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The first written records of the history of the modern day area that is the Kingdom of Helvore are dated from the mid Iron Age. What is now Helvore historically consisted of several major ethno-linguistic groups, often identified by anthropologists as part of the Celtic culture group, (specifically the Aele-la Téne Culture) identified by the Romans broadly as 'Magna Aelvorae'. Roman documentation dating back to the 2nd century BC notes the three major ethnic and socio-linguistic groups of the Helvoran Peninsular: the Aelvors, Bykelai, and Rhythii, from the south, north-west, and north of the peninsular respectively. The Aelvors, being the culture group which would later become the Kingdom of Helvore, are the best documented and attested group of the three, and spoke what is now known as th

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  • History of Helvore
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  • The first written records of the history of the modern day area that is the Kingdom of Helvore are dated from the mid Iron Age. What is now Helvore historically consisted of several major ethno-linguistic groups, often identified by anthropologists as part of the Celtic culture group, (specifically the Aele-la Téne Culture) identified by the Romans broadly as 'Magna Aelvorae'. Roman documentation dating back to the 2nd century BC notes the three major ethnic and socio-linguistic groups of the Helvoran Peninsular: the Aelvors, Bykelai, and Rhythii, from the south, north-west, and north of the peninsular respectively. The Aelvors, being the culture group which would later become the Kingdom of Helvore, are the best documented and attested group of the three, and spoke what is now known as th
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abstract
  • The first written records of the history of the modern day area that is the Kingdom of Helvore are dated from the mid Iron Age. What is now Helvore historically consisted of several major ethno-linguistic groups, often identified by anthropologists as part of the Celtic culture group, (specifically the Aele-la Téne Culture) identified by the Romans broadly as 'Magna Aelvorae'. Roman documentation dating back to the 2nd century BC notes the three major ethnic and socio-linguistic groups of the Helvoran Peninsular: the Aelvors, Bykelai, and Rhythii, from the south, north-west, and north of the peninsular respectively. The Aelvors, being the culture group which would later become the Kingdom of Helvore, are the best documented and attested group of the three, and spoke what is now known as the Proto-Aeletic Langauge, of which Helvoran would later descend. Following the annexation of most of the Helvoran peninsular (with the exception of the Bykalic Region in the north-west) by the Roman Empire in around 25 CE, much of the traditional Aeletic cultures of Helvore were unified into two distinct categories, the southern Romo-Aelvoran and northern Romo-Rhythian Culture, which began to take on many of the linguistic and social aspects of early Medieval Helvore. With the evacuation of the peninsular by the Roman Empire in the late 5th century, Helvore entered a period of fragmentation into numerous small, politically unstable kingdoms throughout the Dark Ages. After centuries of relative chaos and very little social progression, Richarde of Aelvore, through numerous diplomatic arrangements, formed the Aelvoran Union of Kings, effectively unifying several smaller, eastern Helvoran kingdoms into one large political state. In the following decades, the Union would use both political and militaristic tactics to eventually unify much of the Helvoran Peninsular into what became the Kingdom of Helvore, which was officially declared on the 17th of July, 950 CE. Throughout the middle ages, Helvore would continue to assimilate its growing cultural and national identity as it ever-expanded to occupy most of the Helvoran peninsular. With the rise of Protestantism in Germany and the rest of Europe throughout the early 16th Century, Helvore saw a period of religious and political conflict that resulted in the establishment of the Soliterist Church, a denomination of Christianity initially created by St. Solitaire de Crimse, in around 1549. By the turn of the 17th Century, Helvore had experienced a Renaissance and was becoming an important player in European politics, having established one of the largest continental European Empires - the First Helvoran Empire. Following its collapse in the mid 17th Century, Helvore entered a period of great civil and political unrest which eventuated in the Helvoran Revolution and Civil War between 1666 to 1675. During this period, Helvore underwent a great deal of socio-political change, and would fundamentally go on to instigate many of the events that would happen throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. With the enlightenment dawning in Europe at the beginning of the 18th Century, Helvore experienced a resurgence in their political power with the Second Franco-Helvoran War, which itself is believed to be one of the fundamental causes of the French Revolution from 1789 to 1799. Following the French Revolution, Helvore came under the sphere of influence of Napoleon Boneparte, who, between 1804 and 1805, managed to annex much of Helvore. Following the unsuccessful Fourth Coalition against Napoleon, Helvore entered the 'Decade of Darkness' between 1804 and 1815, wherein Helvore experienced the Third Helvoran Revolution, Third Franco-Helvoran War, and led the failed Fifth Coalition against France. Following a decade of great turmoil and civic unrest, the Sixth Coalition eventually defeated Napolean at Waterloo, and thus liberated Helvore from French occupation with his banishment. The rest of the 19th century brought industrialisation and colonialism to Helvore, with the establishment of both the Third Helvoran Empire and the Franco-Helvoran Empire as a result of the Treaty of Paris in April, 1827. With the fall of the Empire in early 1872, Helvore and France divided their colonial and continental Empire, leading to half a century of relative peace in the Helvoran belle époque of 1872 to 1914. The early 20th century brought two world wars and the Mastenburgian Revolution of 1901, which resulted in Helvore's severe economic recession and turmoil of the early 1950s. After a period of rapid economic growth and decolonization in the late 1950s and 60s, Helvore became the state it is today. Since World War II Helvore has been a permanent member of the UN Security Council and NATO, despite some modern controversy occurring with issues in both organisations. Helvore, along with France, played an important role in the unification of the European Union and the peaceful resolution of conflict in Mastenburg following the Ross-Thyrburg Conflicts of the early 1990s. Helvore today remains a strong economic, cultural, and political power in both Europe and the world in the 21st century.
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