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|| The Commoner's Republic of Ruthumbria [OVERVIEW]
Poblachd Cumanta Ruthumbe
Flag | Coat of Arms |
Motto: "Sėth tro strė"
"Peace through Struggle"
Anthem: "Marseillaise an neach-obrach"
("Worker's Marseillaise")
fhwjergerggg uhgh utfgj urt hrgu
Capital City | Ashpool |
Official language | Ruth Cranylic |
National languages | English, French, Italian, various others |
Ethnic Groups: | · White (70%) |
Demonym(s) | Ruthumbrian |
Religion | . Christianity (71.09%) |
Government | Federal Semi-Presidential Republic |
Legislature | . House of Commoners (Lower House) |
Population · Density | . TBD/km2 |
GDP (nominal) | 2020 estimate |
HDI | ▲0.824 |
Currency | Trickle (Tr) |
Area | TBDkm2 |
Time zone | TBD |
Date format | DD-MM-YYYY |
Driving side | left |
Internet TLD | .rth |
Ruthumbria
Ruthumbria, officially the Commoner's Republic of Ruthumbria is sovereign nation in the Western Isles. The Republic is made up of four Commonwicks, with the capital city, Ashpool, making up a separate capital district.
The area now called Ruthumbria was first inhabited by modern humans in the Upper Paleothic period, and the name of the country was derived from the [nation] word for the geographical area, 'Ruthanne'. Ruthumbria began to consolidate into one single Kingdom in the 8th Century, as the core territories of Dernia and Sythclare entered a dynastic union. The influence of the Kingdom of Ruthumbria reached its height in mid-fifteenth Century, which the Kingdom being the main fundraiser for the Crusades of the Isles (1103-1287) and with many smaller territories paying homage to the King of the Ruthe. However, by the early 1600s, frequent losses in conflicts against neighbours, as well as the instability after the Succession Crisis of 1586, the Kingdom of Ruthumbria - at this point under the House of Lewis - began to lose its influence. Political unrest and the monarch's falling popularity lead to the Ruthumbrian Civil War (1632-1639), which in turn saw the execution of Edwin I and the parliament of Ruthumbria take control of the new Commonwealth of Ruthumbria. After several political crises, the modern Ruthumbria came into existence after the Acts of Common Men in 1701.
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- Etymology