Hachuabsh

Hachuabsh, officially the Socialist Commonwealth of Hachuabsh (: Xacuabš Yuhaw̓, ) is a sovereign state in northern Yeongju. It faces Thunderbird Bay to the east and borders Tlakwaan to the north, Yudeok, Atfalati and Muwon to the west, Iyuaschi to the east, as well as Yakaleikin, Aibapatikket and Yelamu to the south. With an estimated 181 million inhabitants, it is the second most populous country in Yeongju.

Since antiquity, the modern territory of Hachuabsh has been continuously inhabited by several ethnic groups, most prominently the along the central coast. An abundance of in the country's rich waters along with the cultivation of  introduced from south Yeongju and Jungju was conducive to the development of early civilizations in Hachuabsh.

Due to a variety of factors- relative political unity, and a lack of desired natural resources in comparison to other areas of Yeongju such as Yahuimilco- Hachuabsh managed to avoid colonization by the Sinju powers. Beginning in the 1860s, a massive modernization and Centerisation campaign was carried out by elites that dramatically restructured the politics, economy, and society of Hachuabsh; transforming the country into an industrialized great power. Hachuabsh went on to establish a throughout West and Central Yeongju.

During the Great Eulhae War Hachuabsh invaded several Jeongmian and Meisaani colonies throughout Yeongju, reaching as far as northwest Yahuimilco and Kealakekua. However, as the war dragged on and the Hachuabshi military found itself increasingly overstretched, the war effort became unpopular on the home front. In the last two months of the war, Hachuabsh experienced a communist revolution led primarily by over the span of two months that resulted in the overthrow of the  Sqíxʷabš, the dissolution of the Hachuabshi Empire, and an armistice with the Allied Powers. A bloody civil war ensued, consolidating power in the hands of the socialists through the People's Assembly. Throughout the latter half of the twentieth century Hachuabsh would support various communist insurgencies throughout Yeongju and Cheongju.

Today, Hachuabsh is a that exerts considerable political, economic, and cultural influence globally. Hachuabsh is the third largest economy in the world and the largest economy in Yeongju by. Hachuabshi and  are important players in the export of  and  goods. Hachuabsh is one of the most highly ranked socialist nations in measures of and. The of Hachuabsh is characterized by numerous, , and  carved by glaciers. blanket much of the outer shore, while the eastern interior is largely arid due to a volcanic mountain chain running from north to south along the coast. Hachuabsh is a member of the Congress of Nations and a founding member of both the OSDMA. It is one of the original signatories of the Pukaq'asa Accords, in which its large and modern armed forces play an important role.

Etymology
Hachuabsh is written in Yeongja as and in  is pronounced as Xacuabš (Hah-chooh-ab-sh). The name Hachuabsh (lit. people living by the large lake) is most likely derived from the term adopted by a group of Pudilabš living around Lake Laklak (: ɬaʔɬaʔ) to refer to themselves. Both Xacuabš and Pudilabš (lit. drifted up people) were common names for the people living in the first centralized Hachuabshi Kingdom that existed between the 6th and 11th centuries CE; however Hachuabsh is thought to have emerged as the more common, as the name came to encompass all the peoples living along the eastern shores of Thunderbird Bay.

Early Fusenese records-- influenced by the accounts of traders and returning from Hachuabsh-- reference the area as the "inlets with many whales" (鯨澳, : Gyōjū, : Gyeongo).

Prehistory and Antiquity


Hachuabsh is likely to have been inhabited by as early as 125,000 years ago. were present in the area by 10,000 BCE after the end of the last.

Evidence has established that a small settlement at S’abš in the Sduhubš river estuary has existed since at least 3,000 BCE. The first inhabitants of the central Hachuabshi coast were. These early Hachuabshis sustained themselves through primitive forms of ; primarily of salmon from rivers and the ocean. , and other marine invertebrates gathered from  and  hunted in thick  covering the region were important supplements to the fish-heavy diet of the early Hachuabshis.

Traditionally, the Hachuabshis used during late summer and early autumn to maintain lowland prairies and grassland for harvesting sustenance plants; especially, , and. Later on, these practices became more commonplace and standardized as, and  were slowly introduced to Hachuabsh throughout the first and second millennium BCE along with technological breakthroughs in the cultivation of camas during the same time period. This caused profound but gradual changes in societal organization. Seasonal patterns of movement between winter villages and temporary camps used in the summer for fishing, hunting, and berrying became less pronounced as some households began practicing agriculture. Thus, permanent, year-round settlements, usually near estuaries and other locations on the coast, began to emerge throughout this period. These changes, along with the invention of stukwalukw, designed to exploit the fall, resulted in a population boom throughout central and northern Hachuabsh that lasted over the span of several hundred years.

By around 800 BCE the Hachuabshis had established a large network of interconnected villages and settlements throughout the inland waterways and islands of central and northern Hachuabsh, as well as the northern coast of Hweshed. Widespread usage of ocean-going built from  allowed for the development of sea-based trade and warfare. Hachuabshi records indicate that some trade expeditions, usually sponsored by rich households in a village, reached as far as Kealakekua. This period was characterized by increasing movement toward a complex and hierarchical society, fueled by innovations in agriculture and metallurgy. were acquired through war with the upriver and  as well as internal wars between the Hachuabshi clans. Wealthy Hachuabshis built large, ceremonial with intricate designs on their facades that are the earliest examples of an indigenous Hachuabshi artistic tradition.

Medieval Hachuabsh


The 6th and 7th centuries CE saw the emergence of several powerful clans in central and northern Hachuabsh. The most prominent of these clans, the P'udilabš, went on to establish a large kingdom in northern Hachuabsh centered around the river watershed. During this period, ʔəcəladiʔ (Učaladi), the capital of the P'udilabš, arose as the principal cultural and economic center of the region. X alphabet arrived from Fusen around 850 CE. The P'udilabš Kingdom reached its height in 900 CE, when it ruled over a territory stretching from the western Yudeok Peninsula to Duxʷlilap Sound, exacting tribute from peoples as far to the south as Yelamu.

A major earthquake and tsunami along the northern section of the Thunderbird Bay subduction zone in 1031 CE almost entirely destroyed the P'udilabš capital in Učuladi, and wiped out other population centers in the region. This event was the death-knell for the P'udilabš civilization which was already struggling to recover from several failed invasions of the city state trade confederacies in eastern Yudeok. The growing frequency of Hadalan pirate raids and Nimiipu nomadic invasions from the Tiicham plateau exacerbated this crisis, leading to further political and economic fragmentation throughout the Hachuabshi lowlands.

Early Modern Hachuabsh


Beginning in the early 15th century, the Hachuabshi heartlands were once again consolidated under a tight-knit confederacy of clans known as the Gwuqíl clique who established their capital at Gwuqíl, near the modern city of Túlq at the mouth of the Hibulb river. The fertile volcanic soil of the Hibulb river delta as well as its access to in Duxlilap Sound allowed for more intensive agricultural practices and greater influence over the trade from empires in South Yeongju into Thunderbird Bay. During this time, the Gwuqíl developed a complex system of dikes and canals throughout the Hibulb Delta that remain operational up to today.

The Gwuqíl's expansion drew it into multiple conflicts with several rich clan city-states to the north, remnants of the Pudilabš civilization, all of whom were eventually subjugated and incorporated into the budding empire. Additionally, innovations made to oceangoing secured much of the central Hachuabshi coast from raids originating in Hadala. The Gwuqíl's conquests of the river valleys throughout the central Hachuabshi plateau resulted in greatly influencing the various  of the Hachuabshi interior and the homogenization of language in the region.

The stability provided by the Gwuqíl clan's military hegemony, a population boom - largely due to the adoption of throughout the Hachuabshi lowlands which had already begun in the 14th century - as well the growing trade with the empires of South Yeongju and Bangju laid the foundation for drastic changes in the organization of Hachuabshi politics and society. The rise of global maritime trading powers in Sinju further intensified these trends. While limited contact with Sinju, primarily the petty Aeyunic kingdoms of eastern Bangju, had existed since antiquity, an explosion in the demand for furs saw greater numbers of traders from Sinju arriving on the shores of Thunderbird Bay. Hachuabshi coastal centers and the Gwuqíl-controlled river valleys traversing X plateau became crucial to accessing the interior fur trade in Iyuaschi and the X region of Taniilux, and as a result, became tremendously prosperous.



The Gwuqíl used this newfound wealth to purchase novel goods from Sinju, especially and other military technologies, allowing the confederacy to expand its territory to the western coast of Thunderbird Bay and parts of the Yudeok Peninsula. This period also spawned a renaissance in Hachuabshi art, literature, and science powered by urbanization and accumulation of riches among Hachuabshi clans. The world-renowned k̓ʷik̓ʷaac̓əb (Kwikwačeb) cedar panels -- a series of complex carvings recounting the ancient epic Thunderbird and Whale commissioned by the affluent k̓ʷik̓ʷaac̓əb clan in 1684 -- is an example of the elaborate style that characterized art during 17th and 18th century Hachuabsh. ceremonies grew increasingly opulent, spawning a unique in Yeongju.

Heightened commercial and economic activity had major demographic impacts on Hachuabsh. For a millennia, Hachuabshi clans along the central coast had granted special privileges to merchants from modern-day Atfalati and Yudeok who served as intermediaries of commerce in the region-- thus as with the rest of Thunderbird Bay small communities of were common throughout Hachuabsh, especially in Duxlilap Sound. However, the advent of the modern fur trade saw even more growth among these groups in Hachuabsh. By 1815, around 2 million Wawa Tilikum were living in territories controlled by the Gwuqíl, occupying central districts in many important Hachuabshi cities such as Učuladi and Túlq.

The personal profits of the small group of ruling houses in the central clique of the Gwuqíl confederacy grew immensely from trade; however, the effects of a commercializing society, the formation of a powerful merchant class and the growth of cities upended traditional clan hierarchies and tutelage systems. The inability of the Gwuqíl to adapt a largely inflexible, heavily stratified Hachuabshi society to these new realities and leverage profits from commercial activities into forming effective state institutions left them vulnerable to dissatisfied rival clans in the confederacy. This resulted in several costly revolts to Gwuqíl rule between 1790 and 1830.

Sqíxʷabši Revolution


Although Sinjuan communities had existed in harbor cities such as 'A'acap in Dxʷqʷtaycədəb Bay, they were heavily regulated by both local houses and Gwuqíl authorities. However, in 1853, a Meisaanese arrived off the coast near Ćhaya'átal, the provincial capital of Muwon island, which had been subject to Gwuqíl rule for over three centuries and was at that time a relatively well integrated province in the confederacy. Meisaan wished to force the Gwuqíl to open Hachuabsh and its territories to trade with the Center even further, and desired to expand upon its colonial holdings in Hadala in order to gain direct access to the region's rich waters.

The confrontation quickly escalated, resulting in the week long Potsosakalay War. The short-lived conflict saw the almost total annihilation of the Gwuqíl's numerically superior fleet by a much smaller Meisaani force. The quick nature of their defeat shocked the Gwuqíl and underscored the growing military superiority of the industrialized Sinju powers. Muwon was lost to the Meisaanis, and several unequal treaties were forced upon the Gwuqíl at the end of the war; opening up the country to exports of consumer goods from the Sinju countries and devastating local.



The chaotic and economically volatile situation that developed in the immediate aftermath of the war severely challenged the Gwuqíl's legitimacy and laid bare Hachuabsh's vulnerability to the imperial Sinju powers. A rival group of clans led by the Sqíxʷabš House, reformist and bent on Centerizing Hachuabsh, capitalized upon this unrest and quickly gained popular support among both the proto-bourgeoisie in the emerging cities and a subset of aristocratic clan houses.

After a civil war from 1865 to 1867, the Sqíxʷabš captured Túlq and consolidated their rule over Hachuabsh. The civil war resulted in the formation of a centralized army, the first iteration of the National Hachuabshi Armed Forces. In the ensuing years, dramatic institutional reforms were undertaken, beginning with the abolition of slavery and the gradual transition from a clan-based, shared land ownership system to a Sinju model of.

The reformists abandoned Hachuabsh's byzantine political system built upon clan relations and houses, establishing a centralized state organized along the lines of the modern Sinju empires. What remained of the old Hachuabshi clans and their lands were dissolved in 1878, and Hachuabsh was reorganized into 35 provinces. The Sqíxʷabš Constitution - largely based off the Jeongmi Heonbeob and Fusen's imperial court structure - was adopted in 1881. This constitution carried over very few Gwuqíl period political structures, with the major exception of the executive position of Great Si'al - traditionally a ruler elected by the clan nobility - which was made hereditary. In practice, the newly created parliament was a, with the Sqíxʷabš and their allies ruling the country as oligarchs through the Great Si'al's.

The Sqíxʷabš sent a newly ascendant elite to universities and colleges in Sinju, who brought and other "Centerist ways" back home. The Hachuabshi language was formally standardized according to the, with many appearing from ,  and  in. Attempts were even made to adopt over  as a written script for Hachuabshi, although these efforts were eventually abandoned. Civil-service exams for the new bureaucracy were introduced from Sinju in 1885, as the state attempted to introduce a standardized system of that would take years to implement.



The establishment of a centralized state also created a favorable financial and political environment for investment and development. While the government was initially responsible for most early investments into industries such as along with the construction of a railway network through the central Hachuabshi coastal corridor, these projects were prohibitively expensive to maintain. Many of these holdings were sold to newly formed corporations called ‘I’ábál’al that were heavily intertwined with the families of Sqíxʷabš state advisors as well as former clan nobility. The ‘I’ábál’al would evolve into large, financial and manufacturing conglomerates; controlling large cross sections of the Hachuabshi economy up until the Eulhae War. Their close symbiosis with the state was instrumental to Hachuabshi industrialization as the country struggled to catch up with the established Sinjuan industrial economies.

Hachuabshi society, predominantly agrarian and still in the midst of a during the mid 19th century, experienced enormous changes as a result of this political and economic transformation. While the simultaneous growth of cities and a bourgeois class in the early modern period had already begun to weaken the dominance of clan aristocracies and customarily powerful houses, the Sqíxʷabš' eradication of the clans as political and land-holding entities suddenly freed millions of peasants to migrate en-masse into the cities to work in factories. The  of the ‘I’ábál’al resulted in the heavy concentration of manufacturing and industry in geographically compact areas; later on creating the conditions for the parallel development of an urban proletariat susceptible to.

Colonial Expansion
As the Sinjuan imperial project reached its height in the late 19th century, the Hachuabshis -- stemming from their experiences in the Potsosakalay War -- determined that acquiring a and modern military was crucial to the country's survival as an independent state. Formal laws were introduced in 1870, and  were recruited from Sinju, especially Mincang and Fusen.



In Chirwol 1875, the Imperial Army launched a against the Atfalatians, former  of the Gwuqíl, and subsequently annexed the territory. However, Hachuabsh's main security concerns during this period were centered in Yudeok and Yelamu. The former of the two soon emerged as a major source of tensions with Taniilux, which had historically held sway over the western peninsula. After the 1890 Chalaitglit Incident, these tensions boiled over into the Taniilux-Hachuabsh war; with Meisaan supporting Taniilux, and Jeongmi - seizing the opportunity to limit a rival power's expansion into West Yeongju - supporting Hachuabsh. The war was a major success for Hachuabsh, whose recently modernized navy and army routed the Taniiluxians. Following the resolution of the war, Yudeok was made a protectorate and territories in Hekatsut were expanded to include modern day Yuluil and Wuyala.

The growing rivalry between Hachuabsh and Meisaan- resulting from the former's rapid expansion at the expense of Meisaani interests in Thunderbird Bay- erupted into open conflict in 1901. While Meisaan had handily vanquished the Hachuabshis earlier in the century, their overconfidence in fighting a perceived "racially inferior" enemy proved misfounded. The Meisaani Eastern Ocean Fleet suffered several debilitating losses, most notably at the Battle of Učuladi Bay. Fierce land battles were fought on both Muwon as well as X in Hadala, featuring Hachuabshi on defensive positions that would be emulated in the Meisaan-Mincang Wars and Bangju War. The Hachuabshi victory marked the first time a non-Sinjuan country had defeated a Central power in military conflict. The Treaty of Dosön that followed the war saw Meisaan lose both Muwon and Hadala to Hachuabsh, with the Center finally recognizing the country as as a.

Antebellum Hachuabsh


The first two decades of the 20th century in Hachuabsh were defined by growing labor unrest and a push toward. The wars with Taniilux and Meisaan had created a budding. However, the choppy transition to a peacetime economy in the early 1900s caused a contraction in military spending, leading to a short deflationary recession between 1903 and 1905. This development occurred amid the backdrop of the arrival in Hachuabsh, the beginnings of a shift away from  production as access to markets in new colonial possessions opened up, and the growth of middle class political power.

1905 saw some of Hachuabsh's first large scale in response to a government tax on rice and grain. The establishment of the Hachuabshi General Union (HGU) in 1920, which brought together both the burgeoning industrial and more established craft union movements-- the former much more radical and influenced by ideology-- marked an important turning point in the power and organization of Hachuabshi labor, and hastened the  of Hachuabshi society. Working class organization and radicalism opened the door for the middle class to demand political enfranchisement; which at the beginning of the century only included land-owners who comprised 2% of the population. The next few decades saw the gradual expansion of the suffrage until was granted by the Súyqid government in 1915.

Recognizing their weakening grasp on the country, the Sqíxʷabš' attempted to manage the economic instability of the era through maintaining high levels of military spending and forcing open access to colonial markets in order to maintain Hachuabsh's protectionist industrialization strategy, both necessitating military adventurism abroad. Yakaleikin was fully annexed in 1908, as well as Yelamu in 1912. Hachuabshi colonial administrations often either emphasized or  intended to boost food production depending on the area and the influence of the National Army. Population pressures in the metropole and a growing population of poor tenant farmers were top concerns for the state; which -- through various coercive methods -- expropriated large swathes of land in the colonies for Hachuabshi settlers.

The liberal reforms of the antebellum period fostered broader social movements across Hachuabsh. became a major social flash point throughout the 1910s and 1920s, with some feminist organizations developing wings. The early 20th century also saw the emergence of a Wawa Tilikum national identity and social justice movements; most prominently the Wawa Tillikum Hy-iu. These movements were often imbued with socialist thought, and were bolstered by the migration of hundreds of thousands of laborers from Yudeok and Aftalati-- who shared similar cultural and ethnic traits with the Wawa Tilikum and were racialized into the same castes. programs were adopted in the 1910s.



Government and Politics


The Socialist Commonwealth of Habchuash is a with elements of  and a political structure built upon  and. At the national level, the People's Assembly and All Unions Congress are the two main governing entities of Hachuabsh, along with the largely ceremonial Worker's Party of Hachuabsh (WPH). These governing bodies hold both and  powers; however, the People's Assembly has a broader jurisdiction than the All Unions Congress, which is primarily relegated to managing the economy and trade.

Hachuabsh is divided into several thousand, which are ruled by  that perform  and  functions. These councils handle the day to day affairs of local governance. The swátixten are organized into larger councils called that coordinate between the local swátixten on a regional scale, and often encompass entire cities and metropolitan areas such as Túlq, Učuladi, and Dugwu'al'al. The People's Assembly, which is essentially a national swátixten, is made up of spokespersons elected by each qw'sú.

-national trade unions congress

Foreign Relations
Hachuabsh is a founding member of the Organization for Socialist Development and Mutual Assistance (OSDMA).

Hachuabsh maintains close relations with Yahuimilco, Mennefer, and other communist states.

Economy


The Hachuabshi economy, in terms of approximately $5.401 trillion in 2022, is one of the top four largest economies in the world, the largest in Yeongju, and the largest among OSDMA member states. According to measurements of GDP through, Hachuabsh's economy has been eclipsed by such as Yahuimilco and Matobo.

Hachuabsh is officially a  with  and  making up the base units of the country's economic structure. However, in practice, Hachuabsh's economy is often characterized as or even described as a. In the immediate aftermath of the Hachuabshi Revolution, the largest and the Hachuabshi General Union of Workers GUW, Hachuabshi = X.....