Kingdom of Slovetinia

From Shipbucket Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Kingdom of Slovetinia
Königreich Slowetinien
Kraljevina Slovetinija
Flag of
Flag
Location of Slovetinia (dark green)
Location of Slovetinia (dark green)
Capital Adelsberg
Largest Laibach
Official languages German, Slovenian
Recognised regional languages Italian, Hungarian
Demonym Slovetinian
Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• Monarch
Jožef III
• Chancellor
Sabina Bogović
• President of the Senate
Klemen Kovačević
• Speaker of the National Assembly
Vida Uršič
Establishment
• Revolutions of 1848
12 January 1848 – 4 October 1849
• April Uprisings
30 April 1859
• Villafranca Armistice
12 July 1859
• Recognition by the Austrian Empire
3 October 1866 (As part of the Treaty of Vienna)
• Founding of the Senate and National Assembly
13 April 1867
• Current Constitution
27 January 1947
Area
• Total
26,236 km2 (10,130 sq mi)
Population
• 2022 estimate
7,501,396 (102nd)
• Density
286/km2 (740.7/sq mi) (51st)
GDP (PPP) 2023 estimate
• Total
$427 billion (46th)
• Per capita
$56,922 (13th)
GDP (nominal) 2023 estimate
• Total
$328 billion (41st)
• Per capita
$43,725 (21st)
Gini (2020) 23.9
low
HDI (2021) 0.919
very high · 22nd
Currency Euro ()
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
Date format dd-mm-yyyy
Drives on the right
Calling code +386
ISO 3166 code SI
Internet TLD .si

Slovetinia, officially the Kingdom of Slovetinia, is a country in Central Europe. Slovetinia is mostly mountainous, covering an area of 26,236 square kilometers with a population of 7,501,396 people. The official languages are Slovene, a South Slavic language, and German. German is the official language of the government and military, while Slovene is the most spoken at home. Slovetinia has a predominantly temperate continental climate, with some exceptions.


Etymology

History

Prior to Independence

Franco-Austrian War

Austro-Prussian War

Great War

Interwar Period

World War II

Cold War

21st Century

Geography

Government and Politics

Administrative divisions

Military

Economy

Demographics

Culture