Forum:Territory application/UL10-08
| File:Noun Project Signature icon 619326 cc.svg | Territory ID and proposed name |
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| The Territory ID (from OpenGeofiction:Territories, e.g. AR123a) and proposed name of the country |
- UL 10-08 - Wesfolk
- I would like to request UL 10-08. I will divide it into three or four counties.
| File:Noun Project Map icon 1463108.svg | Physical geography |
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| An overview of climate, topography and landscape of the country. With the exception of Beginner territories, you should always create a sketch map to illustrate & explain your plans. You can add a link to this (hosted on imgBB, Postimages or similar, but not imgur.com) |
Much of this area consists of hilly farmland but with large moors inland towards the west and low-lying flat land near parts of the northern coast. There are extensive beaches : those on the west are more exposed to strong southwesterly and westerly winds while the eastern side is more sheltered. In some areas, particularly on the moors, there were large tin and copper deposits but these have been mostly exhausted after centuries of mining.
| File:Invest - The Noun Project.svg | Human geography |
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| A brief description of the territory demographics, economic development, land occupation, infrastructure and mapping style |
The total population of the area will be between 3 and 4 million.
The main economic activities of the area are farming, fishing and tourism with some light industry, but there are also one or two significant ports from which many of Ingerland's voyages of exploration and conquest set sail, and there is a major naval base. Historically, tin and copper mining and ship building were also prominent. The area is a popular retirement destination, particularly in the coastal towns and villages.
There will be three or four large cities with populations between 250 and 450 thousand, plus a number of smaller (sub-100K) cities and numerous towns and villages.
There will probably be three motorways converging in the area, one each from the north, east and south. Railways will connect all the cities to the network, with branch lines to the more significant towns.
| File:Noun Project languages icon 105908 cc.svg | History & culture |
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| A brief description of the intended culture and language |
The area was originally inhabited by the Celtic Duvnanii peoples but was conquered by invading Germanic peoples in the ? centuries. They established one of the early Germanic kingdoms which eventually united to form Ingerland in the 11th? century. Tin and copper mining was significant until the 18th century when accessible deposits became harder to find and exploit. The last mine closed in the nineteenth century. The area saw little activity from the Industrial Revolution and its more southerly ports did not grow as major trading ports to the extent that those closer to industrial areas would have done.
Celtic language and culture died out later than in other parts of Ingerland but will be evident in some place names (e.g. those ending with "combe", ... ). It is believed that the Duvnanic language was extinct by the 16th century.
I am basing this on the culture of Devon, Somerset and Dorset but not Cornwall, on the assumption that regions 98 and 99 will be the areas where a more obvious Celtic identity survives.
| File:Noun Project drawing icon 2123401.svg | Past mapping |
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| To support your request provide links to areas of OGF mapping which showcase your mapping skill. Mapping relevant to the requested theme & geography is especially useful. | |
| The {{coord}}, {{node}}, {{relation}} or {{scalehelper}} templates can optionally be used to link to the OGF map - they result in nicely formatted links. Or you can paste in a URL. |
The former
Wesmandy (now being transformed into Tircambry) contains extensive mapping but as it was in the 15th century (my original intention was to map the entire country this way and then update century by century, but this is not practical). Modern urban mapping includes the town of
Abercenlig and, in the old Tircambry, central
Caerarthen and
Porthbrenin. Porthbrenin was mapped century-by-century and is currently at c.1920.
I became inactive on OGF after an extended period of stress and changes in my life but things have now settled down and I have plenty of time to devote to the project, both to "Welshifying" UL11e (the new Tircambry) and building a southwest England-style region. I have been mapping most days since my return in April and expect to continue. If this application is successful, I'll split my time fairly evenly between Tircambry and Wesfolk.
| File:Noun Project Signature icon 619326 cc.svg | Username & date |
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| Sign and date the application by typing four tildes (~~~~) without spaces or "nowiki" tags. |
Pawl (talk) 15:39, 12 June 2023 (UTC)
| Discussion | |
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| Discussion for clarification & decision |
| File:Dash.svg | Territory application closed |
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| This looks great. Both Bixelkoven and I are on board. All I will say is that you may have to back the historical dates up a bit, but that will necessarily be part of the broader discussion of Ingerland's mappers. | |