1
Dispatch → Account → Diplomacy
Organisation of Foroned Nations | | Kingdom of Newfoundland
Newfoundland (Scotch: Talamh an Èisg), ambly Kingdom of Newfoundland (Scotch: Rìoghachd Talamh an Èisg) but also called Nova Scotia, the Scottish Kingdom, the Seawise Kingdom and the Celtish Kingdom, is a land in Northamerica. To its east is some of the northern stretches of the Westsea, while it is bound to the south by New England and to the west by New Albion. Newfoundland has a landfleck of 293,432.09 foursideskilometers and a befolking of 2.2 million, the bulk of whom live along the coasts.A mostly flat land with a rainy, dolish weather with a warm summer, Newfoundland's headstead is Halifax, while other weighty steads inhold Kingshaven, New Belfast, Sanct Iohannes, New Dundee and Hamilton, with more than 75% of the whole befolking living in these six steads. Full of forests and woods, its worthship has somewhat seen a fall in the last few yeartens. It is culturely Celtish and is one of the three "free Celtish lands", with whom it has a close forbinding. Newfoundland is a limb of the Organisation of Foroned Nations, the Organisation of the Organisation of Americanish States, the World Trade Organisation, the World Soundhood Organisation and the Celtish Forband.
Gesheede
Menish beinghood in what is now Newfoundland began around 10,000 years ago, and it was one of the last places in the New World to have a Wildling befolking. The Wildlings foroned their lands into the Micmackish Bound, the Malacitish Bound and the Passamacodish Bound. New Ireland had a fordealt thede of Wildlings known as the Scraelings at that time. Europers first found what parts of Newfoundland in the 1000s GE under Leif Ericson who named his newfound land 'Wineland'. Wineland stretched west in parts of Lower New Albion and south up to near New Kent, though its heartland was in the north, and would die out by 1200s. Some believe that the Scraelings as Europers would later meet them in the 1600s were in true the erf of the Norwegish and Danish settlers, though most do not share that thought.
Iohannes Cabot, a pathfinder working for the Danelager king Hrothgar I found New Scotland, while Lusitanish forkenners also made land in much of the area, namely New Ireland which they named New Earth. It was Jacques Cartier, a forkenner working for the Frankish King, who first went on pathfinding in Newfoundland and spoke for it in the name of King Henry of Frankriche as Port-Royal, an ambight of Acadie. Cartier was followed by the Frankish Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Monts who came there with Samuel de Champlain in 1604. During this, the two grounded the twithe standing Europish colony in Northamerica, beaten only by Sanct August in De Leon by New Hispania. Hamilton's settlestead Port-Royal (Now Kingshaven), would overlive and its grounder is known now as 'Father of Newfoundland'.
Frankriche held onto Port-Royal for some time, but as it was not a good place to forsettle, sold it to the Scotch in 1621 when Scotland's Lord Wilhelm Alexander, Earl Stirling, bought it and named it New Scotland. New Scotland would then find settlers from the Scottish Highlands, the Scottish Lowlands and to a lesser stand, Ireland. In 1652, Ireland and Scotland went to crig over the fraign of Ulster, and at that time New Scotlanders overfell Newfoundland and burned down New Ulster, the only Irish thorpe in the land, and when the Fordrawing of Mann ended the crig, Ireland sold the now-brookless ieland to Scotland to sicker their alliance. Newfoundland was held as a fordealt colony from New Scotland. From 1654, the kingdom began better settling their two colonies, while forhandlings began between Scotland and Frankriche over Acadie, a mickle Frankish colony that neighbored New Scotland, but nothing came out of this.
In the 19th yearhundred and after New England was given its unoffhanghood, Newfoundland became a close friend of the Danelaw's so as to forsicker New England wouldn't overfall it, but also that the Danelaw wouldn't overfall it either in hopes of aovering it and putoning it with New Albion. They sought sidelessness in the Deoch Crig -which had no slaughtfronts that far west, but also other crigs in the 19th yearhundred, and also the First Great Crig, but they became one of the grounding states of the Organisation of Foroned Nations, shaping one of the seven states that became the Foroned Westseafront against Santa Crus and New Hispania. After the Twithe Crig, they returned to their sidelessness, though they would become part of the Celtish Forband, an organisation made of Ireland, themselves and Lidwick, but leave it when the Forband came to fight the Danelaw and her Gemeanwealth in the short Dyflin Crig.
Regearing
Newfoundland is a democratish onehoodstate under a grounded kingdom. It is made of the five provinces of New Scotland, New Ireland, New Mann, Acadia and Heavenfare Ieland. Its Stateshead, the King of Newfoundland is bound by the Newfoundlander Groundlaw to the whims of both the gewaled Lower House -and through them the regearing- and the ethelmen of the Upper House of the Lawthing of Newfoundland. Nevertheless he has more grips than most Europish kings, though not as much as the Caser of New Hispania does further south. The throne is passed through erfship and all kings are from the line of James I of New Scotland (later James I of Newfoundland), himself son of the last King of Scots before Scotland was aovered by the Danelaw in 1674. The King can break apart the Lawthing or sack the Chancellor and his regearing, he holds the last say on the Stridecrafts of Newfoundland, his say is needed for Lawthing writs to become law, and he can welcome and send bodeshippers. The King currently holding the throne is Carl III.English and Scotch both have ambly stand in all of Newfoundland and dealings are done in both these speeches. There are micklehoods that speak Irish (in New Ireland), Welsh, Scots and to a much lesser stand Frankish, though none of those tongues have an ambly stand as the state does not see a need for 'Lawful Smallhood Speeches'.
Befolking
The 2020 Newfoundlander Headcount gave a toteful befolking of 2,252,875, growing around 0.3% over the 2010 tolls. Between 2010 and May 2020, Newfoundland's befolking grew by 7,773, all of whom were born in the land. At 7.6 heads by Foursideskilometer, Newfoundland's folkthickhood is twice that of its neighbor in New Albion but still one of the lowest in the world. Three-fourth of the befolking lives in six steads. The micklehood of Newfoundlanders live in family households, though 28.3% live alone or live with those not their blood kin. 7.3% of households have more than one generation of folk in them, with 33.2% of the folk elding 20-34 living with their parents. Nearly everyone in the land owns their own dwelling.The greatest folkgroup in Newfoundland are Celtish. Named 'Newfoundlander Celts', they are a blend of Highland and Lowland Scots fleeing Albion (or being sent there by the Danelaw), Irishmen who settled Newfoundland and later wandered into the unoffhung Northamericanish kingdom and the Welsh who likewise wandered there. Another bygroup of the 'Newfoundlander Celts' are those with Wildling roots who were made by the early regearings of Newfoundland to take Celtish ways. Put together, they make 63.5% of the whole befolking. Angledanes wandering from both New Albion and New England make the twithe micklest group at 23.7%, while Franks, at 7.2%, make the third and the Deoch, at 2.1% make the fourth. Joseners, at 1.8%, are the only mickle folkgroup not of Europish roots. The beleving 1.7% are 'others'.
Beliefwise, Newfoundland is not quite blended. The Statechurch is the so-called Church of Newfoundland, a bough of Ielander Christendom, and 55% of the befolking follow it. Other beliefs inhold Anewed Christendom (18%) and Catholicish Christendom (5%). One-fifth of the land say to be godless, while the other 2% are 'others'.
Worthship
Newfoundland is a toteful outfarer of food as it makes all the food it needs: MacCain Foods, a Newfoundlander middlestand geselship, is one of the greatest producers of frozen earthapple goods. Other products are applies, cranberry and maple syrup. Livestock goods in Newfoundland inhold cowmeat, chickenmeat, hide, goat, swine and sheep. As more than 80% of Newfoundland is made of woods and forests, it was once a centre of shipbuilding industry, but this fell after the 1850s when bushbuilding and wooden ships both stopped being weighty. Newfoundland came back to the centre of shipbuilding industry in the 1950s however. Likewise, Newfoundland has berghworks that make lead, zinc, copper, coal, iron, silver, gold and potash. Oil and earthgas, besunderly found near New Ireland but also in New Mann and New Scotland.
Loftroom, biowitship, Information and Farspeak Technology and anewbere craftwork have been some of the industries in Newfoundland. Namely, Loftroom makes for 25% of the land's outfares and is its fourth industry, making $2.7 billion of the yearly worthship of the land, while biowitship has over 5,000 workers and makes over $450 million in sales. Outside of these High-Tech industries, other 'traditional', middlestand industies inhold drinks like beer and softdrinks. Seaman's Drinks, a bottling and drink heresteller, is the micklest middlestand geselship where drinks fraign. Its girth notwithstanding, Newfoundland's stridecraft industry is only two-third the size of New Albion which outstands it in both landfleck, rawstuff and befolking tens of times.Newfoundland has a weighty sightseeing industry inholding more than 9,500 straightforward businesses and helping nearly 80,000 lifeworks. Crossliners come to Newfoundlander havens gemeanly. The Haven of Halifax had 261,000 sightseers in 2010, and the industry helps $1.3 billion to the worthship every year. Newfoundland's Celtish Culture make it a Mecca for all Celters in Europer and outside, while its sheen landscape, weighty gesheedely buildings and sites, nationalparks and coastline are other things folk come to see it for. Folk often come to see Newfoundland between June and September when the land is at its warmest and stounds of daylight at their longest.
Stridecrafts
Shielding and its dealings are overseen at time of frith by the Ministry of Landsickerhood, but at times of crig it goes under the Crigministry. While the King is Overcommander of all Newfoundlander stridecrafts, this weald is gemeanly given to the Chancellor, who oversees it as the regearingshead. Stridespending makes for $3.3 billion, which makes 2.5% of the Newfoundlander yearly GIP. Newfoundland's foroned stridecrafts are the Kingly Stridecrafts of Newfoundland (KSCN; Scotch: Rìoghail Feachdan Armaichte Talamh an Èisg, RFATÈ). The Kingly Stridecrafts has 42,000 soldiers, and another 35,000 reservists. While the land has no nationaldraft, it has a Stridegroup, the Newfoundlander Striders, which men and women have to thane in for 10 months after reaching 18 years of eld.The Kingly Stridecrafts is split into the Kingly Heere of Newfoundland (Scotch: Arm Rìoghail Talamh an Èisg, Arm Rìoghail for short), the Kingly Marine of Newfoundland (Scotch: Cabhlach Rìoghail Talamh an Èisg, Cabhlach Rìoghail for short), the Kingly Loftmight of Newfoundland (Scotch: Feachd Rìoghail an Adhair Talamh an Èisg, Feachd an Adhair for short) and the Kingly Coastgewears of Newfoundland. The first is a wholly mechanised heere made of 25 ready-made regiments and 20 reservist regiments, the twithe has 30 seaflack ships inholding 1 commandodragger, and the third has 60 ready flytugs and 100 liftsrewtugs, while the fourth is in true a strandwatch rather than merely coastgewears, and has its own fleet of strandboats and liftscrewtugs.