Puwon

Puwon, officially the Republic of Puwon (, : Buwon Minguk; Puwonese: 긐늬민ᄈᆊᄅᅻ, Rasennication: ‘Röufuè Minñe’guhk) is an in Southwest Yoju. It is surrounded by the Mungnang Sea, and shares maritime borders with Mennefer, Nukigurun, and Habdah. under a and is a developing country. It has a GDP of 19,027,824,912圓, classifying it as a developing country. Since the early 2000s, Puwon’s GDP has been steadily increasing. The country grants its citizens free and universal healthcare and education.

The saw the arrival of  and Proto-Kanāns to Puwon from ancient Mennefer, and modern coastal southwest Nukigurun roughly around 1300 BCE. Puwon was inhabited by bilingual peoples, mostly from southern Mennefer. There were three distinct ethnolinguistic groups:, , and , of which the latter was the smallest. Proto-Arabs were assimilated by the Proto-Remmumennians. The ethnolinguistic peoples spread throughout the island and lived in small communities. At the beginning of the, dozens of city states were established all over the island. The majority of these city states coexisted peacefully. The Bronze Age saw the development of very basic and rudimentary forms of agriculture, and civilization.

In the 3rd century CE, city states on the eastern coast of Puwon began making contact with mainland Yoju. Shortly after established contact, Takhuit (Mennefer) and the city states established trade. Menneferian culture soon spread throughout all of Puwon. In 610 CE, the Aleanqan dynasty was founded. It based itself off of religious and social values from mainland Yoju, primarily Jaantuism. As the first centralized state in the country’s history, Aleanqa was also the first state to adopt a standardized writing system, ; Aleanqa was a multilingual state.

The rise of noble clans and aristocratic families during the 12th century began a period of political instability, royal scandals, and mass corruption. The most powerful clan, Kanān-Abiumm, frequently married into the royal family, and consolidated powerful positions for themselves and their kin. Members of the royal family, and other noble clans tried removing the Kanān-Abiumm family from power. The internal power struggle in the government left the remainder of the country largely neglected and vulnerable. In 1381, the expanding Northern Dynasty (Mennefer) made Hannirami a protectorate, effectively reducing the royal family, and the Kanān-Abiumm clan, to figureheads. Under control of Mennefer, Aleanqa adopted many aspects of Menneferian culture including, religion, architecture, and cuisine. In 1600, the Northern Dynasty lost their power over Aleanqa, and the island regained its independence.

The Kanān-Abiumm clan was ousted from power, and replaced by the Ahibarek clan. The Hannirami dynasty, founded in 1622, was largely peaceful during this time. It still traded with Mennefer regularly, and even began trading with Sahab. During the early 18th century, Nuki sailors made small excersions on the island, and collected spices from the locals. Nuki records of an “rich island of fields and valleys” made its way to Sinju. In the early 19th century, Jeongmi made routine expeditions through the island.

In the 1830s, Jeongmi began constructing Jeongmian language schools in urban areas of Hannirami, and began teaching the locals Jeongmian, and how to read in Jeongja. The Pee Tae-geum Dictionary, published in 1839, was the first literary work to transliterate the Puwonese language in Jeongja, using the Pee Tae-geum Transliteration System. Jeongmian explorers purchased temporary summer residences, and many became permanent residents, gentrifying urban areas all over the island. By the mid 1850s, Jeongmian was the second most-spoken language in the country, and many Jeongmians had stakes in local and federal government. In Owol of 1860, Hannirami became a dependency of Jeongmi, and in 1864, Jeongmi annexed the small island.

During the Eulhae War, many Puwonese were forcefully conscripted to the Jeongmian military, and stationed abroad. Feeling that this was unjust, the Puwonese began a campaign of sabotoge. Many Puwonese soldiers either joined the Contingents, went, or destroyed weapons and ammunition. In Puwon, people were protesting for independence, and led various independence demonstrations. At the end of the war, over 1,000 Puwonese were arrested for desertion, and sabotage.

As protests became increasingly more violenty in the 1950s, Jeongmi held a referendum in Puwon, known as the Puwon Dependency Referendum of 1956, and after an overwhelming majority voted to again independence from Jeongmi, and in 1956 the island's independence was recognized. The following year in 1957, the Republic of Hannirami was established. Its government looked to create a Hanniraman state free of Jeongmian colonial influence, which prompted a “Cultural Restoration”. It was a brief abolition of the Jeongja alphabet and the reintroduction of the, replacing rice crops with staples of older cuisine, and the exclusive use of Hanniraman (Puwonese) in schools. The country also formed closer diplomatic ties with Mennefer, and OSDMA. By the late 1970s, a lot of these changes were reversed. In the 1980s, relations between Hannirami and Sinju densified. The increasingly positive relations between Hannirammi and Jeongmi made the country more open to Sinjuan influence. The Republic of Hannirami renamed itself the Republic of Puwon in 1993.

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Republic of Hannirami
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Categories: Countries