Anguist (Region)

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Principality of Anguist
Tíchernað an hÓenghuð
(Ang.)
kiribati--53.jpg
UKIN Flag
Administrative Division Autonomous region
State United Kingdom of Isselmere-Nieland
Capital
English
Anguistian

Mithesburgh
Cérmidhe
Viceroy The Rt. Hon. Brude MacDérile, Lord High Commissioner
Head of Government The Hon. Nechtan MacDruist, First Minister
Unification 19 May 985
Holidays
Coronation Day
Union Day
Constitution Day

19 May (985)
25 June (1562)
24 March (1986)
Legislature
English
Anguistian
Unicameral parliament
Anguistian National Assembly
Cúnolaed Cenedlaedhol an hÓenghuð
Legal Tradition(s) Mix of common and civil law
Languages
Official
Unofficial

English, Anguistian
Several

The Principality of Anguist is one of the four founding nations of the United Kingdom of Isselmere-Nieland. After a millennium of direct rule from Daurmont, the Constitution Act, 1986 granted Anguist regional autonomy, a legislature of its own, and the Anguistian language official status not only within the newly established Principality, but within the United Kingdom as a whole.

Geography

Anguist abuts the North Atlantic, facing Iceland and the Arctic Ocean, sharing borders with Nieland to the south, Isselmere and Detmere to the east, and Lower Whingeing to the north. The main natural features are the Ungforth Marshes along the Wingerian border, the kelp forests off the Solquist Sea coast, geothermal springs in the south near the Nielander border, and the many, many moors.

The capital of Anguist is Mithesburgh (Anguistian Cérmidhe), situated on the Cernithlin River in the province of Fialtacht. Mithesburgh is a beautiful city that retains the charm of a medieval city without either becoming a theme park or the people's attachment to the present.

There are six provinces within Anguist: Angforth, Fialtacht, Lughensia, Moreddin, Omechta, and Upper Wingeria. Upper Wingeria holds the Crown corporation the Royal Shipyards of Isselmere-Nieland, based in the northern coastal town of Grimsby Downs.

History

Prehistoric Anguist

Anguist is the home to the earliest settlers of the Lethian Islands (Ang. Enais Líaithaða), who arrived shortly after the end of the last great ice age, circa 7200 BC. Culturally, this group was distantly related to those inhabiting northern Scotland, in particular those of the Orkneys and Hebrides, using similar excavated dwellings supported by a framework of shale from about 2900 BC. These first habitations were built within existing hills rather than upon middens as at Skara Brae, although later dwellings did follow the latter model.

Unlike the settlers at Skara Brae, the early Lethians did not abandon such dwellings until much later, around 2100 BCE, despite the worsening climate. Gradually, however, the settlers were forced inland where they were confronted by the island's sturdy firs, from which the region eventually gained its name (Óenghúða or (Land of) the One Fir) for reasons that will be discussed below.

The Bronze Age did not arrive in the Lethe until about 1900 BC, at which point the population were finally able to threaten the main islands many forests. At about the same time, intensive agriculture — and deforestation — began.

Early travellers to the islands, often those blown off course on their way to Britain or Ireland for tin or copper, found the inhabitants to be culturally akin to the Caledonii of ancient northwestern Scotland. Like their Caledonian cousins, the Picts, the ancient Lethians tattooed their skin, using a substance made of copper oxide to produce a blue tint. They also used the reddish clay soil in their hair, presumably to fend off the voracious midges that inhabit parts of the island during the short summer months.

The wet, windy climate made such visits by historic cultures infrequent. Recent archaelogical excavations have added to this limited, frequently biased knowledge. Dwellings throughout Lethe had shifted from excavated or midden dwellings into a mix of shale-supported subterranean rooms with earth-reinforced wooden construction above-ground. Such dwellings frequently contained an entire family unit and their tenants (around thirty people).

Early historic society

With the arrival of Christian monks from Ireland and what became Scotland came the first extensive survey of Anguistian life. The family units (téochlad) still lived in their mixed-level dwellings, mostly within small villages of about five to eight households. Lethe possessed few oppida worthy of the name, such as the two that became modern-day Daurmont.

The heads of the great families, known as the péntéolághu, within each sept nominated their chieftain or tósíag from their ranks. Their selection of the tósíag depended on (invariably) his physical wholeness and fitness, his quick-wittedness, and bravery, although the tósiag's marriage to a suitable wife — i.e., one from a noble family with similar physical and psychological attributes — was of great import as well.

Early Anguistian social ranks

Before Unification After Unification Anglo-Frisian Latin
Pénthéolagu[1] Pénthéolagu Frumgār Subregulus
Tósíag[2] Tícherna[3] Þegn[4] Regulus
Rí túað[5] Rethár[6] Aldor[7] Comes
Róirí or Rí cenéð[8] Mór-rédrað[9] or pénbhúdain Hertoga[10] Dux
Dánstað Dánstað Aeþling Princeps
Rí úlað or róirí an húlað[11] or Rí róirech[12] Rí úlað Cynyng Rex
Réthe Réthe or Mór-rí[13] Cyncynyng Magnus rex

Population

Before the initial successes of the Royal Shipyards, the population consisted mainly of "native" Anguistians, some Isselmerians and Nielanders, and very few recent immigrants from the 1960s boom. With the steady economic development of the region, the population has diversified markedly, sparking the rise of a radical Anguistian independence faction, the Anguistian National Party (Anguistian Partei Cenedlaedhol an hÓenghu or PCO). However, since native Anguistians were the first to benefit and are still the chief beneficiaries of the region's economic successes, the PCO is commonly viewed as an Anguistian joke, particularly amongst native Anguistians.

Though Isselmere-Nielanders are a conservative collection of peoples, most Anguistians will be forthright in declaring immigration to be an absolute boon to the region, especially in terms of cuisine. Indeed, Anguist is commonly noted in many guidebooks as the most welcoming region within the UKIN, albeit frequently mixed with warnings with regard to the extreme potency of the local whiskeys.

About four per cent of Anguistians have Anguistian as their first language and fifteen per cent are conversant in the tongue, and two per cent of citizens speak Nielander. Punjabi and other languages from the Indian sub-continent are growing in importance, as are Cantonese and Mandarin, but most of the people speak English.

References

  1. ^  Sept leader or chieftain.
  2. ^  Tribal king.
  3. ^  Tribal chief.
  4. ^  Thane.
  5. ^  Tribal over-king; i.e., King of kings.
  6. ^  Great steward, regional magnate.
  7. ^  Earl, whence the term alderdom arose.
  8. ^  Regional king.
  9. ^  Lord or prince.
  10. ^  "Lord of the host" (i.e., army) or duke.
  11. ^  King of over-kings.
  12. ^  Great king or high king.


UKIN banner vsm.jpg Topics on Isselmere-Nieland UKIN banner vsm.jpg
Category | Factbook

Categories: Administrative divisions | Constitution | Defence Forces | Festivities | Government | Languages | Laws
Subjects: Capital | Coat of arms | Currency | Economy | Education | Football | History | Lethean Islands | Religion
Monarchy: History | Royal Family
Government: Council of State | DPA | Lords Commissioners | The King | Parliament | Prime Minister | Storting of Nieland
Firms: Detmerian Aerospace | Isselmere Motor Works | Lyme and Martens | Royal Ordnance | Royal Shipyards | Turing-Babbage | UPGO
Products: Isselmere-Nieland Defence Industries