Flurosia

From NSWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Second Flurosian Republic
II República Flurosia
MottoAmb Llibertat, Mai Derrotats
AnthemGema Aragó
Flurosia (green) within East Asia
Capital
and
Fonteta
Official languages Catalan, Japanese
Demonym Flurosian
Government Unitary Parliamentary State
 -  President Marco Narani
 -  Prime Minister Jaume Micó
Legislature Parliament
Establishment
 -  Spanish expedition to Formosa 1626 
 -  Independence from Spain declared 10 March 1810 
 -  Independence from Spain recognised January 19 1838 
 -  Independence from Japan 15 August 1945 
 -  Constitution written 12 August 1947 
Area
 -  Total 78,442 km2
30,287 sq mi 
Population
 -  2017 estimate 38,249,000
 -  Density 487.6/km2
1,262.9/sq mi
GDP (nominal) 2015 estimate
 -  Total $125.6 billion
 -  Per capita $32,840
HDI 0.739
high
Currency peseta
Time zone UTC+09:00 (UTC+9)
Date format DD-MM-YYYY
Drives on the right
Calling code 886
Internet TLD .fl

Flurosia, officially the Second Flurosian Republic (Flurosian Catalan: II República Flurosia), is a country in East Asia.

The country is a remnant of Spanish colonial possessions in the region. Uniquely, this possession was administered by the Crown of Aragon(rather than Castile), prior to the abolition of the former in 1716. This left a distinct cultural impact on the territory, including the Catalan language, which remains the country's most widely-spoken language.

The two roughly equally-sized islands of Formosa and Cayuxu together make up just under 95% of the country's landmass and ~97% of the population. The south-western coast of Cayuxu was incorporated into the territory in the late 17th century and reconquered by Japan in 1875; the entire country was subsequently occupied by Japan from 1932 to 1945.

Flurosia is governed as a parliamentary system, and is a unitary state with two provinces granted autonomy by devolution. Among Asian countries, Flurosia generally ranks highly for standard of living, civil liberties and income equality. Freedom House labels Flurosia as Free, though Democracy Index recently downgraded Flurosia's status from flawed democracy to hybrid regime, and economic freedom remains below average. Corruption in political circles, strained relations with neighboring countries and the pervasive black market are considered by most analysts to be the greatest issues currently facing Flurosia.