Ayoknakhatbam


 * "Hohhieu" redirects here. For other uses, see Hohhieu (disambiguation).

Ayoknakhatbam, officially known as the Republic of Ayoknakhatbam , and otherwise Hohhieu (: 浩柚 ) or Hohhieukoh (: 浩柚國  ), is a   in Southeast Yoju, bordered by Kewhira to the south, Parzawl and the Tagol Sea to the east, Yadanasitpin to the north, and the West Sea to the east. Whereas comprise about 80% of the population, the country is also home to various  and  ethnic subgroups. Ayoknakhatbam has three capital cities: executive Heirok, legislative Momon and judicial Chaowapal.

Little is known about the antiquity of Ayoknakhatbam outside of the Puya, biased manuscripts of the dating back to the Kamjong Kingdom (33-209 CE) and later. It is hypothesized that Paana people wholly migrated from modern-day Gyaser southwards to Ayoknakhatba territory by 800 BCE the latest, coming in contact with indigenous peoples (seemingly ), who practiced extensive. The Paana clans (yeksing) are said to have loosely confederated in order to assert authority over the land. By the first century CE, Paana exploits led to the transition of some yeksing to holistic monarchies. The Kingdom of Ayoknakhatbam (1139-1710) was the first monarchy to unite the modern territory, and the longest-lasting in Ayoknakhatba history.

The Kingdom was most influential from around 1300 to 1500 CE (the so-called asengba matam "sincere epoch"), leading successful military campaigns abroad, enforcing its caste system, and allowing for its arts and sciences to flourish. By resisting to convert to  (in favor of traditional ), the Kingdom shrunk in relevance and lost reliability among foreign merchants, thereby ending its golden era. Its territories remained stagnant until the First Hokanese-Ayoknakhatba War (1534), when the royalty had to concede land for a coastwide Hokanese colony, whose unofficial purpose was to surveil Jeongmian undertakings along the Kewhira Canal.