Difference between revisions of "Byasa"

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of [[List of countries and dependencies by area|the world's smallest nations]]. Its capital, [[Rigrongseb]], is the largest city and political center of the nation. It has a population of almost 10 million.
 
of [[List of countries and dependencies by area|the world's smallest nations]]. Its capital, [[Rigrongseb]], is the largest city and political center of the nation. It has a population of almost 10 million.
  
The first Byasanese people likely appeared in the area making up modern Byasa around 4000 BCE. The area's history has consisted mostly of colonization. In the 8th century CE, the [[Union of Uul]] conquered an area consisting of the majority of the southern half of the modern nation. They likely held on to this land until the 1300s. The northeast of the country has been a part of various Monsilvan dynasties throughout history. In the 1500s, the area was conquered by the [[Empire of Baltanla]] and remained under its control until the late 1700s. Since the 18th century, the nation has been plagued by destabilizing coups and civil wars. The most notable civil war is the [[Second Byasanese Civil War]] between 1928 and 1949, where almost 8 million people died after spillover from the [[Uulgadzan Civil War]] turned into a massive ethnic conflict. The conflict was characterized by massive genocide and destruction of infrastructure. It is commonly said the nation has not recovered from the conflict, even nearly 100 years later.
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The first Byasanese people likely appeared in the area making up modern Byasa around 4000 BCE. The area has been controlled by many dynasties throughout history, the earliest being the [[Bhuti dynasty]]. Power continued to trade between these dynasties, as well as the [[Union of Uul]] which controlled the southern half of the area for about 60 years from 1340 to 1400. The final dynasty was the [[Gyatso dynasty]], which controlled the majority of modern Byasa before the [[Empire of Baltanla]] conquered the land. After the Empire of Baltanla departed, the area was plagued by civil wars and coups. The most notable civil war is the [[Second Byasanese Civil War]] between 1928 and 1949, where almost 8 million people died after spillover from the [[Uulgadzan Civil War]] turned into a massive ethnic conflict. The conflict was characterized by massive genocide and destruction of infrastructure. It is commonly said the nation has not recovered from the conflict, even nearly 100 years later.
  
 
Since 1950, ethnic violence has remained one of the leading causes of death in Byasa. In Rigrongseb alone, almost 100,000 people died from ethnic violence-related causes in 2020. Byasa has one of the lowest life expectancies in Ostlandet, and has the [[List of countries by Human Development Index|second-lowest HDI in the world]]. The lack of infrastructure in the nation has caused it to have one of the highest rates of poverty and lowest GDP per capita in the world. It has the [[List of countries by intentional homicide rate|highest intentional homicide rate in the world]], and has an extremely high crime rate with very little government involvement in the day-to-day affairs of the people.
 
Since 1950, ethnic violence has remained one of the leading causes of death in Byasa. In Rigrongseb alone, almost 100,000 people died from ethnic violence-related causes in 2020. Byasa has one of the lowest life expectancies in Ostlandet, and has the [[List of countries by Human Development Index|second-lowest HDI in the world]]. The lack of infrastructure in the nation has caused it to have one of the highest rates of poverty and lowest GDP per capita in the world. It has the [[List of countries by intentional homicide rate|highest intentional homicide rate in the world]], and has an extremely high crime rate with very little government involvement in the day-to-day affairs of the people.

Revision as of 10:07, 27 August 2023

Republic of Byasa

སྤྱི་མཐུན་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་བྱ་ས (Byasanese)
Таңһч Биаса (Şovunkeln)
Flag of
Flag
Motto: ཨོཾ་མ་ཎི་པདྨེ་ཧཱུྃ
Om mani bêmê hum
Anthem: ཤིང་ཉི་ཤར
Shing nyi shar
"Tree rise"
Capital
and largest city
Rigrongseb
Official languagesByasanese
Şovunkeln
Recognised national languagesBaltanian
Monsilvan
Uulgadzan
Recognised regional languagesSlavic
Stepadnó
Zulu
Ethnic groups
(2020)
32.9% Byasanese
29.4% Şovunkyn
10.3% Monsilvan
10.1% Uulgadzan
8.2% Baltanian
9.1% Other
Religion
(2020)
59.9% Buddhism
23.2% Christian
11.3% Ariunxavč
5.6% Other
Demonym(s)Byasanese
GovernmentUnitary presidential republic
• President
Choden Tenzin
LegislatureParliament
Area
• Total
376,697 sq mi (975,640 km2)
Population
• 2022 estimate
37,944,022
• 2020 census
37,506,225
• Density
99.6/sq mi (38.5/km2)
GDP (nominal)2020 estimate
• Total
₵23,770,000,000 (37th)
• Per capita
₵633.83 (40th)
Gini (2020)61.4
very high
HDI (2020)Decrease 0.479
low
CurrencyByasanese dngul (BYD)
Time zoneAMT+12 (BYT)
Mains electricity120 V-60 Hz
Driving sideright
Calling code+74
ISO 3166 codeBY
Internet TLD.by

Byasa (Byasanese: བྱ་ས; Şovunkeln: Биаса), officially the Republic of Byasa (Byasanese: སྤྱི་མཐུན་རྒྱལ་ཁབ་བྱ་ས; Şovunkeln: Таңһч Биаса) is a landlocked unitary presidential republic in central Ostlandet. It is bordered by Monsilva to the north, Kwazulu-Ciskei to the east, Zloveshchiy to the southeast, Uulgadzar to the south, and Baltanla to the northwest. It is one of the poorest countries in the world and has the lowest GDP per capita in the world. Its total population, according to the 2020 census, is 37,506,225. It has a land area of 975,641 square kilometers, making it one of the world's smallest nations. Its capital, Rigrongseb, is the largest city and political center of the nation. It has a population of almost 10 million.

The first Byasanese people likely appeared in the area making up modern Byasa around 4000 BCE. The area has been controlled by many dynasties throughout history, the earliest being the Bhuti dynasty. Power continued to trade between these dynasties, as well as the Union of Uul which controlled the southern half of the area for about 60 years from 1340 to 1400. The final dynasty was the Gyatso dynasty, which controlled the majority of modern Byasa before the Empire of Baltanla conquered the land. After the Empire of Baltanla departed, the area was plagued by civil wars and coups. The most notable civil war is the Second Byasanese Civil War between 1928 and 1949, where almost 8 million people died after spillover from the Uulgadzan Civil War turned into a massive ethnic conflict. The conflict was characterized by massive genocide and destruction of infrastructure. It is commonly said the nation has not recovered from the conflict, even nearly 100 years later.

Since 1950, ethnic violence has remained one of the leading causes of death in Byasa. In Rigrongseb alone, almost 100,000 people died from ethnic violence-related causes in 2020. Byasa has one of the lowest life expectancies in Ostlandet, and has the second-lowest HDI in the world. The lack of infrastructure in the nation has caused it to have one of the highest rates of poverty and lowest GDP per capita in the world. It has the highest intentional homicide rate in the world, and has an extremely high crime rate with very little government involvement in the day-to-day affairs of the people.

Byasa's economy is heavily agriculture-reliant, with nearly 70% of the nation's GDP coming from agricultural sources. In recent years, the nation has begun to invest in mining operations and manufacturing. The manufacturing industry has seen lots of foreign investment, with the government attempting to attract investors by moving police and military units to protect foreign-owned factories. However, since the 2011 factory bombing in Ringrongseb, investors have been wary to operate inside of Byasa and the economy has stagnated as a result.

Etymology

History

Geography

Climate

Biodiversity

Politics

Government

Legislature

Role of religion

Law and judicial system

Foreign relations

Military

Administrative divisions

Economy

Agriculture

Mining

Manufacturing

Infrastructure

Demographics

Largest regions

Language

Religion

Education

Healthcare

Culture

See also