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Lilienburg has traditionally relied on imported coal and oil for power, and still does to a large extent: 60% of the nation's electricity still comes from coal and oil power, yet the nation has invested heavily in {{wpl|renewable energy}} in recent years; the government has announced its intentions to make Lilienburg {{wpl|carbon-neutral}} by 2035 through investing in {{wpl|solar energy|solar}} and {{wpl|wind energy}}, which has also given Lilienburg less dependence on other countries for electricity.
Lilienburg has traditionally relied on imported coal and oil for power, and still does to a large extent: 60% of the nation's electricity still comes from coal and oil power, yet the nation has invested heavily in {{wpl|renewable energy}} in recent years; the government has announced its intentions to make Lilienburg {{wpl|carbon-neutral}} by 2035 through investing in {{wpl|solar energy|solar}} and {{wpl|wind energy}}, which has also given Lilienburg less dependence on other countries for electricity.


Lilienburg is heavily committed to many treaties encouraging {{wpl|renewable energy}}, reducing {{wpl|carbon emissions}}, {{wpl|water management}} and {{wpl|biodiversity}}. The country has also taken great steps to encourage {{wpl|recycling}}, through imposing charges on waste collection but opening up free recycling centres.
===Transport and Communications===
===Transport and Communications===
Lilienburg possesses a well-maintained network of roads, consisting of 201km of {{wpl|Autobahns}} that link the city with various other towns in the country and with bordering countries and nearby cities. Despite this, most of the city itself is heavily {{wpl|pedestrianisation|pedestrianised}} and as a result the country has a rather low number of cars per capita in comparison to other developed countries.
Lilienburg possesses a well-maintained network of roads, consisting of 201km of {{wpl|Autobahns}} that link the city with various other towns in the country and with bordering countries and nearby cities. Despite this, most of the city itself is heavily {{wpl|pedestrianisation|pedestrianised}} and as a result the country has a rather low number of cars per capita in comparison to other developed countries.
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The city possesses an extensive {{wpl|public transport}} network managed by Transport für Lilienberg, a government-funded co-operative enterprise. This network consists of an underground {{wpl|metro}} system which covers much of the city with a frequent service, as well as a system of {{wpl|trams}} and {{wpl|buses}} above ground.
The city possesses an extensive {{wpl|public transport}} network managed by Transport für Lilienberg, a government-funded co-operative enterprise. This network consists of an underground {{wpl|metro}} system which covers much of the city with a frequent service, as well as a system of {{wpl|trams}} and {{wpl|buses}} above ground.


Lilienburg's telecommunications industry is dominated by the government-funded Lilienburger-Telekom, which maintains {{wpl|landlines}} and also serves as a {{wpl|mobile network}} and an {{wpl|internet service provider}}. The company has worked to provide these services at a low cost, and as a result Lilienburg has one of the highest rates of Internet users and mobile phone users.
==Demographics==
==Demographics==
===Ethnicity===
===Ethnicity===
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In terms of desserts, the city is best known for {{wpl|Apple strudel}}, a type of pastry filled with apple and often served with {{wpl|ice cream}}. Also popular are plum cakes, dependent upon season, and Dampfnudeln served with sweet toppings.
In terms of desserts, the city is best known for {{wpl|Apple strudel}}, a type of pastry filled with apple and often served with {{wpl|ice cream}}. Also popular are plum cakes, dependent upon season, and Dampfnudeln served with sweet toppings.
===Sports===
===Sports===
Lilienburg's most popular sports have traditionally been {{wpl|lacrosse}} and {{wpl|football}}. Both sports have leagues within Lilienburg, in which teams representing various neighbourhoods of the city compete against each other, and the city has entered international sporting tournaments in both sports but has traditionally performed very poorly in football tournaments, rarely qualifying.
[[File:Langfardsskridskoakning.jpg|thumb|left|Professional skaters on a professional lake near the village of Retz.]]{{wpl|Cycling}} has proven very popular with the Lilienburger populace, and in the summer many take to the countryside to cycle. While many cycle as a solo sport, cycling teams for various neighbourhoods within the country exist and compete in races between each other and within their teams. {{wpl|Ice skating}} is also very popular within the country, especially during winter; many small lakes on the edges of the city have traditionally froze over in winter and {{wpl|christmas fairs|fairs}} have set up around these and they are converted into ice rinks.

Revision as of 20:58, 12 October 2019

Free City of Lilienburg
Freistadt Lilienburg (Lilienburger Herusian)

Flag of
Flag
Cockade of
Cockade
Motto: "Fraternity Above All"
Capital
and largest city
Lilienburg
Official languagesLilienburger Herusian
Demonym(s)Lilienburger
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic with elements of syndicalism and direct democracy
• Mayor
Helena Weissmann
• Chancellor
Hermann Thaler
LegislatureStadtshaus
Landshaus
Volkshaus
Establishment
• Free City established
1551
• Schiltach Ascendancy
1810
• Edelweiss Uprising
1893
• Annexation by Hytekojuznia
1905
• Free City re-established
1916
Area
• Total
3,546 km2 (1,369 sq mi)
Population
• 2017 census
607,183
• Density
171.23/km2 (443.5/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2017 estimate
• Total
$24.405 billion
• Per capita
$40,193
Gini (2017)19.9
low
HDI (2017)0.897
very high
CurrencyLilienburger mark
Calling code+328
Internet TLD.li

Lilienburg, officially the Free City of Lilienburg (Lilienburger Herusian: Freistadt Lilienburg), is a city-state located within Erdara, bordering Tudonia to the south, Mascylla to the east, Hytekia to the west and Lake Sigismund to the north-east. The nation is the smallest in Erdara, with an area of 3,546 square kilometers, consisting of the namesake city of Lilienburg, where the overwhelming majority of the nation's 607,183 residents live, and the surrounding countryside.

The city's existence is first recorded in the 11th century as a small market town and fishing village. In the 12th century, however, it became the location of a significant monastery during the 12th century and the town started to grow around the monastery. The monastery gained a reputation for scholastic work as time went on, and in 1415 the University of Lilienburg was opened by the monastic order to educate monks and civil servants, largely focusing on classics and theology. The university, being the first in Erdara, would eventually eclipse the town's other industries and become the town's raison d'être as scholars, monks and priests flocked to the town.

During the 16th century the university town would assert itself as an independent city; the city's council, consisting of property owners, nobles and university graduates, would become the sole authority over the city and it declared itself the Free City of Lilienburg. The city was headed by a Mayor, who was often a member of one of the city's merchant families during the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.

The 19th century would see the city change significantly. The House of Schiltach would come to dominate the city's government between 1810 and 1893, with the Mayor being from the House of Schiltach for the whole of that period. This was also a period in which the city industrialised and the population markedly increased to sustain this industrialisation, creating new industrial neighbourhoods of the city and drastically altering the city's social structure. However, this led to a large working-class and a growing middle-class who opposed the conservatism of the Schiltach dynasty and rallied behind the ideologies of socialism and liberalism. They were largely behind the 1893 Edelweiss Uprising, in which the House of Schiltach and the aristocracy in general were deposed in favour of a state based on popular sovereignty.

However, this new state would not last long; it was marred by divisions between socialists and liberals and a general economic decline, and after 12 years it was annexed by Hytekojuznia in a controversial move that would pave the way for the Continental War. However, Hytekojuznia would lose this war and an independent Lilienburg was re-established. The liberal-socialist divide would continue in the new republic, yet a strong trade union movement would develop which would lead to the dominance of the socialists for much of the 20th century.

Today Lilienburg is a highly developed country with very high levels of social equality, and is both a founding member and the capital of the Erdaran Union. Its economy and political system have been of much interest to economists and political theorists, with many describing the city's economy as using a democratic socialist model based on the dominance of trade unions and co-operatives in a parliamentary democracy. The city has also been noted for its namesake university's prestige and research, and it is also considered a cultural hub in terms of music, comedy, theatre, film and cabaret.

History

Early history

Independent Lilienburg

Industrialisation and Autocracy

Edelweiss Uprising and Crisis

20th century

Politics and Government

Lilienburg is a unitary parliamentary representative democratic republic with elements of syndicalism and direct democracy. The city has no codified constitution, with what is termed the "Constitution of Lilienburg" being a collection of important legal documents detailing the relations of various parts of government, of which the 1551 Proclamation of the Free City and the 1893 Citizen's Declaration are the most important.

The city's legislative power is invested in the Stadtshaus, which is a bicameral body consisting of two chambers. The first of these is the Volkshaus, which consists of 72 representatives elected by the people of the city every three years using the single transferrable vote method of election. The second of these is the Landshaus, which consists of 40 members representing various trade unions, co-operative business, employers and health and education boards, as well as representatives of the civil service and the university. While the Landshaus is only able to delay legislation and cannot deny a government confidence, its verdict is rarely questioned and it has the right to reject budgets.

While officially executive power is placed in the Mayor of Lilienburg and their Cabinet, in reality executive power is exercised by the Cabinet, which is headed by a Chancellor. The position of Chancellor is appointed by the Mayor and is given to the person most likely to hold the confidence of the house. Like in most parliamentary systems, the Chancellor and their Cabinet must retain the continued confidence of the Volkshaus and can be removed through a simple majority in a vote of no confidence. The position of Mayor is elected every six years by a plurality system and expected to be non-partisan: they are expected to give up any party or trade union membership upon election.

Currently the Mayor of Lilienburg is Helena Weissmann, an independent politician and former musician and the Chancellor is Hermann Thaler of The Greens, who leads a coalition of the Greens and the Social Labour Rally.

Direct democracy

Lilienburg has been described by many as being a semi-direct democracy, in that while normally laws are decided by an elected legislature, in line with typical representative democracy, citizens also have a right to petition for a referendum: if an initiative to enact, repeal or amend a law gets 5,000 signatures and it is ruled compliant with the constitution by the judiciary, then it is put to a binding referendum.

Military

Foreign Relations

Geography

Lilienburg is the smallest country in Erdara at only 3,546 square kilometres, being approximately 72 kilometres long and 103 kilometres wide.

A typical field in Sigismundsfeld.

To the south, Lilienburg borders the Tudonian region of Falien and to the east, it borders the Mascyllary state of Gothern. The Free City also borders theHytekian province of Zigmundsesers-Grobina to the north-west and Lake Sigismund, the biggest freshwater lake in Erdara, to the north-east.

The southern half of the country makes up an area known as the Rotefeld, consisting of rolling hills, plains and sparse forests, with its highest point being outside the hamlet of Sipplingen at 192m above seal level. The Rotefeld has a very low population density, with much of its population concentrated in small villages and hamlets geared towards farming, with only one settlement of over two thousand people, Oberlinden.

The northern half of the country, Sigismundsfeld, is much more populated, consisting of flat terrain on the banks of Lake Sigismund. The city is located centrally in this area, extending from the lake's shore towards the beginning of the Rotefeld. The terrain rarely exceeds three metres above sea level in the entirety of Sigismundsfeld, and the extremely flat terrain extends into both Mascylla and Hytekia. This extremely flat terrain on both sides of the city has made the city very easy to invade, as seen in the 1905 Edelweiss Crisis.

A rock formation in the mortth of Rotefeld.

The city state has been highlighted as a world leader in environmental protection, being ranked 3rd in 2015 worldwide by the Environmental Protection Index, and the namesake city has topped the list of Erdaran cities with the cleanest air for three years running.

The nation's climate has been categorised as Cfb on the Köppen climate classification, which denotes an oceanic climate. This describes the country's high levels of precipitation, warm summers, cool winters and a generally temperate climate overall.

Economy

Lilienburg maintains a developed, service-based mixed-market economy defined by heavy government intervention in industry, a skilled labour force and a high level of innovation. Lilienburg is a high-income country, with a PPP GDP per capita of $40,193, and this is relatively evenly distributed, with a Gini coefficient of 19.9, one of the lowest in the world.

Lilienburg's workforce is overwhelmingly employed in the service sector, which employs 79.1% of the workforce compared to 19.1% of the workforce employed in the industrial sector and 1.8% employed in the agricultural sector, largely in Lilienburg's rural areas.

Lilienburg is known for its unique model of labour relations, based around egalitarianism and democratic socialism. As a result, the city's unions play a very strong role in the economy; 82% of the workforce are part of a trade union and unions play a large role in influencing government policy. Many workplaces are run co-operatively, with a government mandate that at least 30% of a company's board has to be elected by the workers, yet many companies have a much larger share of their board elected, and many government-owned companies have almost entirely elected boards. Furthermore, the government maintains a Tripartite Commission which negotiates wages between unions, employers and the government.

A significant portion of Lilienburg's economy surrounds the city's namesake university; the university employs around 5,000 staff and its position in the city has led to the city having a large industry based around science and technology. The Lilienburg Science Park, on the edge of the city, was opened in 1989 and hosts a large number of science and technology companies, such as Redens, a biotechnology company focused on agriculture and biodiversity, and Gutes Gefühl, a company behind experimental pharmaceuticals. Both of these companies receive significant government funds and are largely run as co-operatives.

Much of the rest of the city has traditionally revolved around heavy industry, although in recent years the country has begun a process of deindustrialisation and one of the main economic issues the country has faced has been how to adequately provide new methods of sustenance to areas of the city hit by this phenomena. While the national employment rate is a very low 3.2%, this rises to 5.7% in the neighbourhood of Schiltach which has traditionally been centred around steel production. The government, however, has begun initiatives to try and encourage co-operative businesses to set up in the area.

Lilienburg possesses an extensive welfare state which provides free and universal education and healthcare to its citizenry, as well as 12 months paid leave for both parents, an extensive system of compensation for disability, sickness and injury, an unemployment insurance system with retraining facilities, and a very extensive network of social housing in which the state subsidises and owns a very large proportion of housing through housing co-operatives in order to ensure adequate affordable housing to all Lilienburgers; this system has resulted in Lilienburg having one of the lowest home ownership rates in the world at 37%.

Energy and Environment

Lilienburg has traditionally relied on imported coal and oil for power, and still does to a large extent: 60% of the nation's electricity still comes from coal and oil power, yet the nation has invested heavily in renewable energy in recent years; the government has announced its intentions to make Lilienburg carbon-neutral by 2035 through investing in solar and wind energy, which has also given Lilienburg less dependence on other countries for electricity.

Lilienburg is heavily committed to many treaties encouraging renewable energy, reducing carbon emissions, water management and biodiversity. The country has also taken great steps to encourage recycling, through imposing charges on waste collection but opening up free recycling centres.

Transport and Communications

Lilienburg possesses a well-maintained network of roads, consisting of 201km of Autobahns that link the city with various other towns in the country and with bordering countries and nearby cities. Despite this, most of the city itself is heavily pedestrianised and as a result the country has a rather low number of cars per capita in comparison to other developed countries.

The city possesses an extensive public transport network managed by Transport für Lilienberg, a government-funded co-operative enterprise. This network consists of an underground metro system which covers much of the city with a frequent service, as well as a system of trams and buses above ground.

Lilienburg's telecommunications industry is dominated by the government-funded Lilienburger-Telekom, which maintains landlines and also serves as a mobile network and an internet service provider. The company has worked to provide these services at a low cost, and as a result Lilienburg has one of the highest rates of Internet users and mobile phone users.

Demographics

Ethnicity

Population by country of origin (2018)

  Lilienburg (57.3%)
  Juznia (12.1%)
  Tudonia (11.9%)
  Hytekia (9.3%)
  Mascylla (2.3%)
  Lavaria (1.9%)
  Crethia (1.7%)
  Kustlan (1.1%)
  Other (2.4%)

The native people of Lilienburg are known as Lilienburgers, and are a Hesurian people like Mascyllans and Tudonians. In 2017, 57.3% of the population were of Lilienburger origin, which was a decrease from 2007 yet also the smallest decrease between censuses for 80 years.

The country has seen large waves of migration over the 20th and 21st centuries, especially from Juznia, Tudonia and Hytekia, with one in three residents declaring their national origin as being from one of these three countries. Hytek and Juznik immigration has largely been due to political turmoil in the breakup of Hytekojuznia, with distinct waves occuring in 1986-89, 1991-93 and 1998-2000 due to the Hytekojuznik Civil War and the First and Second Grobina wars, while Tudonian immigration has largely been the result of economic recession in the country, with a majority of Tudonians in the country arriving in the 1970's due to economic stagnation. These three groups have had a large influence on the country, with signage being produced in Hytek and Juznik across the country, as well as being taught in some schools. Many neighbourhoods across the city have been described as "Little Hytekia", "Little Juznia" or "Little Tudonia" due to the large immigrant communities resident.

Other significant minority groups include those from Mascylla, Lavaria, Crethia and Kustlan, although these groups make up very small proportions of the overall population.

Religion

to be completed but probably like ditanist with like a germanic pagan influence? maybe there'll be an actual pagan somewhere

Education

The Botanical Gardens of Lilienburg University

Education is compulsory in Lilienburg between the ages of 6 and 18, and almost entirely provided by the state, with private education and homeschooling being heavily regulated and almost nonexistent. The education system largely consists of a system of secular comprehensive schools, with students attending primary school between the ages of 6 and 14 and secondary school between the ages of 14 to 18. In part due to the small size of the country as well as social views on education, Lilienburg has one of the highest ratios of teachers to the overall population in the world.

The city is also home to one of the world's most prestigious universities, the University of Lilienburg. The university was founded in 1415 as an outgrowth of Lilienburg monastery as an ecclesiastical college for training priests, scholars and civil servants, and currently has 20,000 students enrolled in subjects spanning arts, social sciences, humanities and sciences. There are two other universities in Lilienburg: Edelweiss-Universität, which focuses more on vocational training, and the Lilienburg School of Creative Arts, which specialises in teaching art, music and drama. All three universities offer free tuition to residents of Lilienburg.

Healthcare

Karl-Weulenberg Hospital

Lilienburg has a single-payer, tax-funded healthcare system run by Gesundheit Lilienburg, a government-owned service which consists of ten hospitals across Lilienburg, with seven general hospitals as well as a university hospital, a children's hospital and a hospital dedicated to extensive treatments, as well as a system of general practitioners offices and counselling services. The system is managed by a health board, which is elected by all the employees of Gesundheit Lilienburg and is responsible in part for the allocation of funding and resources alongside the Ministry of Health.

Lilienburgers enjoy good health as a result of this system, with an average life expectancy of 82 years and high rates of survival for conditions such as cancer. The nation's mental health facilities have enjoyed great attention in recent years, with recent governments naming the area a key priority and offering increased support for mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety and bipolar disorder.

Culture

The Lilienburg Science and Technology Museum is one of the world's largest museums on science and technology.

In terms of traditional cultural achievements, Lilienburg is largely overshadowed by its neighbours and does not deviate much from their Hesurian culture, yet in modern years Lilienburg has become a pop culture centre in terms of music, folk theatre and comedy, being Erdaran Capital of Culture 2018, and it retains many of its folk traditions.

The city's conflicted history and status as a university town has led to an abundance of museums in the city. The most famous of these are the Friedrich Wasserburg Museum of Art, the Volksmuseum and the Lilienburg Science and Technology Museum, all three of which are situated on an island in Lake Sigismund. Also notable is the Prehistoric Institute, which contains the largest collection of Proto-Hesurian artifacts in the world.

Also culturally notable is the Wilhelm Locke Theatre, a 17th century theatre in the east of the city that has played host to many significant playwrights over the years, such as the namesake Wilhelm Locke.

The city has gained a reputation for inclusivity in recent years, and boasts a significant LGBT nightlife scene, with streets such as Leon-Abse-Strasse being known for LGBT nightlife.

Music and Cabaret

Indie pop singer Nina Wehn, a popular 2010's Lilienburger musician.

Lilienburg is known for its vibrant popular music scene. The city state has a prolific musical heritage, with its artists spanning genres such as Hesurock, synthpop, hip hop, punk rock, EDM, Neue Hesurische Welle, alternative rock, indie rock and pop. Many artists from the city are known for a DIY approach to songwriting and lyrics heavily focused on personal or sociopolitical lyrical content.

The country is also known for its cabaret scene, featuring intimate performances of singing, music, dancing and comedy, often touching on sociopolitical themes and satire. Performances often take place in environments such as a beer hall, and in modern times have evolved to take on elements of modern music, with many featuring punk rock music in a style known as dark cabaret.

Cuisine

Saumagen served with sauerkraut.

Lilienburger cuisine is similar to the cuisine of the rest of Erdara, with cuisine largely consisting of meat and vegetable based dishes. Dishes such as wurst, a type of Hesurian sausage, and schnitzel, a breaded cutlet of meat, are popular within the country. Schnitzels in Lilienburg are often made of chicken, and a dish consisting of a chicken schnitzel sandwiched in a loaf of bread is often known as a Lilienburger in international parlance as a result.

An apple strudel served with vanilla sauce.

The country has its own unique dishes as well, the most famous of which is Saumagen, consisting of a pig's stomach filled with pork, potatoes, onions and peppers. Other popular dishes include sauerkraut, a fermented cabbage which is often served with Saumagen, and Dampfnudeln, a sweetened bread roll often served with salad.

In terms of desserts, the city is best known for Apple strudel, a type of pastry filled with apple and often served with ice cream. Also popular are plum cakes, dependent upon season, and Dampfnudeln served with sweet toppings.

Sports

Lilienburg's most popular sports have traditionally been lacrosse and football. Both sports have leagues within Lilienburg, in which teams representing various neighbourhoods of the city compete against each other, and the city has entered international sporting tournaments in both sports but has traditionally performed very poorly in football tournaments, rarely qualifying.

Professional skaters on a professional lake near the village of Retz.

Cycling has proven very popular with the Lilienburger populace, and in the summer many take to the countryside to cycle. While many cycle as a solo sport, cycling teams for various neighbourhoods within the country exist and compete in races between each other and within their teams. Ice skating is also very popular within the country, especially during winter; many small lakes on the edges of the city have traditionally froze over in winter and fairs have set up around these and they are converted into ice rinks.