Try locating the Kingdom of Cherusken on a map.
Not able to place it? How about the Grand Duchy of Haren? Or the Kingdom of Talossa? The Free Republic of Laputa? What? You can't even find the Dominion of Asphynxia?
Don't worry, none of them are in
the atlas. All are so-called micronations, a catch-all term that encompasses
the many imaginary states, model nations and "counter countries"
that exist only in the minds of
their creators -- and on the Web. They range from the silly (the Republic
of Roadkills-R-Us, for example, whose motto is "Tread on Me") to more
serious attempts at virtual nation-building.
Why create your own country? Motives
abound, but, as Liz Stirling, an artist and founder of Lizbekistan, said,
"It's a great way to explore why people come together, and what
things like community and nation
mean." Citizens of micronations participate by voting, writing for their
country's newspapers, running ministries and sometimes waging civil
war (by hacking into the site
and shutting it down).
Nevertheless, the micronation movement
predates the Internet; indeed, the impulse to create model countries has
a long history. Writers like Thomas More and Charlotte Perkins
Gilman wrote accounts of imagined
utopian communities.
More recently, groups of "geo fiction"
enthusiasts have drawn up plans for imaginary countries complete with their
own flags, monetary systems, stamps, constitutions,
legislatures -- in short, all
the trappings of a real nation.
Starting in the mid-1990's, the
Web has spurred the creation of hundreds of new "nations." Many have since
organized into leagues or assemblies comparable to the United
Nations. Most prominent are the
League of Secessionist States and the United Micronations.
But such democratic assemblies
are rare: many imaginary states are the creations of closet despots nostalgic
for the Roman Empire and various Balkan fiefdoms. It's no surprise,
then, that many quickly disintegrate
or fall victim to coups.
While most imaginary nations exist only in cyberspace, a few originate in or lay claim to territory, like a college campus, a suburb or an uninhabited island.
But attempts at annexation are usually made in jest. There is more than enough room on the Web.
Here is an almanac of some of the more noteworthy nations now online, along with their coordinates in cyberspace.
BERGONIA: www.bergonia.org
An exercise in socialist dreaming,
Bergonia is a fictional island somewhere in the North Atlantic; it is blessed
with a stable socialist democracy and eco-friendly inhabitants.
Bergonia is the creation of Joe
Cometti, a lawyer in West Virginia.
"It has been an on-and-off-again project since I was a kid," Mr. Cometti said.
The name Bergonia comes from a fictional country depicted in a "Superman" television episode from the 1950's.
But its purpose is not so childish;
Mr. Cometti described his creation as "my contribution to the reinvention
of socialism via the Net." It has nothing to do with what he termed
the "distorted monstrosity of
Red Star commmunism," he said. Still, Mr. Cometti doesn't view Bergonia
as a utopia.
"I want Bergonia to be plausible," he said. "And that means there will be corruption, crime and human pettiness."
THE PRINCIPALITY OF FREEDONIA: www.freedonia.org
A country of libertarian leanings,
Freedonia has very little connection with the Marx Brothers' fictional
country of the same name. Its leader, John I, is a student
at a college in Massachusetts.
He is studying for a degree in investment finance and professes a fondness
for the writings of Thomas Jefferson and Ayn Rand.
John, who uses the screen
name John I, and his fellow Freedonians hope to purchase a chunk of territory
in Somaliland and establish a libertarian enclave.
Notwithstanding its homelessness,
Freedonia has minted its own money (silver) and even written a national
anthem that has this refrain: "Oh, Freedonia, Freedonia the land that
saves, Freedonians never shall
be slaves."
THE KINGDOM OF TALOSSA: www.talossa.com
This constitutional monarchy was founded by Robert Ben Madison in 1979, when he was a high school student in Milwaukee and declared his bedroom to be a sovereign state.
Talossa has its own constitution
and legislature; it allows "foreigners" to become citizens, take part in
elections and formulate policy. Since going on the Web, Talossa has
acquired some 60 citizens, most
of whom live outside the United States. The site's citizens claim to have
inspired the proliferation of online micronations.
AERICAN EMPIRE:
www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Surf/6818/aerica.html
Aerican, one of the more imaginative sites, refers to itself as "the Monty
Python of micronationalism," and its inhabitants
worship a being known as the Great
Penguin.
The site warns its readers: "Aerica places a high emphasis on silliness. People who cannot act silly are permitted entry only on a limited basis." A smiley-face adorns the flag.
Also amusing is Roadkills-R-Us (www.rru.com), with its riffs on secession and fallen fauna.
THE HOLY EMPIRE OF REUNION: www.reuniao.org
This micronation was formed by
Cláudio de Castro, who has taken the screen name Emperor Claudio
I, and Bernardo Bauer in 1997. Claudio and most of his 780 subjects
actually hail from Brazil. His
Imperial Majesty runs the country with an iron hand, and visitors to the
site are greeted with the following disclaimer: "Reunion is not a
Democracy, so you won't be bothered
by candidates and elections."
Instead, citizens engage in intrigues that have not been seen since Louis XIV, wielding influence through Reunion's virtual courts and chambers.
CYBER YUGOSLAVIA www.juga.com
This is a political site that is
critical of the extreme nationalism that has led to ongoing conflict in
the areas that made up the former nation of Yugoslavia. It issues passports
and
grants citizenship for its virtual
version of Yugoslavia.
A site that also has a political outlook is the virtual nation of NSK (www.ljudmila.org/embassy), the creation of Slovenian intellectuals and artists.
The site's manifesto declares,
"The NSK state denies in its fundamental acts the categories of fixed territory,
the principle of national borders, and advocates the law of
transnationality." Like Cyber
Yugoslavia and many other sites, NSK offers citizenship and passports.
LIZBEKISTAN: lizbekistan.com
Until Sept. 9, 1999, Lizbekistan was one of the most popular micronations.
That is when its creator, an Australian artist named Liz Stirling, blew up the site.
She began work on Lizbekistan in
1996 as part of a larger project on citizenship and printed stamps and
passports for would-be Lizbeks. Lizbekistan even had its own currency,
the nipple. In its heyday, the
imaginary nation had four newspapers, including The Lizbek Sentinel, which
Ms. Stirling described as "the independent official organ," and The
Dependent, jokingly known as "the
voice of authority." Lizbekistan eventually acquired several thousand citizens
before being consigned to oblivion last year.
Refugees of Lizbekistan can now
frequent two related sites, www.lizbekdiaspora.com and www.lizvegas.com.
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