Lomercoyne
Lomercoyne
Fasburdas Lomercoyne | |
---|---|
Location in the Northern Kingdom (red dot) | |
Sovereign state | Chatten and Leucen |
Nation | Leucen |
Island | Leucen |
Federal district | Federal Capital District |
Administrative HQ | Horessen Palace |
Government | |
• Type | Mayor-council government and deliberative assembly |
• Body | Greater Lomercoyne Development Authority |
• Mayor | Jayer Inseignia (SDPC) |
Area | |
• Total | 1,844.07 km2 (712 sq mi) |
• Urban | 2,025.37 km2 (782 sq mi) |
• Metro | 9,163.37 km2 (3,539 sq mi) |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 8,629,345 |
• Rank | |
• Density | 5,640/km2 (14,600/sq mi) |
• Urban | 8,956,901 |
• Metro | 15,344,900 |
Demonym | Lommies |
Time zone | UTC+1 (NWT) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CDT |
Area code | +115 |
Geocode | .lomercoyne |
Website | lomercoyne.gov.ch |
Lomercoyne, formally the City of Lomercoyne, nicknamed the "City of Stars" and commonly known as Lommy, is the capital city located in the Federal Capital District of Chatten and Leucen. The city is conveniently located between the federal states of Paworys and South-west Leucen. Situated on the River Cymon, the longest river in Great Chalcain, its access to the Crowergynn Sea through Cymon makes it a continuously inhabited settlement for 2,500 years. Its ancient core, commonly called the Lomerynum, was originally the approximate location of an indigenous city inhabited by a Chalcerean tribe known as the Leucyn. It serves as the historic and contemporary capital of Leucen, Moravian Leucenia, Great Chalcain, and the Northern Kingdom. Serving as the home of the government and the Parliament for a millenia, the city bears the status as the political, financial, cultural, and technological center of the Northern Kingdom. Lomercoyne grew rapidly during the Turembelian, Nethanian, and Crowberwynnian eras, quickly recovering from the disastrous Constitutional Revolution of 1801. It plays a significant role on the rise of liberalism during the Century of Revolutions and the 1935 July Revolution. Briefly becoming the largest city on Callys during the 19th century, its expansion led to the absorption of surrounding counties such as Sharram, Tremmen, and Cywun. By 1975, the city gains a total of 33 districts, necessitating the formation of a federal district of which its greater administrative region becoming the largest in Callys. Both the federal district and the administrative region is governed by the Greater Lomercoyne Development Authority.