Peuramaa and Lumisaari
Royal Union of Pueramaa and Lumisaari Pueramaa and Lumisaari | |
---|---|
Official languages | |
Ethnic groups (2023) | 70% Pueramaans 20% Sámi 10% others |
Demonym(s) |
|
Government | Absolute monarchy (Lumisaari), constitutional monarchy (Pueramaa) |
• Queen | Sigrid Kyöstitytär |
• Prime Minister of Pueramaa | Konstantin Mäkelä |
• First Councillor of Lumisaari | Maarika Jurkka |
Legislature | Lakikirjoittajat |
Establishment | |
• Personal Union | 1725 |
• Pueramaan Independence from Velikoslavia | 1819 |
• Water (%) | 4.4 |
Population | |
• Estimate | 20,350,000 |
GDP (nominal) | estimate |
• Total | $621 billion |
• Per capita | $30,515.97 |
Internet TLD | .pl |
Pueramaa and Lumisaari, officially the Royal Union of Pueramaa and Lumisaari, is a country in northern Belisaria. It was formed as a personal union between Lumisaari, a sparsely-populated island kingdom in the Nordic Sea, and Pueramaa, a kingdom on the continental mainland of Belisaria bordering Hvalheim, Ostrozava, Velikoslavia, and Zamorodna. The country is united under Sigrid Kyöstitytär as Queen and head of state, as well as the head of government for Lumisaari; Pueramaa as a constitutional monarchy maintains a parliament under the head of government Konstantin Mäkelä, viscount of Pueramaa Rajamaat, a non-hereditary title which is extended to every prime minister of Pueramaa.
Pueramaa and Lumisaari are both primarily boreal forest, and Pueramaa has historically been separated between various larger kingdoms and empires while Lumisaari broadly maintained its independence until its union with Pueramaa as a vassal kingdom of the Velikoslavian tsardom. Pueramaa was largely agrarian until the early 20th century and Lumisaari relied mostly on fishing, hunting, and reindeer herding until the latter half of the 20th century when it rapidly digitized and became host to a burgeoning tech industry.
History
Prehistory
The area now known as Pueramaa is believed to have an established, permanent human presence by 8,000 BCE following the recession of the glaciers that previously covered both Pueramaa and Lumisaari. It is thought that Lumisaari, however, was not settled until approximately 6,000 BCE. Human activity in both Lumisaari and Pueramaa can be dated back at least 13,000 years, however.