abstract
| - Alakshak was first inhabited by North American indigenous peoples who inhabited the Artic regions of the Aleut Islands, Canada, and Greenland. For centuries, the Alakshakin people were united under similar languages and cultural spirituality that was described as an empire, according to knowledge gained from Russian expeditions in the late 1600s. According to modern predictions, the migration of the Alakshakin groups to British Columbia’s areas of Mediterranean climate opened up possibilities for maize agriculture adopted from Native American cultures; this theoretical societal evolution from the hunter-gatherer culture to an agricultural one marked the creation of a unitary Alakshakin nation as documented by Russian explorers. The Alakshakin people maintained a rich trade of cetacean biomaterial with other indigenous peoples in North America. European exploration and interaction with the Alakshakin nation in the late 17th century was first undertaken by the Tsarist Russians; the Alakshakins were described as “strong, dark-skinned bearded men, who wore animal furs and bowed to the idols”. The Russian Empire eventually unofficially claimed Alakshak as Alaska for Catherine I of Russia in 1725, and in the 1730s, a huge spread of Christian Orthodoxy occurred among the Alakshakin nation, however there were many cases of traditionalist and cultural opposition that led to violent unrests between Alakshakins and Russian Christians. Meanwhile, Novoarkhangelsk was founded in 1732 and became a center of trade between the Russian colonies and other colonial powers. Novoarchangelsk flourished in urban growth. The Aboriginals coexisted with colonials and made up the majority; almost all of them were laborers paid cheaply, and many younger Aboriginals became indentured servants. On the other hand, in British Colombia hundreds of Alakshakins were eradicated by a smallpox epidemic, but the Artic Alakshakins high energy diet from seals, whales, and other seafood provided a degree of immunization, making the Northern Alakshakins the most populous American Aboriginal group of the time. In the 1760s, the Russian colony of Alakshakin underwent a period of great Christian Enlightment, which highlighted the diminishment of traditional Alakshakin culture to one of European standards as a new generation of colonial born Alakshakins arose. Alakshakins born into the colonies were educated in Russian and the Christian religion by Orthodox churches built all over the Russian colony and they adopted the European culture of Tsarist Russia. Armed with progessive thinking that arose from education, Alakshakins began to take a greater grip in society rather than their former laborer roles. However, the lack of long-term workers brought down Russian colonial businesses. Alakshakins began their own businesses to trade with colonial powers including the Spanish, English, and French. This drastic change in societal roles prompted the Russian Empire to increase taxation among Alakshakin businesses. Alakshakins found that their businesses were being taxed more than businesses run by ethnic Russians. This led to a period of great unrest and social ethnic division between Alakshakins and Russians, lasting until the Blizzard Revolution of 1812 during the winter of 1812. The Blizzard Revolution (1812-1813) began when an ethnically-Alakshakin Orthodox priest named Kristian Makarov, inspired by the American Revolution and the idea of a democratic republic, wanted Alakshakin to unite under ethnic roots, while simultaneously adopting the Orthodox Christian religion as the national religion. His ideas gathered many political fundamentalists of Alakshakin-descent, eventually deciding upon a democratic, semi-presidential system for government with a Constitution inspired by the American Constitution. While Tsar Alexander I was busy fighting Napoleonic France, a brutal winter gave cover for Alakshakins to reclaim the Russian colonies for their own. Armed by colonial British and Spanish traders and manufacturers, Alakshakin Revolutionaries rebelled against Russian colonial rule in a minor armed conflict of few casualties. While independence was declared, the autonomy of the Great Republic of Alakshak was unrecognized by the Russian Empire. Alakshakin warships manufactured by Spanish shipbuilders successfully defended the colonies from the Tsarist fleet in March 1813 after a thunderstorm destroyed much of the Tsarist fleet, leaving the Russians starving on their own ships and outnumbered. Alakshakin remained at peace and flourished in trade with the British, Spanish, and soon the Americans throughout the 19th century, maintaining a successful industry of fishing, whaling, and mining in the North, as well as logging and agriculture in the South. Fur trading was also popular until 1890 when hunting regulations were placed in order to protect the abundancy of wildlife in Alakshak land. In 1873 Gold was discovered in Northern Alakshak prompting a Gold Rush where many foreigners came to the city of Anchorage. However due to the fact that the gold fields were simultaneously being placed under federal control to establish national parks, the Gold Rush was rather short lived as there were very few available gold mining areas, and the rough terrain made travelling ot these places very difficult. Nonetheless, the Alakshak Gold Rush was a success to the city of Anchorage, which flourished economically during the period. Prior to the American Civil War, many escaped American slaves fled to Alakshak due to the fact that racial discrimination was nearly non-existent among Alakshakin citizens. Alakshak gradually modernized with the rest of the world during the first half of the twentieth century. Alakshak suffered economically from the Great Depression in the 1930s, but returned to height during the outbreak of the WWII as Alakshak sold its abundancy of resources largely unsold throught the Great Depression to Canadian military manufacturers. Alakshak and its navy entered the Pacific theatre with the United States when Japanese forces captured the Aleut Islands of Attu and Kiska in order to construct naval bases. During the Cold War, Alakshak, a country in North America sharing a language with the Soviet Union, was largely influenced by the United States counterintelligence and security from the inside despite the declaration of Alakshak’s neutrality. In the 1970s, A number of CIA operatives were deported from Alakshakin to the United States, and the relationship between the two countries was one of skepticism. During the first decade of the twenty-first century, Alakshakin participated in the War on Terror with great public support in favor of the war’s continuation seen as a liberation of the victims of Islamic persecution of Christians in the Middle East. In the twenty-first century’s second decade, Russian Federation and Alakshak relations were on very good terms; Russian president Vladimir Putin and Alakshakin president Vladan Sobakov befriended each other. The Alakshakin republic largely supported Russian efforts in Syria and Ukraine. The Alakshak government justified and supported Pro-Russian separatist movement in Ukraine such that Alakshakin humanitarian groups donated food and water to the seperatists. Alakshakin politicians are known to have controversial views against American exceptionalism and the Pussy Riot arrests, and have accused the Obama administration of supporting a neo-Nazi regime in Ukraine.
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