Mannifax
From Xinda
Revision as of 22:06, 21 July 2007
The Republic of Mannifax | |
| |
National Flag | Coat of Arms |
Motto | A New Homeland |
Region | Liberalia |
Capital | Fordham |
Largest City | Williamsburg |
Official Language(s) | English, French |
Government - President - Vice President | Parliamentary Federal Republic Edmund Ryland Bradford Alessa Victoria Saporto |
Population - Total | 2007 estimate 570,000,000 |
Currency | Dinary (MXDY) |
GDP - Total - Per capita | 2007 estimate $4,953,952,856,006 $8,691 |
National animal - Common name | Cervus canadensis Elk |
Internet TLD | .mx |
Calling Code | +52 |
Mannifax, officially The Republic of Mannifax, is a country located in Liberalia. Mannifax is a parliamentary federal republic of sixteen provinces. The capital city and seat of government is Fordham. Mannifax's national animal is the Elk, which frolics freely in the nation's many lush forests, and its currency is the Dinary.
Mannifax has been a member of the United Nations since 17 July 2007.
Contents |
History
Prehistory
Age of Settlement
House of Royaume
The Channel War
The Hartford Revolution
The Republic
21st Century
Government
Law
Federal level
State level
Administrative divisions
Geography and climate
Economy
Infrastructure
Demography
Religion
Mannifax is a secular country where freedom of thought and of religion is preserved, in virtue of the 1842 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. The Republic is based on the principle of laïcité, that is of freedom of religion (including of agnosticism and atheism) enforced by the 1872 Mannish law on the separation of church and state. Roman Catholicism is no longer considered a state religion, as it was before the Revolution of the early 19th Century.
The Republic of Mannifax has one of the least religious populations in the International Democratic Union. According to the 2007 census, 57% of the country is agnostic, atheist, non-believer or no-organized believer, 29% Roman Catholic, 9% Jewish, 4% Hindu and 1% Muslim. The National Post reports that 12 percent of Mannish citizens regularly attend religious services.