Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition/Līlasuṃghāṇa: Difference between revisions

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|+ <big>'''''Līlasuṃghāṇa'''''</big><br/>'''''Liesũḥa'''''
|+ <big>'''''Līlasuṃghāṇa'''''</big><br/>'''''Liysuṃghuṇa'''''
! scope="row" | Official name
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| ''Līlasuṃghāṇa ga ṭūmma''<br/><small>Eparchy of Līlasuṃghāṇa</small>
| ''Līlasuṃghāṇa ga nīrvaṣa''<br/><small>Eparchy of Līlasuṃghāṇa</small>
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| <small>[[Chlouvānem|Chl.]]:</small> Līlasuṃghāṇi ; Līlasuṃghānyūs<br/><small>Nan.:</small> Liesuḥãũ ; Lieli
| <small>[[Chlouvānem|Chl.]]:</small> Līlasuṃghāṇi ; Līlasuṃghānyūs<br/><small>Nan.:</small> Liysuṃghuñn ; Liɂñ
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'''Līlasuṃghāṇa''' ("[place of] singing ''nāmñē'' cubs"; [[Chlouvānem]] pronunciation: {{IPA|[ɴ̆iːɴ̆ɐsũgʱäːɳɐ]}}; Līlasuṃghāṇi vernacular: ''Liesũḥa'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iə̯ʃũxɑ]}}; popularly shortened to <small>(Chl.)</small> ''Līlah'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆iːɴ̆ɐɦ]}} or <small>(vern.)</small> ''Liela'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iə̯ɴ̆ɑ]}}) is the capital of the [[Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition|Chlouvānem Inquisition]], the holy city of the ''[[Verse:Yunyalīlta|Yunyalīlta]]'', an ''eparchy'' (Chl.: ''ṭūmma'') within the diocese of ''Nanašīrama'', which it is also the episcopal seat of, and the largest city on [[Verse:Calémere|Calémere]], even though it is not, administratively, a single city.
'''Līlasuṃghāṇa''' ("[place of] singing ''nāmñē'' cubs"; [[Chlouvānem]] pronunciation: {{IPA|[ɴ̆iːɴ̆ɐsũgʱäːɳɐ]}}; Līlasuṃghāṇi vernacular: ''Liysuṃghuṇa'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆ii̯ʃỹˈɡʱyːɳɐ]}}; popularly shortened to <small>(Chl.)</small> ''Līlah'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆iːɴ̆ɐɦ]}} or <small>(vern.)</small> ''Liɂ'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆iɁ]}}) is the capital of the [[Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition|Chlouvānem Inquisition]], the holy city of the ''[[Verse:Yunyalīlta|Yunyalīlta]]'', an ''eparchy'' (Chl.: ''nīrvaṣa'') within the diocese of ''Nanašīrama'', which it is also the episcopal seat of, and the largest city on [[Verse:Calémere|Calémere]], even though it is not, administratively, a single city.


Līlasuṃghāṇa lies on the southeastern shore of Lake Lūlunīkam (an inlet of the Jahībušanī sea) in the Jade Coast, with most of the eparchy's area extending south along the southern branch of the Lake, formed by the clearwater Lanamilūki river coming from the wetlands and [[w:Várzea forest|várzeas]] of Talæñoya. Most of the area where the present-day core sectors of Līlasuṃghāṇa lie were formerly a swampland where the Ēmīlumi river ("river of tigers"), the Talitanah river ("cocoa river"), and the Rajālyāti river ("silver-black river") - all three blackwater - reach Lake Lūlunīkam. This former swamp, nestled between low forested hills and the shore, was mostly drained through centuries and is now one of the most densely populated pieces of land on Calémere. Despite lying just south of the 15th parallel north, Līlasuṃghāṇa has an equatorial rainforest climate with constant rainfall throughout the year and no distinct seasons.
Līlasuṃghāṇa lies on the southeastern shore of Lake Lūlunīkam (an inlet of the Jahībušanī sea) in the Jade Coast, with most of the eparchy's area extending south along the southern branch of the Lake, formed by the clearwater Lanamilūki river coming from the wetlands and [[w:Várzea forest|várzeas]] of Talæñoya. Most of the area where the present-day core sectors of Līlasuṃghāṇa lie were formerly a swampland where the Ēmīlumi river ("river of tigers"), the Talitanah river ("cocoa river"), and the Rajālyāti river ("silver-black river") - all three blackwater - reach Lake Lūlunīkam. This former swamp, nestled between low forested hills and the shore, was mostly drained through centuries and is now one of the most densely populated pieces of land on Calémere. Despite lying just south of the 15th parallel north, Līlasuṃghāṇa has an equatorial rainforest climate with constant rainfall throughout the year and no distinct seasons.
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The name of Līlasuṃghāṇa predates the city, and is a bahuvrihi compound of ''līlas'' - the name (nowadays archaic) of cubs of ''nāmñē'', a tropical seal living along most of the Inquisition's tropical coasts - and ''suṃghāṇa'', meaning "melody". The name thus means "melody of nāmñē cubs", intended as "the place where nāmñē cubs sing melodies".
The name of Līlasuṃghāṇa predates the city, and is a bahuvrihi compound of ''līlas'' - the name (nowadays archaic) of cubs of ''nāmñē'', a tropical seal living along most of the Inquisition's tropical coasts - and ''suṃghāṇa'', meaning "melody". The name thus means "melody of nāmñē cubs", intended as "the place where nāmñē cubs sing melodies".


An inhabitant of the city is referred to as ''Līlasuṃghāṇi'' or, more formally, ''Līlasuṃghānyūs''. In the vernacular, the demonym is ''Liesuḥãũ'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iə̯ʃuxɑ̃ʊ̯̃]}}. The vernacular-derived form ''Lieli'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iə̯ɴ̆i]}}, rendered as ''Līyali'' in Chlouvānem, is commonly used both in the vernacular and in Chlouvānem, albeit only informally.
An inhabitant of the city is referred to as ''Līlasuṃghāṇi'' or, more formally, ''Līlasuṃghānyūs''. In the vernacular, the demonym is ''Liysuṃghuñn'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆ii̯ʃỹˈɡʱyɲ]}}. The vernacular-derived form ''Liɂñ'' {{IPA|[ɴ̆iɁɲ]}}, rendered as ''Liɂña'' in Chlouvānem, is commonly used both in the vernacular and in Chlouvānem, albeit only informally.


In foreign languages, it is mostly known by transliterations of the Chlouvānem name ([[Qualdomelic]]: ''Lilasunggana'', [[Skyrdagor]]: ''Ninaszungana'', [[Nordulaki]]: ''Ninasungana'', [[Cerian]]: ''Nínasungána'', [[Holenagic]]: ''Ngingasunggana''), but in [[Brono-Fathanic]] it is commonly called "Holy City" due to it being the holiest city of the Yunyalīlta (Bronic: ''Boraosovahisy'', Fathanic: ''Brawswahes''), with the full form "Holy City of Līlasuṃghāṇa" (Bronic: ''Lilasongana boraosa ovahisy'', Fathanic: ''Liŋaseuŋgan braws wahes'') being only found in a few official reports or in lists of holy cities and places.
In foreign languages, it is mostly known by transliterations of the Chlouvānem name ([[Qualdomelic]]: ''Lilasunggana'', [[Skyrdagor]]: ''Ninaszungana'', [[Nordulaki]]: ''Ninasungana'', [[Cerian]]: ''Nínasungána'', [[Holenagic]]: ''Ngingasunggana''), but in [[Brono-Fathanic]] it is commonly called "Holy City" due to it being the holiest city of the Yunyalīlta (Bronic: ''Boraosovahisy'', Fathanic: ''Brawswahes''), with the full form "Holy City of Līlasuṃghāṇa" (Bronic: ''Lilasongana boraosa ovahisy'', Fathanic: ''Liŋaseuŋgan braws wahes'') being only found in a few official reports or in lists of holy cities and places.
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===Epithets and popular names===
===Epithets and popular names===
Common epithets and popular names include:
Common epithets and popular names include:
* ''Līlah'' (vern. ''Liela''), a shortening which is how the city is usually called in common speech;
* ''Līlah'' (vern. ''Liɂ''), a shortening which is how the city is usually called in common speech;
* ''junyāmite marta'' — the Blossoming City (a reference to its main temple, seat of the Great Inquisitor, the Blossoming Temple (''junyāmiti lārvājuṣa''))
* ''junyāmite marta'' — the Blossoming City (a reference to its main temple, seat of the Great Inquisitor, the Blossoming Temple (''junyāmiti lārvājuṣa''))
* ''brausire marta'' or ''brausamarta'' — the Holy City
* ''brausire marta'' or ''brausamarta'' — the Holy City
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The area around Lake Lūlunīkam, including the location of present-day Līlasuṃghāṇa, has been inhabited for millennia by tribes speaking languages such as Laiputaši or Old Kāṃradeši. In the early part of the 4th millennium, this area was outside the realms of the Kūṣṛmāthi civilization but in its sphere of influence. About halfway through that millennium, Lahob-speaking tribes (the Ur-Chlouvānem) settled in the area, finishing their long migration journey across the whole continent and started settling together with the local people, with common intermixing.
The area around Lake Lūlunīkam, including the location of present-day Līlasuṃghāṇa, has been inhabited for millennia by tribes speaking languages such as Laiputaši or Old Kāṃradeši. In the early part of the 4th millennium, this area was outside the realms of the Kūṣṛmāthi civilization but in its sphere of influence. About halfway through that millennium, Lahob-speaking tribes (the Ur-Chlouvānem) settled in the area, finishing their long migration journey across the whole continent and started settling together with the local people, with common intermixing.


While for many centuries there were various settlements in the swamplands and by the hills of today's Līlasuṃghāṇa, the founding of the city itself happened in 4826 (2962<sub>12</sub>) by order of Great Inquisitor Ṣrāvamaili ga Kālomitāvi ''Dalaigana'', aiming to build the holiest city the world had ever seen. The center of this settlement was on a bigger hammock in the swamp, not far from the Talitanah river and about three kilometers upstream from the lakeside - today's Ṣrāvamaila ("clear water") sector, named after the founding Great Inquisitor's regnal name. The only access to the early city was from the Talitanah river, and a smaller settlement was built at its mouth, functioning as a gate for the city - this area has been later remodelled by land reclamation and it is now the Janaimarta ("port city") sector; many foundation-era buildings can however be seen in the ''talitanah ga maiti memāyi jarmān'' (Talitanah River Mouth Park), part of Saṃryojyam sector, and by the rest of the Saṃryojyam lakeshore. Haleikēlṭah, just opposite the Talitanah from Ṣrāvamaila, became in the following centuries an important merchant quarter.
While for many centuries there were various settlements in the swamplands and by the hills of today's Līlasuṃghāṇa, the founding of the city itself happened in 4826 (2962<sub>12</sub>) by order of Great Inquisitor Ṣrāvamaili ga Kālomitāvi ''Dalaigana'', aiming to build the holiest city the world had ever seen. The center of this settlement was on a bigger hammock in the swamp, not far from the Talitanah river and about three kilometers upstream from the lakeside - today's Ṣrāvamaila ("clear water") sector, named after the founding Great Inquisitor's regnal name. The only access to the early city was from the Talitanah river, and a smaller settlement was built at its mouth, functioning as a gate for the city - this area has been later remodelled by land reclamation and it is now the Janaimarta ("port city") sector; many foundation-era buildings can however be seen in the ''talitanah ga maiti memāyi jarmāṇa'' (Talitanah River Mouth Park), part of Saṃryojyam sector, and by the rest of the Saṃryojyam lakeshore. Haleikēlṭah, just opposite the Talitanah from Ṣrāvamaila, became in the following centuries an important merchant quarter.


Other older settlements later integrated in the main area of the city are found everywhere in the eparchy; quite noticeable, ancient, and near the central area, are the former lakeside village of Kānuṣāṭham (part of Lūṣyambādhi sector, northeast of the Inquisitorial Palace) and the "village of Huneidauṣa", today only a small, pedestrian area in the center of the eponymous sector, southeast of the Inquisitorial Palace. Such villages were often founded after the city itself, as farming settlements in the swamp that was being drained in order to support further growth of the city.
Other older settlements later integrated in the main area of the city are found everywhere in the eparchy; quite noticeable, ancient, and near the central area, are the former lakeside village of Kānuṣāṭham (part of Lūṣyambādhi sector, northeast of the Inquisitorial Palace) and the "village of Huneidauṣa", today only a small, pedestrian area in the center of the eponymous sector, southeast of the Inquisitorial Palace. Such villages were often founded after the city itself, as farming settlements in the swamp that was being drained in order to support further growth of the city.
Līlasuṃghāṇa, the lower Lanamilūki valley, and most of the territories around Lake Lūlunīkam were the only areas in the Chlouvānem world to be continuously ruled directly by the Inquisition before the Consolidation; its status as a holy city ensured its neutrality in the broader Yunyalīlti world, where the Great Inquisitor had a major influence over the politics of most countries.


==Geography==
==Geography==
Līlasuṃghāṇa is situated in the diocese of Nanaširama, comprising almost all of its western third<ref>Excluding an area further west, across Lake Lūlunīkam.</ref>, extending from the southeastern shore of Lake Lūlunīkam (''lūlunīkam ga gūltis''), a tidal inlet of the Jahībušanī Sea (''jahībušanī ga jaryā''), linked to it by the ~150 km long Kyūkamiša [[w:ria|ria]] (''kyūkamiša ga omotē''<ref>In ancient times, the Kyūkamiša was called a river (''kyūkamiša ga maita''), and this usage was common until about the Nāɂahilūmi era. Nowadays it is referred to as a ria~fjord (both expressed as ''omotē'' < Holenagic ''âmoteit'', ''-âmht'', and not distinguished except when the distinction is meaningful; note that it is "fjord", the original Holenagic meaning, to be specified, as rias are much more common in the Inquisition) in Chlouvānem as well as in the Līlasuṃghāṇi and Kaṃradeši vernaculars, but eastern Nanaširami vernaculars still call it "river".</ref>), to the rainforested hills dividing the Lanamilūki valley (''lanamilūki ga maiti inai'') from the rest of Nanaširama (which drains directly into the Kyūkamiša ria or into the Jahībušanī Sea).
Līlasuṃghāṇa is situated in the diocese of Nanaširama, comprising almost all of its western third<ref>Excluding an area further west, across Lake Lūlunīkam.</ref>, extending from the southeastern shore of Lake Lūlunīkam (''lūlunīkam ga gūltis''), a tidal inlet of the Jahībušanī Sea (''jahībušanī ga jaryā''), linked to it by the ~150 km long Kyūkamiša [[w:ria|ria]] (''kyūkamiša ga omotē''<ref>In ancient times, the Kyūkamiša was called a river (''kyūkamiša ga maita''), and this usage was common until about the Nāɂahilūmi era. Nowadays it is referred to as a ria~fjord (both expressed as ''omotē'' < Holenagic ''âmoteit'', ''-âmht'', and not distinguished except when the distinction is meaningful; note that it is "fjord", the original Holenagic meaning, to be specified, as rias are much more common in the Inquisition) in Chlouvānem as well as in the Līlasuṃghāṇi and Kaṃradeši vernaculars, but eastern Nanaširami vernaculars still call it "river".</ref>), to the rainforested hills dividing the Lanamilūki valley (''lanamilūki ga maiti inai'') from the rest of Nanaširama (which drains directly into the Kyūkamiša ria or into the Jahībušanī Sea).<br/>
The eparchy is the largest subdivision of its kind in the Inquisition, and - if considered as a city - one of the largest municipalities by area on Calémere. However, the urban area is far smaller - about half of the land area in the eparchy consists of forested areas or wetlands.


Its geographical coordinates, usually measured at the Old Astronomic Observatory in Ṣūmrāti Park, Nājāmiḍāra sector, which is the reference point for the Chlouvānem longitude system, are 14º32′27.3′′N&nbsp;0º <small>(Cerian/Western standard: 143º35′11.7′′E)</small>. The traditional center of Līlasuṃghāṇa, at the center of the Holy Square (''brausire gaurāta'') in Ṣrāvamaila, where the Blossoming Temple and the Inquisitorial Palace are, is located at 14º33′53.2′′N&nbsp;0º0′58.4′′W <small>(Western: 143º34′13.4′′E)</small>.
Its geographical coordinates, usually measured at the Old Astronomic Observatory in Ṣūmrāti Park, Nājāmiḍāra sector, which is the reference point for the Chlouvānem longitude system, are 14º32′27.3′′N&nbsp;0º <small>(Cerian/Western standard: 143º35′11.7′′E)</small>. The traditional center of Līlasuṃghāṇa, at the center of the Holy Square (''brausire gaurāta'') in Ṣrāvamaila, where the Blossoming Temple and the Inquisitorial Palace are, is located at 14º33′53.2′′N&nbsp;0º0′58.4′′W <small>(Western: 143º34′13.4′′E)</small>.


Most of the central built-up area is located on a former drained swamp; the necessity of draining the swampland resulted in many central sectors of the city (most notably Haleikēlṭah, Hūneidauṣa, and Lūṣyambādhi, but also Ṣrāvamaila  and to lesser extents Saṃryojyam and Hilaiñāña) having a network of canals; especially in Haleikēlṭah and Ṣrāvamaila, which are the oldest parts of the city, these were constructed in ancient times in order to ease movement of goods. The whole sectors of Janaimarta and Latirajāṇa, nearly all of the island where the main airport lies (in Abhākṣamyalka sector), about half of Saṃryojyam and Hilaiñāña, and parts of Lūṣyambadhi were reclaimed from the lake.
Most of the central built-up area is located on a former drained swamp; the necessity of draining the swampland resulted in many central sectors of the city (most notably Haleikēlṭah, Hūneidauṣa, and Lūṣyambādhi, but also Ṣrāvamaila  and to lesser extents Saṃryojyam and Hilaiñāña) having a network of canals; especially in Haleikēlṭah and Ṣrāvamaila, which are the oldest parts of the city, these were constructed in ancient times in order to ease movement of goods. The whole sector of Janaimarta, nearly all of the island where the main airport lies (in Abhākṣamyalka sector), about half of Saṃryojyam and Hilaiñāña, and parts of Lūṣyambadhi were reclaimed from the lake.


===Climate===
===Climate===
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
! colspan=16 | Climate data for the ''Weather Institute at G.I. Namihūlšāvi Šūlteniyæha Nājaldhīm Airport'', Abhākṣamyalka sector<br/><small>''(nanū aveṣyotārire lallāmaha Namihūlšāvi yamei Šūlteniyæhom Nājaldhīmom camimurkadhānom lairkeike pāsaunašmilkūrah)''</small>
! colspan=16 | Climate data for the ''Weather Institute at G.I. Namihūlšāvi Šūlteniyæha Nājaldhīm Airport'', Abhākṣamyalka sector<br/><small>''(širē aveṣyotārire lallāmaha Namihūlšāvi yamei Šūlteniyæhom Nājaldhīmom camimurkadhānom lairkeike pāsaunašmilkūrah)''</small>
|-
|-
! [[Chlouvānem/Calendar_and_time#Solar_months_and_seasons|Month]] !! Prgh !! Glk !! Mlt !! Pṇḍ !! Hny !! Lnd !! Mrt !! Brs !! Uṣr !! Krm !! Bhvy !! Rvṣ !! Prt !! Cmr !! scope="col" style="border-left-width:medium" | Year
! [[Chlouvānem/Calendar_and_time#Solar_months_and_seasons|Month]] !! Prgh !! Glk !! Mlt !! Pṇḍ !! Hny !! Lnd !! Mrt !! Brs !! Uṣr !! Krm !! Bhvy !! Rvṣ !! Prt !! Cmr !! scope="col" style="border-left-width:medium" | Year
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====Palaces====
====Palaces====
Līlasuṃghāṇa is possibly the Chlouvānem city with the highest number of old nobiliar palaces. For a period in Chlouvānem history, it was common for many royal families to have a "representation palace" in the holy city; this makes their number higher than in most other cities, where only the local nobles built their palaces. Most nobiliar palaces in Līlasuṃghāṇa (and all royal ones) are located in Ṣrāvamaila, with a minor number of them in neighboring Lūṣyambādhi and Hūneidauṣa.<br/>After the deposition of nobility in the Nāɂahilūmi era and the expropriation of former noble properties in the first years of the Kaiṣamā, all former royal and nobiliar palaces are now property of the State and house either Offices of the Inquisition (for example the Dhārāṣmaja Palace, second-largest in the city (only behind the Inquisitorial Palace), houses the Inquisitorial Office of Economic Development), museums (e.g. Māyīmajālta Palace, just opposite the Inquisitorial Palace, which houses the Pan-Inquisitorial Museum of Natural History), or other institutions (e.g. the three palaces composing the Ūjaravāli complex, used by some departments of the Eparchical Ecumenical School of Līlasuṃghāṇa).
Līlasuṃghāṇa is possibly the Chlouvānem city with the highest number of old nobiliar palaces. For a period in Chlouvānem history, it was common for many royal families to have a "representation palace" in the holy city; this makes their number higher than in most other cities, where only the local nobles built their palaces. Most nobiliar palaces in Līlasuṃghāṇa (and all royal ones) are located in Ṣrāvamaila, with a minor number of them in neighboring Lūṣyambādhi and Hūneidauṣa.<br/>After the deposition of nobility in the Nāɂahilūmi era and the expropriation of former noble properties in the first years of the Kaiṣamā, all former royal and nobiliar palaces are now property of the State and house either Offices of the Inquisition (for example the Dhārāṣmaja Palace, second-largest in the city (only behind the Inquisitorial Palace) and former representative palace of the Miś Bāniyār<ref>A Širbaghumi-Chlouvānem empire of the early modern era that at its peak ruled over most of the Plain; in Chlouvānem ''bāniyāra ga mīša''.</ref>, houses the Inquisitorial Office of Economic Development), museums (e.g. Māyīmajālta Palace, just opposite the Inquisitorial Palace, which houses the Pan-Inquisitorial Museum of Natural History), or other institutions (e.g. the three palaces composing the Ūjaravāli complex, used by some departments of the Eparchical Ecumenical School of Līlasuṃghāṇa).


====Skyways and covered walkways====
====Skyways and covered walkways====
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As of the 6422 (3872<sub>12</sub>) census), the resident population of the eparchy of Līlasuṃghāṇa amounted to 29,698,169 (9Ɛ.42.535<sub>12</sub>) people; the actual population at any time of the day is much higher due to the huge number of commuters from neighboring areas. 99.4% of the population consists of Chlouvānem citizens; the majority of foreign citizens hail from Brono, Greater Skyrdegan countries, or Eastern Védrenian ones.
As of the 6422 (3872<sub>12</sub>) census), the resident population of the eparchy of Līlasuṃghāṇa amounted to 29,698,169 (9Ɛ.42.535<sub>12</sub>) people; the actual population at any time of the day is much higher due to the huge number of commuters from neighboring areas. 99.4% of the population consists of Chlouvānem citizens; the majority of foreign citizens hail from Brono, Greater Skyrdegan countries, or Eastern Védrenian ones.


87.3% of residents are ethnically Chlouvānem, with the remainder being made up of many other legally recognized ethnicities. The three largest among those are Bronic (1.3%), Kuyugwazians (1.1%), and people of Eastern Védrenian origin (0.9%). Classical Chlouvānem is the city's most spoken language and its administrative language; 70% of all inhabitants also speak the local vernacular, Līlasuṃghāṇi (''liela a dhāḷ'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iə̯ɴ̆ɐ ˈɑ ˈdʱaːɭ]}}), a dialect inside the Southern Jade Coast dialect continuum. The most spoken native language excluding these two has been found to be the Western Chlouvānem Creole, spoken by about 4% of people. Among non-Chlouvānem languages, the most spoken include [[Brono-Fathanic|Bronic]], [[Kuyugwazian]], [[Soenjoan]], [[Lenyan]], other Kenengyry languages, and various languages from Eastern Védren.
84.1% of residents are ethnically Chlouvānem, with the remainder being made up of many other legally recognized ethnicities: Bronics, Kuyugwazians, and Soenjoans are the most represented ones, as the table below shows:
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Ethnic makeup of the Eparchy of Līlasuṃghāṇa
! Ethnicity !! People (6422 census) !! Percentage
|-
! Chlouvānem
| 24,987,471 || 84,14%
|-
! Bronic
| 802,279 || 2,70%
|-
! Kuyugwazian
| 635,109 || 2,14%
|-
! Soenjoan
| 583,824 || 1,97%
|-
! Qualdomelic
| 519,220 || 1,75%
|-
! Toyubeshian
| 408,223 || 1,37%
|-
! Skyrdegan
| 317,965 || 1,07%
|-
! East Vedrénian<br/>(Raina and others)
| 281,102 || 0,95%
|-
! Jīrandašai
| 114,833 || 0,39%
|-
! Dabuke (various peoples)
| 89,365 || 0,30%
|-
! Enegenic
| 65,953 || 0,22%
|-
! Leñ
| 62,506 || 0,21%
|-
! Timbarelai
| 57,227 || 0,19%
|-
! Jalašmak
| 53,539 || 0,18%
|-
! Džemlešwi
| 49,319 || 0,17%
|-
! Cambuṭai
| 48,737 || 0,16%
|-
! Snatårian
| 37,579 || 0,13%
|-
! Rǣrai
| 31,930 || 0,11%
|-
! Bazá
| 29,752 || 0,10%
|-
! Tarueb
| 24,105 || 0,08%
|-
! other ethnicities<br/>indigenous to the Inq.
| 386,849 || 1,30%
|-
! others
| 111,282 || 0,37%
|}


Even by Chlouvānem standards, Līlasuṃghāṇa is a culturally diverse city, first of all because of its position between two major cultural areas, the Great Plain and the South, with traits of both found in the city and its surroundings, and also because of its political role, attracting people from all of the Chlouvānem world and beyond.  
Classical Chlouvānem is the city's most spoken language and its administrative language; 70% of all inhabitants also speak the local vernacular, Līlasuṃghāṇi (''Liɂ ha dhaḷa'' {{IPA|[ˈɴ̆iɁ‿xa ˈdʱaːɭɐ]}}), a dialect inside the Southern Jade Coast dialect continuum. The most spoken native language excluding these two has been found to be the Western Chlouvānem Creole, spoken by about 4% of people. Among non-Chlouvānem languages, the most spoken include [[Brono-Fathanic|Bronic]], [[Kuyugwazian]], [[Soenjoan]], [[Lenyan]], other Kenengyry languages, and various languages from Eastern Védren.


[[Verse:Chlouvānem_Inquisition#Skin_colour_statistics|Skin colour-related statistics]] gave the following results:
Even by Chlouvānem standards, Līlasuṃghāṇa is a culturally diverse city, first of all because of its position between two major cultural areas, the Great Plain and the South, with traits of both found in the city and its surroundings, and also because of its political role, attracting people from all of the Chlouvānem world and beyond. Even if there is no distinction between Chlouvānem people originating from different areas of the country, it is estimated that only about half of the population (14.5 million people) ethnically belongs to the Jade Coastal subgrouping of the Chlouvānem ethnicity, with Eastern Plain, Western Plain, and Western Chlouvānem being the most represented out of the other subgroupings.
* ''lugaṣṭṇīṭah'' 43%
* ''hailaṣṇīṭah'' 27%
* ''lallamurkaṇīṭah'' 13%
* ''naleimurkaṇīṭah'' 6.5%
* ''chlebrāḍhṇīṭah'' 5%
* ''julkṇīṭah'' 3%
* ''nivudaṇīṭah'' 1.5%
* ''vindṛṇīṭah'' 1%


==Economy==
==Economy==
Line 181: Line 246:
===Sports===
===Sports===
===Cuisine===
===Cuisine===
 
===Entertainment and popular culture===
<!--==Līlasuṃghāṇi Vernacular==
Laišūkhrāvati Road (''laišūkhrāvati aira''), also known as Laišūkhrāvati Boulevard (a more accurate translation of the Chlouvānem term ''aira''), is one of the major named streets in Līlasuṃghāṇa and a cultural attraction, constituting one of the most famous areas of the city in popular culture. It is located in the eastern part of the sector of Lūṣyambādhi, starting about two kilometres north of the Inquisitorial Palace, and is a part of the axis linking Ṣrāvamaila to the Janaimarta. It takes its name from Laišūkhrāvateh Temple, located at the northern end of the boulevard. The southern half of the boulevard is well-known for its cafés, shops, and theatres, while the northern half crosses the areas between the Inquisitorial Exposition Grounds on the eastern side and the main scientific-technological campus of the Ecumenical School of Līlasuṃghāṇa on the western side. If Ṣrāvamaila is known as the more traditional, religious and high-culture centre of the city with all political centres of the Inquisition being headquartered there, as well as many museums and the historical sūq area, the area around Laišūkhrāvati Road is often considered the major popular entertainment district of the city. Laišūkhrāvati Road, being a broad and iconic boulevard in a central area of the city, is also often used for parades and rallies.
The vernacular language, commonly referred to as ''mbaîá renã'' [ᵐbaˈja ɾˡeˈnã] (our language) and spoken by about 70% of the inhabitants (a good number of residents come from other areas of the country), is part of the Jade Coast dialect continuum and has traits of both coastal Nanašīrami dialects to the east and Lanamilūki Valley ones to the south. It is characterized by a tendency towards analyticness when compared to Classical Chlouvānem, and more than many other languages of the same continuum it has considerably simplified its syllable structure.
 
===Verbs===
There are two present tense patterns, one for the agent-trigger and one for the patient-trigger conjugation. None of them continues the Chlouvānem forms, as the original terminations were lost and pronouns were cliticized at the beginning, becoming conjugational prefixes.
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! colspan=2 | !! 1SG !! 2SG !! 3SG !! 1SG+2SG !! 1PL !! 2PL !! 3PL
|-
! rowspan=2 | ''mbesy'' /ˈᵐbeʃɨ/ "to see"<br/>(nasal-initial root) !! Agent
| lỹmesy || nãmesy || (r)ẽmesy || lẽmesy || mbylỹmesy || ndanãmesy || tõmesy
|-
! Patient
| lulũmesy || nũmesy || rũmesy || lelũmesy || mbulỹmesy || ndunũmesy || tãî̃mesy
|-
! rowspan =2 | ''wã'' /wã/ "to open"<br/>(oral-initial root) !! Agent
| lywã || ndawã || (r)awã || lewã || mbylywã || ndatawã || towã
|-
! Patient
| luluwã || nduwã || ruwã || leluwã || mbulywã || ndutuwã || taîwã
|}-->


==Notes==
==Notes==
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