Hacyinia

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The Union of Hacyinia

Flag of Hacyinia
Flag
Recognised national languagesPardarian
Recognised regional languagesSyran: Gaullican, Ilkmen, Ziba
Besshar: Beyek, Kacdag, Ukilen
   Unrecognized regional languagesChanwan
Ethnic groups
45% Oroqic
48% Beyeks
52% Ilkmen
32% Pardarian
40% Kactag
60% Pasdewar
10% Chanwan
13% Other
46.5% Ukilen
38.5% Dezevauni
15% Other (Oeguns, others)
Religion
45% Irfanic
40% Badi
6% Chanwan Folk Religion
5% Solarian Catholicism
2% Zohism
2% Other
Demonym(s)Hacyinians
GovernmentDevolved unitary constitutional monarchy, with the parliament operating as a de facto one party government.
• Khan
Makbule Arda Khan
Erasyl Rinat
LegislatureUnified Assembly
Senate
Legislative Chamber
Establishment
• Orto Khanate
TBD
• Syr Khanate
TBD
• Khanate of Bessar established
TBD
• Syran independence
1935
• Peoples Equalist Republic of Syran established
TBD
• Unification
1994
Area
• Total
1,031,116.80 km2 (398,116.42 sq mi)
Population
• 2021 estimate
37,000,000
• Density
35.88/km2 (92.9/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2021 estimate
• Total
$363.7 billion
• Per capita
$9,831
GDP (nominal)2021 estimate
• Total
$80.86 billion
• Per capita
$2,185.54
Gini41.9
medium
HDI0.654
medium
CurrencyHacyinian Som (HSM)
Internet TLD.ha

Hacyinia, officially known as The Union of Hacyinia and also known as Basshar-Syran or Syran-Basshar, is a country in Coius. It borders Dezevau and Lavana to the east, Zorasan to the north and west, Shangea to the southwest, and Zomia to south. A landlocked country, it straddles the boundary between Southeast Coius and the Great Steppe. The physical landscape of the country is defined by mountainous valleys to the west, vast and sprawling steppe through much of the central area of the country, and fertile river deltas in the east along the shore of Lake Zinabad.

Hacyinia has a long history, dominated mostly by the nomadic peoples that have ruled from the steppes as well as powerful empires who have conquered and held sway over the area. Although the area has long been inhabited with archeological records showing evidence of human settlement dating back to 6,000 BCE; the first recorded peoples in the area date back to the second millennia B.C with !Scythian/!Saka nomads domaining the steppes and settled Pardardian speaking city states establishing themselves in the eastern river deltas by Lake Zinabad, as well as in the foothills of the western mountains. The Chanwan had long called the highlands of western Hacyinia home and began establishing their own polity's in the highlands of Mount ???.  In the southwestern steppe, in the modern day borderlands between Hacyinia, Zomia and Lavana, the !Xiongnu/Proto-Beyeks held sway and competed with the !Scythians/!Saka for control of the steppe. The !Xiongnu were able to establish several of their own powerful states controlling parts of Southeast Coius until just before the end of the 1st century CE.

The almost simultaneous Badi Reaction and the expansion of the Second Heavenly Dominion

Following the Tagamic Migrations

The era of the Khanates

Aguda Empire, direct control in the east and suzernity in the west,

Gaullican Syran

Indepdent Besshar

Independent Syran, then Peoples Equalist Republic

Conflicts/"two state period"

Unification and The Troubles.


Etymology

Hacyinia comes from the Old Pardarian word "hamicyia", meaning rebellious. The descriptor of the steppe peoples eventually came to refer to the whole general steppe area south of Pardaran proper. The word didn't gain a political meaning until the mid 20th century when the first ideas of unification between Besshar and Syran were proposed. When Besshar and Syran did unify and merge into one state in 1994, the name Hacyinia was chosen as the new state name.

.The names of the two competent states of Hacyinia, Besshar and Syran, are both Oroqic and Pardarian blended words. Besshar means "Five Cities" and Syran translates to the "Land of Syr/Sir". Besshar stems from the 18th and 19th centuries when the once fairly stateless region began to centralize around the oases city states nestled into the foothills of Mount Chanwan, forming a new polity in the face of the Aguda Empires slow collapse. Syran stems from a much earlier time, and is the result of the eponymous founder of the Syr Khanate in the 11th and 12th centuries. Although the Syr Khanate collapsed shortly after it's founding, the Aguda Empire adopted the local endonym of the province which then became widespread.

Demographics

8,339,800 Beyeks 8,680,200 Ilkmen

4,107,000 Kacdags 6,993,000 Pasedwars

4,070,000 Chanwan

2,236,650 Ukilen 1,851,850 Dezenaui 721,500 Other

Besshar total: 15,044,200 Besshar including Chanwan: 19,114,200 Syran: 17,885,800