Lilienburg

Revision as of 20:45, 29 September 2019 by Crylante (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Free City of Lilienburg
Freistadt Lilienburg (Lilienburger Herusian)
Flag of
Flag
Motto: "Fraternity Above All"
Capital
and largest city
Lilienburg
Official languagesLilienburger Herusian
Demonym(s)Lilienburger
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic with elements of syndicalism and direct democracy
• Mayor
Helena Weissmann
• Chancellor
Hermann Thaler
LegislatureStadtshaus
Landshaus
Volkshaus
Establishment
• Free City established
1551
• Schiltach Ascendancy
1810
• Edelweiss Uprising
1893
• Annexation by Hytekojuznia
1905
• Free City re-established
1916
Area
• Total
3,546 km2 (1,369 sq mi)
Population
• 2017 census
607,183
• Density
171.23/km2 (443.5/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2017 estimate
• Total
$24.405 billion
• Per capita
$40,193
Gini (2017)19.9
low
HDI (2017)0.897
very high
CurrencyLilienburger mark
Calling code+328
Internet TLD.li

Lilienburg, officially the Free City of Lilienburg (Lilienburger Herusian: Freistadt Lilienburg), is a city-state located within Erdara, bordering Tudonia to the south, Mascylla to the east, Hytekia to the west and Lake Sigismund to the north-east. The nation is the smallest in Erdara, with an area of 3,546 square kilometers, consisting of the namesake city of Lilienburg, where the overwhelming majority of the nation's 607,183 residents live, and the surrounding countryside.

The city's existence is first recorded in the 11th century as a small market town and fishing village. In the 12th century, however, it became the location of a significant monastery during the 12th century and the town started to grow around the monastery. The monastery gained a reputation for scholastic work as time went on, and in 1415 the University of Lilienburg was opened by the monastic order to educate monks and civil servants, largely focusing on classics and theology. The university, being the first in Erdara, would eventually eclipse the town's other industries and become the town's raison d'être as scholars, monks and priests flocked to the town.

During the 16th century the university town would assert itself as an independent city; the city's council, consisting of property owners, nobles and university graduates, would become the sole authority over the city and it declared itself the Free City of Lilienburg. The city was headed by a Mayor, who was often a member of one of the city's noble families during the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.

The 19th century would see the city change significantly. The House of Schiltach would come to dominate the city's government between 1810 and 1893, with the Mayor being from the House of Schiltach for the whole of that period. This was also a period in which the city industrialised and the population markedly increased to sustain this industrialisation, creating new industrial neighbourhoods of the city and drastically altering the city's social structure. However, this led to a large working-class and a growing middle-class who opposed the conservatism of the Schiltach dynasty and rallied behind the ideologies of socialism and liberalism. They were largely behind the 1893 Edelweiss Uprising, in which the House of Schiltach and the aristocracy in general were deposed in favour of a state based on popular sovereignty.

However, this new state would not last long; it was marred by divisions between socialists and liberals and a general economic decline, and after 12 years it was annexed by Hytekojuznia in a controversial move that would pave the way for the Continental War. However, Hytekojuznia would lose this war and an independent Lilienburg was re-established. The liberal-socialist divide would continue in the new republic, yet a strong trade union movement would develop which would lead to the dominance of the socialists for much of the 20th century.

Today Lilienburg is a highly developed country with very high levels of social equality, and is both a founding member and the capital of the Erdaran Union. Its economy and political system have been of much interest to economists and political theorists, with many describing the city's economy as using a democratic socialist model based on the dominance of trade unions and co-operatives in a parliamentary democracy. The city has also been noted for its namesake university's prestige and research, and it is also considered a cultural hub in terms of music, comedy, theatre, film and cabaret.