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Oroshia

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Oroshan Democratic Republic
Kikŋaʔvəvi paŋksisavəvi qaʔłŋavnoči
양치기 민주 공화국
Flag of Oroshia.
Flag
Coat of arms of Oroshia.
Coat of arms
Capital
and largest city
Sochvel
Official languagesOroshanJogin
Recognised regional languagesNamchogi
Ethnic groups
(2018)
Demonym(s)Oroshan
GovernmentPresidential republic
• President
Siłəği Kaŋvič
• Vice President
Ğajkusvi Jəŋotł
LegislatureNational Assembly
Independence from the Jogin
• Agreement signed
13 March 1963
• Declared
1 May 1964
Area
• Total
507,039.61 km2 (195,769.09 sq mi)
Population
• 2021 estimate
2,105,500
• 2018 census
2,090,188
• Density
4.15/km2 (10.7/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2020 estimate
• Total
$11.342 billion
• Per capita
$5,426
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
$9.541 billion
• Per capita
$4,565
Gini (2020)39.8
medium
HDI (2018)Increase 0.775
high
CurrencyKikaŋk (OKK)
Date formatyyyy-mm-dd (CE)
Driving sideright
Calling code+47
Internet TLD.or

Oroshia (/əˈɹoʊ̯ʃiːə/, /ɔːɹ-/, /-ʃə/; Oroshan: Vək kikŋaʔvs, pronounced: [vək kigŋaʔfs]; Jogin: 양치기 땅, tr. Yangchigi ttang), officially the Oroshan Democratic Republic (Oroshan: Kikŋaʔvəvi paŋksisavəvi qaʔłŋavnoči; Jogin: 양치기 민주 공화국, tr. Yangchigi minju gonghwagug), is a country in the extreme north-east of Surucia. Oroshia is situated on the eponymic Oroshan Peninsula, with the Gyo-chin mountain ranges forming the backbone of the peninsula, interspersed with flatter coastal plain. With a popuation of over 2 million people (as of the 2018 census), it is one of the least populous countries in Surucia, owing to its harsh geography and mostly subarctic climate. Its capital is Sochvel, originally founded by Jogin colonists, which is also the largest city, housing the government and the legislature, the Oroshan National Assembly.

Jogin sailors had known of the area now known as Oroshia for many centuries before true colonization began, when a decree from the Jogin Emperor in 1634 proclaimed all of the Oroshan peninsula to be subsumed under the Jogin realm. Jogin colonization introduced a system of segregation, wherein the Jogin enjoyed a privileged position in society compared to the Oroshans and Namchogi, both of whom were nomadic peoples until the widespread introduction of agriculture through colonization. The use of the Oroshan and Namchog languages was discouraged, and they were banned for use in education.

Resistance to colonial policies culminated in the Tilgin Rebellion in 1879, where Indigenous Oroshans took up arms agains the Jogin colonial government, but were defeated. Oroshia participated in both Great Wars under Jogin rule, sending expeditionary forces but having no direct control over foreign policy. Mounting calls for independence produced several discussions and summits, where eventually an agreement to independence was signed in 1963. On 1 May 1964, Oroshia was granted formal independence, and adopted a presidential republican government.

Since independence, Oroshia has strengthened ties with the Western world through trade, aligning itself closer to Albrennia rather than the emerging anti-Western bloc countries, for example Songha. Modern Oroshan society is relatively free, though the Oroshan government continues to receive criticism from Western countries with which it trades for freedom of elections and freedom of press violations. The current President of Oroshia is Siłəği Kaŋvič, from the Oroshan Freedom and Democracy—Union Party, successive iterations of which have maintained power since independence.

Etymology

The common Rythenian name, Oroshia, derives from the Keian phrase 放浪者の土地 (tr. Hōrō-sha no tochi), meaning "wanderer-land" or "nomad-land", in reference to the originally nomadic reindeer pastoralist tribes that occupied the area before colonization. The first element, 放浪者, Hōrō-sha, was adopted by Rythenian-speaking traders, who had first learned of Oroshia from Keian sailors. A calque of this term is used in Jogin, where Oroshia is referred to as 양치기 땅 (tr. Yangchigi ttang), the first element of which also means "wanderer" or "shepherd". This is a source for a former Rythenian name for Oroshia, Anchegia, which was used, although not widely, in the 17th and 18th centuries.

Natively, Oroshia is known as Vək kikŋaʔvs, meaning "land of the reindeer chiefs". This is derived from their endonym, kikŋaʔv, which means "reindeer chiefs", and in some ways has a similar meaning to "nomad" or "shepherd", but does not have the colonial association that the other exonyms do. Because of these colonial connotations of some exonyms, beginning in the 1940s, the anti-colonial movement called for the territory to be renamed with an endonym, with Kignavia the most popular suggestion. After independence, it was decided to keep the name Oroshia in Rythenian, however there are still calls for the exonym to be replaced.

History

Oroshan history is unique in being a colony on the same continent as its colonizer, though its remoteness in the pre-industrial era limited contact between the colony and its sovereign controller. This remoteness led to a diminished influence of Jogin culture in Oroshia, especially in terms of population. Less than 10 percent of the Oroshan population identify as Jogin in origin, and most ethnic Jogin in Oroshia today speak Oroshan, and not Jogin, though Jogin remains an official language for the purposes of bureaucracy.

Prehistory and early contact

Not much is known about Oroshia before colonization by the Jogin, since there are no written records left behind by Indigenous Oroshans. There is evidence of trade with much of eastern Isuan, judging from artifacts that could only have arrived through trade with distant places. The Eastern Department's captial city, Yaykvek, is widely known for being built on the site of a former seasonal fishing ground, where reindeer herders would fish seasonally in the winter, when the inland pasture grounds became unsuitable for the reindeer herds. Many artifacts have been recovered from the area around Yaykvek, including pottery from as far south as Songha.

A boat-shaped pot recovered from fields around Yaykvek, from Songha.

Due to the proximity with the historical Jogin realm, Jogin and Keian sailors had known of what is now Oroshia for many centuries, and were lured to its waters by tales of bountiful fish. Trade began peacefully, but soon turned more violent as the Jogin's expansionist aims solidified, with Jogin sailors kidnapping native Oroshans after skirmishes on the shore on multiple occasions.

The trade route overseas to the Jogin Empire proper was treacherous, though, and overland trade came to dominate between the two areas. Fish, which proved so valuable to the Jogin, could only be exported in the warmer months of the year, when overland passes were not restricted by weather. Gradually, more trading posts were established, where the Jogin overwintered and continued trading. A fort was built at Balungang (now Sochvel), becoming the first large Jogin settlement in Oroshia. In 1634, the Jogin emperor decreed Oroshia part of the Jogin realm, formally beginning the centuries-long process of colonization.

Jogin colonization

However, due to the remoteness of Oroshia, a combination of challenging mountainous terrain and dangerous overseas routes, the Jogin presence in Oroshia never grew strong until the industrial era, when rail transport became viable. The colonizers made attempts to outlaw the Oroshan language, first in the Jogin Language Decree of 1734, and cultural practices over centuries, which was met with great resistance by the Indigenous Oroshans, culminating in the Tilgin Rebellion of 1879. The Jogin's introduction of agriculture into the region allowed much greater productivity from the land, and its fertile soils came to provide a large surplus of food, which would be sent back to the Jogin Empire.

Railroads allowed greater contact and mobility through Oroshia's harsh landscape.

The burgeoning agriculture industry initially led to a higher quality of life for Oroshans, beginning in the early 1790s, but the Jogin colonizers soon introduced taxes and quotas to ensure strict control of food production, which was exploited at the benefit of the wider Jogin Empire. During the first wave of industrialization of Oroshia, ushered in during the 1880s and coinciding with innovations that allowed railways to be constructed in Oroshia's challenging terrain, Jogin authorities were careful to carefully control the industries and businesses that developed, to ensure that the balance of power was never tipped out of their favour.

Great Wars and independence

During the First and Second Great Wars, Oroshia sent expeditionary forces to fight on behalf of the Jogin Empire, but was never involved in either conflict as a sovereign entity, only as a colony of the Jogin. After the Second Great War, calls for independence grew, but the Jogin Empire had an increasing desire to hold onto the territory for its abundance of natural resources and industrial sector in the midst of its second industrial boom. Successive deals were reached on autonomy, gaining its own parliament in 1958, and a final agreement, including independence, was agreed upon and signed in 1963, with independence to follow in 1964.

Modern era

The National Assembly building was constructed in 1962, after Oroshia was afforded self-rule in 1958.

In the modern era, Oroshia has been relatively stable, adopting a presidential democratic system after independence, although the freedom of elections is widely debated and criticized by leading democratic countries in Levilion, including its main trading partner, Albrennia. The Oroshan Freedom and Democracy Party emerged victorious in the first independent elections in November 1964, and has maintained power ever since, though having merged in 1987 with the Union Party to form the current Oroshan Freedom and Democracy—Union Party.

Oroshia's abundant natural resources continue to be valuable assets in foreign relations and for itself, and trades actively with major countries around the world. The population boom experienced immediately following the Second Great War powered a second industrialization and a rapidly growing economy, but the rate of population growth has declined steadily since the 1980s. Several researchers have warned that a population decline could be disastrous for Oroshia, lacking the services to adequately support an aging population while also lacking the young population to continue current levels of employment.

Geography

Oroshia is surrounded on three sides by ocean. In the south and east, Oroshia borders the North Demontean Ocean, while in the north, it borders the Northern Ocean. In the west, Oroshia is bordered by the larger Surucian continental landmass. Oroshia occupies the entire eponymic Oroshan Peninsula, in the centre of which are the Gyo-chin Mountains (Jogin: 거친 산, tr. geochin san; Oroshan: Ğajkğiʔn). This large geographical contrast drives many other terrestrial processes, and much of the internal workings of the country.

Topography

The Sochvel River in the southern lowlands

Oroshia is dominated by highlands and mountains, save small areas in the extreme south and northwest. The gently sloping Sochvel valley, formed by the river of the same name, meets the ocean at the Ol-omol Bay (Jogin: 얼음물, tr. eol-eummul; Oroshan: Sičnoməğ), and is the site of the capital city, also called Sochvel (Balungang) (Oroshan: Sočvəł; Jogin: 빠른 강, tr. ppaleun gang). The Ol-omol Bay is a part of the larger Neihai Sea (Huranian: 内海, tr. nèihǎi), itself a marginal sea of the Demontean Ocean.

The northwestern lowlands are a series of marshes that have been formed by the sedimentation and gradual infilling of Shizumutochi Bay (Keian: 沈む土地湾, tr. shizumu tochi-wan; Oroshan: Əvłəpvək ajpməğ), a marginal sea of the Northern Ocean.

A relief map of Oroshia

The highest point in Oroshia is in the Gyo-chin range, just east of the geographic centre of the country. The peak Kəvkəvəvi vaŋaŋč, ("It is groaning sickly", either derived from a folk tale, or from the whistling sound of the wind through the highest peaks), is the country's highest point, at 1,782 metres (5,846 ft.). Most of the country is heavily forested, with over 90% having full tree cover. The main exception are the marshes in the northwest. The average elevation of Oroshia, owing to the mountains, is over 600 metres.

Rivers originate in the mountains, and then flow down to the coast, the most important of which are the Sochvel (Sočvəł) River and the Koynovel (Quğnovəł) River, both of which flow into the Demontean Ocean, and the Bangvel (Paŋkvəł) River, which flows into the Neihai Sea, then into the Demontean, and forms some of the the western border of Oroshia, hence its name in Oroshan, "divide river". In Oroshan, vəł means "river", so the Rythenization of the river names ending in "-vel" followed by "River" is a tautology. Oroshia is divided into eight major watersheds, four of which flow generally south into the Demontean, including Ol-omol Bay and the Neihai Sea, one flows east at Kavyin Bay (Oroshan: Kavğinənts ajpməğ) into the Demontean, and three flow north into the Northern Ocean, including Shizumotochi Bay.

The eight major watersheds in Oroshia

The coast of Oroshia is fairly straight in the north, owing to the subduction of the Brevian Plate under the Surucian Plate, a process which continues to build the Gyo-chin mountains. In the south, it is more rugged, with an extension of the Gyo-chin mountain range (alternatively, a separate Angachyin mountain range) forming the Angachyin peninsula (Oroshan: Aŋkačğinvək), south of which lies Ayptuk Island (Oroshan: Ajptək), Oroshia's largest island.

Climate

A Köppen climate map of Oroshia

Oroshia is dominated by continental climates, as per the Köppen climate classification system. This is the result of the large influence of the Surucian landmass, which creates a continental seasonal variation effect that occurs in the yearly climate cycle. Oroshia lies between the latitudes of 30°N and 60°N, which means that the prevailing air currents are mid-latitude westerlies caused by the surface realization of Ferrell cells. In the summer, the nothern sub-tropical terrestrial low-pressure zone moves northward, driven by increased insolation in the northern hemisphere, intensifying these winds, which manifest in Oroshia as a northerly maritime wind.

This wind is still too dry to cause much precipitation in the extreme south of Oroshia, at least during the summer. In the winter, though, the decreased influence of the northerly wind coupled with the increased influence of southward-moving polar air masses in Rossby waves causes convectional precipitation. Places in the extreme south belong to the Mediterranean-like dry warm-summer humid continental climate type, where there is, on average, 3 times more precipitation received in the winter than the summer.

Much of the northwest belongs to a colder Mediterranean-like climate, the Mediterranean-like dry warm-summer subarctic climate. This is due to the rain shadow of the Gyo-chin Mountains blocking the summer maritime air, and very little precipitation makes it to the northwest in this season. In the winter, again, the interaction between cold polar air masses and a lessened northerly maritime wind creates convectional precipitation that is, on average, 3 times as great in volume as that during the summer months.

The eastern Gyo-chin Mountains, west of Yaykvek

Conversely, the south side of the Gyo-chin range receives much more rain during the summer than the winter, in some places up to ten times the winter precipitation level, producing a monsoon-influenced warm summer humid continental and monsoon-influenced subarctic climates, the difference between the two being the temperature of the coldest month. The subarctic climate is generally colder than its humid continental counterpart, and in Oroshia, the subarctic type tends to occur at higher elevations. The moist maritime summer air is lifted by the elevation of the mountains, which then hits its lifting condentation level and creates substantial orographic precipitation down the south side of the mountains. When the maritime air currents are weaker in the winter, this effect decreases dramatically.

Intermediate between the dry summer-wet winter Mediterranean-like climates and the wet summer-dry winter monsoon-influenced climates are areas where both of these processes have some influence, creating a more moderated, varied climate throughout the year. These are the general warm summer humid continental and subarctic climates, with the humid continental type being dominant in the southwest, and a subarctic climate dominant throughout the north and northeast.

Flora and fauna

Temple juniper.

Given the mainly mountainous terrain of Oroshia, most of the flora variety in the country is of alpine varieties, except in the western lowlands. Based on elevation, the categories of flora vary from tundra types at the most extreme, ranging to coniferous and mixed forests at the lowest elevations. Mainly deciduous flora may predominate in the western lowlands. Plant species have been used for generations medicinally and for food, and about 350 species are listed as at least threatened as of 2020.

Surucian lynx.

Examples of commonly found alpine species are temple juniper, Oroshian cedar, and Oroshian larch. At lower elevations, East Surucian alder, iron birch, and Huranian maple, among others, may transition between being dominant to mixing with conifers depending on altitude. In the virtually separate ecological region of the western lowlands, species such as Huranian tubergourd and variegated-leaf hardy kiwi may be present.

Despite the variation in flora, the fauna of Oroshia mostly range across the entire country, with few species isolated to a certain part of the country. Various kinds of owls, such as Blackiston's fish owl, can be found inland, and many seabirds, such as the scaly-sided merganser can be found at sea. The Keian tiger, Keian leopard, Surucian lynx, wild boar, Oroshan roe, and spotted deer can be found throughout the entire country. Plentiful stocks of salmon and crab are also found, primarily off the southern coast, as the northern coast tends to be too cold in the winter.

Government and politics

Oroshia is a unitary presidential republic, where the head of state and head of government is the President of Oroshia, currently Silegi Kanvic, who has served since 2002. The president's powers are laid out in the Constitution of Oroshia, whose current iteration went into force on December 3, 1996. The president's powers are considered separate from the Oroshan National Assembly, the legislature of Oroshia, though foreign observers have noted that the office of the president often leverages political pressure on the legislature.

Despite being aligned with democratic nations like Albrennia in terms of foreign policy, Oroshia is considered a hybrid regime by many measures. Press is often censored by governmental agencies, and the executive branch of the government has received criticism for alleged interference in legislative, judicial (for example, the arrest of Itikən Pipip), and electoral processes. The 2020 elections were rated as "partly free" by international observers.

Politics in both the legislative and presidential elections are dominated by the Oroshan Freedom and Democracy—Union Party. The Oroshan Freedom and Democracy Party was dominant from independence in 1964 until 1993, when it merged with the New Vision for Oroshia Group to take its current form. Major opposition parties are often noted for their cooperation with the Freedom and Democracy—Union Party in government.

Administrative divisions

Oroshia is divided into 14 departments, one of which is an autonomous department created for the Namchog people. These departments are further subdivided into 92 communities, though the communities of Sochvel and Yaykvek are coterminous with the departments in which they are located. Before an administrative reform in 1992, Oroshia was composed of 17 regions, containing 45 departments in total. After March 1, 1992, the old regions were abolished, and the number of departments was reduced by amalgamation, the departments then becoming the highest tier of sub-national government.

Departments of Oroshia after 1992.
Name Translation Official languages Population (2018) Department Seat
Ajptək, 작은 섬 Small island Oroshan, Jogin 22,302 Ajptək ajpməğ
Aŋkačğinvək Land where mountains rise Oroshan 90,569 Iskučipaka
Aŋkačquğvək Land of strong ice Oroshan 90,344 Kavjak
Əvłəpmiłvi ğajkğiʔnvək Western land of rugged mountains Oroshan 90,452 Kəvitukəłut
Əvłəpmiłvi sičnoməğvək Land to the west of the beginning of water Oroshan 96,433 Kaŋčəłvəł
Əvłəpvək Land that recedes Oroshan 85,302 Əvłəpmiłğin
Ğajkvək, 거친 땅 Rugged land Oroshan, Jogin 234,691 Yaykvek
Kavğinvək Land at the end of mountains Oroshan 101,996 Iłnočiqitjakłəmp
Qaʔłvəŋočəčivi ğiʔnvək, Xuut ppŭhryndadda Land of the Namchog mountains Oroshan, Namchogi 81,096 Reŋŋit ttispi
Quğnovəłvək Land of the cold river Oroshan 251,830 Quğnovəł (Koynovel)
Tiłğinvək Land of tall mountains Oroshan 219,452 Tilgin
Sičtiłmiłvi ğajkğiʔnvək Eastern land of rugged mountains Oroshan 91,117 Sočquğno
Sočvəłvək, 빠른 강 땅 Land of the fast river Oroshan, Jogin 518,021 Sochvel
Vəŋočsikavəvək Warm land of berries Oroshan 116,593 Kačajłvi sičtiłmiłva

Economy

The Oroshan economy is heavily reliant on the extraction and processing of natural resources, such as timber, iron, and tin. The manufacturing of these raw goods into finished products is a major focus of the Oroshan economy, and the nation's largest employer. However, the country lacks a solid supply chain between raw materials and finished products, particularly in the case of iron and steel. Iron ore is extracted in Oroshia, shipped out to be smelted into steel, then returned to be processed into finished goods. This is a remnant of Jogin colonial policy, who attempted to run the colony through the lens of a military-industrial complex. The breaking of the supply chain for Oroshia's most critical resource was an attempt to ensure that Oroshia would forever remain reliant on the Jogin economy, where most of the first-stage processing was done. Oroshia is instead increasingly turning to more overseas trade and boosting its own iron ore smelting industry to remedy the gap.

An open pit mine near Sočquğno

In 2020, the PPP GDP and GDP per capita of Oroshia was $11.342 billion and $5,426, respectively, making it one of the poorest countries in Levilion. Though most of the economic backbone of Oroshia is in manufacturing finished goods, agriculture is one of the largest employers outside of urban areas. Since the Indigenous peoples of Oroshia were nomadic before Jogin colonization, all produce that is farmed is a product of colonization. Wheat grown in the south of Oroshia was once exported en masse throughout the Jogin Empire, to the detriment of the Oroshan food supply. Rice and dairy farming are also common in the south, whereas the north of the country is only suitable for specialized varieties of wheat or traditional subsistence reindeer herding.

There is also an emerging services industry, as Oroshia aligns itself more with Albrennian influence, and the standard of living increases.

Infrastructure

Train on the Northern Route to Tilgin in the Sochvel Valley

Rail is still the dominant mode of transportation between cities in Oroshia. Despite the rough landscape, Jogin colonizers funded the expansion of railroads when the industrial era arrived in Oroshia to exert their influence throughout the whole colony. While most settlements have roads, they do not connect beyond the major cities, and when they do, they are poorly maintained. The rail network in Oroshia was nationalized in 1966 after independence, coming under control of the Oroshan Rail Authority, subject to the Division of Transportation. In the north of the country permafrost poses a major challenge to road and rail network expansion, and rail network maintenance. Communities in the north (especially in the extreme northeast, north of Yaykvek) are thus relatively isolated from the rest of Oroshia. The possibility that air travel might make the northeast more accessible was a hot-button political issue in the 1980s, and it was ultimately decided that it was not worth the investment to build small community airports, after it was revealed that the Division Head of Transportation received a bribe from the partially-state owned airline to advance the issue in the Oroshan Airlines Affair.

The main seaport and airport is in Sochvel, though there is an airport in Tilgin that services the north of the country. Sea ice had made sea travel around the northeastern point of the Oroshan peninsula historically difficult, though warming waters have started to open this route, and with it the possibility of shorter trade routes unencumbered by sea ice. The port in Sochvel includes a ferry service to Ayptuk Island, which was publically operated until 2008, when it was sold to a private entity, rebranded as Ayptuk Hydro-Transport. The Sochvel International Airport is the hub for Oroshan Airlines, the only airline service in Oroshia and the flag carrier for the country.

Demographics

The 2018 Oroshan census enumerated 2,090,188 people, with a population density of 4.15 per km2, the lowest in Levilion. The most populated department was Sočvəłvək, with 518,021 people, and the least populated department was Ajptək, with 22,302 people. Sočvəłvək contains more than a quarter of the total population of the country, largely due to the capital of the country, Sochvel (pop. 499,387), which is also the county seat. The total population of the country increased 7.7% from the previous census in 2005.

Ethnicity

The Oroshan census relies on ethnolinguistic divisions for questions regarding ethnicity. The main division in ethnicities in Oroshia is between those of Indigenous background (87.1% in 2015) and non-Indigenous background (12.9% in 2015). The three groups recognized as being Indigenous to Oroshia are Oroshan people, Namchog people, and Yvlipka people. 1,417,152 people, or 64.8% of the population, identified as Oroshan, 403,406, or 19.3%, as Namchogi, and 66,880, or 3.2%, as Yvlipkan. However, there is some controversy surrounding these figures, especially the last.

Of those of non-Indigenous origin (per the definition used in the Oroshan census), nearly three quarters identified as Jogin — 192,302, or 9.2%. The rest were of various backgrounds, including Songhese and Bansunese.

Enumeration of Yvlipka People

Though the Oroshan census appears to handle ethnicity-based questions along ethnolinguistic lines, there is an evident disparity noted between the number of people of Yvlipkan background reported in the census and the number of speakers of Yvlipkan language. There is a policy of assimilation by the Oroshan government towards Yvlipka people, whose language is similar to Oroshan, and it has been suspected by foreign democracy advocacy groups that the number of speakers of Yvlipkan are intentionally undercounted to try and forward the notion that Yvlipkan is no different than Oroshan.

Language

Of the roughly 2,300,000 speakers estimated for Oroshan, 1,840,370 were those reported in Oroshia itself. Oroshan is the language used in daily life for the majority of the country, even by those not of Oroshan background. It is estimated that 2 million people in Oroshia speak Oroshan in daily life. Namchogi is official in the autonomous department of Qaʔłvəŋočəčivi ğiʔnvək, and was spoken as a native language by 249,875 people in 2015, 243,640 of whom resided in the department. The official census figures for Yvlipkan count only 2,650 speakers, however the true count is estimated to be somewhere near 15,000, out of an ethnic population of 66,880.

Jogin was spoken natively by 201,450 people, though it is understood by nearly a million, a holdover from colonial times when Jogin was the language of education, business, and formal situations.

Religion

The largest organized religion in Oroshia in 2015 was Macakkanism, with 323,980 adherents, or 15.5% of the total population. Macoes began to grow in number in Oroshia at the turn of the 20th century, after the cleric Ğavip Itəŋ established a temple northeast of Kavğin. It soon became popular with the elite, and more temples were established throughout colonial Oroshia.

However, the largest faith group by far are traditional faiths, which are often a kind of Shamanism. 1,230,450 people, or 58.8% in 2015, reported adhering to a traditional faith of some kind. The most popular form of shamanism is Oroshan shamanism, which had 1,070,885 adherents in 2015, or 51.2% of the population. Other forms of shamanism are often influenced by Indigenous traditional beliefs (especially in areas with significant Namchogi and Yvlipkan populations), or Jogin shamanism.

In 2015, 202,750 people, or 9.7%, reported adhering to no religion, a 3.1% increase from the 2005 census, and the largest increase of any religious category. Demographically, most of the population that adheres to no religion is under the age of 35, where the rate is 29.4%.

Culture

After independence from the Jogin Empire, an emphasis was put on returning to traditional Oroshan culture, which led to a cultural revival and the inclusion of many modern elements into Oroshan culture. The Oroshan government designed programs through until the 1990s that advocated for the expression of Oroshan culture, of which the Cook Oroshan! series remains perhaps the most well-known.

Cuisine

Traditional Oroshan cuisine is influenced by the nomadic reindeer herding of pre-colonization populations. Game meat such as deer, reindeer, bear, and wild boar are popular, though more modern and accessible alternatives include domesticated pork, beef, lamb, and chicken. In addition, as wheat began to be extensively grown throughout the southwest during the colonial period, many baked goods were introduced to the common diet in Oroshia. Black rye bread became especially popular and is commonly baked with coriander seed in the dough. A tradition developed, at least by the early 1850s, to bake the rye bread with coriander seed designs in the top of the loaf. Popular legend attributes this to a baker, Ipoğip Taŋ of Tilgin in 1837, but this is doubtful. A reindeer antler-shaped design in the top of a loaf is often associated with proposals and weddings.

Coriander seeds baked into black rye bread

Pies baked with wild berries are also traditional, and are often paired with tea made with cedar or spruce needles. Berries are often dried out and preserved for consumption throughout the winter. Berries are associated with temptation in Oroshan folklore, which led to their association with decadence and the spring solstice, where many dishes are made with berries. They are often sweet, like puddings, preserves, and cakes, but also used in combination with meat, especially deer and boar.

For most of history, where refrigeration was not available, meat was often salted to last throughout the winter. This is still often the case, especially in remote areas of the northeast of the country, where the infrastructure is underdeveloped. Still, dishes made with salted and/or dried meat are popular in large parts of the country. A dish of sliced salted venison with wild berry preserves is the often the main dish for celebrating the arrival of spring at the solstice.

A particular delicacy, dried bear's paw, has earned a reputation for being a particularly unusual experience amongst tourists. It is said to confer protection from evil spirits when consumed in folklore, and it was the subject of a recent internet challenge for tourists in Oroshia.

Media

The high-power radio broadcasting tower in Sochvel

Media infrastructure in Oroshia is severely underdeveloped and neglected. Print newspapers are available in every city, and have not suffered the same fate as in some countries, because the infrastructure required for internet connectivity is not yet fully present in many areas of the country. Newspaper outlets are nominally independently owned in each city, though they are closely watched and censored by the Oroshan government. Print media is available through various newspapers in Oroshan, Namchogi, and Jogin. While the Oroshan government does not expressly forbid the publishing of newspapers in Yvlipkan, it considers Yvlipkan to be a dialect of Oroshan and will exert pressure to change the language of publishing to Oroshan. Notable newspapers include the weekly Čoŋi, "The Paper", in Sochvel, and Iqat!, "Unite!", in Tilgin. Iqat! was formerly a labour-oriented newspaper that received governmental pressure to change its messaging and is now a more mainstream newspaper, though it retains its original name.

Radio and television broadcasts are managed by the government-funded Oroshan Broadcasting Company (Oroshan: Oŋkipčipistəŋči kikŋaʔvs), based out of Sochvel, though the infrastructure is outdated and often cannot reliably reach large swaths of rural Oroshia. The mountainous regions in the centre pose a particular challenge for constructing telecommunications infrastructure because of their ruggedness and the fact that the signals cannot reliably pass through the mountains, so more towers need to be constructed to cover the same area. Broadcasts are offered in Oroshan and Jogin throughout the country, and in Namchogi in the Qaʔłvəŋočəčivi ğiʔnvək autonomous department, where Namchogi is official. Radio and television broadcasts are even more tightly regulated by the government, and any political commentary other than that released in news broadcasts is expressly forbidden. Oroshan governmental radio has been noted for its radio plays that flout these rules by including hidden political messages.