Chaska

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Chaska
Flag Coat of arms
File:Missingflag.png
Motto: Mana Qonqasunchikchutaq

"Nevertheless, we will not forget"

Anthem: The War Song
Locator map
Capital city Qheca
Largest city
Official language Remana
Other languages
Ethnic groups Ruma
Religion Circulism
Demonym(s) Chaskan
Government
Government Type Government type
Your 1st leader title (e.g. King) name
Uma Akllaxqa (Premier) name
Legislature your choice
Establishment
The Founding of Qheca date 1
The Quiet Revolution date 2
Area
Total 1,983,088.96 km2
Water % 0.0%
Population
Total 85,219,877
Density 42.97/km2
Economy
Economy type
GDP (total) Ꞡ 525,506,341,492.37
GDP per capita Ꞡ 6,166.48
Currency samp_nat_currency
Currency symbol
Inequality index 0.0
Development index 0.0
Other information
Time zone 0
Driving side right
Calling code +441
Internet code .ch

Chaska is a reasonably large, reasonably populated nation just to the south of the equator. It is most prominently known for its history (once part of three separate empires simultaneously), its reserves of gold and coal and plantations of coffee, its architecture, and its music.

Chaska used to be the eastern provinces of Huilcasonco, an empire spanning the Kancha and Suyana Mountain ranges and much of their associated lowlands on either side. Once divided, it then survived in the form of Ayawantin, an independent state in the southern lowlands which expanded out to the islands in the east while the mountains became the territory of colonial states. It was only after the Quiet Revolution that the two were reunited once again into the state occupying its present borders, although they were obliged to forfeit the island territory they had since gained.

Today, Chaska is divided into the northern regions—industrial, more than slightly Livaryan in look and manner, whose wealth comes from the provision of power through thermal generators on the mountain coastline—and the southern regions—less industrialized and more traditionalist (they call themselves ñach'uq "authentic, pure"), whose main wealth comes from trade and the plantations of coffee and spices found in the lowlands.