Easwegian Independence
Easwegian Independence encompasses the events of the Easwegian Reawakening which occurred following 24 November 2017 when the Free Serpent Forces of the Ouroboros' Serpents of Easway Alliance (FSFOSEA), led by Grand Marshal Emizerri, declared Bear Island a free realm and proclaimed the arctic Easway an independent multi-ethnic nation on 19 December 2017.[1] Consisting of a group of 7; Grand Marshal Emizerri, Commissar-in-chief Aleksou Desourrë, Major Oelaanni Creizoun and commanders Dr. M, Geno, Wreno and Railiyde; the Easwegian assembly established a provisional authority, headed by Emizerri, and continued the long task of achieving full Easwegian restoration.
Easwegian Independence Day | |
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Official name | The Declaration on the Establishment of a Sovereign and Independent Easway |
Observed by | Easway |
Type | National |
Date | 19 December 2017 |
Frequency | annual |
Background
From the late 12th century to the late 15th century, the area of southern Svalbard was under the domain of the Novgorod Republic. Following the Republic's forcible dissolution by Muscovy in 1478, the Easwegian Commonwealth succeeded in the Svalbard Isle's administration and increasingly came to rely on it in the next few centuries.
Modern western Europeans first visited Svalbard in 1596 when Willem Barentsz sighted Bear Island on June 10th 1596. Thomas Edge later visited the Island in 1609 on the Paul, and claimed it for the British Crown. This claim was later released when mass walruss-hunting, mainly in modern day Urdport had driven the remaining alive Walruses from the shores. Following a war between Denmark-Norway and Sweden, Sweden annexed Norway in 1814. [2]Easway, which had supported the Napoleonic side including Denmark and Norway during this war to protect the maritime trade of the Pomors, and had historically supported the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth against Sweden during the 17th century Deluge, was thus illegally annexed in 1821 by the direction of Sweden-Norway king Karl Johan and Norwegian state minister Thomas Fasting. The latter of which was subsequently impeached by the Norwegian supreme court for his under-the-table dealing.[3]
The brief 1821 war, ending with the Battle of Realmsedge, led to the exodus of the ethnic Ezaari and those affiliated with its ruling houses. These Easwegians fled to their largest state ally at the time, Great Britain and Ireland. Norwegians of the Commonwealth assimilated into local society, and the Pomors trade began to cool down. The 1925 Spitsbergen Treaty allowed Easwegians the right of return to Svalbard, although this was short-lived with the outbreak of WW2 and the German-occupation of Svalbard leading to mass evacuations. In 2015, an Easwegian national movement began to form to to seek the independence of the peoples of the Barents Region, led by Emizerri. This was operated through an international underground forum known as the Cyber Council Easwegian Alliance.
References
- ↑ https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fwUCOMwqQkyj4v842wREuKrs_3XP4GjRPdI0O7WPzA0/edit?usp=sharing
- ↑ Rasmus Glenthøj; Morten Nordhagen Ottosen (14 January 2014). Experiences of War and Nationality in Denmark and Norway, 1807–1815. https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=dy3FAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA239&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q&f=false Palgrave Macmillan. p. 239. ISBN 978-1-137-31389-8.
- ↑ ^ «Saken mot statsråd og kommandør Fasting 1821» hos Nettressurser.no Statsforfatningen i Norge, 10 utgave, Riksrettpraksis. (Av Johs. Andenæs og Arne Fliflet. ISBN 978-82-15-00989-6)