User:Crylante/Sandbox/Lilienburg

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Lilienburger Hesurian

-South of Benrath Line: "machen" not "maken".
-North of Bad Honnef Line: "Dorp" not "Dorf".
-North of Sankt Goar Line: "Dat/et/wat" not "Das/es/was".
-North of Speyer Line: "Äppel" not "Apfel".
-South of Hus-Haus Line: "Haus" not "Hus".
-South of Uerdinger Line: "Ich" not "Ik".
-North of Boppard Line: "Korf" not "Korb".
-/d/ -> /t/ at start of words.
-/a/ -> /æ/ before /r/ and /ʃ/.
-<Ä> represents /æ/ not /ɛ/.
-Plural verb forms all united to "-en".

Political parties of Lilienburg

Party Name Volkshaus Seats Ideology
The Greens
Die Grüne
18 / 72
Green politics
Progressivism
Participatory democracy
Left-wing populism
Social Labour Rally
Soziale Arbeiterpartei
16 / 72
Democratic socialism
Trade unionism
Social democracy
Independents
Unabhängige
12 / 72
Various
Civic Unity
Bürgereinheit
9 / 72
Liberal conservatism
Liberalism
Economic liberalism
Libertarianism
Democratic Party
Demokratische Partei
7 / 72
Christian democracy
Social conservatism
Change
Veränderung
4 / 72
Left-wing populism
Anti-establishment
Egalitarianism
Centre Party
Zentrumspartei
3 / 72
Agrarianism
Populism
Decentralisation
Schiltach Independents
Schiltacher Unabhängige
3 / 72
Localism
Right-wing populism

Die Verwaltung

Die Verwaltung
OriginWelhaven, Lilienburg
GenresPop punk, electropunk, surf punk, emo
Years active2015 (2015)–2019 (2019)
LabelsWasserstoff
MembersHans Rosenthal
Lena Rosenthal
Mark Landrut

Die Verwaltung were a Lilienburger alternative rock band formed in July 2015, consisting of twin siblings Hans and Lena Rosenthal, on vocals and guitar and drums respectively, and Mark Landrut on bass.

The band's debut EP, Warte eine Minute, was self-released in 2017 on the band's website, where it gained a following and came to the attention of famed independent record label Wasserstoff Records, who signed the band in August 2018. Soon after the band's first single, "Mädchen", was released on this label, followed by "Absturz und brennen" in February 2019. Both of these songs were top five hits within Lilienburg, and would later be featured on the band's second EP, Die neue Verwaltung, which would reach number 2 on the album charts.

While touring this EP, however, the band were implicated in the 2019 [company] plane crash, which cost the lives of all three members. The reaction in Lilienburg was one of shock, and the week of the crash the EP's third single, Zwischen, topped the Lilienburg chart, and all proceeds from the song's streams and downloads were donated to the victims of the crashes.

The band were known for their fast and youthful pop punk stylings which incorporated elements of synthpop, surf rock and emo into their music. The band's lyrics focused largely on relationships and the social pressures of growing up, and many songs discussed Hans Rosenthal's bisexuality.

Die neue Verwaltung
EP by
Die Verwaltung
ReleasedApril 2019, 05 (05-04-2019)
RecordedNeue-Strasse Studio, Lilienburg
GenrePop punk, emo pop, synthpop
Length27:18
LabelWasserstoff
ProducerDie Verwaltung
Die Verwaltung chronology
Warte eine Minute
(2017)
Die neue Verwaltung
(2019)

Edelweiss Uprising

Edelweiss Uprising
Part of the buildup to the Continental War
Peterloo Massacre.png
An print of a liberal demonstration by Helmuth Bäcker
Date25 January – 15 March 1893 (1893-01-25 – 1893-03-15)
Location
Lilienburg
Caused by
Resulted inDemocrat victory
Parties to the civil conflict
Democrats
Loyalists
Casualties
Death(s)~750

The Edelweiss Uprising (Hesurian: Edelweiß-Aufstand) is the name given to a largely uncoordinated revolution in the Free City of Lilienburg which took place during 1893 and resulted in the demise of the regime of the House of Schiltach in favour of one of the first modern democratic republics in the world.

The uprising has been cited as an important precursor to the Continental War, citing the instability created in Lilienburg as a result of the revolution as a fundamental reason for its annexation in the Edelweiss Crisis twelve years later, an event widely cited as building the tensions necessary for the outbreak of the war.

Overview

Since 1551, Lilienburg had been governed as an aristocratic republic in which a noble class, the propertied classes and graduates of the University of Lilienburg shared power through a republican constitution. However, since the election of the low-ranking noble Kurt von Schiltach as the Mayor of Lilienburg in 1810, the city state had seen its top positions of power increasingly dominated by members of the House of Schiltach in a situation often described as a hereditary dictatorship.

This coincided with the increasing industrialisation of the city state; the city's population exploded as various heavy industries such as steel manufacturing blah blah blah the new working classes didn't like that tory family and yeeted them out with the help of some middle class liberals and champagne socialists and spent twelve years arguing before being yeeted out by the subhumans in hytekojuznia Events:

  • Welhaven Massacre, 25 Jan: Police shoot at bread riot in Johannes-Platz, Welhaven - mass public outcry.
  • Schiltach Steelworks Strike, 8-19 Feb: Steelworkers' strike over poor pay, long hours and dangerous conditions, workers arrested under anti-union laws.
  • First general strike, 21 Feb: Workers across the city go on strike to protest the use of force to put down the Schiltach Steelworks Strike, students join in, many more arrests made.
  • Sipplingen Festival, 24 Feb: Folk music festival in hamlet of Sipplingen turned into anti-government demonstration, speeches about overthrowing House of Schiltach delivered.
  • Steinburg Manifesto, 27 Feb: A liberal society publishes a document detailing a plan for a democratic government, which is distributed across the city.
  • Neustadt Massacre, 5 March: Workers, socialists and radical liberals arrange a demonstration in Neustadt district - police fire at it, justifying it with 17th century anti-revolutionary laws.
  • Second general strike, 6-10 March: Workers on a much larger scale go on strike over the events of the Neustadt Massacre.
  • Defenestration of Oberlinden, 11 March: Edmund von Schiltach, Mayor of Lilienburg, flees the city over fear of the revolution, caught in Oberlinden and defenestrated.
  • Resignation of Chancellor, 15 March: Otto von Schiltach, Chancellor of Lilienburg, resigns and appoints liberal academic Friedrich Reinfeldt as Chancellor, who declares a constitutional convention.