Draakur

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Dominion of Draakur
Flag of Draakur
Flag
Draakur Gray.png
Draakur in Belisaria
Draakur Major Cities.png
The Draakur Archipelago with principle cities.
CapitalHaefeld
Largest cityFredrikspurt
Official languagesDraakurae
Allamunnic
Demonym(s)Draakurae
GovernmentCouncil and Manager (Devolved Government; for higher national government, see United Kingdom of Ottonia)
• Governor-General
Ardem Wyatt
• Speaker of the Council
Honorius Waalturs
Population
• 2020 census
5,644,871

Draakur, officially the Dominion of Draakur, is a component realm of the United Kingdom of Ottonia. As of May 1 2022, it is the sole remaining component realm of the UKO and its territory is coterminal with the United Kingdom's.

History

The earliest known human habitation of the Archipelago dates back to approximately 12,500 years ago. The earliest habitation by the antecendents of the current inhabitants begin some time after that. What is known is that by the time Latin explorers documented the islands for the first time in writing in the 2nd century CE, the Keld-Eoni Tracurii people that would give the islands their name were already settled on the archipelago, and archaeological remains from the time suggest that they lived alongside Proto-Ghantish Haratago settlements, as well as some circumstantial evidence suggesting that ancient Norumbian fishermen may have reached and traded with the Tracurii. The Latins would eventually land and establish settlements on the island now known as Grenolm, but native pressure prevented the foothold from growing much beyond that.

Allamunnic Invasions

When the Allamunnic peoples invaded what is now Ottonia during the late period of the Latin presence in southwest Ottonia and Draakur in the 6th century, many of the more Latinized Eoni and Proto-Kanketyan peoples fled the influx of invaders to the islands off the coast, resulting in a significant increase in the archipelago's population. Until the conquests of Otto the Invincible, the Tracurii and Eoni would form their own independent kingdoms in the archipelago.

Ottonian Empire & Early Tyrrslynd

The islands would fall under the conquests of Otto the Invincible in the 9th century CE, becoming part of the larger Ottonian Empire. This would last until Otto's death, when his son, Magnus, would split off much of the northwest Salacian coast of the Empire into his own realm. Draakur during this period became part of the Kingdom of Tyrrslynd under Magnus' descendents, but remained functionally autonomous under its own feudal lords. The islands would fall victim to the predations of the Nords as they scourged the Boreian Sea and North Salacian, and consequently Nordish migrants became the latest wave of new arrivals to the islands.

Kingdom of Tyrrslynd

Initially, Draakur was administered by a cadet branch of the House of Magnus, the House of Draakur. When, in the 12th century, Erik Magnussunn left his throne to seize the throne of Low Ghant, he set off a series of events that would see the House of Draakur become the ruling house of Tyrrslynd by the early 1400's.

Royal Domain

When the House of Draakur became the ruling house of Tyrrslynd, the political center of gravity of Tyrrslynd shifted temporarily to Draakur, resulting in, over the next several centuries, the political marginalization of more of the mainland. It was during this time that the ports of the Draakur Central Bay began to experience significant growth as trade between Ghant, Southern Belisaria, the Ottonian Salacian Coast, and, increasingly, a nascent empire and contacts in Norumbia.

Empire Period

As the centuries unfolded, Draakur began to be the crown jewel of a maritime Tyrrslynder empire, even as the resources and manpower needed to maintain that empire were drawn from an increasingly-politically-marginalized mainland. The effort to maintain the empire in Norumbia in particular roused the attention and interference of the Ghantish, as well as the ire of indigenous Norumbians and colonists who began to view their interests as distinct from the homeland. The near-annihilation of the Tyrrslynder fleet in a series of campaigns against the Ghantish fleet in the 17th century incurred huge financial expenses in addition to the manpower losses, and ultimately led to the de facto loss of the Norumbian territory; attempts to do so increased the financial burdens on the mainland.

The financial burdens on the mainland and increase in taxation, combined with political marginalization, would lead in 1733 to the Tyrrslynder Revolution, which saw major fighting on the mainland as the Jormundean, Corvaean, and Kamryker peoples fought for their independence against the increasingly-feeble grip of the Tyrrslynder monarchy. By the time the civil war concluded in 1742, Tyrrslynd had been reduced to a rump of its former self, consisting only of a handful of coastal regions (notably most of the Tyrrslynd Peninsula) and the Draakur Archipelago. Notably, Fredrikspurt and Haefeld were bombarded and suffered severe damage in 1737, 1738, and 1740-41, suffering severe damage and prompting the moving of the capital to the small church town of Sant Mikel.

Unification Period

The loss of Tyrrslynd's territories in Norumbia and on the Ottonian mainland were all but a deathblow for Tyrrslynd's influence as the 18th century continued, with its territorial reductions stunting its ability to recover from its newfound impoverishment. Gran Draakur and Fentyera became deemphasized as the Tyrrslynder royal court moved to Ponver, better situated to administer to the remaining coastal territories as well as the islands. The House of Draakur also increasingly found itself relegated to a functional vassal of the Onnerian throne.

The Tyrrslynder authorities watched the development of the Pan-Ottonian Alliance with alarm on the mainland, but when the Wars of Ottonian Unification began and the Nationalist armies began sweeping across Ottonia, Tyrrslynd was only able to muster token resistance before it was incorporated into the new Ottonian Federation.

Ottonian Federation

During the latter half of the 19th century, Draakur, now incorporated into the Ottonian Federation as the Province of Draakur, became prized by the federal government as a base for the nascent Federal Navy. During this time, Bronnsburg and Fredrikspurt became the hosts of federal facilities that stimulated growth, even as the House of Draakur retreated increasingly back to Haefeld. Unbenownst to the Federal government at this point, Sant Mikel and Haefeld would play host to the meetings between the Ottonian royalists, aristocrats, and industrialists who would form, in secret, the Restoration Society, one of the key players in the Royalist Alliance.

Ottonian Civil War

When the Ottonian Civil War broke out in 1915, Draakur was a hotbed of conflict, with pro-Federation, pro-Republican forces supplementing most of the Federal garrisons in Fredrikspurt and Bronnsburg against a Royalist Alliance force that had covertly assembled in Haefeld. Ultimately, Royalist forces in Ponver were able to assist pro-Royalist elements in the Bronnhuld fleet to seize that base, and those forces along with the Haefeld group placed Fredrikspurt under siege. The siege would last into 1917, when it was relieved by Federal reinforcements. The Haefeld force, along with the House of Draakur, were forced to flee to the mainland, and the archipelago would remain in Federal hands through the end of the war. Despite attempts to get it back in the Partition of Ottonia agreement in 1923, Draakur would remain part of North Ottonia.

South Ottonia

In 1935, Draakur was one of the key targets of the South Ottonian offensive that began the Great Ottonian War. Draakur was attacked simultaneously by Royalist forces striking from Wyllemspurt and Ghantish forces sent by the Nathan III's government, allowing it to be taken by a joint occupation in spite of the substantial North Ottonian defenses that had been built up. However, it was not an easy fight; even as the South and Ghantish forces on the mainland rolled towards Ottonia City, Federal defenders on Draakur held out, battling back against furious assaults and retreating into the mountainous regions of Gran Draakur; though the ultimate outcome wasn't in doubt by the time 1936 dawned, Northern forces would continue to resist in the north of Gran Draakur for almost another year.

Initially, there were thoughts that Ghantish forces might be there to stay, either to hold Draakur as a base or as compensation for the death of Prince Robert of Ghant in the Ottonian Civil War more than a decade previously, however, the UKO's government put its foot down and ended up demanding the return of Draakur, damaging relations with their ally (with Ghantish troops eventually leaving for good as the Mad Emperor's War began in 1939).

When the Armistice of 1943 ended the Great Ottonian War, while other areas changed hands as part of border adjustments, Draakur remained in Southern Royalist hands. Initially, there were efforts to fortify the island, and both naval stations in Fredrikspurt and Bronnsburg were restored, as well as new ones in Primpoht and Suwatch, and for a while the House of Draakur even returned to Haefeld, since, after the initial fighting, the island had largely been spared the worst of the fighting that had hit the mainland.

Draakur briefly enjoyed a resurgance of resources and attention from 1943 into the 1960's courtesy of the resumption of Rowena VI of Tyrrslynd and her son Erik's residence, with future South Ottonian prince-consort Harald VI of Tyrrslynd even being born in Haefeld's Kristiana III Memorial Hospital.

However, the young Harald's marriage to the future Storkenegyn Adelhaed of Ottonia in 1966 (followed, a year later, by the birth of their own heir, the future Storkeneg Rodrik of Ottonia) and the subsequent marrying-off of Harald's younger sisters, Jana and Franceska, in the ensuing years saw the family's next generation largely anchored outside Draakur, and, as Adelhaed took a more active role in the nation's governance, so too did her in-laws, Erik and Andrea, increasingly spend time at court on the mainland. Over the ensuing decades, Draakur's prominence in national priorities slipped, with even its defensive uses falling further into the back of the country's leadership's minds, as it became increasingly obvious that the Northerners had no intention of breaking the hostile peace of the Ottonian Cold War and, even if they had, lacked the naval capacity to significantly threaten South Ottonian shipping. The largesse of the 1980's in the Ottonian states helped ease the sting of that mostly-benign neglect, but when the economy began to slow down in the mid-1990's, the cold grip of austerity brought dwindling honeymoon in Draakur to an end.

As the nation's political center of gravity largely remained fixed on the Onneria-Staalburg axis, Draakur found itself increasingly relegated to a political backwater as well. With Erik X's death in 1983, the islands had become directly-administered by the royal government through the Royal Authority on Draakur, a civil service bureau purposed with governing the archipelago. However, as Harald grew increasingly feeble in the early 2000's and his sisters' attentions remained with their families abroad, the RAD started to become a stashing ground for officials who proved too troublesome for advancement at court but too potentially-useful for removal, or too incompetent for advancement but too well-connected to dispose of. The nationally-allocated budget dwindled, and as Allamunnic cultural dominance became more-and-more fixed as government policy the non-Allamunnic-speaking populace of Draakur began chafing under the oversight.

All of this meant that, on the eve of the South Ottonian Revolution in spring of 2022, Draakur had a restive population and a local government not overly-inclined to loyalty to the mainland government. This would have consequences.

South Ottonian Revolution

Geography

Draakur is an archipelago consisting of 11 islands, with an additional two "outlying" islands that are not part of the archipelago proper but are politically-united with the others. The islands are typically organized according to their size and proximity, with the three largest islands typically referred to as the "principle islands" of Draakur, the eight nearest in proximity to them referred to as the "minor home islands", and the two distant ones as the "outlying islands."

Geologically, the eleven home islands are part of the Belisarian continent; in addition to residing on the Belisarian plate, these islands actually reside on a protrusion of the Belisarian continental shelf, resulting in relatively shallow seas.

Gran Draakur

The largest and most central of the major home islands.

Grenolm

Fentyera

Tortugom

The Draakuri islands

Minor Home Islands

Nordraakur

(North-most)

E'figlante

(Directly north of Grennhulm)

Tebrona

(South, between Gran Draakur & Grennhulm)

Ref'ye

(South, large island east of Gran Draakur)

Is'Ramoa

(immediately north of Ref'ye)

Laportunda

(directly south of Gran Draakur)

Puetarenke

(southwest of Gran Draakur)

Outlying Islands

Eltatira

Vendimeno

Politics

South Ottonia was nominally a constitutional executive monarchy, in which the monarchs of the House of Sproek-Kristhulm act as the heads of the armed forces and national police forces, charged with enforcing laws. Legislative authority was mostly vested in the unicameral legislature, the Royal Senate.

Since March of 2022, the country has been under the administration of the Emergency Transitional Administration, headed by Stevan Grimmeburger, following the South Ottonian Revolution and the subsequent Flight to Draakur. Although ruling in the name of the Storkeneg, the ETA largely governs as it sees fit, and has embarked on a number of dramatic reforms following the UKO's collapse on the mainland.

Government

Emergency Transitional Administration

In the immediate aftermath of the South Ottonian Revolution, the government and its loyalists evacuated to the islands of Draakur, which had largely escaped the violent uprising which swept the rest of the country due to independent actions taken by the military governors of the islands, including the promise of reforms demanded by protestors. When the subsequent arrival of the UKO's government in the Flight to Draakur threatened a relapse in regards to public order, the military authorities on the island insisted on a provisional government to oversee the process of relocating the UKO's government and military onto Draakur, as well as implementing the reforms needed to prevent further violence.

Part of the process of implementing the Emergency Transitional Administration involved the abdication of Storkeneg Rodrik I in favor of his son, Vitus, who in turn named Draakur's former deputy governor, Stevan Grimmeburger the Director of the ETA. The ETA includes Grimmeburger, who reports to the Storkeneg, as well as an assortment of civil servants and administrators, tasked with restructuring the government and consolidating Draakur as the sole remaining territory of the UKO, as well as the drafting and issuance of a new governing charter.

Nationalism

Economy

Demographics

Culture