Holy Free (Pacifica)

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Kingdom of Holy Free

Racha-anachak Holy Free (Tai)
Motto: "Rao nan seri tao ti rao ja tam die leao"
"As free as we can be"
Anthem: Seri ti saksit
The holiness of being free

Royal anthemPha-ong tan Sa-nga
His Graceful Grace's
Location of Holy Free in the South Pacific
Location of Holy Free in the South Pacific
CapitalLordinia
Official languagesTai, Austral
Recognised regional languagesAlman
Religion
(2019)
84.12% Holsanism
13.37% Non-religious
2.01% Christian
0.5% Other/unknown
Demonym(s)Holy Freean
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• King
Trinal IX
Samanala Porsled
LegislatureNational Assembly
Senate
House of Representatives
Independent state
• The Kingdom of Free
3 March 1638
• The Kingdom of Holy Free
22 December 1813
• Modern government
6 July 1945
Area
• Total
164,283 km2 (63,430 sq mi)
Population
• 2020 estimate
14,000,000
• 2020 census
14,192,379
• Density
86.39/km2 (223.7/sq mi)
CurrencyFrees (HFF)
Time zoneUTC-2 (CCT)
Driving sideleft
Calling code+33
World Forum CodeHF
Internet TLD.hf

Holy Free, officially the Kingdom of Holy Free and formerly known as Free, is a sovereign state whose territory consists of mainland Holy Free in northern Cordilia and the overseas province of Holsani in western Rainbow Islands. Mainland Holy Free is bordered by the Sea of Frost in the north, Farengeto in the south, Besern in the east and T.S.S.S. in the west. With a size of 164,283 square kilometers (63,430 square miles). As of 2020, the population is about 14 million. Holy Free is a unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy with its capital in Lordina, the country's largest city and main cultural and commercial center. Other major cities include Rove, Tamils, Portelo, and Holy City.

Etymology

Holy Free (/hoʊli fri/ Tai: Prathet Holy Free [pratɪd hoʊli fri]), officially the Kingdom of Holy Free (Tai: Racha-anachak Holy Free [rat͡ʃa anat͡ʃak ˈˈhoʊli fri]) and formerly known as Free (Tai: Prathet Free [pratɪd fri])

Etymology of Free

Originally the name of the country "Free" is named after the House of Free of King Andrea I who united all the counties in the plain of Free in 1638. The Origin of the name of the house is unknown but the most popular theory is that once King Andrea I's great-great-grandfather met a smart kid who speaks Austral and the kid told him a story of how the word "Free" is important to a kingdom and once he became the count of Lordinia, he decided to name his house "Free" and ruled the counties as a great "free" ruler.

Etymology of Holy Free

The "Holy" pre-fix was added (after a personal-union with Holsani in 1812) in 1813 under King Trinal V command. To united the people under his rule, he declared that Holsani would be an official religion of Free. After the King dictates that a country should have good beliefs to hold onto that would bring us close together (This is before the name change and after the personal-union). After that, he changes the country name to reflect on how the country of "Holy" Free change with unity, togetherness and the holiness that comes with it.

History

Prehistory

There is evidence of continuous human habitation in present-day Holy Free from 12,000 years ago to the present day.

Early States

Kingdom of Free

Kingdom of Holy Free

End of Absolute Monarchy

Modern day Holy Free

Geography

Location and borders

Geology, topography and hydrography

Climate

Fauna and flora

Politics

Government

Political parties

Law and judicial system

Administrative divisions

Holy Free is divided into 15 provinces (Changwat), which are gathered into five groups of provinces or regions (Pak) by location.

Each province is divided into districts (Amphoe) and the districts are further divided into sub-districts (Tambon).

Foreign relations

Military

Economy

Agriculture

Tourism

Energy exports

Fishery

Manufacturing

Oil production

Demographics

Urban areas

Language

Religion

Religion in Holy Free as of 2019.

  Holsanism (84.12%)
  Non-religious (13.37%)
  Christian (2.01%)
  Other (0.5%)

Education

Healthcare

Immigration

Famous Holy Freean

Culture

Value system and society

Holidays

Literature

Arts

Music

Cinema

Media

Architecture

Cuisine

See Also