Atlas: Commonwealth: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "'''Commonwealths''' are collections of provinces that share an identity together surpassing provincial boundaries; this identity can have various bases and/or limits. A commonwealth may range from internally maintaining great autonomy for each province (perhaps even not forming a stable entity but merely being an alliance of some form between still-independent provinces) to being extremely consolidated (perhaps a even single centralized government ma..."
 
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'''Commonwealths''' are collections of [[Atlas: Province|provinces]] that share an identity together surpassing provincial boundaries; this identity can have various bases and/or limits.
'''Commonwealths''' are collections of [[Atlas: Province|provinces]] that share an identity together surpassing provincial boundaries; this identity can have various bases and/or limits.


A commonwealth may range from internally maintaining great autonomy for each province (perhaps even not forming a stable entity but merely being an alliance of some form between still-independent provinces) to being extremely consolidated (perhaps a even single centralized government managing several different provinces and [[Lorebook: People|people(s)]]).
A commonwealth may range from internally maintaining great autonomy for each province (perhaps even not forming a stable entity but merely being an alliance of some form between still-independent provinces) to being extremely consolidated (perhaps even a single centralized government managing several different provinces and [[Lorebook: People|people(s)]]).


[[Category: Atlas]] [[Category: Atlas (Commonwealths)]]
[[Category: Atlas]] [[Category: Atlas (Commonwealths)]]

Latest revision as of 04:45, 12 June 2025

Commonwealths are collections of provinces that share an identity together surpassing provincial boundaries; this identity can have various bases and/or limits.

A commonwealth may range from internally maintaining great autonomy for each province (perhaps even not forming a stable entity but merely being an alliance of some form between still-independent provinces) to being extremely consolidated (perhaps even a single centralized government managing several different provinces and people(s)).