Povan Union

From CWS Planet
(Redirected from Povania)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Povan Union
Ledzib: Vevli kerekwe
Vevli kerekwe
Arkihanakh: þaldiṫuyumû alweywlew
Ŧarditsuyumɨ arVeyvrev
Ailmudenian: düṫūrūmo powai
Dytsūrūmo Povai
Flag
CapitalSäromos
Official languages Ledzib (various dialects)
Arkihanakh
Ailmudenian
Recognised national languages Neviran
Osuri
Razaissokh
Ethnic groups 65.5% Povan
8.7% Adzamasiin
6.3% Neviran
5.6% Taygo
5.2% Kon
8.7% others
Demonym Povan
Government Confederal presidential constitutional republic
 -  President Altac'in Ic’vitaviŧen der Sinkaŧ
 -  Vicepresident
Legislature Supreme Assembly
 -  Upper house Assembly of the Republics
 -  Lower house Council of the Union
Area
 -  1,649,085 km2
636,715.28 sq mi
Population
 -  census 144.954.571,5
 -  Density 87,9/km2
227,3/sq mi
HDI 0.810
very high
Currency Povan tange (TGE)
Time zone Aramos Time (SCT+3)
 -  Summer (DST) not observed (SCT)
Drives on the right

The Povan Union (Ledzib: Vevli kerekwe /vʲevlʲi kʲeˈrʲekʷe/) (Arkihanakh: þaldiṫuyumû alweywlew /θɐːdɪtsʊjʊmɨ ɐːvɛjvrɛv/) (Ailmudenian: düṫūrūmo powai /dɨt͡suːruːmo poʋɐj/), informally referred to as Povania (Ledzib: vevle Vevle /vʲevlʲe/) (Arkihanakh: alweywle ArVeyvre /ɐːvɛjvrɛ/) (Ailmudenian: powai Povai /poʋɐj/) is a confederation located in Lower Ekuosia on the continent of Baredina, and is the sixth-most populous country. It is bordered by Nevira to the east and south, and by Tabiqa to the northwest. The confederation is made up of four constituent countries: Arkihan, Ailmudenje, Arzahu, and the largest, Cimseje.
Povania is mainly inhabited by the Adzo-Neviric groups, mainly the Ledzib and the Arkihanakh, Neviric and Adzamic groups respectively, which arrived in different migrations, the first being the arrival of the Neviric peoples around 2000 BCE.
Historically, the Povan area has been controlled by all three of the major Lower Ekuosian empires, and between those periods was divided into a number of smaller states. Following the collapse of the Saruan Empire, the area formed the Confederation of the Lower Ekuos firstly as a defence against Nevira, but after several revolutions and political changes became allied with them against other regional powers, namely Tabiqa. Whilst sufficiently stable during its early existence, in the late 30s various crises led to a takeover by Kúúlist forces, an invasion by both Neviran and Tabiqan forces, culminating in the Povan War between Tabiqa and Nevira. Over the years since then, states within the confederation have themselves united up until the modern day, leaving the four constituent countries that make up the modern-day Povan Union.

Etymology

The adjective "Povan" refers to the Povan Valley, an area in the eastern part of the country that drains into the Povi River, the largest river contained entirely within Povania. Well, it might. Subject to change.

History

Prehistory

Human history of the Povan region, also known as Povania, dates back to hundreds of thousands of years ago, when humans first migrated south from Tabiqa.

Agriculture is thought to have spread to the Povi Valley in 7000 BCE, with permanent settlements being founded along riverbanks as early as 5000 BCE. Exactly which civilizations existed in the area remain under dispute, but scientific consensus is that by 3000 BCE the confluence of the Ekuos and the Povi rivers had become the focal point of the Pela Pola civilization. Its population consisted primarily of Dekanian peoples, who had migrated to the region after being displaced from Nevira in about 3200 BCE. The Pela Pola civilization collapsed in 2500 BCE for reasons unknown.

The Adzo-Neviric group settled in Povania no later than 2200 BCE, thought to be speaking the Proto-Adzo-Neviran language. This group is believed to be the ancestors of the current Adzamasi ethnic group. They were largely driven out by the Neviric peoples after a few centuries.

First civilisations and Adzamic conquest

The first mayor settlements appeared across the Ekuos river.
The Ekuos became a focus for the expanding Adzamian Empire, which conquered the entirety of the region between 90 and 60 BCE, later entering conflict with the Neviran city states. After failing to completely subjugate the delta, they turned their attention to more central povan regions. During the Adzamic dominance, the Kudzat people, an azro-barradiwan group, arrived in the region.

Post-Adzamic period

The end of the Adzamic Empire left various splintered states across Povania, the most important of which were X, Y and Z.

Under the rule of the Neviran Empire

The discovery of gunpowder in Nevira had as its main consequence the emergence of the Neviran Empire, which under the rule of emperor X, swiftly defeated Y armies. The empire kept expanding across the povan regions and further.

Interimperial era

Saruan Empire

The area was conquered again by the Saruan Empire

Saruan collapse and Union of the Lower Ekuos

The sentiments of the Neviran Revolution spread to the region bordering the Ekuos. After the conquest of Yisma by revolutionaries, loyalist generals escaped to the Povan region to use it as a base to attack the Republic of the Delta and restore the empire. However, they were defeated by the republicans at the battle of X, after which their forces disbanded, and many imperial loyalists fled the lower Ekuos out of fear of retaliation, leaving local bourgeois and administrative workers at charge of the region. The Republic of the Delta did not organise further incursions as the area was not thought of as a threat by then.
The newly formed Ekuos states reformed into the Union of the Lower Ekuos, while the Arkihanakh people established Arkihan.

Stormy times

Turmoil hit the area once again with the outbreak of the Great Ekuosian War, which caused trade disruptions and economic downturn. The inability of the constituents of the Union of the Lower Ekuos to collaborate allowed kuulist revolutionaries to gain an important foothold, declaring the [[[Lower Ekuosian People's Revolutionary Front]]. It would require the intervention of Nevira and Arkihan for the kuulist defeat.

Modern union

The modern union was established by the Povan Constitution of 1954. The Union was integrated at first by 4 constituents, a reformed ULE, now called Cimseje, Arkihan, Ailmudenje, which was ceded territory by Nevira, and the Saromos Autonomous Region. Arzahu joined in 1962, seeing the economic benefits of being in the Union.
The 1954 constitution settled several juridical bases: the existence of the Union Council with two houses, the lower one being assembled via Terminian Federalism, the powers of the President of the Povan Union, the existence of the All Union Povan Army (albeit not banning the existence of constituents having their own armed forces) and a single, united foreign policy, the bases of where funding for the federal budget comes from, and most procedures to amend the constitution and introduce or move competences (like taxes and services) from a union level to a republican level. It also guaranteed the right of secession.
However, at the beginning, the union government did not possess many powers.

Geography

Geology

Climate

Biodiversity

Politics

Government

The federal government of the Povan Union is structured around the framework of a constitutional republic which parallels in many ways the governments of its constituent republics. The Povan constitution guarantees a democratic system of government and a separation of powers, with various mechanisms to prevent any one constituent from overpowering another.

Legislative

The legislative power is vested in the All-Union Council, the legislative body which features a unique tricameral system.

The Council of the Republics (abbreviated as CR) behaves similarly to an upper house. It is composed of 30 from each constituent except for Saromos, which instead sends 20, totalling 140. 10% of these delegates (3, or 2 for Saromos) are elected by their respective republican legislatures. These delegates cannot be affiliated to any political party once elected. The rest, which are allowed to belong to political parties, must be popularly and directly elected, although each constituent is given free will on their system of choice. The CR is the only house with direct legislative initiative.

The Council of the Union (abbreviated as CU) behaves most similarly to a lower house. It follows Terminian federalism, meaning the house is composed of the legislatures of all 5 constituents, totalling 2900 members (1 per 50,000 people). Therefore, all of it is elected by popular vote, which once again varies by every constituent. Due to it's structure, many, very minor parties achieve representation here, in contrast with the CR where most oftenly 4 or 5 parties achieve representstion. It is considered the more "proportional" house, however due to the large amount of deputies, debating legislature is rarely done, and it lacks direct legislative initiative. However, members can propose legislation to the CR, as well as propose amendments, and its vote is required to pass legislation.

The Council of Labour (abbreviated CL) is composed of representatives elected by workers. Workers at an enterprise elect representatives to their city, and those elect other representatives at a higher level until it reaches the CL. All representatives follow an imperative mandate, unlike the other two councils, and cannot belong to any political movement. The basic function of the CL is to work as a tiebreaker, as its vote is not required to pass legislation, its vote can sway the votes in the other two houses by up to 10%. This begins when the CL votes 50% in any given topic, it translates to 5% change in vote in both houses, and every 10% in the CL translates to 1% in the other houses. As such, it can help pass legislation not rejected by a large margin in either or both houses. Exceptions are constitutional amendments and overturning presidential vetos (2/3 of all three houses needed) and passing budgets (1/2 of all three houses needed), where the CL loses its tiebreaker function.

Executive

The executive is headed by the President of the Povan Union, both the head of state and government, commander in chief of the army and highest political position in the country. It is elected by popular vote every 5 years in a joint-ticket with its deputy, the Vice-president of the Povan Union using a two-round system. A president can serve up to 2 consecutive terms. The president, once elected, assembles the cabinet.

Judiciary

Administrative divisions

The Povan Union is a confederation of four republics each of which elects its own government and is highly autonomous. Some provinces have historically been independent nations, while others were created during the early days of the Povan Union through the combination and division of smaller states. 3 of the 4 republics are themselves federal, albeit to different levels. The Povan constitution requires all republics hold a democratic government, but restrictions stop there.

Province Capital Area
(km2)
Population (2014 est.) Map
United Republic of Ailmudenje idk 366,683 40,846,921 Ailmudenie map.png
Republic of Arkihan Arkot 267,965 26,748,243 Arkihan map.png
Sovereign State of Arzahu idk 488,889 6,324,409 Arzahu map.png
Union of Cimseje Kižavle 518,164 62,484,612 Cimseje map.png
Saromos Autonomous Region Saromos 7,384 8,550,387 Saromos AR map.png
Povan Union Saromos 1,649,085 144,954,572

Foreign relations

nevira gud

Military

Economy

Transport

The Povan Union has an expansive and diverse transportation network. The main corridor for trade and international travel is the Ekuos River, a wide river that flows through the west of the country. Millions of tonnes of raw material and finished goods are transported between the Povan Union and other countries along the Ekuos River.

Major roadways, including expressways, are managed by the federal Ministry of Infrastructure. The most travelled route is known as Highway 1, an expressway ranging from two to eight lanes in each direction. Highway 1 is an uninterrupted, limited-access expressway that parallels the west bank of the Ekuos River between international border crossings in Nevira and Tabiqa.

The formation of rail networks across Povania was slow, with some nations opting to only connect their largest cities to the regional network, and other smaller ones refusing to lay down any rail lines at all. As a result, sea transport via rivers, lakes, and canals remained the predominant method of trade in Povania well into the 19th century. Rail lines and road transport grew at the turn of the century, with many states caving to pressure from larger neighbours to create more redundancies in their transport systems.

The Macjeran Imperial Wars and subsequent Great Ekuosian War resulted in the destruction of many rail and road links across the north and center of Povania. Transport infrastructure damaged in the wars often laid in disrepair for decades. It was not until a wave of infrastructure investment from local and Neviran businesses and entrepreneurs led to the establishment of an expressway network across Povania, and the restoration of many old rail lines and the construction of others. A second wave of infrastructure investments, manifesting in the form of national highway projects and public transport, came a decade later, with substantial contributions from Shohuanese businesses and investors.

Energy

Science and technology

Tourism

Demographics

Ethnic groups

Urbanisation

Language

The Union has no official language. All republics are let free to set their own official languages: Ledzib in Cimseje with Kudzat being official only at a state level, Arkihanakh in Arkihan, Ailmudenian in Ailmudenje and X in Arzahu.
Official languages are used in each republic's media and governments, however, all government websites and institutions at the Union level are required by law to be available in all official languages, as well as Neviran. At a republic lebel, Neviran is often available in those situations, although it is not required by law.

Education

Each province maintains its own education curriculum, however all provinces have mandatory education for a minimum of 11 years. All but the most rural areas typically have two or more school boards with jurisdiction over the same area. Over 98% of Povan citizens have the option to enroll their children in a provincially-funded public school or a private school with tuition. In some cities, there may be a third board for education in the Neviran language.

Mandatory education in the Povan Union is divided into classes, with the exception of kindergarten (meta name). Students begin kindergarten the year of their 5th birthday - in most provinces this is a full school week, while some provinces allow parents to opt for only part of the day or week. Each province sets a standard curriculum for each class from kindergarten up to Class 8. In classes 7 through 9, students are guided towards attending either a gymnasium or a pre-trade school, with expectations for the two groups diverging in Class 9.

The gymnasium is designed for students pursuing a formal education in the arts, humanities, social and physical sciences, and mathematics. The pre-trade school, in contrast, is designed for students who intend to enter a trade or profession. Baccalaureate programs require students to have graduated from a gymnasium, while other colleges accept students from pre-trade schools as well as gymnasiums. Some smaller communities may have a gymnasium and pre-trade school in the same institution.

Faith-based education, in which the curriculum is supplemented with Qurosist teachings and doctrine, was formerly common throughout much of the Povan Union until it was outlawed in 2000.

Healthcare

The Povan Union has a mixed public-private healthcare system. Some provinces have universal healthcare, others have subsidies on common procedures and medications, while still others have largely private healthcare. Despite this, union-owned public restrooms, called Kavapriausa, have been standard across every settlement in the union since the 1987 Toilet Bill.

Religion

More than 75% of Povan citizens are adherents of Qurosism. Most other Povans are irreligious, with a minority being of the Tanhunga faith.

Culture

Heritage

Architecture

Literature

Art

Music

Theatre

Film

Cuisine

Sport

The most popular sport in the Povan Union is association football.

Symbols

See also

Summary: /* Modern union */ This is a minor edit Watch this page Please note that all contributions to CWS Planet may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here. You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see CWS Planet:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!


Templates used on this page:

Differences Your text The modern union was established by the Povan Constitution of 1954. The Union was integrated at first by 4 constituents, a reformed ULE, now called Cimseje, Arkihan, Ailmudenje, which was ceded territory by Nevira, and the Saromos Autonomous Region. Arzahu joined in 1962, seeing the economic benefits of being in the Union.
The 1954 constitution settled several juridical bases: the existence of the Union Council with two houses, the lower one being assembled via Terminian Federalism, the powers of the President of the Povan Union, the existence of the All Union Povan Army (albeit not banning the existence of constituents having their own armed forces) and a single, united foreign policy, the bases of where funding for the federal budget comes from, and most procedures to amend the constitution and introduce or move competences (like taxes and services) from a union level to a republican level. It also guaranteed the right of secession.
However, at the beginning, the union government did not possess many powers. Most republics were reluctant to give too many competences to the union government so quickly. In 1955, Cimseje and Ailmudenje ceded control over their main roads and soon after, railways, after the Saromos system (completely in union hands) seemed to work well. The following year, Arkihan did so as well. Up until the early 60s, the All Union Army was disorganised as republics moved over units from their own armies, ranks needed to be standardised, and equipment distributed equally.
In 1969, during the presidency of [], the Union's 3rd president, came the commonly known as Toilet Bill. This bill sought to improve sanitation across the union to bring it to the same standard. This made all water supplying companies, public or private, follow the same regulations across all constituents. Additionally, it also included funding for building union-owned public toilets all across the republics, connected to clean water. This bill paved the way for more standardisation of regulations for several industries in all constituents.
Starting from the late 1970s, some political movements within the union started calling for the abolishing of the right to secession. Starting on 1993, this debate gained more popular following after Arzahu threatened to leave due to disagreements on

Geography

Geology

Climate

Biodiversity

Politics

Government

The federal government of the Povan Union is structured around the framework of a constitutional republic which parallels in many ways the governments of its constituent republics. The Povan constitution guarantees a democratic system of government and a separation of powers, with various mechanisms to prevent any one constituent from overpowering another.

Legislative

The legislative power is vested in the All-Union Council, the legislative body which features a unique tricameral system.

The Council of the Republics (abbreviated as CR) behaves similarly to an upper house. It is composed of 30 from each constituent except for Saromos, which instead sends 20, totalling 140. 10% of these delegates (3, or 2 for Saromos) are elected by their respective republican legislatures. These delegates cannot be affiliated to any political party once elected. The rest, which are allowed to belong to political parties, must be popularly and directly elected, although each constituent is given free will on their system of choice. The CR is the only house with direct legislative initiative.

The Council of the Union (abbreviated as CU) behaves most similarly to a lower house. It follows Terminian federalism, meaning the house is composed of the legislatures of all 5 constituents, totalling 2900 members (1 per 50,000 people). Therefore, all of it is elected by popular vote, which once again varies by every constituent. Due to it's structure, many, very minor parties achieve representation here, in contrast with the CR where most oftenly 4 or 5 parties achieve representstion. It is considered the more "proportional" house, however due to the large amount of deputies, debating legislature is rarely done, and it lacks direct legislative initiative. However, members can propose legislation to the CR, as well as propose amendments, and its vote is required to pass legislation.

The Council of Labour (abbreviated CL) is composed of representatives elected by workers. Workers at an enterprise elect representatives to their city, and those elect other representatives at a higher level until it reaches the CL. All representatives follow an imperative mandate, unlike the other two councils, and cannot belong to any political movement. The basic function of the CL is to work as a tiebreaker, as its vote is not required to pass legislation, its vote can sway the votes in the other two houses by up to 10%. This begins when the CL votes 50% in any given topic, it translates to 5% change in vote in both houses, and every 10% in the CL translates to 1% in the other houses. As such, it can help pass legislation not rejected by a large margin in either or both houses. Exceptions are constitutional amendments and overturning presidential vetos (2/3 of all three houses needed) and passing budgets (1/2 of all three houses needed), where the CL loses its tiebreaker function.

Executive

The executive is headed by the President of the Povan Union, both the head of state and government, commander in chief of the army and highest political position in the country. It is elected by popular vote every 5 years in a joint-ticket with its deputy, the Vice-president of the Povan Union using a two-round system. A president can serve up to 2 consecutive terms. The president, once elected, assembles the cabinet.

Judiciary

Administrative divisions

The Povan Union is a confederation of four republics each of which elects its own government and is highly autonomous. Some provinces have historically been independent nations, while others were created during the early days of the Povan Union through the combination and division of smaller states. 3 of the 4 republics are themselves federal, albeit to different levels. The Povan constitution requires all republics hold a democratic government, but restrictions stop there.

Province Capital Area
(km2)
Population (2014 est.) Map
United Republic of Ailmudenje idk 366,683 40,846,921 Ailmudenie map.png
Republic of Arkihan Arkot 267,965 26,748,243 Arkihan map.png
Sovereign State of Arzahu idk 488,889 6,324,409 Arzahu map.png
Union of Cimseje Kižavle 518,164 62,484,612 Cimseje map.png
Saromos Autonomous Region Saromos 7,384 8,550,387 Saromos AR map.png
Povan Union Saromos 1,649,085 144,954,572

Foreign relations

nevira gud

Military

Economy

Transport

The Povan Union has an expansive and diverse transportation network. The main corridor for trade and international travel is the Ekuos River, a wide river that flows through the west of the country. Millions of tonnes of raw material and finished goods are transported between the Povan Union and other countries along the Ekuos River.

Major roadways, including expressways, are managed by the federal Ministry of Infrastructure. The most travelled route is known as Highway 1, an expressway ranging from two to eight lanes in each direction. Highway 1 is an uninterrupted, limited-access expressway that parallels the west bank of the Ekuos River between international border crossings in Nevira and Tabiqa.

The formation of rail networks across Povania was slow, with some nations opting to only connect their largest cities to the regional network, and other smaller ones refusing to lay down any rail lines at all. As a result, sea transport via rivers, lakes, and canals remained the predominant method of trade in Povania well into the 19th century. Rail lines and road transport grew at the turn of the century, with many states caving to pressure from larger neighbours to create more redundancies in their transport systems.

The Macjeran Imperial Wars and subsequent Great Ekuosian War resulted in the destruction of many rail and road links across the north and center of Povania. Transport infrastructure damaged in the wars often laid in disrepair for decades. It was not until a wave of infrastructure investment from local and Neviran businesses and entrepreneurs led to the establishment of an expressway network across Povania, and the restoration of many old rail lines and the construction of others. A second wave of infrastructure investments, manifesting in the form of national highway projects and public transport, came a decade later, with substantial contributions from Shohuanese businesses and investors.

Energy

Science and technology

Tourism

Demographics

Ethnic groups

Urbanisation

Language

The Union has no official language. All republics are let free to set their own official languages: Ledzib in Cimseje with Kudzat being official only at a state level, Arkihanakh in Arkihan, Ailmudenian in Ailmudenje and X in Arzahu.
Official languages are used in each republic's media and governments, however, all government websites and institutions at the Union level are required by law to be available in all official languages, as well as Neviran. At a republic lebel, Neviran is often available in those situations, although it is not required by law.

Education

Each province maintains its own education curriculum, however all provinces have mandatory education for a minimum of 11 years. All but the most rural areas typically have two or more school boards with jurisdiction over the same area. Over 98% of Povan citizens have the option to enroll their children in a provincially-funded public school or a private school with tuition. In some cities, there may be a third board for education in the Neviran language.

Mandatory education in the Povan Union is divided into classes, with the exception of kindergarten (meta name). Students begin kindergarten the year of their 5th birthday - in most provinces this is a full school week, while some provinces allow parents to opt for only part of the day or week. Each province sets a standard curriculum for each class from kindergarten up to Class 8. In classes 7 through 9, students are guided towards attending either a gymnasium or a pre-trade school, with expectations for the two groups diverging in Class 9.

The gymnasium is designed for students pursuing a formal education in the arts, humanities, social and physical sciences, and mathematics. The pre-trade school, in contrast, is designed for students who intend to enter a trade or profession. Baccalaureate programs require students to have graduated from a gymnasium, while other colleges accept students from pre-trade schools as well as gymnasiums. Some smaller communities may have a gymnasium and pre-trade school in the same institution.

Faith-based education, in which the curriculum is supplemented with Qurosist teachings and doctrine, was formerly common throughout much of the Povan Union until it was outlawed in 2000.

Healthcare

The Povan Union has a mixed public-private healthcare system. Some provinces have universal healthcare, others have subsidies on common procedures and medications, while still others have largely private healthcare. Despite this, union-owned public restrooms, called Kavapriausa, have been standard across every settlement in the union since the 1987 Toilet Bill.

Religion

More than 75% of Povan citizens are adherents of Qurosism. Most other Povans are irreligious, with a minority being of the Tanhunga faith.

Culture

Heritage

Architecture

Literature

Art

Music

Theatre

Film

Cuisine

Sport

The most popular sport in the Povan Union is association football.

Symbols

See also