Shangqing Tianguo

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The '''Shangqing Tianguo''' is a state in central China. It borders the [[Qing Empire]] in the north and east, [[Allgemeine Ostasiatische Gesellschaft]] to the southeast, the [[Yunnan Clique]] to the south and the [[Xibei San Ma]] warlords' demesne in the west.
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The '''Shangqing Tianguo''' is a state in central China. It borders the [[Qing Empire]] in the north and east, [[Allgemeine Ostasiatische Gesellschaft]] to the southeast, the [[Yunnan Clique]] to the south and the [[Xibei Lianbang Yiyuan]] warlords' demesne in the west.
    
    
== History ==
== History ==
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The Shangqing Tianguo (english: ''The Pure Kingdom Upon the Heavens'') is a theocratic revolutionary state founded by [[Zhang Tianran]] and his religious movement [[I-Kuan Tao]] (english: ''The Path of Consistence''), it is also considered the "spiritual successor" of the Taiping Tianguo, the failed rebellion attempt against the [[Qing Empire]] in the 1850s-60s. The State is controlled by the Great Teacher, position held the founder of the I-Kuan Tao, and his second-in-command woman and wife, [[Sun Sunzhen]]. The I-Kuan Tao combines Taoist, Confucianist and Buddhist concepts and philosophy with western religion's, specially Christianism and Islam, and like the latter two, is monotheistic.  
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The Shangqing Tianguo (English: ''The Pure Kingdom Upon the Heavens'') is a theocratic revolutionary state founded by [[Zhang Tianran]] and his religious movement, [[I-Kuan Tao]] (English: ''The Path of Consistence''). It is considered the spiritual successor of the Taiping Tianguo--an ill-fated rebellion against the [[Qing Empire]] in the 1850s-60s. The state is controlled by the Great Teacher, a position held by the Patriarch of the I-Kuan Tao. His wife, [[Sun Sunzhen]] serves as his second in command. The I-Kuan Tao is a monotheistic religion that borrows its core beliefs from Christianity and Islam, and the philosophical teachings of Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism.
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This state was founded following the [[Qing Empire#Warlord era|period of fights and warlordism]] in which China plunged into in the mid-20s when the people saw the none of the competing warlord was worthy of holding the mandate of heaven. Moved by [[Lu Zhongyi]] and his charismatic speeches about a united China ruled only by Chinese people, a powerful middle kingdom, a Kingdom over the heavens, these people rallied to his cause, and over a couple of years, his little cult grew to a powerful faction to be considered, with special strength in the mountains of central China, in the Shaanxi province. In 1924, they successfully revolted against the government, seizing the Shaanxi province, implemented a theocratic, but benevolent, government and compared to the current government, liberal and with a modern bureaucracy under the leadership of [[Lu Zhongyi]].  
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The Tianguo was founded during a tumultuous period of [[Qing Empire#Warlord era|civil unrest in the 1920s]]. China was divided by several competing warlord cliques, none of whom could adequately prove themselves worthy of the Mandate from Heaven. The disillusioned Chinese people were inspired by the charismatic demagogue and 17th Patriarch of the I-Kuan Tao cult, [[Lu Zhongyi]]. Lu spoke of a unified China, once again a great power; truly deserving of the name "Middle Kingdom." Most importantly, however, he proclaimed that China would be for the Chinese, and the foreign devils and their running dogs would be expelled once and for all! His words rallied all those who heard them to his cause, and within a few years' time, the ranks of his cult had grown to the point that it was able to compete with more established cliques.  
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Lu died in 1925 but his replacer had already been chosen: the new "Great Teacher" was [[Zhang Tianran]]. Zhang wanted to make the newly formed nation a modern nation and then proceed to to industrialize the province and founded an army which he named ''Millenarian Movement Army'' and entitled Fang Zhimin, a known military commander and faithful follower of the I-Kuan Tao, as ''Commander of the great armies of heaven'', who proceed to heavily fortify the province, successfully resisting the [[Qing Empire#Restoration|attacks of the German armies]]. Now, in 1936, after gathering a great army and followers and industrializing and modernizing his state, Zhang Tianran is ready to declare a "Heavenly Crusade", to expel the foreign, the corrupt and the impure from the Middle Kingdom. Will this campaign be successful, will China really be the Empire on top of the heaven that he proclaims? Or will he fade on the shadows of history, as another failed revolutionary?
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In 1924, Lu Zhongyi successfully broke free of the unstable de jure government by seizing the Shaanxi province and proclaiming the mountains of central China to be the domain of the Shangqing Tianguo. Lu then set about establishing a benevolent theocracy with a modern, centralized bureaucracy. Although Lu's government was largely authoritarian, it was far more stable and (some argue) more enlightened than the German-backed Qing government to the East.
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Lu would never see his dream of a unified China come to fruition. He passed away in 1925, leaving the position of Great Teacher to [[Zhang Tianran]]. Zhang understood that if he was to unify China under the I-Kuan Tao, he would have to stand up to the warlord cliques and possibly major foreign powers. To make this possible, he would have to modernize and industrialize the Shaanxi province. Over the next decade, Zhang ordered the construction of several roads, railways, and factories. He also founded the ''Millenarian Movement Army'' and appointed Fang Zhimin--a respected military commander and loyal student of the I-Kuan Tao--as his supreme commander.
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Under Fang's watchful eye, the Millenarian Movement Army heavily fortified the mountains. The heavy fortifications combined with the natural defensive advantage of mountain ranges allowed the Millenarians to successfully repel a [[Qing Empire#Restoration|grand offensive by the German Expeditionary Force]], securing Shangqing Tianguo's independence, at least for the time being. As a new year dawns upon the word, the modernization program of the Shangqing has born fruit, and Zhang is ready to declare a holy crusade against the non-believers and foreign intruders. Will the Pure Kingdom Under Heaven successfully unify all of China under one ruler? Will China be once again to the Chinese? Will the Germans and Japanese, hungrily clinging to their ill-gotten gains, be driven out once and for all? Only time will tell.
== Government ==
== Government ==
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The power is distributed in a three scales pyramidal, but dynamic, style. First there's the '''Great Teacher''', who holds the ultimate decision on all what goes on in the country. Then there are the different bureaus, of industry, of agriculture, etc. who hold monthly reunions with a council of citizens randomly elected every month, as the government is populist it always needs to hear the will of the people. And then there's the citizens, who also have, in theory, power to control everything that goes on on the country, exposing what needs to be changed, or if taxes are to be lowered to the different bureaus.  
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Shangqing Tianguo's government resembles a modified form of centralized democracy, a concept first proposed by an ill-fated Russian idealist. Authority is organized in the form of a three-tiered pyramid. The first and highest tier is occupied by the Great Teacher himself, Ziang Tianran, and his wife. They handle the most important national matters, hear appeals and petitions, and have the power to make binding, arbitrary decisions over matters brought to them.  
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The second tier is occupied by a diverse array of bureaus, each specializing in a political matter (i.e. industry, agriculture). Every month, each bureau holds a meeting, assembling a panel of randomly-selected citizens to discuss day to day matters and address problems brought to their attention by the citizenry. They are also responsible for forwarding proposals and appeals to the Great Teacher. The third and lowest tier is occupied by the citizens themselves. Theoretically, the citizens have broad access to political participation; they brief their fellow citizens on lesser matters, create the petitions to be sent to the Great Teacher for consideration, and can allocate national funds to bureaus by popular vote.
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The only thing that the government demands in exchange is complete loyalty to the country and to the I-kuan Tao. This means, that in time of war, every men and women must be enlisted onto the army (normally, they do so zealously). Men and women are respected equal, and unlike the repressive [[Qing Empire|Qing government]], military men can wear the hair as they like and not the traditional Manchu hairstyle.
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In exchange for populist access to the government, citizens are expected to dedicate their lives to the I-kuan Tao and the future of the Shangqing Tianguo. This includes, but is not limited to, conscription of all able-bodied men and women in times of war (normally, this is not an issue, as the citizens of Shangqing Tianguo are fanatically loyal to the Great Teacher). Women enjoy much of the same privileges afforded to men, both as civilians and as soldiers, which makes the Shangqing Tianguo a unique faction among the Chinese states. Unlike the repressive [[Qing Empire|Qing government]], soldiers are permitted to wear their hair as they wish, instead of being restricted to the traditional Manchu hairstyle.
== Military ==
== Military ==
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Officially the "Heavenly Host of the Pure Kingdom" (In Chinese: Qingguo Tianjun), more commonly known as '''Millenarian Movement Army''', is as of 1936, a rudimentary and outdated, but zealous and determined in their goals, army. Composed only of a few professional soldiers, the rest are poorly armed, but courageous militias that will fight to the end for their Great Teacher. At the moment, the Shanqing Tianguo has not enough resources to build or buy planes, and is a landlocked country, therefore it has neither navy or air force.  
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The Qingguo Tianjun (English: "Heavenly Host of the Pure Kingdom"), known colloquially as the Millenarian Movement Army, is rudimentary and obsolete both in equipment and tactics. Only a few professional soldiers form its ranks; the rest are poorly-trained, but fanatically loyal militias. Although they are armed with Weltkrieg-era small arms, and possess neither armor nor artillery, they are estimated to be better equipped than the Ma and Yunnan Cliques neighboring them. As of this writing, Shangqing Tianguo has no air force to speak of, due largely in part to their lack of the materials and facilities necessary to construct planes.
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Fang Zhimin, a well known hero of the 1924 revolution and a great strategic mind, is ''Commander of the great hosts of heaven'', that is equivalent to a Supreme Commander of the army and of the land forces in a Western army. There's little information on who are the Supreme commanders of air and sea.
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The Millenarian Movement Army is currently led by Commander Fang Zhimin, who earned much respect and prestige after leading the successful defense against the German-backed Qing during the civil war. Despite his army's small size and poor equipment, he knows how to use the devotion of his soldiers to full effect, enabling him to hold his own against a minor power.
[[Category:Countries]] [[Category:Asian countries]] [[Category:Chinese-related topics]]
[[Category:Countries]] [[Category:Asian countries]] [[Category:Chinese-related topics]]

Current revision as of 09:45, 3 November 2012

丄清天国
Shangqing Tianguo
The Pure Kingdom Upon the Heavens
Shangqing-1.gif


Flag of the Shangqing Tianguo

Motto
Gong qingguo Cheng tianchou
(Solidify our Pure Kingdom, Underneath the aegis of heaven,!
)
Anthem
March of the believers
Official Language Chinese
Capital Xa'an (provisional)
Head of State Great Teacher Zhang Tianran
Head of government Sun Sunzhen
Establishment
  - Shixaan Heavenly revolution

 18 December 1924
Government Theocratic state
Currency Yuan (de facto)
Population Unknown (The cult grows in numbers every day)

The Shangqing Tianguo is a state in central China. It borders the Qing Empire in the north and east, Allgemeine Ostasiatische Gesellschaft to the southeast, the Yunnan Clique to the south and the Xibei Lianbang Yiyuan warlords' demesne in the west.

History

The Shangqing Tianguo (English: The Pure Kingdom Upon the Heavens) is a theocratic revolutionary state founded by Zhang Tianran and his religious movement, I-Kuan Tao (English: The Path of Consistence). It is considered the spiritual successor of the Taiping Tianguo--an ill-fated rebellion against the Qing Empire in the 1850s-60s. The state is controlled by the Great Teacher, a position held by the Patriarch of the I-Kuan Tao. His wife, Sun Sunzhen serves as his second in command. The I-Kuan Tao is a monotheistic religion that borrows its core beliefs from Christianity and Islam, and the philosophical teachings of Taoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism.

The Tianguo was founded during a tumultuous period of civil unrest in the 1920s. China was divided by several competing warlord cliques, none of whom could adequately prove themselves worthy of the Mandate from Heaven. The disillusioned Chinese people were inspired by the charismatic demagogue and 17th Patriarch of the I-Kuan Tao cult, Lu Zhongyi. Lu spoke of a unified China, once again a great power; truly deserving of the name "Middle Kingdom." Most importantly, however, he proclaimed that China would be for the Chinese, and the foreign devils and their running dogs would be expelled once and for all! His words rallied all those who heard them to his cause, and within a few years' time, the ranks of his cult had grown to the point that it was able to compete with more established cliques.

In 1924, Lu Zhongyi successfully broke free of the unstable de jure government by seizing the Shaanxi province and proclaiming the mountains of central China to be the domain of the Shangqing Tianguo. Lu then set about establishing a benevolent theocracy with a modern, centralized bureaucracy. Although Lu's government was largely authoritarian, it was far more stable and (some argue) more enlightened than the German-backed Qing government to the East.

Lu would never see his dream of a unified China come to fruition. He passed away in 1925, leaving the position of Great Teacher to Zhang Tianran. Zhang understood that if he was to unify China under the I-Kuan Tao, he would have to stand up to the warlord cliques and possibly major foreign powers. To make this possible, he would have to modernize and industrialize the Shaanxi province. Over the next decade, Zhang ordered the construction of several roads, railways, and factories. He also founded the Millenarian Movement Army and appointed Fang Zhimin--a respected military commander and loyal student of the I-Kuan Tao--as his supreme commander.

Under Fang's watchful eye, the Millenarian Movement Army heavily fortified the mountains. The heavy fortifications combined with the natural defensive advantage of mountain ranges allowed the Millenarians to successfully repel a grand offensive by the German Expeditionary Force, securing Shangqing Tianguo's independence, at least for the time being. As a new year dawns upon the word, the modernization program of the Shangqing has born fruit, and Zhang is ready to declare a holy crusade against the non-believers and foreign intruders. Will the Pure Kingdom Under Heaven successfully unify all of China under one ruler? Will China be once again to the Chinese? Will the Germans and Japanese, hungrily clinging to their ill-gotten gains, be driven out once and for all? Only time will tell.

Government

Shangqing Tianguo's government resembles a modified form of centralized democracy, a concept first proposed by an ill-fated Russian idealist. Authority is organized in the form of a three-tiered pyramid. The first and highest tier is occupied by the Great Teacher himself, Ziang Tianran, and his wife. They handle the most important national matters, hear appeals and petitions, and have the power to make binding, arbitrary decisions over matters brought to them.

The second tier is occupied by a diverse array of bureaus, each specializing in a political matter (i.e. industry, agriculture). Every month, each bureau holds a meeting, assembling a panel of randomly-selected citizens to discuss day to day matters and address problems brought to their attention by the citizenry. They are also responsible for forwarding proposals and appeals to the Great Teacher. The third and lowest tier is occupied by the citizens themselves. Theoretically, the citizens have broad access to political participation; they brief their fellow citizens on lesser matters, create the petitions to be sent to the Great Teacher for consideration, and can allocate national funds to bureaus by popular vote.

In exchange for populist access to the government, citizens are expected to dedicate their lives to the I-kuan Tao and the future of the Shangqing Tianguo. This includes, but is not limited to, conscription of all able-bodied men and women in times of war (normally, this is not an issue, as the citizens of Shangqing Tianguo are fanatically loyal to the Great Teacher). Women enjoy much of the same privileges afforded to men, both as civilians and as soldiers, which makes the Shangqing Tianguo a unique faction among the Chinese states. Unlike the repressive Qing government, soldiers are permitted to wear their hair as they wish, instead of being restricted to the traditional Manchu hairstyle.

Military

The Qingguo Tianjun (English: "Heavenly Host of the Pure Kingdom"), known colloquially as the Millenarian Movement Army, is rudimentary and obsolete both in equipment and tactics. Only a few professional soldiers form its ranks; the rest are poorly-trained, but fanatically loyal militias. Although they are armed with Weltkrieg-era small arms, and possess neither armor nor artillery, they are estimated to be better equipped than the Ma and Yunnan Cliques neighboring them. As of this writing, Shangqing Tianguo has no air force to speak of, due largely in part to their lack of the materials and facilities necessary to construct planes.

The Millenarian Movement Army is currently led by Commander Fang Zhimin, who earned much respect and prestige after leading the successful defense against the German-backed Qing during the civil war. Despite his army's small size and poor equipment, he knows how to use the devotion of his soldiers to full effect, enabling him to hold his own against a minor power.

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