What do you know about the distinct regions that are not found on ordinary maps - such as Manchuria, Tibet, South India, Siberia, Kurdistan, East Spain, Scotland, and California?
What do you know about the distinct regions that are not found on ordinary maps - such as Manchuria, Tibet, South India...
i know LA is full of oil rigs
but those are well known regions and on maps?
>Siberia
I live here.
Transoxiana is consistently one of the most difficult regions in the world to conquer and hold
I mean border-wise. They are not 'represented. And that often does make them a little less known.
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(You)
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Well I live right here in Manchuria. Better than the chink part for sure.
How so? Why's that?
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East Spain? That’s literally were 90% of tourists go
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Same
Vladivostok, Nakhodka, Ussuriysk?
Do you mean like state-less nations?
Yes, pretty much. Or just places that don't fit the usual notions about the states they're part of.
>Or just places that don't fit the usual notions about the states they're part of
Right then, in Europe, that pretty much goes for any region, in any country that is not the capital, but I'll post a few examples that are either a distinct nation of their own, or have some kind of active seperatist movement atm:
>Bavaria
>Sorbia
>South-Tyrol
>Wallonia
>Flanders
>Catalonia
>Samiland/Lapland
>Brittany
>Transylvania
>Siebenburgen
Thanks. Whats particularly noteworthy about some of them, that you can say?
And sometimes it's a group of them, like Flanders and Wallonia which you lasted, I think. South India has several non-Hindi peoples numbering in the tens or one hundred of millions.
>Bavaria
An almost ancient German kingdom, and historicly one of the biggest, and most powerful German realms, before unification in 1872.
It is the heart and soul of the German beer culture, and I think pretty much all of the stereotypical German clothing and customs originate from there.
>Sorbia
The Sorbians are a west-Slavic minority group south of Berlin. They've pretty much lived there since the beginning of recorded history
>South-Tyrol
They're Italian-born Austrians
>Catalonia
This is what I believe you really mean by east Spain
>Samiland/Lapland
The indegnious people of the northern half of the Scandinavian penninsula, northern Finland, and the Kola penninsula.
>Brittany
Frenchified celts
>Transylvania
In the middle of Romania, there are large enclaves of Hungarians, living in Hungarian towns, speaking Hungarian, and practicing Hungarian culture. Toghether with Siebenburgen, they became a part of Romania after Austria-Hungary lost WW1.
>Siebenburgen
Also in the Transylvanan mountains, the nether-Saxon people in Siebenburgen are decendants of Germans immigrating to areas in Transylvania during the time of the Austro-Hungarian empire. They speak their own wierd dialect of German that is almost incomprehensable to anyone else.
Not LA a bit north towards Bakersfield
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east spain is just touristland
i dont like it there
and valencians are awful human beings in general
In Spain would be the west part, Extremadura and Leon. Dehesas (pic related) filled with farmers, cattle, iberian pigs, and some wild animals like deers, boars and lynx. it's rural as fuck but they have the best pork (and pork related charcuterie) in the world.