8
Population
• 1613 AR estimate
61,085,900
GDP (nominal)estimate
• Total
$ 225,000,000,000.00
• Per capita
$ 4,405.00
CurrencyShonenor (SHN)
Date formatdd/mm/yy
Driving sideright

Khijovia (Khijovian: Khıjovïæ [kɪjəʊviə]), officially the Ascended Kingdom of Khijovia, is a feudalistic constitutional monarchy situated in northwestern Pelia, with Kleitore serving as its capital. It shares its borders with the Federated People's Republic of Kyldigard to the north and the Kingdom of Prestore to the south, while the Kesper Sea lies to the west. With a population of approximately 61 million inhabitants, Khijovia occupies the northern part of the High West region and holds the Recondian Archipelago in the Wintry Ocean. Established in 1607 AR by Arcadion II following the collapse of the Khijovian Federation and the return of the Zenonian Dynasty, the Ascended Kingdom is divided into 27 fiefdoms and a special administrative district. Known for its deeply spiritual society, Khijovia has maintained a unique connection with the magical arts throughout its history.


Etymology

The origin of the name Khijovia has long intrigued linguists and historians, prompting diverse reconstructions. While some theories delve into etymological roots, others are steeped in historical narratives, including the intriguing notion of an ancient pre-Shuffle king named Khjvonnə in popular traditions.

One prevalent theory suggests that the name stems from Khyjvīə, an exoethnonym used by the Koritians for a tribe residing in the neighboring Aldoria region. Another hypothesis, not mutually exclusive, proposes that these people venerated a pagan deity, Khœvă, making the name signify "inhabitants of the land of Khœvă."

Alternatively, a distinct theory posits a simpler origin—the semantic fusion of Khvıəyūtœnnə, an adjective linked to the Kveutonian Empire, and Jyovïæhnnə, associated with the Jovianic Order and its doctrine.

History

During ancient times, Khijovia served as a crossroads for numerous neolithic cultures. Thriving city-states emerged during the Era of Ruin, preserving their cultural identity and language staunchly against external influences. Notwithstanding the upheavals in the rest of Sparkalia, Khijovia remained isolated, relatively unaffected by wars and famines until the catastrophic Abheric Wars and the subsequent collapse of the city-state system around 277 BR, ushering in the Barren Age and marking the end of the Archaic Age in Khijovian history. Despite suffering continental amnesia during the Great Shuffle, Khijovian culture persisted.

In 289 AR, the Kveutonian civilization conquered and divided Khijovia into governatorates, making it a crucial economic and cultural hub within the Kveutonian Empire. The empire reached its zenith around 415 but dissolved in 502, leading to the formation of independent statelets and religious-monastic military orders, including the influential Jovianic Order. Over the centuries, cities transformed into feudal lordships, giving rise to Khijovian principalities, duchies, counties, and marquisates.

The Grand Duke of Klettoria, Zenon the Great, initiated a national unification campaign in 1152, defeating the rival House of Arenia and establishing the Kingdom of Khijovia on July 11, 1161. Despite centuries of rule, the Zenonian Dynasty faced a coup on January 28, 1534, leading to the formation of the Khijovian Federation. However, in 1607, with the return of the Zenonian Dynasty, Prince Arcadion II reclaimed power, founding the Ascended Kingdom of Khijovia on July 3, 1607.

Primordial Aeon

Prehistory

Approximately 35,000 years ago, the first known inhabitants of the Khijovian territory were the Acreatics, a nomadic civilization whose existence is primarily evidenced by the archaeological site of Yvernia along today's Pletorian coasts. Yvernia preserves remnants of an intricate funerary complex, featuring over 20 tombs with associated burial items. The Acreatics had distinctive burial practices, arranging skeletons with heads facing East—a potential symbol of rebirth. Skulls were adorned with red ocher, signifying a return of blood and life to the deceased. The complex walls displayed propitiatory rock paintings, depicting shamanic rituals.

Burial for the Acreatics was a magical rite, aimed at preventing the disturbance of the deceased's soul and facilitating its transition to new life. This culture marked the initial encounters with magical arts in the Khijovian region. The prevalence of Venus figurines in the tombs hints at a matriarchal social organization, emphasizing women's connection to fertility and reproduction.

Despite the Neolithic agricultural revolution, the Acreatics maintained their reliance on hunting and shellfish gathering. Around the twelfth millennium BR, climatic shifts prompted their migration from coasts to surrounding regions. The mountainous terrain led to the development of transhumant farming, eventually giving way to settled agriculture. This marked the end of nomadism and the permanent settlement of the Acreatic people across the Khijovian region.

Protohistory

The advent of agriculture and livestock, providing a surplus of food, led to a significant demographic increase and the emergence of the first housing agglomerations. During this phase, the matriarchy gradually faded as the need for male military leaders arose to defend villages, ushering in a transition to a patriarchal society. The onset of metallurgy in Khijovia marked the Copper Age, giving rise to distinct cultures: the Venatorian culture in the north, Khantan culture in the east, and Koritian culture in the central-south. The Bronze Age saw the emergence of the Xomian culture on Axiomia island, while the Iron Age gave rise to the Kleitite culture near the mouth of the Thevre river. These cultures, stemming from the Acreatic people, shared a common language but spoke different dialects, often unintelligible to one another.

Around 1400 BR, the large village centers evolved into cities, establishing an interdependent relationship with the surrounding countryside. Rural areas produced goods to sustain urban centers, while the cities provided defense for villages. Job specialization's development led to a social hierarchy, with the ruling class of specialists forming the foundation for the future aristocratic caste.

Era of Ruin

Archaic Age

Urban centers within the Khijovian region manifested as independent and self-sustaining city-states, flourishing predominantly throughout the Era of Ruin due to a robust isolationist policy. Despite their cultural and linguistic similarities, these city-states adopted diverse organizational structures.

In certain locales, authority was wielded in the name of the deity by theocrats—priests perceived as those chosen by the gods to govern the city. In such cases, there existed no separation between political and religious power. The theocrat, serving as the executor of divine will, held full political authority, led the military, and administered justice. The sovereign received support from a caste of priest-officials known as hierarchs, convening every ten years to elect a new state theocrat and distribute cultivated lands among the populace. The temple of the eponymous divinity, aside from serving as the theocrat's seat, functioned as an organizational hub for work, a storage facility for foodstuffs, and the city's treasury. In these cities, private property was virtually nonexistent, as land was communal, and all residents contributed to public works. Conversely, in some instances, this theocratic system devolved into viewing the theocrat not merely as the gods' representative but as a deity incarnate, whose sacralization justified their authority. The unbridled powers of the absolute theocrat found legitimacy in a powerful priestly caste of extensive landowners, exerting considerable influence in political affairs. The high priest within this caste assumed the role of grand vizier to the sovereign. Consequently, from a political standpoint, Khijovian absolute theocracy manifested as an autocratic form of governance fundamentally grounded in priestly legitimacy.

On the other hand, certain cities evolved into monarchies, representing a likely progression from the theocratic system, wherein a clear distinction was established between political and religious authority. Concurrent with this separation of sovereign power, the kings in these city-states fortified their capacity to intervene in social and economic affairs, channeling their efforts in a more centralized manner. In certain instances, this consolidation of royal power also involved the adoption of an expansionist policy aimed at territorial enlargement. These kingdoms adhered to a well-defined ideology of monarchical authority, a concept subsequently transmitted to subsequent state organizations in Khijovia. Similar to theocratic systems, it was believed that the gods endowed the sovereign with power; however, this divine gift, while acknowledged, was deemed distinct from religious authority. Consequently, this shift led to the displacement of the temple, formerly the governing center, with the royal palace assuming the pivotal role of power. In this organizational framework, citizens were regarded as mere subjects and possessions of the sovereign, although it is noteworthy that substantial privileges were reserved for the priestly class.

Certain city-states adopted a state structure founded on a timocratic principle, wherein landed or military aristocrats governed within a small general assembly known as the kledia (klaēdïæ). Exclusive to a particular caste, assembly members had the privilege of inheriting a seat of power. The kledia biennially elected seven specialized magistrates responsible for administrative, religious, and military functions. Upon concluding their terms, these magistrates joined the council of sapients - the ghrontia (ghrœhntïæ) - serving as both a supervisory body and the supreme court. In addition to these aristocratic institutions, there existed the drarchia (đrahrchïæ), a minor consultative assembly representing some members of the less affluent population. In cities governed by aristocracy, the title of citizen, implying possession of political rights, was reserved for adult males who owned land. Among these citizens, only the large landowners held actual political power, qualifying them for high offices within the city. In an economy centered around agriculture and livestock, wealth was conspicuously measured by the extent of landownership. The considerable influence of the aristocracy severely constrained opportunities for small landowners and marginalized all other individuals within the city, subjecting them to aristocratic domination.

Finally, when a city-state was governed by its populace, it earned the designation of a "democratic" city. Democracy, emerging later in the League Phase, evolved as a protracted process originating from the aristocratic system. Democratic transformations commenced with concessions from the aristocracy, aimed at averting popular revolts, which strengthened the people's influence within institutions. Over time, following a sequence of concessions, the drarchia, where the people asserted numerical superiority, ascended to become the paramount political entity, leading to the displacement of the kledia and ghrontia. Magistracies were drawn from all citizens except women, individuals from other cities, serfs, and slaves, while military and financial positions remained elective. Citizens of democracies enjoyed equal rights to speak in the people's assembly and tribunal, alongside equal legal rights. Aristocrats, on the other hand, were largely excluded and marginalized, stripped of their extensive estates, barred from participating in political life, and, in certain instances, faced proscription lists calling for exile or possible elimination. These radical measures, indicative of demagogic populism adopted by the "democrats," led to some democracies being labeled kakistocracies by other city-states. Ultimately, Khijovian democracy never materialized in its pure form, existing as a hybrid balance resulting from the coexistence of different state forms.

This forced coexistence of diverse and conflicting state systems endured throughout the entirety of the Archaic Age in Khijovian history. While diplomatic relations between city-states remained ostensibly peaceful, underlying political tensions lingered, compelling cities to reconcile through an intricate network of alliance pacts and leagues. This network served as the sole remedy to prevent disastrous intranational wars.

League Phase
Abheric Wars

Barren Age

Khijovic Middle Ages
Syhric Advent

Nova Antiquity

Kveutonian Age

Jovianic Domination

Modern Era

Surgence Epoch

Zenonian Age

Khijovian Renascence
Koronian Civil War

Contemporary Age

Federalist Parenthesis

Ascension Period

Geography

Physical Geography

Physical Map of Khijovia

Situated within the expansive geographical region known as the High West, the Khijovian landscape showcases diverse features, making it one of the most varied regions on the Pelian continent. Bordered by the Kyldigardian region to the north, Khijovia is geographically enclosed by the Clastoclite range to the east and the Stornic massif to the south. The Khijovian terrain exhibits a broad spectrum of characteristics, with a prevalence of hilly areas compared to flat or mountainous zones, maintaining an average altitude of approximately 730 meters above sea level. The mountainous landscapes extend across the eastern expanse of the nation, encompassing a significant portion of the western Clastoclite system. The highest peaks in Khijovia are situated in the central Clastoclites, where numerous summits exceed 5000 meters, including the remarkable Mount Eletherium (5800 meters), standing as the loftiest peak in the Clastoclite range. Over time, the Khijovian mountainous region has been shaped by an ancient Cenozoic glacial mass, leaving behind extensive moraines flanking the western Clastoclite slope, forming expansive highlands in the north and numerous shallow valleys amidst the southern hills.

Topographic Map of Khijovia

The plains of Khijovia encompass various areas, including the Catridian plain, formed by the alluvial expanses of the Thevre river and its tributaries, extending to Pyrisia; the Betronic plains, elevated plains along the coasts of Androvia and Charonthia; and the Platic plain, an elongated flat valley of tectonic origin encircling the Axiomia Lake, stretching from Cassiopia to Carcassonia.

Numerous Khijovian isles are grouped in small archipelagos, such as Cheronia off the Charonthic coasts, and Recondia, a polar archipelago situated within a deep lagoon connected to the Wintry Ocean, entirely surrounded by ice cap glaciers.

Geology

The geological history of Khijovia is intricately shaped by ancient geo-dynamic events, primarily the collision between two lithospheric plates—the Kesperian plate and the northern Pelian plate—commencing from the Late Cenozoic. This collision, involving the eastern Kesperian margin and the Pelian continent, resulted in the formation of the Clastoclitic chain and the accretion of marginal microplates.

Noteworthy Neogene volcanism and a relatively high seismicity highlight the region's ongoing geo-dynamic activity, marking it as one of the most geologically active areas in Pelia. After extensive studies spanning a century, geologists identify two primary paleogeographic domains separated by the Clastoclitic line: the Pelian domain, specifically the western accreted margin of the northern Pelian plate, and the Kesperian domain, encompassing the entirety of the High West and the Kesperian marine basin. The High Western domain comprises a system of Kesperian vergence nappes, predominantly composed of carbonate and mixed sequences, extending southward into the Stornic massif, positioned along a tectonic line distinct from the Clastoclitic line.

From a stratigraphic perspective, sedimentary rocks in northern Khijovia, dating based on paleontological content, span from the Precambrian to the Quaternary. Low-grade metamorphites in the southeastern region, characterized by sandstones alternating with pelites, are dated approximately to the Cambrian. However, the majority of the sedimentary cover in Khijovia postdates the Paleozoic era.

The geological complexity of this region, featuring a diverse array of geological characters within a relatively small area and numerous active endogenous and exogenous phenomena, positions Khijovia as a significant contributor to the geological understanding of north-western Pelia.

Volcanism

Khijovia, a country marked by significant volcanic and plutonic activity, bears the imprint of this geological dynamism across its landscape. Predominantly, the presence of a convergent boundary between accreted microplates to the north has given rise to the most active volcanoes in the High West. This collisional interaction induces subduction of the Charonthic crustal plate, leading to its progressive fusion within the mantle and the ascent of magmas through the crust to the surface, notably manifested by the volcanoes in the Cheronian Archipelago.

The evidence of volcanic activity spans from Palaeozoic rocks to the present era, manifesting not only in visibly distinct volcanic bodies on the mainland but also in features such as lakes, islands, widespread rocks of effusive volcanic origin, and various endogenous activities linked to the presence of molten or cooling magma near the surface. These include hot thermal springs, hot muds, fumaroles, and CO2-rich springs. Ongoing oceanographic research indicates the continuation of extensive volcanic phenomena in the underwater environment.

Prominent among the persistent eruptive centers in Khijovia are Mount Rhont (960m), Mount Stronio (820m), Mount Sibon (1,780m), and Mount Kratov (1,030m). While the first two, located in Cheronia, exhibit explosive-type eruptions, the latter two, situated in Atredia and Garganthia, erupt effusively. Due to their proximity to densely populated areas, active Khijovian volcanoes are closely monitored by national authorities.

Numerous other volcanic centers have witnessed eruptions in historical or geologically recent times. Dormant volcanoes, such as Mount Rhetron (680m) off the coast of Pletoria, Pyrisia, and Mount Ascarion (740m) at the southern tip of the Chondian peninsula, have seen activity. Additionally, several underwater volcanoes remain active in the Kesper Sea. Notably, the Coprion, situated approximately ten miles west of the mouth of the Thevre river, rises 1,670 meters from the seabed, with its summit only three hundred meters below the water's surface. Although the volcano last erupted thousands of years ago, its active status and potential for triggering a significant tsunami through a collapse of the volcanic edifice warrant continued consideration and monitoring.

Seismology

The Khijovian territory, due to its unique geodynamic setting resulting from the convergence of the Kesperian plate with the Pelian plate, experiences frequent earthquakes, holding the record in the High West for such phenomena. The majority of destructive earthquakes in the region have notably impacted Khijovia. Focal movement analysis reveals their predominant distribution along areas influenced by Clastoclitic tectonics, where fault movements play a significant role. In the eastern Kesper Sea, hypocenter distribution, reaching depths of 500 kilometers, indicates the presence of a Benioff plane resulting from the subduction of the Kesperian lithosphere. The most powerful earthquake documented in Khijovia, measuring 8.1 in magnitude, occurred on December 25, 1532, along the central Clastoclites, causing widespread destruction and fatalities across much of eastern Khijovia.

Georesources

From a mineral perspective, Khijovia boasts numerous deposits, including mercury, antimony, lead, zinc, silver, iron, manganese, and industrial minerals like pyrite, fluorite, asbestos, and bauxite. While various deposits exist, economically exploitable ones, given current Khijovian technology, are relatively limited. Notable mining activities involve evaporitic salts, cement marls, clays, and feldspars for ceramic and refractory industries. The extraction of marble, pumice, obsidian, talc, and coal, a crucial fossil fuel powering the national aethermotives, is also significant.

Khijovia possesses abundant natural outcrops of bitumen, oil, and methane, suggesting favorable geological conditions for hydrocarbon genesis and accumulation. The country initiated hydrocarbon exploration shortly after the first contemporary oil well was drilled in Kyldigard, evolving into extensive research, exploration, and production activities of natural hydrocarbons.

Khijovia hosts the largest hydrocarbon reserves in the High West, distributed across three tectonic-stratigraphic and geochemical systems: biogenic methane in Plio-Pleistocene terrigenous series, thermogenic gas in Oligo-Miocene foredeep terrigenous sediments, and oil within Mesozoic carbonate series. Presently, annual oil production stands at approximately thirty thousand barrels, with an estimated billion barrels yet to be discovered in deposits.

Hydrography

Climate

Meteorology

Ecosystem

The Khijovian region, with its rich geographical diversity, harbors a distinctive collection of unique biomes, rendering the national territory one of the most characteristic and biodiverse in the entirety of Pelia. This intricate biotic ensemble contributes to the fascination and diversity of the Khijovian ecosystem.

Biomes

Flora

Fauna

Politics

State Structure

Administrative Regions

Region Map of the Khijovian Administrative Regions
1 Klettoria KhijovianRegions3.png
2 Luriah
3 Pyrisia
4 Qaylasiah
5 Atredia
6 Chondia
7 Charonthia
8 Androvia
9 Ketheria
10 Iverniah
11 Kharpovia
12 Venatoria
13 Profania
14 Koritia
15 Bellatoria
16 Cassiopia
17 Corkovia
18 Aldoria
19 Teutoria
20 Garganthia
21 Kalkhovia
22 Carcassonia
23 Sopholenia
24 Karkarovia
25 Kenveciah
26 Akrocanthia
27 Recondia
* Axiomia

Foreign Relations

Military

Great Bordeaux Army

Royal Navy

Grand Air Force

Royal Gendarmerie

Royal Force of the Border Guards
Royal Force of the Carabineers
Royal Force of the Brigadiers of Public Security

Society

Economy

Culture