Alternative History
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Worker's Republic of Comancheria
Arbeiterrepublik Komankerien
Timeline: An Honorable Retelling
Comancheria Flag AHR State Arms of Texas
Flag Coat of arms
Motto: 
Friendship
Anthem: 
The Yellow Rose of Comancheria
Location of Comancheria (An Honorable Retelling) 2
Location of Comancheria (green)
Capital
(and largest city)
Lyndon Baines Johnson City
Other cities Yanaguana, Karl-Marx-Stadt, Atoyac, Wahkoh, Fort Johnson
Official languages Nahuatl, German, Comanche
Regional languages Apache, Navajo, Plains Japanese, French, English
Religion State Atheism (official)


Atheism (46%)

Islam (34%)

Waldensianism (15%)


Other (5%)
Government Unitary one-party socialist republic
 -  President Sema Momozxochitl
 -  Premier of the Communist Party of Teycha Bill White
Establishment
 -  Independence from the Empire of Mexica June 9, 1836 
 -  Independence from the Sovereign States of Columbia August 20, 1943 
Population
 -  2024 estimate 47,382,293 
Drives on the right

Comancheria (German: Komankerien), officially the Worker’s Republic of Comancheria (German: Arbeiterrepublik Komankerien) is a nation located in Columbia. It is bordered by Mexica to the south, Afrocolumbia to the east, and the United States to the north. After its independence from the Sovereign States of Columbia, Comancheria became one of the few nations in the New World to be under a socialist government.

Home to various indigenous peoples and unique pre-colonial languages, Comancheria became a Province of the Córdoban-led Empire of Mexica around the 17th century. In 1820, Columbian settlers in Northern Mexica started the Comancheria revolt in order to get independence from the Empire, later resulting in the First Columbian War, leading to the annexation of the territory by the U.S. The Second Columbian War ended with Comancheria once again nominated now by the Grand Confederation. Opposition to the Bilbo regime and self-governance desires led to the independence of the nation in 1943.

The capital of the nation is Lyndon Baines Johnson City, named after the patriot and first Chairman of the nation Lyndon Baines Johnson.

Etymology[]

The term "Comancheria" is derived from the Comanche term "Nʉmʉnʉʉ Sookobitʉ" which literally translates to "Comanche land." At the time of European exploration of what is now the territory of the nation, the Comanche were the dominant power of the region, running a massively lucrative and expansive trade empire. Due to their presence and prominence in the zone, the name ultimately stuck in maps and descriptions of the region.

History[]

Pre-European settlement (pre-1570)[]

Before European arrival in Comancheria, a great amount of peoples and cultures inhabited the modern-day territory, but none of them were able to establish dominance over the rest. Cultures like the Anasazi and the so-called "Mound Builders" expanded to some of the Comancherian land.

During the Pilgrim Crusades, the Caddo people had converted to Islam and forged a large empire which stretched a large swath of the Mississippi river basin, including eastern Comancheria. The Caddo Sultanate was the largest power in pre-colonial Comancheria, but the Pilgrim Crusades of the 1500s would result in the devastation and decline of the sultanate, allowing for European and other indigenous powers to move into the region and assert their power.

Colonization of Comancheria (1570 - 1831)[]

German colonization (1570 - 1590)[]

Nahuatl/Mexican Colonization (1576 - 1700)[]

Arrival of the Comanche (1706 - 1817)[]

Rise of the United States and the Anglo-Comancherians (1790 - 1831)[]

State of Comancheria (1831 - 1943)[]

Comancherian War of Independence (1831-1836)[]

Bancroft

George Bancroft, Columbian general who would end up becoming president of the nation years later.

Columbian settlers started to have difficulties expanding south thanks to the dhimmi system which required taxation of non-Muslims in order to live within the lands of the Mexican Empire. Comanche-Columbian regions started to grow apart from the neighbouring Mexican-majority regions. The arrest of a prominent Columbian landowner in 1831 would spark a small revolt, that later grew larger after finally transforming into the Comancherian War of Independence. Mexica initially had the upper hand in the conflict, but Comancherians counted with the advice of various Columbian generals and commanders, while the Mexican army of the zone was poorly trained soldiers and used some outdated equipment, leading to key victories in favor of the revolutionaries. A peace treaty that recognized the independence of the Comanche was signed in 1836, only leading to the recently-formed Comancheria being annexed by the United States only days after the independence.

U.S. State of Comancheria (1836 - 1848)[]

Confederate State of Comancheria (1848 - 1943)[]

Worker's Republic of Comancheria (1943 - present)[]

Johnson Chairmanship + the Golden Age of Comancheria (1943 - 1980)[]

Strasser Comancheria + the "lost decade" (1981 - 1990)[]

Reforms + modern Comancheria (1990 - present)[]

Government and politics[]

Subdivisions[]

Comancheria is subdivided into 18 regions.

Regions
Atoyac
Brave River
Central Comancheria
Clark
Comancheria
Fannin
Jefferson
Liberty
Maricopa
Milam
Nacogdoches
New Mexica
Red River
Robertson
Sequoyah
Tonkawa
Yanaguana
Young

Demographics[]

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