User:Oriflamme/Sandbox3
Amayana Makgato Federation | |
---|---|
Capital and largest city | Airashe |
Official languages | Ka'ayana |
Ethnic groups (2022) |
|
Demonym(s) | Amayana |
Government | Federal parliamentary republic |
Historical Landmarks | |
• Ihemodian Yoke | 1375-1550 |
• Second Realm | 1550-1875 |
• Treaty of Airashe | 5.02.1979 |
• Treaty of Yanomi | 11.08.1986 |
Population | |
• 2023 estimate | 39,043,101 |
• 2022 census | 38,940,056 |
GDP (PPP) | estimate |
• Total | $436,3 billion |
• Per capita | $11,175 |
Gini | 36.1 medium |
HDI | 0.608 medium |
Date format | mm.dd.yyyy |
Driving side | right |
Amayana Makgato Federation, abbreviated AMF and unofficially known as East Itayana, is a de facto sovereign state in the East Scipia. It is a landlocked country bordered by Charnea to the north, M'Biruna by the east and the Solar Autocracy to the south-west. The Makgato Plateau, rising 1500 meters above the sea level, forms the entirety of the territory, while most of the major cities are situated within the Makgato Basin of Karana, the key river of the Itayana region.
The Makgato Plateau was conquered and integrated into the Greater Itayana by the year 800. The Ihemodian invasion of Itayana ravanged the entire area safe for the most remote outlying fortresses. Resettled by Ikelan slaves in the following years, it served as one of the agricultural regions of the Ihemodian Realm until its reconquest, conducted by Itayana Second Realm in 1521-1548. The conquest saw many of the settlers killed or forcibly relocated in the interior. Amayana resettlement allowed the area to rebuild and later serve as one of the staging grounds for military campaigns against East Scipia in the early 1700s. The fragmentation of the Second Realm left the region largely alone for the next hundred years.
AMF economy is formed around agriculture and tranport lanes of the Scipian railroads. Industry, primarily in form of foreign concessions, is concntrated in the largest cities, while the outlying cities serve primarily as outposts and communication hubs.