Verse:Chlouvānem Inquisition/Līlasuṃghāṇa

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Līlasuṃghāṇa
Official name Līlasuṃghāṇa ga ṭūmma
Quaestorship of Līlasuṃghāṇa
Country Chlouvānem Inquisition
Tribunal Jade Coast Area
Diocese Nanašīrama
Divisions 24 districts, 21 cities, 11 parishes, 15 villages
Largest division (pop.)
Usāṃrātnam core district (1,372,443 (5.62.2ᘔ312))
Official language Chlouvānem
Other languages Nanašīrami vernacular (Līlasuṃghāṇi dialect)
Demonym Chl.: Līlasuṃghāṇi ; Līlasuṃghānyūs
Nan.: Læilasihæc ; Læɂi
Area 4.486 e (7.59010)[1]
8,500.8 km2 (3,282.18 mi2)
Population 29,698,169 (9Ɛ.42.53512) (4E ᘔƐ (13110) census)
Population density 2.321/e (3,91310)
3,493.57/km2 (9048.3/mi2)
Government type Quaestorship
Quaestor
Chilamulkāvi Narṣakarai Lārta
Capital
Līlasuṃghāṇa[2]
Time zone LIL (Līlasuṃghāṇi time — Līlasuṃghāṇi avyāṣa)
Telephone area code (+87) 02

Līlasuṃghāṇa ("[place of] singing nāmñė cubs"; Chlouvānem pronunciation: [ˌɴ̆ʲiːɴ̆asũˈgʱaːɳa]; vernacular Līlasuṃghāṇi: Læilasihåṇ [ˈɴ̆ɛi̯ɴ̆ɐʂ(ɯ)ˌɣɔ̃]; popularly shortened to Līlah [ˈɴ̆ʲiːɴ̆aɦ]) is the capital of the Chlouvānem Inquisition, the holy city of the Yunyalīlta, a quaestorship (Chl.: ṭūmma) within the diocese of Nanašīrama, which it is also the episcopal seat of, and the largest city on Calémere, even though it is not, administratively, a single city.

Līlasuṃghāṇa lies on the southeastern shore of Lūlunīkam Lake (an inlet of the Flæmvasta sea) in the Jade Coast, with most of the quaestorship's area extending south along the southern branch of the Lake, formed by the clearwater Lanamilūki river coming from the wetlands and várzeas of Talæñoya. Most of the area where the present-day core districts of Līlasuṃghāṇa lie were formerly a swampland where the Ėmīlumi river ("river of tigers"), the Hanaiyami river ("cocoa river"), and the Rajālyāti river ("silver-black river") - all three blackwater - reach Lūlunīkam lake. 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.

Despite being referred to as a "city", Līlasuṃghāṇa is a quaestorship, which means that it has - at least for the core wards, called districts (hālgārai) a consolidated government at the level of cities, circuits, provinces, and even some functions of the diocese itself. Administratively, there are, however, places in Līlasuṃghāṇa designed as cities, parishes, or even villages: the area of the quaestorship is extremely large, covering also some valleys of tributaries of the Lanamilūki river to the south where the only settlements are floating villages in the middle of igapós. About 45% of the land area of the quaestorship is covered by rainforest or swampland.

The quaestorship of Līlasuṃghāṇa, at the 4E ᘔƐ (13110) census, had a population of 9Ɛ.42.535 (29,698,16910) people. The Līlasuṃghāṇa metropolitan area is the second-largest in the world (after the polycentric conurbation of eastern Hachitama diocese) and extends into neighboring parts of Nanašīrama and also the dioceses of Talæñoya to the south as well as Lgraṃñælihaikā and Kāṃradeša across the lake.

Chlouvānem is the administrative language of the city, spoken, as in the whole Inquisition, in a state of diglossia alongside the local vernacular; the Līlasuṃghāṇi vernacular shares traits with most vernaculars of the eastern part of the Jade Coast. It has distinctive features of both the coastal Jade Coast vernaculars to the east - such as the extensive reworking of the vowel system - but also the typical stød-like phonation of the Lanamilūki Valley vernaculars (cf. Nanašīrama > nanɧæirm [nãˈxʷɛ̃ɪ̯̃ˤ]; dældā "language" > døldå [dzʏɴ̆ˈdɔːˤ]).
The typical Līlasuṃghāṇi pronunciation of standard Chlouvānem also has a few peculiarities, which however may not be heard in more formal speech because of switching to a more standard pronunciation: its most noticeable features (and the most joked upon by non-natives) are the use of [œ œː] for /a aː/ in closed syllables before a nasal consonant (nāmvute "I crush" [nœːmʋyte]), also /aː/ as [œː] in open syllables before /j/ and a front vowel (jāyim "girl" [ɟ͡ʑœːim]), and the fronting of /u/ to /y/ in non-final open syllables (ānukte "to lie on" [aːˈnykte]).
The Laifutaši language, which was spoken in pre-Yunyalīlti times in the area and greatly influenced Chlouvānem (and also some words of the local vernacular not present in standard Chlouvānem), has left its trace in many toponyms in the area: lake Lūlunīkam; the rivers Lanamilūki, Hanaiyami, and Rajālyāti; the diocese of Nanašīrama itself, and obviously most names of districts (such as Himakouta, Hājurvānim, Sarālilyāniah, or the omnipresent -dāneh ending).

Etymology

The name of Līlasuṃghāṇa predates the city, and is a bahuvrihi compound of līlas - the name (nowadays archaic) of cubs of nāmñė, a tropical seal living along most of the Inquisition's tropical coasts - and suṃghāṇa, meaning "melody". The name thus means "melody of nāmñė cubs", intended as "the place where nāmñė cubs sing melodies".

An inhabitant of the city is referred to as Līlasuṃghāṇi or, more formally, Līlasuṃghānyūs. In the vernacular, the demonym is Læilasihæc [ˈɴ̆ɛɪ̯ɴ̆ɐʂxɛc͡ɕ]. The vernacular-derived form Læɂi [ˈɴ̆ɛʔi] is commonly used both in the vernacular and in Chlouvānem, albeit only informally.

History

The area around Lūlunīkam lake, including the location of present-day Līlasuṃghāṇa, has been inhabited for millennia by tribes speaking languages such as Laifutaši or Old Kāṃradeši. In the early part of the First Era, this area was outside the realms of the Kūṣṛmāthi civilization but in its sphere of influence. About halfway through the Era, 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 2E 126 (17410) by order of Great Inquisitor Kahėrimaili ga Banditiāvi 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 Hanaiyami river and about three kilometers upstream from the lakeside - today's Kahėrimaila ("clear water") district, named after the founding Great Inquisitor's regnal name. The only access to the early city was from the Hanaiyami 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") district; many foundation-era buildings can however be seen in the neighboring Nājādaneh district, in the Hanaiyami ga maiti memāyi jarmān (Hanaiyami River Mouth Park), and by the Saṃryojyam lakeshore.

Geography

Climate

Environment

Demographics

Economy

Transportation

Education

Culture

Arts

Sports

Cuisine

Līlasuṃghāṇi Vernacular

The vernacular language, 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. A noticeable characteristic in two thousand years of evolution from Chlouvānem is the restructuring of the vowel system. Original Chlouvānem vowels all diverged in quality (often through diphthongization) and vowel length has later become phonemic based on syllable structure. The regular developments of Chlouvānem vowels are as follows:

  • a > a ; å /ɔ/ if followed by r or l plus a stop.
  • ā > å /ɔ/
    • both a and ā become ø /œ/ when followed by a nasal and a stop
  • e > e ; eu /ɛʊ̯/ when stressed in a closed syllable
  • ė > oi /ɔɪ̯/ (through intermediate *ei)
  • i > i
  • ī > æi /ɛɪ̯/
  • u > u /y/
  • ū > o /u/
  • o > uo /uɪ̯/
  • å > o /u/
  • æ > e
  • ą > å /ɔ/
  • ę > æ /ɛ/
  • į > i
  • ų > u /y/
  • ai, au > æ /ɛ/
  • ei > oi /ɔɪ̯/
  • ea, oe > ьeu /jɛʊ̯/ (ь results in a palatal consonant, cf. liloe > ldzieu [ɴ̆dzjɛʊ̯])
  • ou > o /u/
  • ąi > ai
  • ęi > æi /ɛɪ̯/
  • ąu > a
  • ṛ, ṝ > år /ɔʁ/ or /ɔˤ/

As for consonants, like all Nanašīrami dialects the Līlasuṃghāṇi vernacular has lost contrast between /s/ and /ʂ/, having only a retroflex in most contexts; unlike such dialects, however, /ɕ/ developed to /xʷ/ (possibly through /ɧ/), like in dialects to the west, including Galiākñi. Chlouvānem -lt and -ld which became word-final are particular in Nanašīrami dialects as many areas developed them differently. They evolved to /ɴ̆/ with stød in Līlasuṃghāṇi, just as in most Lanamilūki Valley vernaculars - young speakers in urban Līlasuṃghāṇa often front it in this position almost to [ð], sounding very similar to the Danish soft d. This evolution is particularly different from other Nanašīrami dialects, cf. the result of the word "Yunyalīlta" in various vernaculars of Nanašīrama, Talæñoya, and Lgraṃñælihaikā - which shows very well the various developments of the Līlasuṃghāṇi urban vernacular, which is roughly in the middle of this area:

  • Līlasuṃghāṇa (urban): yunylæilt [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛɪ̯ˤɴ̆]
  • Mālekṣam (village in southern Līlasuṃghāṇa qst.): yunylæalt [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛˤo̯t]
  • Jāryakūraṇa (central Nanašīrama): yunylæitl [ˈjyːɲˌɴ̆ɛɪ̯tɬ]
  • Kareahåmba (northeastern Nanašīrama): yunylætel [juɲˈɴ̆ɛːtəl]
  • Haryanauka (southeastern Nanašīrama): yunьlæitḷ [jynʲˈɴ̆ɛɪ̯təl]
  • Kaldaṣūṣa (capital of Lgraṃñælihaikā dioc.): yuinliǹd [ˈjui̯nʲˌɴ̆iŋd]
  • Lunahīkam (capital of Talæñoya dioc.): yunyeliëld [ˌjunjeˈɴ̆iˤəɴ̆]
  • Haɂipūlla (southern jungles of Talæñoya): yuñelild [ˌjũj̃eˈɴ̆iˤɴ̆]

Notes

  1. ^ 1 e (ekram) = 1,12 km2 = 0,43 mi2.
  2. ^ The actual government offices all lie in Kahėrimaila district, but it is not counted as it is formally not a municipality (parish-level subdivision).