| rdfs:comment
| - Han nationalism (⼒人丶ゝ二 ⼟ 韩木ゝ二, tr. garinan no hanmin) refers to nationalism among the Han people and its diaspora. Han nationalism began its roots in the late 19th century, following Sierran and allied intrusion into Han territory. Han nationalism manifested itself into the Bagohan ("renewal") reforms period during the last decade of the Li dynasty. During the Sierran colonial era, Han nationalism was greatly surpressed to turn Hans into subservient subjects of Sierra. However, this surpression ironically increased Han uneasiness, which culminated in the collapse of Han royal rule in the late thirties, and the subsequent Hanyang Declaration; which oversaw the rapid takeover of the islands by two main guerilla groups.
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| abstract
| - Han nationalism (⼒人丶ゝ二 ⼟ 韩木ゝ二, tr. garinan no hanmin) refers to nationalism among the Han people and its diaspora. Han nationalism began its roots in the late 19th century, following Sierran and allied intrusion into Han territory. Han nationalism manifested itself into the Bagohan ("renewal") reforms period during the last decade of the Li dynasty. During the Sierran colonial era, Han nationalism was greatly surpressed to turn Hans into subservient subjects of Sierra. However, this surpression ironically increased Han uneasiness, which culminated in the collapse of Han royal rule in the late thirties, and the subsequent Hanyang Declaration; which oversaw the rapid takeover of the islands by two main guerilla groups. Han nationalism was cemented as the basis of ruling ideologies of both Hani's during the North–South period. Han nationalism was shortly removed during the liberalization of the nineties, shortly after Han reunification. However, recently the Grand National Party has reinstated it as the official state ideology. Han nationalism, while it played a huge role in the Miracle on the Min River and Han successes, is often attributed as the cause of increasing xenophobia and anti–American sentiment. Racial nationalism rather than civic nationalism provides the basis of Han nationalism, with ancestry being prioritized over citizenship and allegiance. It also incorporates some elements from statolatry, glorifying the ruling Grand National Party has the only authority fit to rule the Han state.
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