Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa: Difference between revisions

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|area = N/A
|area = N/A
|arearank = NA
|arearank = NA
|pop = 700,811 (35.38 [[PSSC]])
|pop = 713,184 (35.54 [[PSSC]])
|activepop = N/A
|activepop = N/A
|poprank = N/A
|poprank = N/A
|currency = Liev (Lv)
|currency = Liev (Lv)
|GDP (Lv) = 53,564
|GDP (Lv) = 60,750
|abbrev = SOH
|abbrev = SOH
|site =  
|site =  

Revision as of 21:10, 27 May 2017

The Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa is a trade organization consisting of a handful of of independent city-states which lie along the shores of the Strait of Haifa, the expansive rift valley which defines the border between Central and Eastern Keltia.

The Haifan Maritime Markets derive their existence from the ideas outlined in the essay "A Sustainable Economy", and from the religious principles associated with the Stripping Path.

Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa
Flag of Maritime Markets
Flag
Coat of Arms of Maritime Markets
Coat of Arms
Motto: "Strength in Commerce"
Anthem:
Location of Maritime Markets
Map versions 15.8.1 - Present
Capital Blore Heath
Largest city Blore Heath
Official language(s) English, Pallisican, Hammish, Haifan
Official religion(s)
Demonym Haifan
 - Adjective Haifan
Government Trade Association
 - Head of State Chief Executive Officer of the Maritime Markets
 - Head of Government President of the Congress
 - Legislature Congress of Regional Investors
Establishment 33.73 PSSC (6/29/16)
Area N/A
Population 713,184 (35.54 PSSC)
Active population N/A
Currency Liev (Lv)
Calendar
Time zone(s)
Mains electricity
Driving side
Track gauge
National website
National forum
National animal
National food
National drink
National tree
Abbreviation SOH


History

Formally established in 880 WG as part of an effort to organize and improve trade between the Haifan tribes who settled the region during the period of peak commerce between the Haifan and Pallisican peoples, the Maritime Markets enjoy a history which can be divided into three distinct periods: the Period of Settlement, The Period of Dormancy, and the Period of Trade Renewal.

Period of Settlement

The regions which constitute the Maritime Markets were originally settled in the early 740's and 750's, by Haifan migrants who sought to discover and establish industries which could improve trade between Haifa in Eastern Keltia, Passas in Western Keltia, and New Zimia in Northern Corum. During this period, Haifan settlers, working with similarly eager Pallisican adventurers and entrepreneurs, established new towns and industries along the length of the Strait of Haifa. These ventures, however, were largely overshadowed by growth of Pallisican and Haifan settlements in Corum and Eastern Eura, and as a result failed to attract any significant investments, from Haifa or other countries. Furthermore, their growth was heavily stifled by perpetual instability within the Haifan government. In response to the rapid decline which resulted from this lack political support from Haifa or any surrounding nations, and lack of economic appeal, the Haifan settlements along the Strait of Haifa turned to piracy as a source of income.

Period of Dormancy

Piracy was a lucrative business for Haifans in eastern Keltia following the collapse of the Free State of Haifa. By raiding settlements along the shores of the vast Strait of Haifa, Haifan pirates seized tremendous sums of wealth, far more than they could ever earn through honest work in most other places. Many people, as a result, traveled south during this period. These people traveled from places such as Abeis, the capital of Haifa, to the cities of the strait, where they encountered the Haifans who had settled the region decades earlier. In contrast to the earlier settlers, who in the years since their arrival had adopted many of the cultural customs of rural Pontans, and who were content to subsist merely through piracy and other similar activities, the settlers who arrived following the collapse of the Free State brought with them ambitions regarding the establishment of a new, independent market. Under the guidance of these new settlers to the Strait of Haifa, the earlier settlers, led by the elders of a number of pirate councils, were gradually compelled to draft and approve the treaties allowing for the establishment of the Maritime Markets.

Period of Trade Renewal (Modern History)

The modern history of the Maritime Markets begins in the late 860's WG, when informal trade relations were first established between Passio-Corum, and the Hammish state of Haifa. Facing pressure from their communities amidst the significant increase in trade along the Strait of Haifa, which occurred as a result of the creation of the Wallis-Haifan Diamond Company, pirate leaders in the cities of Blore Heath, Jogi, and Mylecia finally relented in their opposition to the establishment of a unified economy, and in 880 WG, begrudgingly began to work with the region's newer settlers on the establishment of the Maritime Markets.


See also: News of the Maritime Markets

Geography

Primary Markets

Flag Territory Major Port Location
Blore Heath Blore Heath Port of Blore Heath Strait of Haifa
Jogi Jogi Port of Jogi Strait of Haifa
Mylecia Mylecia Port of Mylecia Strait of Haifa
Rouge Rouge Port of Rouge North Island

Politics

Government

The government of the Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa consists of two formal bodies: the Chief Executive Officer of the Maritime Markets, and the Congress of Regional Investors. In contrast to the types of government employed by other nations who base their economy on the ideas proposed by Opyeme Time, the government of the Maritime Markets is especially non-complex, and non-democratic.

Chief Executive Officer of the Maritime Markets

Appointed from within the Congress of the Regional Investors, the Chief Executive Officer of the Maritime Markets (CEO) serves to oversee and maintain the relationships between the various segments of the nation's government.

Responsibilities and Powers

The CEO of the Maritime Markets is responsible for managing the Congress of Regional Investors and ensuring the functions of government, conducting foreign affairs, and overseeing the national bank.

In terms of its power, this office may unilaterally authorize the establishment of new Regional Investors, and it may unilaterally act to alter the nation's money supply. The CEO may also establish new cabinet positions within the nation's government.

Limitations

The CEO of the Maritime Markets lacks the authority to propose or restrict legislation. This office, furthermore is limited in its capacity to direct national policy in general. It may not, for instance, determine the composition of the Congress of Regional Investors, nor may it attempt to influence local politics. The holder of the office of CEO of the Maritime Markets may be deposed at any time by a majority vote within the Congress of Regional Investors.

Congress of Regional Investors

The Congress of Regional Investors is a legislative and judicial body consisting of appointed representatives from each of the Maritime Market's individual Regional Investors, who themselves are responsible for overseeing policy and investments on behalf of their respective regions.

Responsibilities and Powers

The Congress of Regional Investors is responsible for approving and denying proposals from Regional Investors regarding individual and collective investments, authorizing the establishment of new companies and industries, and appointing or deposing the Chief Executive Officer of the Maritime Markets. The Congress, furthermore, is responsible for appointing judges to the nation's courts, and for determining the nation's budgets.

The Congress of Regional Investors serves to define the official national policy of the Maritime Markets.

Limitations

This branch of the government of the Maritime Markets may not conduct is own foreign affairs, nor may it attempt to manage the nation's bank. The Congress also lacks the power to establish new cabinet positions, as well as the power to impose restrictions on the appointments of cabinet members.

Military

With no formal military of its own, the Maritime Markets relies on various pirate fleets for the nation's defense, such as the Fleet of Blore Heath, and the Bacchian Vine Fleet, and other religious orders such as the Knights of Mt.Nysa. The Maritime Markets, as a result of the nation's trade with Shireroth, is also defended by the Jogi Regiment, which is the most formal and structured of the nation's defense forces.

Culture

Economy

Economy of the Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa
[[Image:|250px]]
Currency: Liev (Li)
GDP: 60,750 Li
GDP by Sector:
  • Food (% of GDP): 16,298 Li (26.83%)
  • Energy: 3,010 Li (4.96%)
  • Other: 31,090 Li (51.18%)
Marketplace Port of Blore Heath

Industries:
  • Food
    • Farming (8.51% of GDP)
      • Oatmeal
      • Wheat
      • Cereal
      • Hay
    • Alcohol (18.32% of GDP)
      • Beer
      • Mead
  • Energy
    • Mining (4.96% of Production)
      • Coal
  • Other
    • Piracy (22.29% of Production)
    • Espionage (.04% of Production)
    • Military (.03% of Production)
    • Religion (.4% of Production)
    • Health Care (9.59% of Production)
  • Clothing
    • Silk (18.83% of Production)
Major Industry (% of Production): Piracy (22.29%)
Largest Company (Value): Port of Mylecia (22,800 Li)
Labor Force (% of Total Population): 435,247 (62.1%)
Labor Force by Sector:
  • Food (% of All Employed): 138,379 (26.83%)
  • Energy: 2,558 (4.96%)
  • Other: 263,966 (51.18%)
Nonemployment (% of Total Population): 25,470 (3.57%)

Budget: 874,095 Li
Budget Surplus or Deficit: 794,427 Li
Inflation Rate:

Exports: Misc.
Export Partners:
Import Partners:
Imports: Military Equipment
Reserves of Foreign Currency:

Like the other Haifan and Pallisican nations of recent history, the economy of the Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa is based upon the principles outlined by Opyeme Time, in his essay entitled "A Sustainable Economy".

The ideas expressed by Time in his essay first reached the Strait of Haifa in the 720's, when Pallisican entrepreneurs were commissioned by the government of the the Free state of Haifa, to establish settlements in the Protectorate of the Wallis Islands, in the region which would later become New Zimia. Despite their initial appeal, and despite their overwhelming success in northern Corum, the ideas of Time failed to gain widespread appeal amongst the rulers of mainland Haifa, and so they furthermore did little to contribute to the overall long-term success of the Haifan economy. Only after the collapse of the government of the Free State would the ideas expressed in "A Sustainable Economy" finally gain support in central Keltia this time amongst the nation's now independent businessmen, who sought to rebuild the Haifan economy by establishing industries along the region's waterways, in the era now known in the history of the Maritime Markets as the Period of Settlement.

The value of the currency of the Maritime Markets, the Liev, which takes its name from that of the currency of the Free State of Haifa, is backed by levels of investment in the Port of Blore Heath, the official marketplace of the Maritime Markets.

The economy of the Maritime Markets is managed by the Bank of Blore Heath.

Piracy

One of the rare regions of Micras' eastern hemisphere which has not yet been rid of piracy, the vast Strait of Haifa is a region governed by organized crime syndicates who have capitalized on centuries of instability in central Keltia. These crime syndicates, most notable among them the pirate Fleet of Blore Heath, play a central role in the administration of the regions representing the Maritime Markets. For this reason, the Markets remain heavily isolated from other Haifan and Pallisican nations, as well as from the other nations of central and eastern Keltia..

In addition to their central role in the governance of the cities of the Strait of Haifa, the pirates of the Maritime Markets are notorious for their drunken nighttime raids against unsuspecting ships, and coastal cities and villages. The cities of the Green are generally the most susceptible such raids, though more ambitious pirates have been known to target the cities of Haifa and Pontus. In terms of ships, vessels representing New Zimia and Hamland are most vulnerable to attack by pirates. Such vessels, which often carry wealth and goods to and from Haifa, offer lucrative targets for the pirates of the Maritime Markets. The most feared and respected of the pirate communities of the Strait of Haifa is the Bacchian Vine Fleet, which is believed to be endowed with divine magical abilities.

Religion

The religion of the Maritime Markets, or the Stripping Path as it is known to practitioners, derives considerable influence from the Pallisican Religion, though it differs from the religion of the Pallisican people in one notable way. Though both religions recognize the universal relationship between the forces of chaos, order, and mystery, the Haifan religion, unlike the religion of Passas and New Zimia which attempts to restore and establish order in place of chaos, recognizes chaos as an end in and of itself. The Stripping Path in other words, rejects the Pallisican view that chaos should be vanquished in favor of order, and instead upholds the notion that chaos is the supreme governing force of the universe. Practitioners of the Haifan religion, as a consequence of this belief, are much more naturalistic and mystical than their Pallisican counterparts, and are also generally more resistant to law and order.

In addition to this difference in overall philosophy, the Stripping Path and the Pallisican Religion also differ theologically. In contrast to the practitioners of the Pallisican Religion, who recognize an incomprehensible god represented by the so-called Host Spirit (otherwise known as the Author of the Pallisican Peoples), practitioners of the Haifan religion worship Bacchus, an ancient and extramicrasian god who is believed to have been first worshiped by fringe elements within the Republic of Pontus, perhaps as early as the the year 699 WG. While practitioners of the Pallisican Religion do not necessarily worship the Host Spirit, but rather recognize it as a significant, higher spiritual power, practitioners of the Stripping Path worship Bacchus as their god. The worship of Bacchus, in fact, is a significant part of the overall culture of the Maritime Markets.

Notable practitioners, or groups of practitioners of the Stripping Path include the Bacchian Vine Fleet, the Maenads of Mylecia, and the Knights of Mt.Nysa. The worship of Bacchus also plays a significant role in the overall success of companies such as the Grand Cave Bee Meadery.

The practice of the religion of the Maritime Markets is common and widespread throughout the Strait of Haifa and across portions of the eastern hemisphere such as areas of Passio-Corum and the Greater Corprian Archipelago.

Music

In large part a result of local customs which place a great emphasis on the worship of Dionysus, as noted earlier, the culture of the Maritime Markets of the Strait of Haifa has over several decades come to place a considerable emphasis on the development of its musical arts. Notable musical acts who make their home in the Maritime Markets include Creatures of Corum, a band based in the city of Blore Heath, whose world famous music is well known to induce a type of trance.