Saltstead

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Kingdom of Saltstead
Königriħė Såutstedes (Saltsteadish)
Flag of Saltstead
Flag
Coat of arms of Saltstead
Coat of arms
Motto: Wi sind end’ skulun sin
(Old Saxon: “We are and shall be”)
Anthem: Åverstanden ut ruinen
(Saltsteadish: “Risen from ruins”)
God orhåude König Wilheum
(Saltsteadish: “God save King William”)[a]
Location of Saltstead in Atlantian Oceania
Location of Saltstead in Atlantian Oceania
Capital
and largest city
Ashwell
Official languageSaltsteadish
Languages of
historical
significance
Demonym(s)Saltsteadish
Saltsteader
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• King
William Thomas
Alexander van den Hågen
• President
Johanna de Bur
Jacob Rotstad
LegislatureStates General
National Council
National Diet
CurrencyShilling (HAS)
Time zoneSST
DST not observed
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideleft
Internet TLD.ha
  1. ^ God orhåude has equal status as a national anthem but is generally used only on royal and military occasions.

Saltstead (/ˈsɔ(ː)ltstɛd/; Saltsteadish: Såutstedė, /ˈsɑʊ̯ʔsteːʔ/), officially known as the Kingdom of Saltstead, is a unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy located on the north-eastern end of the landmass of Cyanea in Atlantian Oceania.

Etymology

The name Saltstead is a calque of the endonym Såutstedė, which itself derives from Old Saxon: såut derives from the Saxon salt and is cognate with the English word “salt”; the element stedė derives from stedi, meaning “city” or “place”. The name references the salt mines that were the source of Saltstead’s historic wealth and fame.

Other Germanic languages use calques such as Dutch Zoutstad and German Salzstadt, while Romance languages tend to use names derived from the Latin Salia, such as French Selie. Greek uses the similarly-derived name Aleia (Άλεια), from whose ancient form Haleia comes Saltstead’s two-letter country code.

History

Tribal era

Great Settlement

Medieval Saltstead

Union and Anarchy

Cornflower Revolution

Post-war Saltstead

Geography

Geology

Climate

Biodiversity

Politics

Saltstead is governed as a democratic, parliamentary constitutional monarchy with universal suffrage. The Saltsteadish political system operates within the bounds of and derives its legitimacy from the 1947 Constitution, which regulates the powers of state institutions and the relationship between the state and the people; it is founded on the principles of responsible government, judicial independence and the rule of law and guarantees fundamental and universal human rights that cannot be infringed upon by the state.

The Reigning King (de sittändė König), currently William Thomas, is the ceremonial head of state of Saltstead, acting as “the symbol of the realm and of the unity of the people”; unusually, the Saltsteadish monarchy is a popular monarchy in which the holder’s power is linked to a popular mandate. The monarch has few de jure powers, the most notable of which are the power to refuse a parliamentary dissolution and to refer bills to the Constitutional Court to test their compatibility with the Constitution.

The Chancellor of Saltstead, currently Alexander van den Hågen, serves as the head of government of Saltstead. The Chancellor initially possessed little power under the absolutist monarchy, but accrued significant power as the monarchy’s position weakened throughout the Saltsteadish Anarchy. The Chancellor later became the unchallenged leader of Saltstead in the aftermath of the Saltsteadish Civil War and the fall of the Regency, with the war resulting in the depoliticisation of the monarchy and democratisation of Saltstead. The modern Chancellor serves as the commander-in-chief of the Saltsteadish Defence Forces (SDF), negotiates the terms of treaties, appoints and dismisses government secretaries and exercises control over policies of the central government.

The bicameral States General exercises legislative power and control over the executive through its ability to withhold confidence and supply. The National Diet is elected by universal and secret suffrage for all Saltsteadish citizens over the age of 18 by closed list proportional representation. As the lower house of the States General, the Diet initiates most legislation and has the sole power to invest and dismiss the Government of Saltstead, the power to initiate monetary bills and declare war and peace on behalf of the realm.

The National Council is the upper house of the States General and is formed on a corporative basis, representing the interests of various sectors of society. The chamber has the power to delay legislation, but lacks veto power; decisions and amendments made by the house can be overturned by an absolute majority in the National Diet. The Council’s status as a non-partisan body and its insulation from public opinion gives it the power to act as a chamber of sober second thought and gives the body a more collegial atmosphere than its elected counterpart; as the Government does not need to rely on the support of the Council to remain in office and cannot rely on its automatic support, the Government commonly faces more serious scrutiny in the upper house than the lower.

Law and judiciary

Administrative divisions

Saltstead is divided into 34 administrative counties, which are grouped into three historic provinces: Walland in the north, Saxland in the south-east and Sealand in the south-west. The counties are in turn divided into 537 municipalities.

Municipalities are governed by a directly elected municipal council and have powers over housing, social service administration, planning applications, public transportation, utilities, leisure, recreation and waste collection. Counties are similarly governed by a county council and are responsible for roads management, waste disposal, policing, fire services, vehicle licensing, civil registries, transport planning, health services, tourism and water and flood defence. On the other hand, provinces exist largely as points of geographic reference, and retain only limited administrative significance.

Military

Saltstead maintains a military force with ??? active and ??? reserve personnel, built around a defence policy of deterrence and non-interventionism. Divided into the Army, Armada, Air Force and Guard, the Saltsteadish Defence Forces are headed by the Chancellor as commander-in-chief and the Defence Staff appointed by the Defence Secretary. The armed forces operate under a policy of conscription, with all Saltsteadish males and females (including those with dual citizenship) over the age of 18 required to serve at least twelve months in the military. Deferment is available for those entering higher education until three months after graduation, while conscientious objectors are permitted to do eighteen months of alternative civilian service instead of serving in the military, such as in the police, fire department, education, public hospitals, homes for the elderly or international humanitarian service.

The Saltsteadish Defence Forces are empowered by the National Defence Act and given the mission to “preserve the independence, sovereignty, peace and security of Saltstead”, “protect the interests of Saltstead” and “overcome any organisations or regimes responsible for aggressive acts that imperil the peace and security of Saltstead.” Saltstead maintains a strict policy of deliberate ambiguity on whether it possesses nuclear, chemical and biological weapons to aid in its deterrence strategy.

Economy

Transport

Energy

Science and technology

Tourism

Demographics

Ethnic groups

Urbanisation

Language

Education

Healthcare

Religion

Culture

Architecture

Literature

Art

Music

Theatre

Film

Cuisine

Sport

Holidays

Notes

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