Fusen

Fusen ( 浮川, Fusen) is a an, consisting of over 6,740 islands, located in north-east Sinju. It is located east of the Jeongmian island of Yeoseo and west of northern Yeongju. Fusen consists of three major archipelagic chains, the largest of which is the island of Kasho (literally meaning, the home island). The nation is further divided into four major regions and twenty unitary provinces, as well as a special administrative zone for the of the capital city of Chukyo.

Josei Era
The Treaty of Chukyo and subsequent allied occupation and would have a profound impact on the development of post-war Fusen. The dissolution of the Fusenese colonial empire was also a stipulation of the Treaty of Chukyo, and subsequent treaty accords following the Okawara Trials. The of Emperor Ensho on February 8th of 1941 was considered to be highly influential ceremonial and symbolic event of the transition towards a new 'post-war society." According to traditional line of succession the Emperor's eldest daughter, Meisho, would succeed him; however, having not yet reached adulthood at this point the throne would be occupied by a,  until the coronation of Empress Meisho in 1949. Democratization of various mechanisms of government, as well as economic liberalization, also occurred in accordance with the Chukyo Treaty.

The Akishima Diploma, signed in 1942, would serve as the basis for the nation's new constitution. The diploma served as the foundational framework for the establishment of a democratic, constitutional monarchy, modeled after the systems in place in Meisaan and Jeongmi. Political and legal reform also sought to tackle issues of the caste-like stratification of Fusenese society; particularly dissolving legal barriers to the class of citizens demarked as Fujunjin (不純人, literally impure folk) under the previous Imperial governance. The 'opening' of the Fusenese economy, beginning gradually in 1946 and continuing into the 1950s, led to a period of rapid economic growth as trade with continental Sinju flourished. Reconstruction efforts from the destruction of the Eulhae War and the payment of war repatriations preoccupied the Fusenese governmental budget for the next several decades.