Anahuacan diaspora

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Anahuacan diaspora
La Diáspora Anahuacana
Anahuaco flag.png
Flag of Anahuaco
Total population
66,992,418 (1738 AN, estimated)
Regions with significant populations
Nouvelle Alexandrie Nouvelle Alexandrie XXXXX
Moorland Moorland XXXXX
Constancia Constancia XXXXX
Natopia Natopia XXXXX
Benacian Union Benacian Union XXXXX
Oportia Oportia XXXXX
Other nations XXXXX
Languages
Religion
Predominantly Nazarene
Related ethnic groups
Alexandrian people (Martino); Verionian people

Population figures based on 1738 AN Joint Humanitarian Operations Center estimates and Anahuacan census records.

The Anahuacan diaspora refers to the mass displacement and global dispersal of the Anahuacan people following the East Keltian Collapse of 1737 AN, which resulted in the dissolution of the Anahuaco Empire and one of the largest refugee crises in recent Micran history. Prior to the collapse, Anahuaco had a population of approximately 67 million people, with the majority concentrated in major urban centers like Ciudad de Anahuaco, Hidalgo, San Miguel el Grande, and Agustin. The empire was notable for having one of the largest Martino-speaking populations on Micras after Nouvelle Alexandrie.

The catastrophic events of 1737 AN triggered a series of coordinated evacuations under Operation Northern Light, a Raspur Pact humanitarian mission that successfully extracted hundreds of thousands of Anahuacans through an extensive network of air and sea routes. The operation established several major processing centers along Moorland's border with Anahuaco and deployed significant naval assets including Task Force Redemption and elements of the New Alexandrian Keltian Fleet. Particularly notable was the evacuation of Hidalgo, Matamoros, where Constancia's Military Advisory Command Anahuaco coordinated the extraction of over 85,000 civilians and military personnel under enemy fire.

Current estimates from the Joint Humanitarian Operations Center indicate that approximately millions of Anahuacans were displaced by 1738 AN, with the largest communities resettling in Nouvelle Alexandrie, Moorland, and Constancia. These communities have established significant cultural institutions to preserve Anahuacan heritage while integrating into their host nations, particularly in areas of agriculture, manufacturing, and technical industries where Anahuacan expertise has proven valuable.

History

Main article: Anahuaco

Geographic Distribution

Culture

Identity and Integration

Institutions

Notable Figures

Legacy

See also