Ventora

Ventora, officially the Kingdom and Commonwealth of Ventora (: Reino y Mancomunidad de Ventora), is a  in southwestern Alutra. Located along the north coast of the Abayadi Sea, Tagaraš lies to the west, Avakhtem to the north, with Threazari and Watan bordering Ventora to the southeast. Ventora covers 1,405,430 km2 and the  is Plenas. Ascara is the country's economic center and largest city. Over 80.6 million people live in Ventora.

Properly a kingdom, the deaths of the entire royal familiy in the royal train derailment at Lorqui on September 13, 1961, resulted in a succession crisis. The subsequent War of the Three Capitals ended with the Treaty of Terelle and its addendum, the Protocols of State in 1964. This consitutional document layered a commonwealth form of governance over the monarchy. As a result, Ventora's has been an elected regent ever since. The current Regent of Ventora is Isidro Venceslás Duarte Arias Duque de Estévez. The Governor General is with Ploerio Incio Oquendo Campo Conde de Araujo currently holding the office.

Etymology
The name derives from the old Ventoran ventosa (windy) and ora (coast) from the country's location on the Abayadi Sea and the winds attributed to it. Use of the term ventosora to refer to the coastal areas has been recorded as early as the mid-500s. It became more popular along the coasts and gained some recognition as a reference to people within the Coastal Confederation beginning in the 800s. The name was formalized as Ventōra in 959 with the establishment of the Kingdom of Ventora (Reino de Ventōra). As the Ventoran language developed further, the "ō" became a simple "o". Scholars are uncertain when Ventōra became Ventora, but consensus places the change some time in the mid-1100s.

History
Ventorans have been seafaring peoples since the times of the first boats. As settlements grew, trade expanded, and exploration gave rise to more trade and influences from outside the region. Increased contact beyond the local area also gave rise to the need for self-defense. Early coastal settlements soon developed s to meet this need. The hillfort settlements were a key step to facilitating the development of city-states.

Rise of city-states
Around 1,000 BC, Nauigio rose to regional prominence, becoming a. It held sway over surrounding villages which provided it with food and workers while the city-state provided benefit in the form of trade and defense.

Nauigio's success gave rise to other city-states along the southwestern Alutran coast of the Abayadi Sea. By around 500 BC, there were a half dozen. Each were trade centers and each extended their influence inland. After the Flax Tax Revolt of 226 BCE in Nauigio, the economic center of the region shifted to the nearby city-state of Plenas, which then overshadowed Nauigio's prestige, supplanting it as the dominant regional power by 225 BCE.

First Haksar tributaries
By 100 BC, Ascara had grown substantially in stature and became the biggest trade rival to Plenas. In the last half century BC, Haksar sway grew in the region. Plenas was the first city-state to become a to Haksarad, giving it a trade advantage. The other city-states soon followed suit.

Distance across the sea kept Haksarad from having a strong dominance in southwestern Alutra, however. To offset this, the empire introduced the concept of nobility to the area in 49 CE, naming the rulers of the city-states as counts. As a result, the city-states were clearly no longer independent even if they remained largely autonomous. As the tributary system began collapsing in 249, the city-states became independent counties after Zabarko's death in 252.

In the mid-200s, Threazari built numerous forts, including in areas claimed by the duchy of Challuyo. These encroachments led to the First Challuyo-Threazari War (281-282). Following a minor victory by Threazari, Challuyo paid a small amount to secure peace and a negotiated new border. The revised boundary left Challuyo's former county of Lucuá in Threazari territory and is the source of a territorial dispute lasting to the present day.

Confederation period
In an effort to expand influence, Reinaldo de Montaña Asís, the Duke of Ascara, solicited the formation of a loose confederation of surrounding duchies for economic and defensive purposes. The Confederation of Montaña was formalized May 22, 263. This spurred the coastal duchies to form their own Coastal Confederation on June 20, 274. Neither confederation had a central authority beyond their Councils of Dukes, which represented each constituent duchy. Despite this structure, the Dukes of Ascara and Plenas held sway over their respective bodies.

Economic hardships in Threazari appeared to present an opportunity to Duke Rucat de Challuyo y Bultén to retake Lucuá. Due to a lack of substantive assistance from other duchies in the Coastal Confederation, the war sputtered to an inconclusive end of active fighting. The lack of resolution left Lucuá in its disputed status.

During this period, the northern regions of modern-day Ventora were not unified in any significant way. The area began to develop some identity as northeastern Alutran migrations spread through the Kanakan region of the Alutran Steppe. Nonetheless, the zone remained largely nomadic until the 1500s.

Second Haksar tributaries
With Ashniqir's restoration of the Haksarad empire in 511, trading ties with the confederations grew again, particularly during the latter half of the sixth century. Beginning around 600, the confederations became semi-autonomous tributaries. This status did not bind the member duchies except as it affected their roles within their confederations.

Although the Haksar perspective of these tributaries was imperialistic, the southwest Alutran dukes saw them more as a military and trade alliance. The fact the confederations were the tributes relieved the dukes of direct fealty. To further enhance their independence and economic strength, the confederations formed a customs union in 783.

Kingdom
Observing Haksar conquests in Tagaraš, Montaña sought to expand its territory in 955 by seizing Eshar land to its west. Although militarily successful, the confederation found itself stretched. The Kanakan region in the northeast had become less passive. Differences of opinion on priorities among its dukes led to the Montaña Confederation becoming less stable, with limited ability to maintain control across its vast lands. As a result, Teodosio de Salamanca, Duke of Ascara and Montaña, petitioned the Coastal Coalition for assistance with the northern lands.

Recognizing an opportunity to increase influence in southwestern Alutra, Haksar Emperor xxx offered the pair of confederations the opportunity to become a united kingdom under tribute. Clemente Duque de Plenas used the situation to shift the balance of power from the wealthier Montañans to the more rural eastern Coastal Confederation. This suited the Haksars and the Montañans agreed in order to retain what prestige they still had a grasp of and gain military aid from the southeastern duchies.

On August 17, 959, the member dukes of the confederations signed the Concords of Plenas creating the Kingdom of Ventora. Clemente I of the House of Carres was the first king. The Concords dissolved the confederations but gave semi-autonomous standing to the duchies. The kingdom’s charter established it as a tributary of Haksarad. The name Ventora clearly signified coastal prominence in the kingdom as did naming Plenas as capital.

Expansionist period
With the added resources of the former Coastal Confederation, the new kingdom was able to secure hegemony over significant portions of eastern Tagaraš. Much of Clemente's reign involved pacifying the area of the new holdings and bringing about reduced military expenditures. With his death in 972, the War of Ventoran Succession ensued as Clemente's sons vied for power. The war ended with the elder Florencio I retaining the throne. He gave is brother, Serim, the majority of the family's ducal holdings as the duchy of Arava. Florencio issued the Mandate of Sovereignty to solidify his position as monarch and clarify the manner of royal succession.

Having good trade relations with the Watanese, Ventora sought to compel its smaller neighbor into a tributary relationship, which was established in 1038. King César I saw this as a means to both expand Ventoran prestige and help pay for efforts at pacifying the northern regions known as the Kanakan Steppe. Various areas of Watan were awarded to specific duchies of Ventora as provinces with arrangements for trade, defense, and administration.

Because of the nomadic nature of peoples of the steppe, the kingdom’s control over the region remained somewhat nebulous and its northern borders were often unclear. Ongoing needs for armed forces in northern Ventora and the success of the Watanese tribute state encouraged King César I to grant limited autonomy to Ventoran holdings in the eastern Tagar region in 1041. The holdings were obligated to become tributaries to Ventora in exchange. The change initially met César's objective of quelling periodic uprisings in the area but never fully eliminated the underlying dissatisfaction of the Tagar populace. Using agricultural knowledge gained from the Haksars, the kingdom introduced cultivation to arable areas of the Kanakan region in the 1100s. As farming became more accepted, the nomadic nature of the zone diminished, all but disappearing by the 1500s.

Various dukes of Challuyo lobbied for efforts to restore the county of Lucuá to Ventoran control. Notwithstanding the expansionist desires of the period, the results of the two Challuyo-Threazari wars dissuaded any significant interest in mounting a military effort to retake Lucuá. Even so, the area remains disputed territory claimed by Ventora to the present. In 1274, Siquaerom ascended to the throne. His personal excesses led to an arbitrariness and lack of attentiveness in his reign. Having no children, his sister Emiliana became queen upon his death in 1279. Her efforts to restore respect for the monarchy and the rule of law led to her issuing the Canon of Obligations in 1282. It established certain rights and duties for both the nobility and the monarch.

Although the Watanese remained semi-autonomous, a Ventoran custos appointed by his duke was placed in charge of each respective province. The arrangement continued for nearly 300 years. It was largely an amicable situation although the Ventorans had a tendency to treat the Watanese paternalistically. When disputes arose, they were often settled by a saber duel, a Watanese tradition the Venetorans viewed as honorable. Just such a duel resulted in the end of the tributary relationship in April 1328 when Ventora’s Provincial General, Pruspes Elizondo Quixada Penemar, Count of Otero, lost his duel with Watanese Prince Fábio. King Seve II of Ventora considered using the army to compel Watan to remain a tributary state, but the relationship had long been at least tacitly voluntary. As a result, there was little support at home for armed intervention and the King’s Council advised him to accept the result of the duel, which Seve reluctantly agreed to.

Independence
With waning Haksar imperial authority in the early 1700s, Ventora secured its release from tributary status on May 12, 1740. Since the Kingdom had been virtually independent despite its tributary status, the Release from the Charter was a technicality but legally important document which gives the signing date great significance in Ventora. Although not a specified part of the Release, Ventora agreed to release its hold over lands in eastern Tagaraš as a prerequisite to Haksarad's emperor signing the document. From Ventora's perspective, this allowed the kingdom to focus on fully incorporating the Kanakan region in the realm instead of dealing with local revolutionary activities in its Eshar lands.

Despite long-standing historical ties with Haksarad, Ventora took a position of neutrality in the Coffee Wars. The Kingdom did not want to damage growing trade with the northeastern Alutran countries, including Ordrey, Gladomyr, Edury, Salia, and Ecoralia. Ventora saw neutrality as the best way to renew trade with belligerents on both sides once the war was resolved. Its neutrality severely curtailed Ventoran trade during the Coffee Wars, however, since a majority of its trade partners were engaged in the wars.

World wars
During each of the First and Second World Wars, Ventora sided with its historical ally, Haksarad. In the first war, Ventora became involved as part of an agreement to avoid becoming a tributary of Haksarad again.

When Velorenkya sent troops into Tagaraš around 1940, Ventora joined the Haksar armed intervention to prevent expansion of Velorenkyan hegemony in the region. Coupled with growing displeasure at increasing Concert of Nations interference in trade and other matters of sovereignty, Ventora joined the Alliance in the Second World War. Although not considered a major power in any of the wars, Ventoran Armed Forces were involved in supporting activities as well as a number of combat operations.

From almost the start of the Second World War, the Ventoran Navy provided naval patrols and escorts throughout the Abayadi Sea. This allowed the major Alliance powers to allocate their forces more toward the combat zones. A number of Ventoran expeditionary air and army forces participated with other Alliance forces in several of the major battles. Because of the nature of the aviation arms race at the time, Ventoran pilots often trained for and flew combat flights in other Alliance country aircraft. This became the nucleus of the modern Ventoran Air Force. The country's wartime experiences at sea in the first two world wars, along with its longstanding maritime history, also explains Ventora's relatively robust seaborne capability in modern times.

Both of the earlier world wars were costly, both fiscally and in lives, for Ventora. A changed political climate, the advent of nuclear weapons, and what King Florián III saw as a lack of clarity between combatants and non-combatants, including civilian populations, in the Third World War were key reasons Ventora remained neutral during that conflict.

War of the Three Capitals
King Florián III and the entire royal family were killed September 13, 1961, when their train derailed in the Lorqui rail incident while en route back to the capital from the Summer Palace. With a lack of clear succession, the Council of State appointed Tácito Duque de Castellano as regent in the interim. After months of bitter discussions, Castellano declared the Council dissolved on March 10,1962, and used military forces to secure the capital city of Plenas. This led to the formation of monarchist, republican, and northern alliances, each with varying degrees of support. With no formal means of discussion, the rivalries degraded into open warfare, now known as the War of the Three Capitals, as three prominent dukes vied for the throne.

After two years of varying degrees of battles, the popularity of the war was waning with average citizens. The nobility also felt the economic impact of the war. Realizing continuing the fight could result in a complete loss of power, the dukes agreed to resume discussions on succession, meeting in the relatively neutral location of the Summer Palace at Terelle.

Commonwealth
On October 18, 1964, the dukes signed The Treaty of Terelle. This resulted in the formation of the current commonwealth under a regent as an overlay to the retained structure of the kingdom. The dukes agreed to the duchies having a confederal arrangement with the national commonwealth due to the lack of a monarch.

Since mid-1967, the People's Emancipation Union (UEP), a Noyonist organization, has engaged in , typically  in nature, against police and the Ventoran Armed Forces. The UEP claims Ventora's commonwealth form of government under the regent is invalid and, therefore, so is the status of the nobility. UEP is, seeks an end to the nobility, and wants to radically restructure society and the economic system. Most of its support is in the north-northeast of the country in and around the Kanakan Steppe, largely due to decreased economic opportunity. Over one thousand people, mostly civilians, have been killed in UEP-sponsored bombings, shootings, and attacks on government personnel and facilities, all of which the government classifies as.

Geography
At 0 km2, Ventora is a medium-sized country in Altrua along the northern coast of Abayadi Sea. The Gulf of Eshar lies to the west and Bastrop Bay is near the southeast corner of the country. The Lávar River, a major navigable waterway, forms much of the western border of Ventora with Tagaraš. Watan borders Ventora to the east, with Threazari also along a portion of the eastern border. Avakhtem lies to Ventora's north.

Topography


The Alutran Steppe forms in the Kanakan region of northern Ventora and stretches east across central eastern Altura. The area is relatively sparsely populated and a fair number who live there still tend to lead semi-nomadic lifestyles although the expansion of agriculture in the region has led to less nomadic tendencies.

Central and western Ventora consists of plains. The coastline tends to be rocky, but there are some good beaches. The black sand beaches of the Alpunte al Oeste region are a popular tourist destination. In the southeast, the Tilarg Mountains rise and extend eastward along the Abayadi coast.

An extensive river system in central Ventora supports agriculture, industry, and transport. The Lávar and Karru Rivers are important navigable waterways. Other significant rivers throughout the country include the Lagurín, Nasidu, Quala, Salitra, Sebria, and Topata rivers.

Climate
Four main climate zones fall largely along geographic lines.
 * In the northwest corner, there is a relatively small areas of (BWk). The area experiences hot, dry summers and cold, dry winters.
 * The Kanakan steppe region lies below the desert, covering about a quarter of the country in the northland. The steppe has a (BSk) with warm to hot summers and cold winters. Snowfall in winter is not uncommon but is also not typically heavy.
 * South of the steppe, a band of (BSh) crosses the middle of the country, gradually extending southward to encompass much of the Tilarg Mountains region. Hot summers and warm-to-cool winters typify weather in this band, with cooler and wetter temperatures more common in elevated areas. Peaks of the higher mountains can see some snow in winter.
 * The central plains and coastal areas predominantly experience a (Cfa). The area encounters hot, humid summers with generally mild winters. Humidity is commonly higher nearer to the coast and temperatures tend to be cooler further north. Daily summer  are a regular occurrence.

Politics
Technically a, Ventora is a constitutional with an elected regent in the stead of the monarch and a bicameral. The country's body of, the Fundamental Law of Ventora (Ley Fundamental de Ventora), is a consisting of six separate documents. This is further influenced by certain that have developed over time.

Ventora is multi- country with universal suffrage at age 20 but a complex three-tier franchise for voting at the national and some lower levels.

Government
The consists of the Grand Council of State (Gran Consejo de Estado), as the upper house, and the People's Assembly (Asamblea Popular), as the lower house. Each of the 26 reigning dukes and duchesses hold a life seat in the Grand Council. Members of the nobility elect another 26 nobles to 4 year terms, bringing the number of fellows to 52. All citizens may vote under the three-tier franchise system to empanel a Conclave of Electors by district who elect delegates to 2 year terms in the 780 seat People's Assembly. Candidates must be at least 20 years of age and have completed national service.

Serving a 5 year term, the Regent (Regente) is. The Grand Council elects the Regent who must be a titled noble at least 25 years of age. Although not required to have completed national service, in practice no candidate has stood who has not fulfilled that obligation. The Regent appoints, with consent of the Grand Council, a Governor General (Gobernador/a General) as. The Governor General serves at the pleasure of the Regent and may resign at will but may only be dismissed by the Regent with simple majority concurrence of the People's Assembly.

The College of Commissioners (Colegio de Comisionados) is the advisory council and for the government of Ventora. Its members are the Commissioners who are the heads of the various primary departments of state. The constitution provides for the cabinet but does not define the departments themselves, leaving that to the discretion of the Governor General. He or she appoints the Commissioners with simple majority approval of the Grand Council and the assent of the Regent who issues their Royal Commissions.

Administrative divisions
Ventora consists of 26 semi-autonomous (ducados). Due to the lack of a monarch after the demise of the royal line in the Lorqui rail incident of 1961, the dukes and duchesses no longer have personal fealty to the head of state. As a result, the duchies are semi-autonomous and have a relationship with the state and each other. A duke or duchess formerly ruled their respective duchy under an hereditary system. Since 1978, however, the role of the duke or duchess is more ceremonial in nature. Governance is invested in an elected head of government, most commonly a, and executive departments. Each duchy has its own judiciary and elected legislature.

Duchies have a varying number of (condado) with a count or countess as titular head. The authorities and independence of the counties varies by duchy. The next level of governance consists of (municipios), which may be further subdivided into boroughs ().

Law and judiciary
The legal system in Ventora is a system compiled into statute books called codes (códigos). There are separate codes for criminal, civil, and commercial laws, as well as laws of governance. Although the state has prominence in commercial and some criminal and governance law, most civil and criminal law is within the purview of the duchies. The country's document, the Fundamental Law of Ventora, provides for the structure of the state and its governance.

The judiciary is organized into sets of courts for each type of law plus an armed forces court system. The national court systems consist of three tiers: Courts of Inquiry, Courts of Justice, and High Courts. Duchies have their own court systems but typically mirror the national structure. A single State Supreme Court (Corte Suprema del Estado) is superior to the lower national tiers and serves as a court of last resort for appeals from the highest ducal court.

Military


Falling under the authority of the Defense Commission (Comisión de Defensa), the country's armed forces consist of three combat branches: Army (Ejército), Navy (Armada), and Air Force (Fuerza Aerea), each under the command of their respective Captain General. The Logistics Corps (Cuerpo Logístico) provides support to the entire armed forces. Although members of the armed forces proclaim their fealty to the Regent in the stead of the King, the Defense Commissioner is the peacetime commander-in-chief and gives direction through the Captains General. In wartime, the Governor General assumes the role of commander-in-chief. This unique chain of command was devised to ensure no one office or person held too much military power as a result of the experiences that led to the War of the Three Capitals.

The Gendarmerie (Gendarmería) provides military police services to the armed forces. It also has responsibility for border security, maritime surveillance, protection of government facilities and senior officials, and provides a national-level rapid response force for internal security purposes such as crowd control and interdiction of organized crime and terrorism. The Interior Commission has charge of the Gendarmerie during peacetime but it may be subordinated to the Defense Commission during wartime. The Logistics Corps provides oversight to Gendarmerie military police operations on behalf of the armed forces.

Foreign relations
Although the Regent has influence in matters of foreign policy, it is largely the purview of the Governor General and Foreign Commissioner. Ventora's key objectives in its foreign policy focus on trade. The country takes an expansive view in its foreign relations policies as demonstrated by tendencies to recognize any legitimate governmental authority and efforts to encourage and support local determination free from external interference.

Ventora's oldest is the Lávar Authority which coordinates navigation, economic use, and environmental protection for the Lavar River. The country joined the World Forum in 1959 and is also a member of the Council for Abayadi Prosperity, Compact for Abayadi Security, and Alutran Cultural Community. The Civil Protection Corps, a government-chartered private which provides  within Ventora, is an affiliate of the International Relief Operations Organization and has participated in relief and disaster assistance operations around the world.

Economy
The national currency is the standard (estándar), which uses the symbol Ɇ. The State Bank of Ventora (Banco Estatal de Ventora, BEV), the country's, issues notes in 1, 5, 10, 25, 50, 100, 500, and 1000 denominations, although the latter two are not used often. It also mints 1 and 5 standard coins, with the 5 Ɇ coin not being popular due to its weight. The standard divides into 100 cents (centavos) with 1, 5, 10, 25, and 50 cent coins in circulation. The State Bank manages monetary policy and sets the value of the currency based on a currency band influenced by the exchange rate of leading currencies.

In 2020, Ventora had a nominal of Ꝟ2 trillion, ranking moderately among middle powers. Unemployment has fallen recently and was 10.5% in 2020.

Overview
Ventora has an economic system with extremely high degrees of private ownership and minimal regulation and governmental intervention. While the government does establish certain minimum safety standards, such as for aircraft safety, most other aspects of the economy are not regulated. Resource and product distribution, as well as pricing, follow the natural correlations of supply and demand. To ensure consumer choice and protections, the law typically restricts single-owner market control to not more than half in most cases. A notable exception is utilities and transport infrastructure due to avoid inefficient duplicative efforts. Nonetheless, private concerns often operate such public services by concession from the government.

Agriculture
The central plains are Ventora's breadbasket. Grains are the largest crops, including, , and. The country is a large source of olives, which grow in the northern scrublands between the steppe and central plains. Grapes are a popular crop in the southeastern foothills of the Tilarg Mountains and the region has many vineyards and wineries. Wine is a significant export. There are also many orchards for oranges, grapefruit, apples, apricots, pears, peaches, and plums, especially closer to coastal areas. Vegetables include tomatoes, onions, potatoes, and nuts, particularly peanuts, walnuts, and pecans.

Livestock raised in Ventora includes cattle, pigs, chickens, and lambs. In the higher elevations, sheep and goats are the main livestock, followed by cattle. Generally no longer raised as beasts of burden, horses have become the prerogative largely of the wealthy. Fishing has been a major food source since before recorded history and commercial fishing remains an important economic activity in Ventora.

Manufacturing
Numerous companies in Ventora manufacture goods and equipment, such as machinery, to support and serve other industries. Consumer goods, including home appliances, televisions and radios, and furniture, represent a significant portion of manufacturing output. Subassemblies and parts are becoming a growing segment within the manufacturing sector. Although most automobiles are imported, there is some domestic production. Sociedad Tramullas de Automóviles Rallye SA (STAR) produces an inexpensive series of cars which are popular for their low cost and ease of maintenance.

Mining
Once a much larger segment of the economy, mining remains important. Recent developments in the ability to extract has been important to the sector. Coalfields provide the largest quantities of minerals in the sector.

Iron and copper ore deposits are abundant, allowing small export quantities. Other metal commodities, such as nickel, zinc, potassium, and magnesium, can be found economically extractible quantities to meet domestic needs.

Ventora is also an important source of s, gypsum, and sulfur. Limestone is also abundant but is not a significant export commodity.

Tourism
Foreign and domestic people enjoy holidays in the coastal areas. The black sand beaches along the southwestern shores are particularly popular. There is also a growing, albeit niche, scientific tourism engaged in visiting the northern scrublands and the Kanakan region of the Alutran Steppe.

Transport
Ventora has a well-developed railway network, especially in the south. Tren Rápido, a system, connects the major cities in the coastal region. Passenger rail radiates from hubs along the high-speed line to serve other large municipalities. Densely populated municipalities have transit systems incorporating regional commuter rail, trams, and subway lines. Most cities have some level of transit bus service.

With xxx km (xxx mi) of roadway, Ventora's Autovia dual-carriageway highways connect all major cities as well as many cities and towns in between. A number of autovisa are operated as tollways by private concerns under franchise.

True to its maritime history and traditions, foreign trade is an important element in the country's economy. A wide variety of raw materials and finished goods are shipped in and out through the dozen major ports along the Abayadi coast. These ports transload nearly a half billion tonnes of bulk solids, bulk liquids, and containerized goods annually. Waterways, including the Lávar and Karru rivers which are navigable along much of their lengths, provide another important means of moving goods and people through south, west, and central Ventora. Ferries also connect several of the coastal cities.

Energy
Electrical generation consists of over a third renewables and the balance from fossil fuels. Renewables provide for 37.6% of electricity production, with the largest sources being wind, hydro, and solar. Biofuels, soild waste, and geothermal facilities are other renewable energy sources. Fossil fuels, including coal, natural gas (including shale gas), and petroleum, produce the remaining 62.4% of electricity in Ventora. The country is an electricity exporter, producing more than it consumes, amounting to about 11 TWh of surplus in 2018.

Natural gas, which Ventora primarily imports due to few domestic sources, is the primary fuel for residential heating and cooking. A number of cities use district heating systems supplied largely by waste-to-energy facilities. Some electrical generating stations provide excess or post-generation steam for industrial heating or steam-propelled systems in a handful of manufacturing facilities located near the power plants. Although Ventora has some oil fields, particularly in the midlands, the country imports the bulk of its petroleum and petroleum product needs.

Demographics
The 2020 census tallied Ventora's population at 0. This gives the country a population density of 2 km2 overall. However, densities are higher in the southwestern and southern coastal regions, then begin to thin in the central plains, midlands, and are lowest in the north.

Ethnic groups
The largest in Ventora are the Quattali, numbering over 17 million. They are found predominantly along the southern coasts and into the midlands. Divasans, at nearly 16 million, are the next largest group, generally inhabiting the midlands. At almost 11.5 million, Montañeros/as originate in the west central region. Kanakans are the other indigenous ethnic group consisting of about 9.3 million who live primarily in the north. About 6.7 million ethnic Tilarg live largely in southeastern areas. Close to 3.5 million people with Watanese origins live mostly in the eastern highlands. Kashar and Binu, at just over 3 million each, can be found largely along coastal areas. Ethnic !Eshar comprise nearly 2.5 million people who live largely in west-central Ventora. Florentines can be found predominantly in northwestern areas and number just over 2 million. A little more than a million people of Salian origin live most typically in coastal areas. The remaining 4.5 million people belong to a number of ethnic groups, including Ordrish, Myrish, Gundiaghs, and Ecoralanders.

Languages
is the official and primary in the country. While 98% of the population speak Ventoran, only 86% claim it as their first language. Regional native languages include in the lower west,  across the midsection, Kanakan in the north-northeast, and  in the southeast. About 7% of the population, mostly Haksar expatriots, claim Manauk as their mother tongue. Watanese is another common language in the southeast as is !Eshar in the west center.

Education
Everyone in Ventora must attend school from age 5 through 16. Public schools do not charge tuition but most licensed private schools do, the amount varying from school to school. School is in session year-round, with week-long breaks every quarter, as well as week-long breaks at each solstice and equinox.

Parents may send children to preparatory schools before age 5. State-supported schools accept children ages 3 to 5 and many parents take advantage of the programs designed to socialize children and prepare them for the learning environment. Private preparatory schools accept children younger than age 3 and some have programming that is considered highly academic for such young children. Such preparatory schools are popular among the wealthy for the perceived advantage it gives their children.

The compulsory education structure and minimum standard curriculum is the same for both state-funded and private schools. Private schools may teach above the curriculum requirements. The Selectividad (lit. selection) examination at the end of secondary school determines a student's placement in one of four tertiary school tracks: general, academic, technical, or vocational. As a result of the compulsory education scheme, Ventora enjoys a literacy rate above 99%. Upon receiving their tertiary certificate (certificado), students who scored well enough on the comprehensive examination may attend baccalaureate (bacalatura) for levels 12 and 13, typically at ages 16 to 18. The curriculum at this level is designed for students planning to attend university and focuses on academic and technical subjects. It often includes a second foreign language. The final examination score plays a significant role, along with course scores, in determining university placement. Students with vocational aptitude may attend a vocacionarium for levels 12 and 13, with coursework focused on the particular skills necessary for a trade. For some trades, the vocacionarium serves as the apprenticeship; for others it is a pre-apprenticeship, saving the student time in achieving qualification in the trade.

Most students admitted to university complete four years of study and receive their licentura. Students with above average academic achievement and desire may be admitted to advanced university studies. After two more years, successful students receive the diplomatura. Additional university education beyond the diplomatura results in the awarding of the titulura after the student completes and successfully defends a disertation on a particular topic relevant to their field of study. Universities charge tuition to cover their costs.

Health
Ventorans enjoy universal healthcare paid for by a combination of employer subsidies, compulsory worker subscriptions, and a tiered service co-pay scheme designed to encourage personal care and responsibility for individual health conditions. An emphasis on public health, through sanitation and robust, proactive efforts at controlling and eliminating infectious diseases and disease vectors, helps contain costs of the system. Healthcare encourages preventive care, with periodic wellness examinations and vaccinations having no out-of-pocket charges. Co-pays for addressing chronic, preventable conditions, such as type 2 diabetes, certain cancers, and coronary heart disease, are still low and vary depending on insurance or the healthcare trust plan.

Local polyclinics serve as initial points of access to to care, with general practice physicians and specialists housed together at the clinic. Centralized medical records ensure quality of care since healthcare providers can easily review a person's previous care and medical history. The polyclinics include pharmacies, in-house laboratories, and diagnostic testing appropriate to outpatient services. More serious cases receive care in hospitals, either on an outpatient or inpatient basis.

Most Ventorans rely on their healthcare trust to cover their healthcare costs while some also subscribe to private insurance for coverage of co-pays or treatments, such as so-called cosmetic procedures, that may not be covered by healthcare trusts. On average, Ventorans seem satisfied with their healthcare system. The system is credited with the average life expectancies of 79 years for males and 83 for females as of 2020.

The Commonweal Commission oversees the healthcare system. It sets standards for medical facilities, research, education, and providers and must be registered with the commission. A majority of facilities and providers are private, typically non-profit in nature.

Religion
While H'Ejrad, with 33.6 million members, is the largest practiced in Ventora, Sortisism is the predominant indigenous faith, claiming over 27.5 million followers. Sortisism is a religion centered on the interpretation and meaning of. Other significant religions with large numbers of adherents in the country include Stroomism and, to a degree, Ayekism. Over 10 million people in Ventora either don't believe in a or do not follow any religious practices or standardized belief systems.

Culture
Scholars have invested countless hours in researching Ventoran culture.

Society
Following the demise of the royal family in 1961, Ventoran society consists of the nobility (aristocracy) and the polity (citizenry at large). Nobles can be either titled (dukes, counts, and lords) or untitled nobility, termed hidalgo. Nobility passes through heredity by means of. In general, titled nobility hold lands and historically governed the areas under their jurisdiction, although today their reign typically largely ceremonial. While they may own land, and frequently do in modern times, the hidalgo are not considered "landed". The captains of industry and many senior government officials tend to be hidalgo.

The polity technically embodies the non-noble classes:, , , and classes. Although substantially defined by economic parameters, social class in Ventora also carries some behavioral presumptions and expected characteristics, such as living style, educational achievement, and occupation.

Architecture
Throughout history, in Ventora has been a product of both local ideas and foreign influence. Some styles are uniquely Ventoran while others are more universal. was popular in the 19th century while modern designs tend to follow fundadismo or glass-and-steel concepts. The former often appears with government buildings while the latter is more typical of commercial structures.

Cuisine
Fish and seafood are popular foods in coastal areas with meats more of a main stay in the center and north of the country. Grains, pastas, and vegetables frequently make up part of meals. Garlic is found in a wide variety of dishes and use of onions, chilis, and other spices is also customary. As a leading producer, olive oil is a common element in Ventoran cuisine.

So-called chain restaurants are a rarity in Ventora. Instead, street vendors are the popular source for quick-food meals and can be found throughout the country, even in rather remote, rural areas. A widespread food choice is the, a fried, or sometimes baked, turnover which usually has a fish or meat and spices and sauce filling. Sometimes empanadillas include potatoes or, less frequently, vegetables.

Sport
Ventorans enjoy sport on both an individual and team basis. They are avid fans for local teams and spectator sports often serve as an outlet for regional rivalries. is a good example of this.

Several individual sports have low cost and enjoy popularity along the spectrum of social and economic standing. Hunting and fishing are common activities in rural areas while fitness activities such as walking, running, cycling, calisthenics, and swimming have adherents across the country. A number of people participate in and  in the Tilarg Mountains while many people enjoy  in the coastal areas; canoeing and kayaking are common on the country's rivers and streams. More organized sports include, , and various sport competitions.

Falconry and several equestrian sports have been considered out of reach for ordinary Ventorans. In recent years, s have helped make these sports more accessible to the less affluent. In fact, falconry, as a traditional hunting method in the steppe and Tilarg Mountains regions, along with working class falconers, has become a sort of equalizer among the classes in some competitions, such as judged hunts and field meets.

Martial championships are of interest, particularly among the nobility, but the open and grand tournaments also attract participants from non-noble classes. The Ventoran Martial Championship Council (Consejo del Campeonato Marcial Ventoran, CCMV), which is the country's martial competitions governing body, has even established a charitable fund to assist participation among interested people who would otherwise not be able to afford martial sports. Ventora is a founding member of the global Grand Martial Championship Association (GCMA) and has a permanent seat in the GCMA Assembly with the representative designated by CCMV.

As a maritime country, fishing and boating competitions are significant sports. The Maritime Sport Federation (Federación de Deportes Marítimos, FDM) sponsors two noteworthy annual sailing competitions. The Southwest Alutran Cup is a sailing race held every May. In late August, FDM holds the Abayadi Regatta, a multi-day event that requires boat crews to navigate to certain points in a particular order. Crews gain points based on time. The regatta is a test of skill and endurance tracing its roots back to Ventora's early maritime trading history.

Public holidays and festivals
Ventorans enjoy a number of local and regional festivals in addition to several official holidays. Two popular festivals include the Harvest Festival (Fiesta de la Cosecha), the largest of which takes place in Vedra, Sabaray for five days in mid-September, including the labor day holiday. Many cities and towns, especially in the rural areas, have their own harvest festivals. Another popular festival is the Summer Festival (Festival de Verano), usually in conjunction with the summer solstice holiday.

Although the duchies each have some of their own public holidays, there are eight holidays celebrated throughout the country. In addition, some localities, including cities and counties, may recognize a regional holiday or two. Many businesses do not operate on public holidays and the majority give their employees the day off with pay as though worked while persons who must work on a holiday generally receive premium pay. Most holidays are observed on the nearest Friday to result in a long weekend, with the excpetions being New Year's Day and the summer and winter solstices.