Kroraine

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Federal Democratic Republic of Kroraine

Krorainentse Śamnäṣṣuva Miṃcuteya Cantre
ཀྲོ་རཻན​་འེན་ཙེ་ཤམ་ནཻཥ་ཥུ་ཝ་མིཾ་ཅུ་ཏེ་ཡ་ཅན་ཏྲེ་
Flag of Kroraine
Flag
Federal Seal of Kroraine
Federal Seal
Motto: Tañ nesem, arai kartseya Kroraina.
"Us for you, O beautiful Kroraine"
Anthem: Guṇacaṃdrentse Yapoy
"Land of Gunachandra"
Kroraina map.png
Capital
and largest city
Korla
Official languagesKroraini
Recognised regional languages
Ethnic groups
(2015)
Religion
(1995)
Demonym(s)Kroraini
Shanshanese (chiefly historical)
GovernmentFederal parliamentary republic
• President
Puñamitre Kaṣyāre
Vrauśke Kunlyumeṃ
• Justiciar
Kāḍike Tsyakune
Etriṣe Katakarṇi
LegislatureSaṃsade
Klyomñentse Kercci
Ankāmnintse Kercci
Formation
• Shanshan Kingdom first attested
630 CE
• Gunachandra unifies the Kroraini petty kingdoms
770-790
• Idiqut Dynasty takes the throne
1006
1132
• Independence Declared
5 May 1936
1936-1954
• Treaty of Turpan
23 November 1954
Area
• Total
275,966.01 km2 (106,551.07 sq mi)
• Water (%)
2.8%
Population
• Estimate
18,576,600 (2019)
• 2015 census
18,248,281
• Density
66.12/km2 (171.3/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2012 estimate
• Total
$140.530 billion
• Per capita
$7,701
GDP (nominal)2012 estimate
• Total
$51.861 billion
• Per capita
$2,842
Gini32.8
medium
HDIIncrease 0.574
medium
CurrencyṢotre (₹) (KRS)
Time zoneUTC+1:00 (KST)
Date formatyyyy-mm-dd
Driving sideright
Calling code+27
Internet TLD.kro
Notes:
^A: In Yutyan Province and Ärämci provinces.
^B In Sarikol Province.

Kroraine, officially the Federal Democratic Republic of Kroraine (Kroraini: Krorainentse Śamnäṣṣuva Miṃcuteya Cantre, pronounced [kroˈrəɪ̯nent͡se ɕəmˈnɨʃuʋə minˈt͡ɕutejə ˈt͡ɕəntre]; Rygalic script: ཀྲོ་རཡྣ་འེན་ཙེ་ཤམ་ནཻཥ་ཥུ་ཝ་མིཾ་ཅུ་ཏེ་ཡ་ཅན་ཏྲེ་), is a sovereign state in central Coius. Kroraine is a landlocked country, dominated by the Tarya river valley which runs from north to south throughout the length of the country. It is bordered by Yi to the south, Xiaodong to the west, Zorasan to the north, and ??? to the east. The capital and most populous city is Korla, which lies in the northern half of the country.

The earliest known inhabitants of the area of modern Kroraine were a caucasoid people, often with red or blonde hair, dating to at least the 2nd millennium BCE. Various nomadic peoples, such as the Yuezhi and Wusun of Xiaodongese sources, were part of the migration of Hyndo-Euclean speakers who settled in Central Coius during that period. Although geographically isolated by its mountainous boundaries and highly variegated and often inhospitable terrain, which has helped to preserve its unique culture, Kroraine has been at the crossroads of several great civilisations as part of the Silk Road and other commercial and cultural routes. It has long been dominated by foreign powers, in particular the Xiaodongese, and attained sovereignty as a nation state only after securing its independence from the Auspicious Republic in 1954.

Since independence, Kroraine has officially been a federal parliamentary republic, although it has endured some internal conflicts and political strife.

Ethnic Krorainis make up a majority of the country's nearly 19 million people, followed by notable minorities of Yi, Gojalis and Xiaodongese. The Saka would be considered the second largest ethnic group ahead of the Yi, but they are generally considered to be Krorainis as well. The Kroraini language, also known as Shanshanese, is the primary official language of Kroraine, although Xiaodongese remains widely spoken as an inter-ethnic language — a legacy of centuries of Xiaodongese rule over Kroraine. The majority of the population practice a local syncretic form of Satyism, although there are significant numbers of pagans and irreligious people. The culture of Kroraine bears similarity to those of its neighbouring nations, in addition to its autochthonic heritage.

Etymology and names

History

Early history

Suspected route of proto-Kroraini migrations from central Euclea across Coius.

The identities of the earliest inhabitants of modern Kroraine are unknown, although evidence of a human presence in the region dates to about 21,000 years before present. This paleolithic population was largely replaced by neolithic migrants from eastern and southeastern Coius around 3000 BCE. There is some genetic continuity between these early peoples and modern inhabitants of Kroraine.

The pre-Kroraini population which inhabited the area from 3000 to 1000 BCE is equally mysterious, as their existence predates any written records. The material culture they left behind, however, resembles that of contemporary achaeological cultures in Brem and Phula, indicating that they may have been related to the ancient Bremish or Rygyalic peoples.

Reconstructed facial features of an early Kroraini migrant from a mound grave in Ārśi, dated c. 11th century BCE.

The ancestors of the modern Kroraini people began to cross over the Ipräṣṣe mountains into the region beginning around 1200 BCE, settling first in the Sarikol Valley and by the mid 11th century spreading well into the Cyämo valley. The new settlers were culturally and genetically distinct from the existing population and greater in number, absorbing them into the new proto-Kroraini culture. Other innovations not seen prior to the advent of the proto-Kroraini migrants include new irrigation techniques, crops, and animals previously not domesticated in the region. Sizeable settled agricultural communities formed, with new communities cropping up following the Cyämo valley southward.

Shanshan Kingdom

Tao Protectorate

Xiaodongese colonisation

Rise of Kroraini nationalism

War of Independence and aftermath

Modern day

Politics

Administrative divisions

Geography

Mountain systems

Hydrology

Climate

Biodiversity

Economy

Agriculture and fishing

Mining and minerals

Foreign trade

Infrastructure

Transportation

Health

Energy

Demographics

Ethnic groups

Ethnic distribution within Kroraine, 2015
  Krorainis (75.8%, excl. Saka)
  Saka (8.4‬%)
  Yi (6.6%)
  Gojalis (5.8%)
  sparsely inhabited

Languages

Education

Employment

Religion

Urbanisation

Culture

Holidays and festivals

Cuisine

Sports

Arts

Visual arts

Architecture

Music

Media

See also

Notes