Difference between revisions of "Archive:Haboya"
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Revision as of 23:10, 21 July 2022
Republic of Haboya Rúdasa na Habóya |
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Official languages | Hasíbi | |||
Demonym | Haboyan | |||
Government | Unitary Constitutional Crowned Republic | |||
- | 'ayía (President) | Tomá Osembí | ||
- | Nánasi (Prime Minister) | Kokoyí Ováka | ||
Legislature | Lésa | |||
Establishment | ||||
- | Haboya Province Established | 109 BCE | ||
- | Collapse of the First Cananganamese Empire | November 28, 1262 | ||
- | Founding of the Haboya Republic | September 3, 1759 | ||
- | Modern Constitution Ratified | July 8, 1902 | ||
Area | ||||
- | 467,452 km2 180,484 sq mi |
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Population | ||||
- | 2021 census | 45,342,844 | ||
- | Density | 97/km2 251.2/sq mi |
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GDP (nominal) | estimate | |||
- | Total | $724.487 Billion USD | ||
- | Per capita | $15,978 | ||
Gini | .38 low |
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HDI | 0.721 high |
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Currency | Haboyan Havása |
Haboya (Hasibi Language: Habóya [ʔaˈboja]), officially the Republic of Haboya, is a country located upon the west coast of Nagu. Haboya is bordered by Cananganam and Mujansa to the South, TBD to the East, and Sarsa to the North. The country is noted for its vast number of languages, clothing and agricultural industries involving products such as chocolate, banana, cocaine, sugar, and taro.
Etymology
The name of Haboya descends from Classical Cananganamese Sabúñā, which is derived from çaᵐbɨ ɲaxa, meaning "it is stopped (here)". This is referring to the Salagwea river which composes the largest source of fresh water for the nation, flooding into the sea.