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{{Short description|Self-proclaimed political entity}} | |||
{{otheruses4|entities that are not recognized by any world governments or major international organizations|information on countries that are generally recognized but geographically tiny, such as ], ], ], or ]|microstate}} | |||
{{About|self-proclaimed political entities that are not recognised as states|small countries that are officially recognised|Microstate|recognized small countries larger than microstates|Small state}} | |||
{{Distinguish|list of states with limited recognition{{!}}unrecognised state}} | |||
{{Good article}} | |||
] is a micronation located on ] off the coast of the United Kingdom.]] | |||
{{Politics}} | |||
A '''micronation''' is a ] whose representatives claim that they belong to an independent ] or ], but which lacks ] by any ]. Micronations are classified separately from ] and ]s; they are also not considered to be ] or ] as they lack the legal basis in ] for their existence. The activities of micronations are almost always trivial enough to be ignored rather than disputed by the established nations whose territory they claim—referred to in micronationalism as ''macronations''. Several micronations have issued coins, ], postage stamps, ], medals and other state-related items, some as a source of revenue. Motivations for the creation of micronations include theoretical experimentation, political ], artistic expression, personal entertainment and the conduct of criminal activity. The study of micronationalism is known as '''micropatriology'''{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=74}} or '''micropatrology'''.{{sfn|Ferguson|2009|p=37}}{{efn|name="Note"|Both terms also refer to the study of ].<ref name="Vieira"/><ref>{{cite book|last=Eccardt|first=Thomas M.|year=2005|title=Secrets of the Seven Smallest States of Europe: Andorra, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, San Marino, and Vatican City|publisher=]|page=142|isbn=978-0-781-81032-6}}</ref>}} | |||
]]] | |||
Although several historical states have been retroactively called micronations, the concept was formulated in the 1970s, with a particular influence from the ]. Micronationalism saw several developments thereafter, with several micronations being founded in Australia in the 1970s and Japan in the 1980s. As a result of the emergence of the ] in the mid-1990s, micronationalism lost much of its traditionally eccentric anti-establishment sentiment in favour of more hobbyist perspectives, and the number of exclusively online or merely simulation-based micronations expanded dramatically. This has allowed several intermicronational organisations to form, as well as allowing for many ] to take place between micronations since the 2000s, including the biennial ] convention. | |||
'''Micronations''' – sometimes also referred to as '''cybernations''', '''fantasy countries''', '''model countries''', and '''new country projects''' – are entities that resemble independent ]s or ]s, but which are unrecognized by them, and for the most part exist only on paper, on the Internet, or in the minds of their creators. | |||
== Definition == | |||
Micronations also differ from ] and ] movements in that they are largely viewed as being eccentric and ] in nature, and are often created and maintained by a single person or family group. | |||
{{see also|Sovereignty}} | |||
Micronations are ] that claim ] but lack ] by world governments or major ].{{sfn|Mislan|Streich|2018|p=17, 26}}<ref name="Sawe">{{cite web|last=Sawe|first=Benjamin Elisha|date=25 April 2017|url=https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/what-is-a-micronation.html|title=What Is A Micronation?|series=World Facts|work=World Atlas}}</ref> Micronations are classified separately from ] and ]s, nor are they considered to be ] or ] as they lack the legal basis in ] for their existence.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=82, 202}} While some are ] in nature, most micronations are widely regarded as sovereignty projects that instead seek to mimic a ] rather than to achieve ], and their activities are almost always trivial enough to be ignored rather than challenged by the established nations whose territory they claim{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=2}}{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021a|p=75}}—referred to as a ''macronation'' in micronationalism.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Wedgwood|first=Ruth|year=2000|url=https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klj/vol88/iss4/5/|title=Cyber-Nations|journal=]|publisher=]|volume=88|issue=4|page=962}}</ref> Some micronations admit to having no intention of actually becoming internationally recognised as sovereign.<ref name="Brussles">{{cite web|last=Oeuillet|first=Julien|date=7 December 2015|url=http://www.brusselstimes.com/magazine2/4653/springtime-of-micronations-spearheaded-by-belgian-grand-duke-niels|title=Springtime of micronations spearheaded by Belgian "Grand-Duke" Niels|work=]|archive-date=13 January 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160113080229/http://www.brusselstimes.com/magazine2/4653/springtime-of-micronations-spearheaded-by-belgian-grand-duke-niels}}</ref> Geographically, most micronations are very small, are often the outgrowth of a single individual, rely on their sovereign state to some extent, and mimic sovereign states by creating their own government, legislation, proclaiming ], holding national elections and engaging in ] with other micronations.{{sfn|Ferguson|2009|p=1–2}}{{sfn|Moreau|2014|p=59–60}} While most micronations claim sovereignty over physical territory, others are based solely around the ] or do not claim sovereignty at all, a hobbyist paradigm of micronationalism that arose with the rise of the Internet from the mid-1990s onwards.<ref name="web1">{{cite web|last=Latrive|first=Florent|date=2 October 1998|url=https://www.liberation.fr/ecrans/1998/10/02/l-organisation-des-nations-online-de-choconia-a-merovingie-les-micronations-virtuelles-se-developpen_249745/|title=L'organisation des nations online. De Choconia à Mérovingie, les "micronations" virtuelles se développent sur l'Internet avec leur Constitution, leur drapeau, voire leur monnaie. Entre jeux de rôles, création artistique et laboratoire politique.|trans-title=The organization of nations online. From Choconia to Merovingia, virtual "micronations" are developing on the Internet with their own constitution, their own flag, even their own currency. Between roleplay, artistic creation and political laboratory.|language=French|work=]}}</ref><ref name="web2">{{cite news |last=Mihm |first=Stephen |date=25 May 2000 |title=Utopian Rulers, and Spoofs, Stake Out Territory Online |work=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/05/25/technology/utopian-rulers-and-spoofs-stake-out-territory-online.html |url-access=limited}}</ref>{{sfn|Lasserre|2000|p=11–17}} | |||
Some micronations have managed to extend some of their operations into the physical world by issuing ], ]s, ], ]s, medals and other items. Such trappings of "real" sovereign states are created as a way of seeking to legitimize the micronations that produce them. | |||
In 2021, legal academics ] and ], in their '']'', defined micronations as "self-declared nations that perform and mimic acts of sovereignty, and adopt many of the protocols of nations, but lack a foundation in domestic and international law for their existence and are not recognised as nations in domestic or international forums".{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=76}} | |||
The term "micronation" was coined in the 1990s to describe the many thousands of small, unrecognised, state-like entities that have mostly arisen since that time. The term has since also come to be used retroactively to refer to earlier ephemeral unrecognised entities, some of which date as far back as the early 19th century. | |||
Online dictionary '']'', published by ], gives a similar definition: "An ], typically existing only on the internet or within the private property of its members, that lays claim to sovereign status as an independent nation, but which is unrecognized by real nations."<ref>{{cite dictionary |title=micronation |dictionary=] |publisher=] |url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/micronation}}</ref> | |||
== Definition == | |||
{{unreferenced|section}} | |||
Micronations generally have a number of common features: | |||
# They often assert that they wish to be widely recognised as sovereign states, but are not. | |||
# They are small; those that claim to control physical territories are mostly of very limited extent - however the majority exist exclusively in the online world. While several micronations claim hundreds or even thousands of members, the vast majority have no more than one or two active participants. | |||
# Some issue government instruments such as ]s, stamps, and currency, and confer titles and awards; these are rarely recognised outside of their own communities of interest. | |||
== History == | |||
These criteria distinguish micronations from ], ]s, ]es, ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s, and ]s (TAZs), which do not usually seek to be recognised as sovereign. Micronations are also distinguishable from entities that have diplomatic relations with other recognized nation-states of the world without being formally recognized themselves by many nation-states or accepted by major international bodies (such as the ]), for example the ] (]). By contrast, micronations do not have diplomatic relations with recognized nation-states of the world or major international bodies (such as the UN). | |||
{{see also|List of micronations}} | |||
=== Retrospective micronations === | |||
The term "micropatrology" is sometimes used to describe the study of both micronations and ]s by micronational hobbyists, some of whom refer to ] ]s as "macronations". | |||
Several historical ] have been retroactively described as micronations in academic and journalistic works, including the ] (existed 1811–16),{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=14}} ] (since 1860),{{sfn|Ferguson|2009|p=1}} ] (1861–1986),<ref>{{cite AV media|last=Lienhard|first=John H.|date=27 June 2022|url=https://uh.edu/engines/epi3277.htm|title=Small Countries |publisher=]|time=2:15–2:37|format=audio}}</ref> ] (since 1878),{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=105}} and the more contemporary ] (since 1944),{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=105}} ] (since 1947),<ref>{{cite news|first=Lebby|last=Eyres|date=12 March 2020|url=http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20200311-a-tiny-country-between-france-and-switzerland|title=A Tiny Country between France and Switzerland|work=]|publisher=]}}</ref> ] (1949–1973)<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mackinnon|first=Lachlan|date=2014|url=https://www.shimajournal.org/issues/v8n2/i.-MacKinnon-Shima-v8n2-105-119.pdf|title="Give me fish, not federalism"|journal=Shima|publisher=Shima Publishing|volume=8|number=2|page=106}}</ref> and ] (1959–{{floruit|1964}}).{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=169}} | |||
=== Libertarian micronations and seasteading projects: 1964–1972 === | |||
== Legitimacy == | |||
], before its destruction]] | |||
In ], the two most common schools of thought for the creation of statehood are the ] and ] theories of state creation. The constitutive theory was the standard nineteenth-century model of statehood, and the declaratory theory was developed in the twentieth century to address shortcomings of the constitutive theory. In the constitutive theory, a state exists exclusively via recognition by other states. The theory splits on whether this recognition requires "diplomatic recognition" or merely "recognition of existence." In the declaratory theory of statehood, an entity becomes a state as soon as it meets the minimal criteria for statehood. | |||
] was a libertarian project that succeeded in building an ] in 1972 by importing sand]] | |||
Several entities that can be considered micronations by contemporary standards were established throughout the 1960s and early 1970s and based on ideals of ] and many of them created via ]. | |||
As micronations do not meet either criterion, they cannot be considered sovereign states, and have no legitimacy in international law. | |||
] was founded in 1964 by writer ], claiming a bamboo raft that he had constructed with steel, iron piping and rock. Hemingway had it towed {{convert|9.7|km}} off the coast of Jamaica and argued that it was technically an ] and fully sovereign based on the ]. Although Hemingway had plans to expand the raft, it was destroyed within a few years by a cyclone, and the project was completely abandoned in 1973.<ref name="web3">{{cite web|url=https://norman.hrc.utexas.edu/fasearch/findingaid.cfm?eadid=00327|title=Leicester Hemingway: An Inventory of His New Atlantis Collection in the Manuscript Collection at the Harry Ransom Center|date=n.d.|work=]|publisher=]}}</ref>{{sfn|Strauss|1999|page=65–68}}<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/island-environments-in-a-changing-world/0DBFE3F1D0A2AA9ECF96DF86752E6A20|last1=Walker|first1=Lawrence R.|last2=Bellingham|first2=Peter|title=Island Environments in a Changing World|year=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-13950-026-5|page=34|url-access=subscription}}</ref> In 1967, ] squatted on ], an offshore platform in the ] used during World War II approximately {{convert|12|km}} off the coast of the United Kingdom.<ref name="Mac"/> Bates had intended to broadcast a ] from the platform, however ultimately never did so.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=9}} He instead declared the independence of Fort Roughs and declared it the ].<ref name="Mac"/>{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=9}} Bates died in 2012, and ] has since succeeded him as Prince of Sealand.<ref>{{cite news |date=10 October 2012 |title='Prince of Sealand' Roy Bates dies in Essex |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-19901944 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140331173525/https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-19901944 |archive-date=March 31, 2014}}</ref> | |||
:''See also:'' ], ] | |||
] was a project started in 1968 by Werner Stiefel, aiming to establish a new, libertarian nation in international waters via seasteading.{{sfn|Simpson|2016|p=I}} The operation launched a ] boat on the ] in December 1971, piloting it to an area near the Bahamas with the intent to permanently anchor it as their territory.<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Baker|first=Chris|date=19 January 2009|url=https://www.wired.com/2009/01/mf-seasteading/?currentPage=all|title=Live Free or Drown: Floating Utopias on the Cheap|magazine=]}}</ref> Upon reaching its destination, however, it sank in a hurricane.{{sfn|Simpson|2016|p=28}} After a number of subsequent failed attempts to construct a habitable sea platform and achieve sovereign status, the project was abandoned in 1976.{{sfn|Strauss|1999|p=74}} The ] was an artificial platform originally constructed as a ] in the ] in 1968. However, Italian architect Giorgio Rosa soon declared it sovereign.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=14}} The micronation had its own currency, a post office and commercial establishments. In 1969, the ] used explosives to destroy the facility, claiming it was a ploy to raise money from tourists while avoiding national ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Imarisio|first=Marco|date=28 August 2009|url=https://www.corriere.it/cronache/09_agosto_28/isola_utopia_imarisio_64f311d6-9397-11de-8445-00144f02aabc.shtml|title=Riemerge l'isola dell'Utopia|trans-title=The island of Utopia re-emerges|language=Italian|work=]}}</ref> The ] was a libertarian project that succeeded in building a small ] on the ] in 1972 by importing sand.{{sfn|Strauss|1999|p=115–116}} It was invaded by troops from Tonga that same year, who ] it before destroying the island.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=14}} During its brief existence, Minerva was a ].{{sfn|Strauss|1999|p=123}} | |||
== Early history and evolution== | |||
{{unreferenced|section}} | |||
]]] | |||
The micronation phenomenon is tied closely to the development of the ] concept in the 19th century, and the earliest recognisable micronations can be dated to that period. Most were founded by eccentric adventurers or business speculators, and several were remarkably successful. These include the ], ruled by the Clunies-Ross family, and ], ruled by the "White Rajahs" of the Brooke family; both were independent personal ]s in all but name, and survived until well into the 20th century. Author ] has suggested that so-called ]s located on the ] during the Sixteenth Century were also a type of early micronation. | |||
=== Conceptualisation === | |||
Less successful micronations are the ] (1819–1820), in what is now the ] state of ], the ] (1828–1835), which is now the town of ], the ] (1860–62) in southern ] and ], and the ] (1888–90) in ]. The oldest extant micronation to arise in modern times is the ], founded in 1865 in the ]. It failed to establish itself as a real country, but has nonetheless managed to survive into the present day as a unique literary foundation with its own king and aristocracy — although it is not without its controversies: there are presently at least four competing claimants to the Redondan throne. | |||
As of January 1973, the Office of the Geographer of the ] had a file cabinet for "countries which are only partially real", which included the ], Outer Baldonia, Minerva and the ]—not a micronation{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=50, 52}}—among others. Writer ] added, "We know the ], the ], and the ] nations. But there is another universe of nations which exist apart from the familiar countries."<ref>{{cite news|last=Hilts|first=Philip J.|author-link=Philip J. Hilts|date=21 January 1973|title=Where Is This Place?: Strange shores, indeed|newspaper=]|page=PC12|id={{ProQuest|148471481}}}}</ref> The ] (IMS), an American ] and ], was founded in 1973 and dedicated to the study of micronations, a discipline it named ''micropatrology''.{{sfn|O'Driscoll|2000|p=100}}{{sfn|Moreau|2014|page=51}}{{sfn|Strauss|1999|p=162}} By 1976, it had documents pertaining to 128 micronations and similar political entities.<ref name="NYT">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1976/03/28/archives/nations-off-the-beaten-track-a-world-of-tiny-nations.html|last=Bongartz|first=Roy|date=28 March 1976|title=Nations Off the Beaten Track|work=]|via=the New York Times Archives}}</ref> The earliest attested use of ''micronation'' in its current meaning appeared on 28 March 1976 in an article by '']'' about the IMS.<ref name="NYT"/> The first use of ''micronation'' in a book was in an eponymous dedicated section of the 1978 '']'' by ] and ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Wallechinsky|first1=David|last2=Irving|first2=Wallace|author1-link=David Wallechinsky|author2-link=Irving Wallace|year=1978|title=The People's Almanac #2|url=https://archive.org/details/peoplesalmanac200wall/page/330/mode/2up|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-553-01137-1|pages=330–331}}</ref> In 1979, the first book about micronations, '']'', was published by ].{{sfn|Strauss|1999|loc="]"}} The IMS contributed considerably to the work.{{sfn|Strauss|1999|page=II}} However, the word ''micronation'' is notably absent from the book. A second edition of the work was published in 1984 by ], followed in 1999 by a third edition published by ].{{sfn|Strauss|1999|loc="]"}} According to the ], the IMS was disestablished in 1988.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://uia.org/s/or/en/1100018345|title=International Micropatrological Society (IMS)|date=n.d. |website=] (UIA)}}</ref> | |||
=== Initial developments in Australia: 1970–1981 === | |||
], owner of the ] island of ] in the early decades of the 20th century, declared himself King and issued private coinage and postage stamps for local use. Although the island was ruled as a virtual fiefdom, its owner never claimed to be independent of the ], so ] can at best be described as a precursor to later territorial micronations. Another example is the ], a 16-acre rocky island off the coast of ], founded by ], chairman of ], in 1945 and consisting of a population of 69 fishermen.{{-}} | |||
] (formerly Hutt River Province), a micronation founded in Australia]] | |||
Australia has a disproportionate number of micronations compared to other countries.<ref name="Trigger"/><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/oct/23/raising-the-drawbridge-why-are-so-many-australians-creating-their-own-countries|last1=Hobbs|first1=Harry|last2=Williams|first2=George|date=23 October 2022b|title=Raising the drawbridge: why are so many Australians creating their own countries?|work=]}}</ref> The first micronation founded within Australia was the ] in 1970. It was declared independent by farmer ] over a dispute concerning wheat ].<ref name="Casley">{{cite news|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/leonard-casley-obituary-tvn6h5l0g|date=5 March 2019|title=Leonard Casley obituary|work=]|url-access=subscription}}</ref> In 2017, the ] ordered that Casley pay $2.7 million in unpaid tax, and that his son Arthur Casley pay $242,000 in unpaid tax.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Neuweiler|first1=Sebastian|last2=Menagh|first2=Joanna|date=16 June 2017|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-16/hutt-river-province-decision-on-ato-fight/8624450|title=Australia's oldest micro-nation founders ordered to pay $3m tax bill|work=ABC News}}</ref> Casley abdicated in 2017 in favour of his son ].<ref name="Casley"/> Leonard died in 2019, and Hutt River dissolved the following year amidst continued disputes with the ] as well as the ].<ref name="CNN">{{cite news|last=O'Connell|first=Ronan|date=10 August 2020|title=Australia's oldest micronation, Hutt River is no more thanks to Covid-19|work=]|url=https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/australia-micronation-hutt-river-principality/index.html}}</ref> In 1976, the ] was declared by Alec Brackstone in response to the ]. Brackstone, an ardent British monarchist, became alarmed by what he saw as a drift away from the Australian system of ] toward outright ]. Thus, to ensure that at least one portion of Australia would remain loyal to the ], Bumbunga was declared.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=144}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/bumbunga-governor-alec-brackstones-relentless-will-to-secede/news-story/d743e96aaf5cb71cfc28b26bf7a30a6d|last=Cook|first=Craig|date=30 June 2018|title=Bumbunga Governor Alec Brackstone's relentless will to secede|work=]}}</ref> | |||
== History during 1960 to 1980 == | |||
{{unreferenced|section}} | |||
The 1960s and 1970s witnessed the foundation of a number of territorial micronations. The first of these, ], was established in 1967 on an abandoned ] gun platform in the ] just off the ] coast of England, and has survived into the present day. Others were founded on ] principles and involved schemes to construct ]s, but only three are known to have had even limited success in realising that goal. | |||
The ] was proclaimed in 1978 by German migrant Paul Neuman. Aeterna Lucina came to public attention in 1990 when Neuman faced fraud charges in the ] court system relating to land sale offences; the case was abandoned in 1992.<ref>{{cite news|last=Brown|first=Malcom|url=|title=Clouds cleared on baron's reign|work=]|date=24 June 1992|page=10|via=the SMH Archives}}</ref> In 1979, the ] was declared by Thomas Barnes in protest of alleged incompetence by the ] in regards to the flooding of his and others' properties.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=97}} He was inspired by Hutt River.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=145}} The ] was established in ] in the early 1980s by politician ], and issues its own banknotes.<ref name="Trigger">{{cite news|last=Trigger|first=Rebecca|date=10 February 2017|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-02-10/meet-the-micro-nations-of-australia/8252020|title=Micro-nations: Meet the tiny states who've said 'see ya later' to the Commonwealth|work=]}}</ref> In recognition of his status, Rudge legally changed his name to John the Duke of Avram.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2022|p=24–25}} In 1981, the ] was founded in ] as a non-territorial global government based on the ideals of ], ] and ]. Among the causes Atlantium supports are the right to unrestricted international ], the right to ], and the right to ].{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=74}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/lifematters/micronations/3039654|last=Gilbert|first=Ewan|date=17 October 2015|title=Empire of Atlantium: Take a glimpse into Australia's smallest micronation|work=ABC News}}</ref> | |||
] was a 400-m<sup>2</sup> platform built in ] in Italian national waters in the ], 7 miles off the ] town of ]. It is known to have issued stamps, and to have declared ] to be its official language. Shortly after completion, however, it was seized and destroyed by the ]. | |||
=== Micronational community in Japan: 1981–1991 === | |||
In the late 1960s, ] (aka Lester Hemingway), brother of author ], was involved in another such project — a small timber platform in international waters off the west coast of ]. This territory, consisting of an 8 foot by 30 foot barge, he called "New Atlantis". Hemingway was an honorary citizen and President; however, the structure was damaged by storms and finally pillaged by Mexican fishermen. In 1973, Hemingway was reported to have moved on from New Atlantis to promoting a 1,000-square-yard platform near the Bahamas. The new country was called "Tierra del Mar" (''Sea Land''). (Ernest Hemingway's adopted hometown of ] would itself be part of another micronation, see ]) | |||
{{Main|Mini-dokuritsukoku}} | |||
In 1981, drawing on a news story about Hemingway's New Atlantis, novelist ] wrote a 700-page work of ], '']'', about a village that secedes from Japan and proclaims its bumpkinish, marginalized ] its national language, and its subsequent ]. This single-handedly inspired a large number of real-world Japanese villages, mostly in the northern regions, to declare independence, generally as a move to raise awareness of their unique culture and crafts for urban Japanese who saw village life as backwards and uncultured. These micronations, known as ] ({{langx|ja|ミニ独立国|mini dokuritsu koku}}),<ref>{{cite book|last=Vlastos|first=Stephen|year=1998|title=Mirror of Modernity: Invented Traditions of Modern Japan|publisher=]|page=121|isbn=978-05-20206-373}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|first1=Munetaka|last1=Kurahara|first2=Yuki|last2=Goto|first3=Toshiya|last3=Hikage|date=30 October 1996|url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/aija/61/488/61_KJ00004221789/_pdf/-char/ja|title=住民主体のまちづくりに向けての北海道ミニ独立国の活動に関する考察|trans-title=Consideration on the activities of the mini-independent country of Hokkaido for resident-centered town planning|language=Japanese|journal=Proceedings of the Architectural Institute of Japan|publisher=Architectural Institute of Japan|volume=61|issue=488|pages=165–175|doi=10.3130/aija.61.165_2|doi-access=free| issn = 1340-4210 }}</ref> held intermicronational ], and some of them formed confederations and intermicronational organisations. The Ginko Federation held an intermicronational ] in 1986. However, the economic impact of the ] in 1991 ended the boom. Many of the villages were forced to merge with larger cities, and the micronations and confederations were generally dissolved.<ref>{{cite book|first=Shigeru|last=Inoue|title=日本まちづくり事典|trans-title=Nippon Matchidukuri Jiten|pages=407–409|year=2010|language=Japanese|publisher=Maruzen Publishing|isbn=978-4-621-08194-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.transformationsjournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Trans35_08_Streich.pdf|last=Streich|first=Philip|date=2021|title=The Japanese Experience with Micronations|journal=Transformations|issue=35|pages=119–128}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://japandaily.jp/will-secede-japans-micro-nation-boom-2573/|last=Pasion|first=Adam|date=9 February 2016|title=The Will to Secede: Japan's Micro-nation Boom|work=Japan Daily}}</ref> | |||
The ] was set up in 1972 as a libertarian new-country project by ] businessman ]. Oliver's group conducted dredging operations at the ], a shoal located in the ] south of ]. They succeeded in creating a small artificial island, but their efforts at securing international recognition met with little success, and near-neighbour ] sent a military force to the area and annexed it. | |||
=== Protest micronations: 1980s === | |||
On ] 1977, ] ] declared the United Kingdom town of ] an independent kingdom with himself as its monarch. The town has subsequently developed a healthy tourism industry based on literary interests, and "King Richard" (whose sceptre consists of a recycled toilet plunger) continues to award Hay-on-Wye peerages and honours to anyone prepared to pay for them. | |||
The 1980s saw the establishment of several micronational entities in protest. | |||
The ] was a ] established in ], ], in 1980 in order to protest against the establishment of a ] dump at the site. The residents created a ] and built a temporary village with more than 100 huts, ranging from elaborate round houses to tents. After 33 days, the local police moved in and evicted the camp.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.ndr.de/kultur/3-Mai-1980-Atomkraftgegner-errichten-Republik-Freies-Wendland,freierepublikwendland100.html|last=Werner|first=Carina|date=3 May 2020|title="Freie Republik Wendland": Gelebte Utopie der Atomkraftgegner|trans-title="Free Republic of Wendland": Living utopia of nuclear power opponents|language=German|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.spiegel.de/politik/venceremos-tschuess-a-bad93b9f-0002-0001-0000-000014331635?context=issue|date=13 July 1980|title="Venceremos, tschüß"|trans-title=Venceremos, Goodbye|language=German|work=]}}</ref> Also in 1980, the ] was declared by residents of the ] during the ], which was opposed to the proposed construction of an ] at Aramoana in New Zealand.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2022|page=194}} This was because the project called for the destruction of the villages of Aramoana and Te Ngaru, and also threatened a local wildlife reserve. The project was ultimately abandoned in the early 1980s, and the micronation of Aramoana peacefully reintegrated into New Zealand.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.odt.co.nz/lifestyle/travel/aramoana-pathway-sea|last=Constantine|first=Ellie|date=13 December 2011|title=Aramoana: pathway to the sea|work=]}}</ref> | |||
== Australian developments == | |||
Micronational activities were disproportionately common throughout ] in the final three decades of the 20th century. | |||
*The ] was founded in 1970, when a farmer declared his property independent after a dispute over wheat quotas. | |||
*1976 witnessed the creation of the ] on a rural property near ], by an eccentric British monarchist. | |||
*The ] was created in a hamlet on the ] north coast in 1978. | |||
*An anti-taxation campaigner founded the Duchy of ] in western ] in the late 1970s; "His Grace the Duke of Avram" was later elected to the Tasmanian Parliament. | |||
*In ], a long-running dispute over flood damage to farm properties led to the creation of the ] in 1979. | |||
*A mortgage foreclosure dispute led George and Stephanie Muirhead of ], to briefly and abortively secede as the ] in 1993. | |||
*Another Australian farm tried to establish itself as secessionist micronation on ] ] as the ]. | |||
*The ] was established in 2004 as a symbolic political protest by a group of gay rights activists based in southeast Queensland. | |||
*The , based in Australia, claims the Koronis family of ]s as its territory. | |||
The ] was founded by local residents of the ] in 1982 after the ] set up a roadblock and inspection point on one of the only two roads connecting the Florida Keys with the mainland. The ] complained repeatedly about the inconvenience, claiming that it hurt the Keys' tourism industry. Though the roadblock was soon removed, the claim to sovereignty of the Conch Republic has persisted as a ] venture meant to bolster tourism.{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=131–133}} | |||
== Impact of Internet == | |||
Micronationalism shed much of its traditionally eccentric anti-establishment mantle and took on a distinctly hobbyist perspective in the mid-1990s, when the emerging popularity of the Internet made it possible to create and promote statelike entities in an entirely electronic medium with relative ease. As a result the number of exclusively online, fantasy or simulation-based micronations expanded dramatically. | |||
In 1986, the ] was declared by inventor ] after a denial from local officials to build his own wind turbine on North Dumpling Island in ], which Kamen privately owns. Kamen wrote his own constitution and created a flag, currency and national anthem for the micronation.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1988/04/22/nyregion/our-towns-from-li-sound-a-new-nation-asserts-itself.html|last=Ravo|first=Nick|date=22 April 1988|title=Our Towns; From L.I. Sound, A New Nation Asserts Itself|work=The New York Times|url-access=subscription}}</ref> In 1992, despite still being recognised as part of ] in the United States, Kamen was able to leverage his personal relationship with then-president ] to sign an unofficial ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|page=150}} | |||
The activities of these types of micronations are almost exclusively limited to simulations of diplomatic activity (including the signing of "treaties" and participation in "supra-micronational" forums such as the League of Micronations and the ), the conduct and operation of simulated elections and parliaments, and participation in simulated wars — all of which are carried out through online bulletin boards, mailing lists and blogs. Some micronations also make use of online ]. | |||
=== Artistic micronations: 1990s === | |||
A number of older-style territorial micronations, including the Hutt River Province, Seborga, and Sealand, maintain websites that serve largely to promote their claims and sell merchandise. | |||
Several ] projects with micronational claims arose in the 1990s, usually as a means to challenge the idea of ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=110}} | |||
In 1991, ] (NSK), a Slovenian ] ], declared independence. NSK describes itself as a "State in Time", claiming no territory in order to be a "stateless state".{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=110}} ] is a conceptual art project founded in 1992 by Swedish artists ] and ]. According to them, everyone who dies is automatically granted citizenship. Among Elgaland-Vargaland's territorial claims include ], people's ]s and "the distance between ] and ]" of France.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2022|p=113}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/09/arts/design/09bien.html|title=At Venice Biennale, Artists Plant Flag for Their State (of Mind)|work=The New York Times|last=Kennedy|first=Randy|date=9 June 2007|url-access=subscription}}</ref> They also claim to operate ] around the world.<ref>{{cite news|last=Daniel|first=Sabine|date=26 March 2019|url=https://france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr/normandie/culture-ambassade-elgaland-vargaland-hebergee-au-frac-caen-1645106.html|title=Culture: L'Ambassade d'Elgaland-Vargaland hébergée au FRAC de Caen|trans-title=Culture: The Embassy of Elgaland-Vargaland hosted at the FRAC in Caen|language=French|work=]}}</ref> In 1996, Swedish artist ] proclaimed the ] as a result of a court battle between local authorities over Vilks's ] of two sculptures in the natural reserve of ] in southern Sweden. Ladonia's claim of independence has since persisted following Vilks's death in 2021, with ] serving as Queen since 2011.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.dn.se/kultur/drottningen-av-ladonien-var-plikt-att-rora-oss-framat/|date=11 October 2021|title=Drottningen av Ladonien: "Vår plikt att röra oss framåt"|trans-title=The Queen of Ladonia: "Our duty is to move forward"|language=Swedish|work=]}}</ref> In 1997, the neighbourhood of ] in ], Lithuania declared tongue-in-cheek independence as a republic consisting of laidback artists.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20181014-uupis-a-tiny-republic-of-free-spirits|last=Rhone|first=Erin|date=15 October 2018|title=Užupis: A tiny republic of free spirits|work=BBC News}}</ref> | |||
== Categories == | |||
In the present day, seven main types of micronations are prevalent: | |||
=== Effects of the Internet and media attention === | |||
# Social, economic, or political simulations. | |||
In the mid-1990s, the emerging popularity of the ] made it possible for anyone to create their own virtual state-like entity with relative ease,<ref name="web2"/>{{sfn|Lasserre|2000|p=10}} and many micronations launched their own ]s.<ref name="web1"/> As a result, micronationalism lost much of its traditionally eccentric anti-establishment sentiment in favour of more hobbyist perspectives, and the number of exclusively online or merely simulation-based micronations expanded dramatically.{{sfn|Lasserre|2000|p=1–3, 8}} Several intermicronational ] were also established,<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.unipo.sk/public/media/21000/3_Ištok_FG_2014_volume56_no1_.pdf|last1=Ištok|first1=Robert|last2=Nováková|first2=Štefánia|date=2014|title=Micronationalism as a Phenomenon of the Present|journal=Folia Geographica|publisher=]|volume=56|number=1|page=52}}</ref> with the ], originally founded in 1980 by the ],{{sfn|O'Driscoll|2000|p=258}} and the United Micronations being at the forefront.<ref name="web2"/> The ] ({{langx|fr|l'Institut français de micropatrologie}}) was founded in 1996 by Swiss academic Fabrice O'Driscoll to study this phenomenon.<ref name="web1"/><ref>{{cite journal|first1=Valérie|last1=Foucher-Dufoix|first2=Stéphane|last2=Dufoix|url=https://www.cairn.info/revue-pardes-2012-2-page-57.htm|title=La patrie peut-elle être virtuelle ?|trans-title=Can the homeland be virtual?|language=French|date=February 2012|journal=Pardés|publisher=In Press|volume=52|pages=57–75|via=]}}</ref> Other online micronational services during the 1990s included MicroWorld, a monthly micronational magazine,<ref name="web1"/> and alt.politics.micronations, a ] ] dedicated to discussions regarding micronationalism.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://researchers.mq.edu.au/en/publications/diy-sovereignty-and-the-popular-right-in-australia|title=DIY sovereignty and the popular right in Australia|last=Lattas|first=Judy|journal=Mobile Boundaries/Rigid Worlds |year=2005|editor1-first=Michael|editor1-last=Fine|editor2-first=Nicholas|editor2-last=Smith|editor3-first=Amanda|editor3-last=Wise|publisher=]|page=14}}</ref> In 2000, O'Driscoll authored '']'' (They do not sit at the UN: a review of some micro-states, micro-nations and other ephemeral entities), which details over 600 micronations.<ref name="Vieira">{{cite book|last=Vieira|first=Fátima|editor1-last=Marks|editor1-first=Peter|editor2-last=Wagner-Lawlor|editor2-first=Jennifer A.|editor3-last=Vieira|editor3-first=Fátima|year=2022|title=The Palgrave Handbook of Utopian and Dystopian Literatures|chapter=Micronations and Hyperutopias|publisher=]|page=282|doi= 10.1007/978-3-030-88654-7_22|isbn=978-3-030-88654-7}}</ref> | |||
# Exercises in personal entertainment or self-aggrandisement. | |||
# Exercises in fantasy or creative fiction. | |||
# Vehicles for the promotion of an agenda. | |||
# Entities created for fraudulent purposes. | |||
# Historical anomalies and aspirant states. | |||
# New-country projects. | |||
]'s claimed border with Nevada]] | |||
===Social, economic, or political simulations=== | |||
These micronations tend to have a reasonably serious intent, and often involve significant numbers of people interested in recreating the past or simulating political or social processes. Examples include: | |||
* ''']''' ( and the ), a political simulation founded in 1979, with more than 130 members ("citizens") and an invented culture and ]. | |||
* (Sacro Imperio de Reuniao) — a Brazilian micronation founded in 1996 as an online constitutional monarchy simulation. It claims several dozen members around the world. | |||
* ''']''', a group claiming a worldwide membership of several thousand that has minted its own coins , maintains its own Wiki , and which engages in real-life Roman-themed re-enactments. | |||
In 2000, the ] and the erstwhile ] hosted an Intermicronational ] online to coincide with the ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2022|p=220}} Six micronations competed and were asked to record their performances then report it to a Molossian ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Hay|first=Mark|date=14 October 2016|url=https://www.good.is/sports/micronations-play-sports-too|title=The Absurd History Of The Intermicronational Olympic Games|work=]}}</ref> In 2003, the ''First Summit of Micronations'' summit commenced in ], Finland, coinciding with a ] festival called Amorph!03. Six micronations were represented.<ref>{{cite book|last=Kochta-Kalleinen|first=Oliver|year=2005|orig-date=2003|url=http://www.studiokalleinen.net/downloads/amorph03_protocols.pdf|title=Amorph!03 Summit Of Micronations: Protocols|translator1-last=Monni|translator1-first=Sari|translator2-last=Kallio|translator2-first=Mikko|publisher=Artists' Association MUU|isbn=978-9-519-65536-9}}</ref> An art exhibition exhibiting various micronational miscellanea, ''We Could Have Invited Everyone'', occurred in 2004 and 2005 at the Reg Vardy Gallery, ], England and Andrew Kreps Gallery, ], United States respectively.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/6973488.hidden-nations-revealed/|date=29 October 2004|title=Hidden nations revealed|work=]}}</ref><ref name="NYT1">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/15/arts/art-in-review-we-could-have-invited-everyone.html|last=Smith|first=Roberta|date=15 July 2005|title=Art in Review; We Could Have Invited Everyone|work=The New York Times}}</ref> The items were featured alongside artwork by artists including ] and ].<ref name="NYT1"/><ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://brooklynrail.org/2005/09/artseen/i-we-could-have-invited-everyone-i|last=Raven|first=Francis|date=September 2005|title=We Could Have Invited Everyone|magazine=]}}</ref> Both exhibitions coincided with an intermicronational summit.<ref>{{cite press release|url=https://kunstaspekte.art/event/we-could-have-invited-everyone-2005-06?hl=en|title=We Could Have Invited Everyone (24. Jun 2005 → 29. Jul 2005)|work=Andrew Kreps Gallery|publisher=Kunstaspekte}}</ref> In 2005, the six-part ] comedy-] series '']'' aired on ], in which comedian ] attempts to create his own country in his apartment in ]. The micronation he created was eventually named the ].{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=28}} The following year, the ] company ] published a light-hearted guide to numerous micronations titled '']''.<ref>{{cite news|last=Chadwick|first=Alex|title='Lonely Planet' Explores Micronations|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6416479|work=]|date=1 November 2006}}</ref>{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|loc="]"}} | |||
=== Exercises in personal entertainment or self-aggrandisement === | |||
With literally thousands in existence, micronations of the second type are by far the most common. They exist "for fun", have few participants, are ephemeral, Internet-based, and rarely survive more than a few months — although there are notable exceptions. They are usually concerned solely with arrogating to their founders the outward symbols of ]. The use of grand-sounding titles, awards, honours, and heraldic symbols derived from European feudal traditions, the conduct of "wars" and "diplomacy" with other micronations, and claims of being located on fantasy continents or planets are common manifestations of their activities. Examples include: | |||
In 2007, two self-proclaimed princesses of the ], sisters Puteri Lamia Roro Wiranata and Puteri Fathia Reza, were detained by Malaysian immigration authorities for attempting to enter from Brunei using diplomatic passports from the Sunda Empire. They claimed to be the princesses of the historical ] and that their parents were in ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2007/07/24/two-princesses-detained-in-sarawak_1|last=Then|first=Stephen|date=24 July 2007|title=Two 'princesses' detained in Sarawak|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/520063|agency=Associated Press|date=12 September 2007|title=Self-professed 'princesses' from ancient Indonesian monarchy face Malaysia court|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220510111849/https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/520063|archive-date=10 May 2022}}</ref> In early 2008, they were freed by the Sessions Court, but maintained their claim of Sundan citizenship, thus making them ineligible for ] to Indonesia. The Malaysian authorities subsequently deemed them ], and they were interned at an immigration depot under supervision of the ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://jakarta.tribunnews.com/2020/06/20/tak-akui-indonesia-ini-kewarganegaraan-dua-putri-mahkota-sunda-empire-di-paspor-diplomatiknya|last=Gustaman|first=Y|date=20 June 2020|title=Tak Akui Indonesia, Ini Kewarganegaraan Dua Putri Mahkota Sunda Empire di Paspor Diplomatiknya|trans-title=Not Recognizing Indonesia, These are the Citizenship of the Two Crown Princesses of the Sunda Empire in their Diplomatic Passport|language=Indonesian|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://intisari.grid.id/read/032206487/13-tahun-2-putri-sunda-empire-mendekam-di-sel-mau-dibebaskan-pemerintah-malaysia-bingung-karena-keduanya-tidak-mengaku-sebagai-wni-kekeh-mengaku-dari-sunda-empi|last=Ariyani|first=Tatik|date=21 June 2020|title=13 Tahun 2 Putri Sunda Empire Mendekam di Sel, Mau Dibebaskan Pemerintah Malaysia Bingung Karena Keduanya Tidak Mengaku Sebagai WNI, Kekeh Mengaku dari Sunda Empire|trans-title=13-year-old daughters of Sunda Empire languish in cell, want to be released but Malaysian government confused because neither of them claim to be Indonesian citizens; Kekeh claims to be from the Sunda Empire|language=Indonesian|work=]}}</ref> | |||
]]] | |||
<!-- floating with following bullet list --> | |||
* The ''']''', a ]esque micronation founded in 1987 and known for its tongue-in-cheek interplanetary land claims, smiley-faced flag and a range of national holidays that includes "Topin Wagglegammon" amongst others. | |||
* '''Tarsicia''', a project that has undergone a mind-boggling series of reinventions by its teenage creator, including claims to be a proto-undersea kingdom. | |||
* '''Project ''', developed by ] based librarian Tony Skaggs. | |||
*''']''', a desert-based micronation located near ]. | |||
*''']''' is a attempt by King Danny I (]) to create a internet nation based in his flat in London. | |||
=== 2010s === | |||
=== Exercises in fantasy or creative fiction === | |||
In 2010, the documentary film '']'', directed by Jody Shapiro, was screened as part of the ].<ref name="Variety">{{cite news|url=https://variety.com/2010/film/markets-festivals/how-to-start-your-own-country-1117943530/|last=Anderson|first=John|date=12 September 2010|title=How to Start Your Own Country|work=]}}</ref> The documentary explored various micronations around the world and included an analysis of the concept of statehood, seasteading and ].<ref name="Variety"/><ref name="Seasteading">{{cite news|url=https://www.seasteading.org/review-micronation-film-highlights-seasteading-vision/|author=]|date=20 October 2010|title=Review of Micronation Film Highlights Seasteading Vision|work=The Seasteading Institute}}</ref> The film was inspired by Erwin Strauss' eponymous book.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://thewest.com.au/entertainment/movies/documentary-explores-the-meaning-of-country-ng-ya-148275|last=Harvey|first=Shannon|date=5 October 2011|title=Documentary explores the meaning of country|work=]}}</ref> Also that same year, an intermicronational summit, ], was held at ] in ], Australia. It was organised by Judy Lattas of ], Princess Paula of the ] and George Cruickshank of the Empire of Atlantium.<ref name="Squires"/><ref name="PoliNation"/> Between 2013 and 2014, two ] ]s declared independence from Australia as part of the concept of ]—first the ], comprising the ], in 2013, and the ], comprising the ], in 2014.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://world.time.com/2013/05/30/australias-aborigines-launch-a-bold-legal-push-for-independence/|last=Neubauer|first=Ian Lloyd|date=30 May 2013|title=Australia's Aborigines Launch a Bold Legal Push for Independence|magazine=Time}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.lonelyplanet.com/news/aboriginal-tribe-forms-micronation-and-offers-australia-treaty|last=Waby|first=Tasmin|date=3 November 2015|title=Aboriginal tribe cuts ties with Australia|work=Lonely Planet}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2016/feb/17/nigel-scullion-acknowledges-yidindji-cabinet-as-murrumu-pushes-for-treaty|last=Robertson|first=Joshua|date=17 February 2016|title=Self-declared sovereign Indigenous nation recognised by Australian minister|work=The Guardian}}</ref> In both cases, the declarations of independence went wholly unrecognised by the ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2022|page=192}}<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theage.com.au/national/nsw/murrumu-walubara-yidindji-renounces-citizenship-to-reclaim-australia-20151102-gkok6g.html|last=Howden|first=Saffron|date=2 November 2015|title=Murrumu Walubara Yidindji renounces citizenship to reclaim Australia|work=]}}</ref> | |||
Micronations of the third type include stand-alone artistic projects, deliberate exercises in creative online fiction, and ] creations. Examples include: | |||
* '''Lizbekistan''', a popular Internet-based project created by Australian artist Liz Stirling. | |||
* ''']''' and ''']''', two micronations using the names of real territories within ] and ] repectively. Part of an extraordinarily diverse and entertaining array of micronations invented by prolific New Zealand-based ] producer Bruce Henderson since the early 1970s. | |||
* The '''Republic of ], ] and ]''', a highly developed web-based alternative reality project developed by Stephen Abbott named for three uninhabited ]. | |||
* The ''']''' is the creation of a self-styled Grand Duke Louis, who claims that three tiny islands in a ] pond are not owned by the local council, and so has declared them an independent state. These islands have been the subject of a book 'Micronations' by Lonely Planet and website. | |||
* The nation of NSK - ''']''', a nation created by a number of ] artists who satirically claim to be part of a voluntary totalitarian collective, among them ]. | |||
* '''Aristasia''', the ''Feminine Empire'', is an all-female State in which the two legal 'sexes' are Blonde and Brunette. Aristasia exists both as a virtual reality and in physical households in Britain, America and elsewhere. It has both virtual and physical embassies. | |||
* In the ] ] / ] movie '']'', the then-] ] of ''']''' supposedly declares independence from ] and becomes a micronation. | |||
* The '''Republic of ]''', founded by an Austrian artist and based in a ball-shaped house in ], which quickly became a tourist attraction. | |||
* The '''Copeman Empire''', run from a caravan park in ], by its founder ], who changed his name by ] to ]. He and his empire are the subject of a ] (ISBN 0-09-189920-6 ) and a . | |||
*''']''', a fictitious micronation in the episode E. Peterbus Unum of ] | |||
*'''La Republique de Rêves''', a combined exercise in fiction and art by ]. | |||
*''']''', an ] hoax created by the British newspaper '']'', in its ], ] edition. The fictional island nation was described in an elaborate seven-page supplement and has been revisited by the newspaper several times. | |||
* '''Republic of ]''' (''République du Saugeais''), a fifty-year-old "republic" in the French ], bordering Switzerland.The republic is made of the 11 municipalities of Les Allies, Arcon, Bugny, La Chaux-de-Gilley, Gilley, Hauterive-la-Fresne, La Longeville, Montflovin, Maisons-du-Bois-Lievremont, Ville-du-Pont, and its capital ]. It had a "president" - Georgette Bertin-Pourchet, elected in 2006 - a "prime minister" and numerous "citizens". It was born from a joke between a Sauget resident and the local Préfet. | |||
* ] wrote a short story about an attempt to create an entire encyclopedia about the fictional ]. | |||
In 2015, the first convention of the biannual ] was held in ], United States. Hosted by the Republic of Molossia, several presentations were held by micronationalists regarding various topics in micronationalism.<ref name="QZ"/><ref name="NPR"/><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/microcon-2015-dictators-of-the-world-unite-at-world-summit-of-micronations--countries-too-small-to-count-10174346.html|last=Usborne|first=Simon|date=13 April 2015|title=MicroCon 2015: Dictators of the world unite at world summit of micronations - countries too small to count|work=]|url-access=subscription}}</ref> The '']'', a French intermicronational organisation, was founded in 2015.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.lemonde.fr/series-d-ete/article/2021/08/20/flandrensis-le-grand-duche-qui-veut-sauver-la-planete_6091884_3451060.html|url-access=subscription|last=Baudet|first=Marie-Béatrice|date=20 August 2021|title=Flandrensis, le Grand-Duché qui veut sauver la planète|trans-title=Flandrensis, the Grand Duchy that wants to save the planet|language=French|work=]}}</ref> The organisation organised its first summit in 2016, hosted by the ].<ref name="20min"/> In 2018, the ] was established by two individuals aiming to build a ] micronation.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Collett|first1=Richard|date=10 March 2022|title=They bought a Caribbean island to start their own country |url=https://www.cnn.com/travel/article/islandia-lets-buy-an-island-micronation/index.html|work=CNN}}</ref> Successfully purchasing the uninhabited ] in the ] off the coast of Belize in 2019, Prime Minister of Belize ] dismissed the project in 2022, calling them "stupid" and stating "We will never allow anybody to have their own country within this country - what a stupid thing. If you stupid enough to pay a lot of money to buy piece of land, good for you."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/belize-coffee-caye-buy-island-micronation-b2048047.html|last=Thackray|first=Lucy|date=31 March 2022|title=Crowdfunded private island sparks feud after owners claim it as 'micronation'|work=The Independent|url-access=subscription}}</ref> | |||
=== Vehicles for agenda promotion === | |||
These types of micronation are typically associated with a political or social reform agenda. Some are maintained as ] and ] exercises, and examples of this type include: | |||
* The "global state" of ''']''', established on the North Atlantic island of ] by ] protesters in 1997. | |||
* The ''']''', which began in 1982 as a protest by residents and business owners in the ] against a ] roadblock. It has since been maintained as a tourism booster, though the group has engaged in other protests. | |||
* The ''']''', started to promote tourism in a small ] town. | |||
* The ''']''', founded 1980 as part of a campaign to prevent the construction of a nuclear waste disposal facility in ], in the ] (northern ]). | |||
* The ''']''', a secessionist state founded in 1980 to oppose the proposed construction of an aluminium smelter in an environmentally sensitive area of ]. | |||
* The ''']''', founded in June 2004 on the uninhabited ] off the coast of ], in response to the Australian government's refusal to recognize ]. | |||
*The ''']''', a controversial separatist group seeking the creation of an independent ] state across much of the southern USA. | |||
*The "] country" of ''']''', declared by ] in 1973, a "state" designed to uphold Lennon's ideals such as those portrayed in "]". This declaration was done to advocate Lennon's philosophies, and is believed to also be intended partly to protest the trouble Lennon was having emigrating to the United States. | |||
* The ''']''', a part of the City of ], ], that "seceded" from the rest of the city. It still exists as a charitable and publicity vehicle, and runs a unique fund-raiser in the form of a cross-bridge Tug of War. | |||
* Proposed demolition and redevelopment of the Freston Road area in north ] in 1977 prompted the local residents to declare independence as '''Frestonia''' (see ). This delayed the redevelopment scheme and forced the ] to renegotiate. | |||
* ] against the ] link road through ] in north-east London in 1994 proclaimed two areas of squatted homes to be the Republics of ] and '''Euphoria'''. | |||
=== 2020s === | |||
=== Entities created for allegedly fraudulent purposes === | |||
During the ] that began in 2020, several micronations imposed their own restrictions, mimicking countries.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.lonelyplanet.com/articles/how-micronations-are-responding-to-the-coronavirus|last=Haines|first=Gavin|date=25 March 2020|title=How micronations are responding to the coronavirus|work=Lonely Planet}}</ref> Some inactive Internet-based micronations also returned to activity as people were commanded to stay home and quarantine.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/fake-countries-had-a-hard-time-dealing-with-the-pandemic-too-11592766597|last=Hookway|first=James|date=21 June 2020|title=Fake Countries Have a Hard Time Dealing with the Pandemic, Too|work=]}}</ref> In 2020, ] released the film '']'', based on the story of engineer Giorgio Rosa and the Republic of Rose Island.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-55092341|title=Rose Island: Netflix adapts the story of 'prince of anarchists' Giorgio Rosa|date=7 December 2020|work=BBC News}}</ref> In 2021, academics Harry Hobbs and George Williams published ''Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty'', a book exploring various aspects of micronationalism.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/94147|last=Corbett|first=Jack|date=May 2022|title=Book review: Micronations and the search for sovereignty|journal=Small States & Territories |volume=5|issue=1|pages=229–230}}</ref> It was published by ].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/abs/micronations-and-the-search-for-sovereignty/micronations-and-the-search-for-sovereignty/37C4A87BB351D4275285EC20CCCEBD50|title=Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty|series=Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law |publisher=]|date=n.d.|isbn=978-1-009-15012-5 }}</ref> A follow-up book on micronations by Hobbs and Williams, entitled '']'', was published in 2022 by the ].<ref>{{cite news|date=28 October 2022|title=Forget a castle — your home can be your very own nation|work=]}}</ref> Also in 2022, illusionist ] purchased ], an uninhabited island off the coast of Scotland and declared it independent as the Republic of Lamb. Geller offers citizenship, with proceeds going to ], an Israeli charity.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-62150163|last=Berg|first=Raffi|date=7 August 2022|title=The mysteries that gave birth to the world's newest micronation|work=BBC News}}</ref> | |||
A number of micronations have been established for fraudulent purposes, by seeking to link questionable or illegal financial actions with ''seemingly'' legitimate nations. | |||
== Territorial claims == | |||
By far the most successful of these was the Territory of ], invented by Scottish adventurer and South American independence hero ] in the early 19th century. On the basis of a land grant made to him by the Anglophile native King of the Mosquito people in what is present-day ], MacGregor wove one of history's most elaborate hoaxes, managing to charm the highest levels of ]'s political and financial establishment with tales of the bucolic, resource-rich country he claimed to rule as a benevolent sovereign prince, or "Cazique", when he arrived in the UK in 1822. MacGregor's appointed diplomatic representatives were even received at the ], and thousands of investors subsequently parted with hundreds of thousands of pounds (equivalent to many millions today) in exchange for Poyaisian bonds, land grants, and official government appointments and commissions. The hoax was exposed when several shiploads of immigrants arrived at "Poyais" to find a fetid, uninhabited swamp instead of the thriving European-style metropolis that MacGregor's guidebooks and maps had led them to expect. Hundreds died of disease, and the remainder relocated to ] - yet amazingly, MacGregor escaped prosecution, lived out his days in ], and was honoured with a state funeral upon his demise. | |||
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| caption1 = Many micronations claim private property. Wrythe, the capital of the ], is a house in ], London<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.yourlocalguardian.co.uk/news/4064529.carshalton-home-declares-itself-independent-state/|last=Barnes|first=Kevin|date=22 January 2009|title=Carshalton home declares itself independent state|work=]}}</ref> | |||
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| caption2 = The micronation project ] has claimed a piece of land it considers '']'' due to technicalities in a border dispute between Croatia and Serbia.<ref name="JB">{{cite news|last=Bartlett|first=Jamie|date=24 May 2016|title=The crypto-libertarians using technology to undermine the nation-state|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/05/24/the-crypto-libertarians-using-technology-to-undermine-the-nation/|url-access=subscription|work=]}}</ref> | |||
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While most micronations ] they can administer, often private property, some have made claims to uninhabitable tracts of land. For instance, some micronations have claimed ] in Africa and ] in ], lands which are '']''—unclaimed by any other sovereign state.<ref>{{cite encyclopaedia|title=Micronation|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/micronation|encyclopedia=]|date=10 October 2023}}</ref>{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=130}} Several others have also made claims to other portions of ]. Examples are the ] and ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=130–132}} However, due to Antartica's remoteness, no micronation has yet to establish a permanent residence on the continent.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=133}} On the other hand, at least one micronationalist has physically reached Bir Tawil;{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=84}} in June 2014, Virginian farmer Jeremiah Heaton travelled to the area and proclaimed the ]. Heaton stated that he claimed the territory in order to fulfil a promise to his daughter to make her a princess, however Heaton has appeared to have other motivations, offering several initiatives—such as the implementation of a national currency and the construction of an international airport and ]—via ].<ref>{{cite news|last=Jackson|first=Joe|date=11 May 2015|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2015/5/11/creating-the-kingdom-of-north-sudan|title=Creating the Kingdom of North Sudan|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine|last=Helen|first=Regan|date=12 May 2015|url=https://time.com/3854995/kingdom-of-north-sudan-crowdsourcing-campaign-jeremiah-heaton-agriculture-research-center/|title=World's First 'Crowdsourced Country' Campaign Aims to Solve World Hunger|magazine=]}}</ref> | |||
The best-known modern example is the ], which has been for promoting ]ulent banking activities and other financial scams, and for the involvement by one of its founders in the attempted secession of the ]an island of ]. | |||
Other micronational claims have been made to ] on the west bank of the ] between Serbia and Croatia. Some micronationalists argue that the land is ''terra nullius'' because Croatia states the pockets are Serbian, whilst Serbia makes no claims on the land.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=139–140}} However, the ] has rejected these claims, stating that the differing border claims between Serbia and Croatia do not involve ''terra nullius'' and are not subject to occupation by a third party.<ref>{{cite press release|date=6 July 2015|title=On Virtual Narratives at Croatia's Borders|url=https://mvep.gov.hr/nachrichten-91528/on-virtual-narratives-at-croatia-s-borders-160587/160587|work=Hungarian Embassy of the Republic of Croatia|publisher=]}}</ref> The most prominent example is the ], which was proclaimed in April 2015 by Czech ] politician and activist ], and claims the largest pocket, Gornja Siga.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=139}}<ref name="JB"/> The land lacks infrastructure and lies on the ] of the Danube.<ref>{{cite news|last=Palmeri|first=Tara|date=2 September 2016|url=https://www.politico.eu/article/looking-for-liberland-serbia-croatia-vit-jedlicka-danube-swamp-anarchist-libertarian-utopia-taxation-flood-plain-swamp/|title=Looking for Liberland|website=]}}</ref> | |||
Another micronation called ], operated by an Oklahoma City longevity promoter named Prince Lazarus R. Long (b. Howard Turney; the "Long" name clearly drawn from the character "Lazarus Long" from several stories by ], most notably '']'') - and ostensibly a ] new country project - was stopped by a ] federal court temporary restraining order from selling bonds and bank licenses. New Utopia has claimed for a number of years to be on the verge of commencing construction of an artificial island territory located approximately midway between ] and ]; however, the selected location remains submerged by the waters of the ]. | |||
=== Other claims === | |||
The ], which claims ] in the ] belonging to the ], has been deemed a scam for selling passports and diplomatic papers by the governments of the Marshall Islands and of the United States. | |||
Some micronations have attempted to establish themselves in ]—parts of the ] that cannot be claimed by any sovereign state—by seasteading. This involves the creation of permanent dwellings at sea. Some micronations are associated with ], a ] organisation formed to facilitate the establishment of these seasteads.<ref name="Seasteading"/><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.wired.com/2009/01/mf-seasteading/|last=Baker|first=Chris|date=19 January 2009|title=Live Free or Drown: Floating Utopias on the Cheap|work=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Eveleth |first=Rose |author-link=Rose Eveleth |date=14 April 2015 |url=https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150414-i-rule-my-own-ocean-micronation |title='I rule my own ocean micronation' |work=]}}</ref> | |||
The ], founded in October 2016, claims an ] that orbited the Earth.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=75}}<ref>{{cite news|last=Cuthbertson|first=Anthony|date=26 June 2018|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/tech/space-kingdom-asgardia-nation-iq-tests-citizens-a8417276.html|title='Space kingdom' Asgardia wants IQ tests for wannabe citizens|work=]}}</ref> Named ], the two-unit ] was successfully launched by ] in November 2017 as part of an ] resupply mission.<ref>{{cite news|last=Crane|first=Leah|date=13 November 2017|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/2153196-the-space-nation-asgardia-just-launched-its-first-satellite/|title=The 'space nation' Asgardia just launched its first satellite|work=]}}</ref> Asgardia-1 reportedly re-entered the atmosphere in September 2022.<ref>{{cite news|last=Mack|first=Eric|date=7 September 2022|url=https://www.cnet.com/science/asgardia-the-worlds-first-space-kingdom-could-soon-crash-back-to-earth/|title=Asgardia, the 'World's First Space Kingdom,' Could Soon Crash Back to Earth|work=]}}</ref> The ] claims all of ],{{sfn|Strauss|1999|p=82, 85}} whilst the ] lays claim to ] around the world's oceans in protest against their existence.<ref>{{cite news|last=Baudet|first=Marie-Béatrice|date=18 August 2021|url=https://www.lemonde.fr/series-d-ete/article/2021/08/18/l-empire-d-angyalistan-mallarme-et-pierre-dac-pour-boussoles_6091687_3451060.html|title=L'invitation au rêve de l'empire d'Angyalistan, qui règne en tout bien tout honneur sur la ligne d'horizon|trans-title=The invitation to dream of the empire of Angyalistan, which reigns supreme on the horizon|work=]}}</ref> | |||
On April 23, 1998, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of the ] issued an official Circular Note, denouncing both "EnenKio" and "Melchizedek" as frauds. . | |||
Other claimed micronations may fit more into a cultural category were territorial claims are not as easily defined such as ], what appears to be an ] and ] revival micronation based in or around ]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bennett |first1=Gary |title=Garden City News |url=https://www.gcnews.com/articles/aynvaul-micronation-thrives-on-li-under-residents-noses/|website=Garden City News |date=July 12, 2024 |publisher=Litmor Publishing Corp. |access-date=July 27, 2024}}</ref> and the ], ] based ]<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BpvNg-wrTkk&t=38s | title=The People Who Rule the World's Smallest Countries (HBO) | website=] | date=3 August 2017 }}</ref>{{full citation needed|date=June 2024}}<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3rEePJ8FB0 | title=Microcon 2019: Kingdom of Ruritania | website=] | date=7 August 2019 }}</ref>{{full citation needed|date=June 2024}} based on the fictional country of ] from Anthony Hope's ]<ref>{{Cite web |title=A Traveller's Guide to Ruritania {{!}} History Today |url=https://www.historytoday.com/miscellanies/traveller%E2%80%99s-guide-ruritania |access-date=2024-08-20 |website=www.historytoday.com}}</ref>{{full citation needed|date=June 2024}}, the latter of which hosted ] 2017 in ], ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Microcon 2017 |url=https://www.molossia.org/microcon/microcon2017.html |website=molossia.org}}</ref>{{full citation needed|date=June 2024}} | |||
Another micronation associated with fraudulent activities was the ], which operated a website that ceased to function in 2005, and which claimed to be located in the Pacific Ocean near Australia. The "kingdom" published maps of its alleged location; however, the islands shown did not exist. Atlantis' leader, the self-styled Sheikh Yakub Al-Sheikh Ibrahim, was wanted in the US for various crimes including fraud and money laundering. At one point, Atlantis sent a delegation to ] to offer a low interest loan of $100 million. (also contains an image of the flag) | |||
== Functions as a sovereign state == | |||
] | |||
{{unreferenced|section}} | |||
A small number of micronations are founded on historical anomalies or eccentric interpretations of law. This category includes: | |||
* ], a town in the Italian region of ], near the southern end of the border with ], which traces its history back to the middle ages. | |||
* the ], a farm in ] which claims to have seceded from ] to become an independent ] with a worldwide population numbered in the tens of thousands. | |||
* ], a ]-era anti-aircraft platform built in the ] beyond Britain's then territorial limit, seized by a pirate radio group in 1967 as a base for their operations, and currently used as the site of a secure web-hosting facility. Sealand has continued to promote its independence by issuing stamps, money, and appointing an official national athlete. | |||
* ], a town in North Wales declared a "free borough" by a Welsh "prince" which unsuccessfully applied to the ] in 1947 and has the motto "Cymru, Lloegr a Llanrwst" (English: ''Wales, England and Llanrwst'') as testament to its apparent independence. | |||
* ], now the town of Pittsburg, New Hampshire - a geographic anomaly left unresolved by ] that ended the U.S. Revolutionary War, and claimed by both the U.S. and Canada. Between 1832 and 1835, the area's residents refused to acknowledge either claimant. | |||
* The ] claims that the original ] was never properly annexed by the ]. | |||
Micronations function in the same way as sovereign states in that they have their own government, ], legislation, and (if a ]) hold national elections. Micronations often have national symbols such as a ], ] or seal, ] and ], and many micronations also issue coins, banknotes, stamps, passports, ], ] and bestow honours and ], although these are not recognised internationally.<ref name="Sawe"/>{{sfn|Moreau|2014|p=59–60}}{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=75}}{{sfn|Ferguson|2009|p=2}} Some micronations have made profits by selling these items as ] and ] to tourists and via their national websites, and others have even sold ] and titles of nobility.<ref name="Mac">{{cite news|last=MacEacheran|first=Mike|date=6 July 2020|url=https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20200706-sealand-a-peculiar-nation-off-englands-coast|title=Sealand: A peculiar 'nation' off England's coast|work=BBC Travel|publisher=BBC News}}</ref>{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=32}} Some micronational coinage and stamps, if professionally made, have become valued as ]s by ] and ] (stamp collectors) alike.<ref>{{cite news|last=Lee|first=Winnie|date=6 February 2020|url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/micronation-stamps|title=The Joy of Collecting Stamps From Countries That Don't Really Exist|work=]}}</ref> In addition, both Sealand and Seborga have their own national ] teams. The ] was founded in 2004<ref>{{cite news|date=7 May 2012|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/av/football/17981522|title= Ralf Little gets an international cap for Sealand|work=]|publisher=BBC News}}</ref> and became an associate member of the ], a federation made up of unrecognised states, ], regions and micronations that are not allowed to join ], in 2006.<ref>{{cite press release|url=https://unpo.org/article.php?id=2715|title=NF-Board Opens Registrations for the 1st Viva World Cup in Northern Cyprus|date=1 July 2015|work=]}}</ref> The ] was founded in 2014 and is run by the Football Federation of the Principality of Seborga.<ref>{{cite news|date=3 October 2022|url=https://www.riviera24.it/2022/10/la-federazione-calcistica-di-seborga-ottiene-il-primo-titolo-nazionale-italiano-782242/|title=La Federazione Calcistica di Seborga ottiene il primo titolo nazionale italiano|trans-title=The Seborga Football Federation obtains its first Italian national title|language=Italian|work=Riviera24}}</ref> | |||
These types of micronations are usually located on small (usually disputed) territorial enclaves, generate limited economic activity founded on ] and ] and ] sales, and are at best tolerated or at worst ignored by the nations from which they claim to have seceded. | |||
== Community == | |||
=== Diplomacy === | |||
New-country projects are attempts to found completely new nation-states. They typically involve plans to construct artificial islands (few of which are ever realized), and a large percentage have embraced or purported to embrace ] or ] principles. Examples include: | |||
] at ]]] | |||
Like countries, micronations engage in intermicronational diplomacy with one another. This includes the signing of ], ]s and intermicronational conventions, ] and ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=154–155}} Several intermicronational ] also exist, with some having as many as 80 ]. Most of these organisations generally work to maintain peace, strengthen micronational cooperation and to improve diplomatic relations between member states.{{sfn|Moreau|2014|p=236–237}}{{sfn|Ferguson|2009|p=16}} | |||
* ], an early 1970s New York-based libertarian group that built a concrete-hulled ship called ''Freedom'', which they sailed to the ], intending to anchor it permanently there as their "territory". The ship sank in a hurricane and the project foundered with it. | |||
* ], another libertarian project that succeeded in building a small man-made island on the Minerva Reefs south of ] in 1972 before being ejected by troops from ], who later formally annexed it. | |||
* ], a libertarian project that tried to lease territory from the Sultan of Awdal in ] in 2001. Resulting public dissatisfaction led to rioting, and the deaths of several Somalis. | |||
* Oceania (also known as "The ]", but unrelated to the 1970s project of the same name), another libertarian artificial island project that raised US $400,000 before going bankrupt in 1994. | |||
==== Intermicronational summits ==== | |||
== Academic, literary and media attention == | |||
{{Further|summit (meeting)}} | |||
{{unreferenced|section}} | |||
There has been a small but growing amount of attention paid to the micronation phenomenon in recent years. Most interest in academic circles has been concerned with studying the apparently anomalous legal situations affecting such entities as ] and the ], in exploring how some micronations represent grassroots political ideas, and in the creation of role-playing entities for instructional purposes. | |||
Intermicronational summits are also commonplace within the micronational community,{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=155}} and several reoccurring summits have taken place. These include the sporadically-held PoliNation,<ref>{{cite news|last=Johanson|first=Mark|date=24 May 2017|title=Masters of micronations: Meet people who started their own tiny countries|url=https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/micronations/index.html|work=CNN}}</ref> biennial MicroCon;<ref name="QZ">{{cite news|last=Simon|first=Johnny|date=31 March 2018|url=https://qz.com/1196022/photos-the-leaders-control-some-of-the-small-nations-in-the-world|title=Meet the leaders of the world's imaginary nations|work=]}}</ref> and the ''Organisation de la microfrancophonie'' has hosted three intermicronational summits between its member states.<ref name="Sud">{{cite news|url=https://www.sudouest.fr/gironde/blaye-devient-la-capitale-de-la-microfrancophonie-12040123.php|url-access=subscription|last=Maury|first=Martial|date=28 August 2022|title=Blaye devient la capitale de la microfrancophonie|trans-title=Blaye becomes the capital of the Microfrancophonie|language=French|work=Sud Quest}}</ref> PoliNation 2010 was held at Dangar Island, Sydney, Australia and was organised by Judy Lattas of ], Princess Paula of the ] and George Cruickshank of the Empire of Atlantium.<ref name="Squires">{{cite news|last=Squires|first=Nick|date=4 May 2010|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/australiaandthepacific/australia/7673696/Wacky-world-of-micronations-unite-to-demand-recognition.html|title=The world's micronations unite to demand recognition|work=The Telegraph|url-access=subscription}}</ref><ref name="PoliNation">{{cite web|url=http://www.soc.mq.edu.au/PoliNation-conference/|title=PoliNation: A One-Day Conference on Micronationalism|date=n.d.|work=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101012125357/http://www.soc.mq.edu.au/PoliNation-conference/|archive-date=12 October 2010}}</ref> PoliNation 2012 was held in London, United Kingdom, and PoliNation 2015 commenced at ], Italy.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.micronationconference.com/conference.html|title=PoliNation 2012 @ London|work=MicronationConference.com|date=n.d.|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120525054007/http://www.micronationconference.com/conference.html|archive-date=25 May 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=FQ|date=4 July 2015|url=https://www.ilfattoquotidiano.it/2015/07/04/micronazioni-conferenza-ad-alcatraz-quella-in-umbria-per-costituire-la-mini-onu/1837731/|title=Micronazioni, conferenza ad Alcatraz (quella in Umbria) per costituire la "mini Onu"|trans-title=Micronations, conference in Alcatraz (the one in Umbria) to set up the "mini UN"|language=Italian|work=]}}</ref> MicroCon 2015 was held in ] and hosted by Molossia;<ref name="NPR">{{cite news|last=Neuman|first=Scott|date=10 April 2015|url=https://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2015/04/10/398757610/molossia-heads-up-big-micronation-summit-in-california|title=Tiny Territories Mingle At MicroCon; Passports Optional|work=NPR}}</ref> MicroCon 2017 in ] by the ];<ref>{{cite news|last=Buckner|first=Heather|date=30 June 2017|url=https://www.atlantamagazine.com/news-culture-articles/probably-didnt-know-leaders-26-micronations-just-gathered-atlanta/|title=You probably didn't know, but leaders from 26 micronations just gathered in Atlanta|work=]}}</ref> MicroCon 2019 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, by the Kingdom of Slabovia;{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=155}}<ref name="MC19">{{cite web|url=https://www.microcon2019.com/|date=n.d.|title=The 3rd global conference for micronations|work=MicroCon2019.com}}</ref> and MicroCon 2022 in ] by Westarctica, having been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.microcon2022.com/|date=n.d.|title=MicroCon 2022|work=MicroCon2022.com|access-date=2022-11-21|archive-date=2022-10-08|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221008204333/https://www.microcon2022.com/|url-status=dead}}</ref> The first summit hosted by the ''Microfrancophonie'' was held in 2016 in ], ], and hosted by the Principality of Aigues-Mortes;<ref name="20min">{{cite news|url=https://www.20minutes.fr/montpellier/1930903-20160926-sommet-francophone-micronations-entre-folkore-engagement-citoyen|last=Bonzom|first=Nicolas|date=26 September 2016|title=Le sommet francophone des micronations, entre folkore et engagement citoyen|trans-title=The Francophone micronational summit, between folklore and citizen engagement|language=French|work=]}}</ref> the second summit took place in 2018 in ], Paris, and was hosted by Angyalistan;<ref name="LeParisien">{{cite news|url=https://www.leparisien.fr/val-de-marne-94/les-faux-princes-empereurs-et-marquis-des-micronations-francophones-en-sommet-a-vincennes-20-07-2018-7827972.php|last=Nèves|first=Corinne|date=20 July 2018|title=Les (faux) princes, empereurs et marquis des micronations francophones en sommet à Vincennes|trans-title=The (fake) princes, emperors and marquises of the Francophonie micronations at a summit in Vincennes|language=French|work=]|access-date=6 November 2022}}</ref> the third summit took place in 2022 in ], ], organised by the Principality of Hélianthis.<ref name="Sud"/> Since 2022, the Micro Euro Summit has been held regularly as a congress for European micronations.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mejzrová |first=Anita Haas |date=2022-06-30 |title=Arcivévoda, Marx i kačer Donald. Reportáž ze summitu mikronárodů, jež se uznávají navzájem |url=https://denikn.cz/908958/arcivevoda-marx-i-kacer-donald-reportaz-ze-summitu-mikronarodu-jez-se-uznavaji-navzajem/ |access-date=2024-12-05 |website=Deník N |language=cs}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Antonov |first=Zar |date=2024-07-24 |title=Micro Euro Summit 2024 ends with success and confidence. |url=https://www.microcosme.info/post/micro-euro-summit-2024-ends-with-success-and-confidence |access-date=2024-12-05 |website=Microcosme.info |language=fr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Micronationalism |url=https://flandrensis.com/about/micronation/ |access-date=2024-12-05 |website=vzw Groothertogdom Flandrensis |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
In his 1996 book, ] analysed 16th- to 19th-century ]s located on the ], suggesting that they shared some characteristics of micronations. | |||
=== Websites and online communities === | |||
In 2000, Professor Fabrice O'Driscoll, of the ], published a book about micronations: ("They are not in the United Nations"), with more than 300 pages dedicated to the subject. | |||
There are thousands of micronations which exist and operate solely online.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=12}} Micronationalists convene and engage with one another through several online platforms, especially ] and historically ] (message boards), where micronationalists can share lessons and ideas as well as gain inspiration for establishing their own micronation.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=203, 216}} ], the largest micronational ] and ], has thousands of articles on various topics related to micronationalism "with many country pages longer than those of real nations ]]",<ref name="Independent">{{cite news|last=Usborne|first=Simon|date=13 April 2015|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/microcon-2015-dictators-of-the-world-unite-at-world-summit-of-micronations-countries-too-small-to-count-10174346.html|title=MicroCon 2015: Dictators of the world unite at world summit of micronations - countries too small to count|work=]}}</ref> and a number of micronations exist and conduct diplomacy solely on the wiki, utilising it as an ].{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=203}}{{sfn|Hayward|2018|p=163, 168}} As of October 2023, the largest micronational ] on ], ''Micronations and Alternative Polities'', had 3,400 members,<ref>{{cite web|title=Micronations and Alternative Polities|url=https://www.facebook.com/groups/micronationsandalternativepolities/|type=]|work=]|publisher=]|url-access=registration|quote=3.4K members}}</ref> and the ] forum r/micronations on ] had another 8,000.{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=155}}<ref>{{cite web|title=r/micronations|url=https://www.reddit.com/r/micronations/|type=]|work=]|publisher=]|quote=8.2K Nation Builders}}</ref> | |||
== Legality == | |||
In May 2000, an article in the ] entitled brought the phenomenon to a wider audience for the first time. Similar articles were published by newspapers such as the French , Italian ''La Repubblica'', Greek , ''O Estado de São Paulo'' in Brazil and Portugal's ''Visão'' at around the same time. | |||
=== Arguments for sovereignty === | |||
''Micronation'' as a word has no basis in international law.<ref>{{cite dictionary|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/display/10.1093/acref/9780195389777.001.0001/acref-9780195389777-e-1445?rskey=xn1ueZ&result=1441|editor-first1=John P.|editor-last1=Grant|editor-first2=J. Craig|editor-last2=Barker|year=2009|title=micronations|dictionary=Encyclopaedic Dictionary of International Law|edition=3|publisher=]|isbn=978-0-195-38977-7|quote=While the terms micro-States or mini-States have some meaning in international law, the term micronations does not.|via=]}}</ref>{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=28–29}} Despite this, several micronations have attempted to justify their claims to sovereignty by citing ] in local laws. A commonly attempted tactic used by micronationalists to legitimise their claims is the ] as defined by the ], which defines a '']'' as: "a person of international law possess the following qualifications: (a) a permanent ]; (b) a defined territory; (c) government; and (d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states."{{sfn|Hobbs|Williams|2021b|p=28–29}}{{sfn|Furnues|2018|p=11–12}} | |||
In 2019, a couple seasteading off the coast of Thailand went into hiding after being accused by the ] of violating Thailand's sovereignty. If found guilty, they could face ] or the ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-04-18/bitcoin-couple-face-death-penalty-in-thailand-for-seastead/11031336|last=Weedon|first=Alan|date=18 April 2019|title=Bitcoin couple could face death penalty in Thailand for 'seastead' floating home in international waters|work=ABC News}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-47974234|date=18 April 2019|title=US man could face death penalty over Thailand 'sea home'|work=BBC News}}</ref> As of 2020, they relocated to Panama.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Elmhirst |first=Sophie |date=2021-09-07 |title=The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world's first cryptocurrency cruise ship |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/sep/07/disastrous-voyage-satoshi-cryptocurrency-cruise-ship-seassteading |access-date=2023-11-15 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> | |||
Several recent publications have dealt with the subject of particular historic micronations, including ''Republic of Indian Stream'' (University Press), by ] geographer Daniel Doan, and ''The Land that Never Was'', about Gregor MacGregor and the Principality of Poyais, by David Sinclair (Review, 2003, ISBN 0-7553-1080-2 ). | |||
=== Based on historical claims === | |||
In August 2003, a took place in Helsinki at Finlandia Hall, the site of the Conference for Security and Co-operation in Europe (]). The summit was attended by delegations of the ], the Kingdoms of ], ], ], the "Transnational Republic", the ] and by scholars from various academic institutions. | |||
Some micronations are founded on the basis of historical anomalies. The ] was founded in 1963 by Giorgio Carbone, who claimed to have found documents from the ] which, according to Carbone, indicated that ] had never been a possession of the ] and was thus not legally included in the ] when it was formed in 1861, meaning that Seborga had remained sovereign.<ref>{{cite news|date=27 November 2009|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/royalty-obituaries/6671765/His-Tremendousness-Giorgio-Carbone.html|title=His Tremendousness Giorgio Carbone|work=The Telegraph|url-access=subscription}}</ref><ref>{{cite video|last=Bosio|first=Dario|date=27 February 2018|url=https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20180226-an-italian-village-that-wants-independence|type=short documentary|title=An Italian village that wants independence|work=]|publisher=BBC News}}</ref>{{sfn|Ryan|Dunford|Sellars|2006|p=28–33}} The ], created by chairman of the ] ], claims to be a re-creation of the ] that holds ] as the rightful ] to the imperial throne.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Bernard|first1=Lagan|last2=Parfitt|first2=Tom|date=28 February 2017|url=https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/paradise-lost-for-russian-and-dream-of-an-empire-in-the-sun-c3s088tdw|title=Russian monarchist dreams of Romanov revival in the Pacific|work=The Times|url-access=subscription}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
From ] through ] ], the ] at the ] (UK) on the subject of micronational group identity and symbolism. The exhibition focused on ], ] and ] artifacts, as well as other symbols and instruments created and used by a number of micronations from the 1950s through to the present day. A summit of micronations conducted as part of this exhibition was attended by representatives of ], ], ], ], Frestonia and Fusa. The exhibition was reprised at the ] in ] from ] - ] of the following year. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== Footnotes == | |||
The Sunderland summit was later featured in a 5-part ] light entertainment television series called ] presented by ]. The series told the story of Wallace's experience of founding a micronation, ], located in his . It screened in the UK in August 2005. | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
== References == | |||
Similar programmes have also aired on television networks in other parts of Europe. In France, several ] programmes have centred around the satirical , while in Belgium a series by Rob Vanoudenhoven and broadcast on the Flemish commercial network VTM in April 2006 was reminiscent of Wallace's series, and centred around the producer's creation of . Among other things Vanoudenhoven minted his own coins denominated in "Robbies". | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
=== Bibliography === | |||
In 2000, the TV show ] featured an episode called ], in which the main character ] declared his house to be the new nation of "Petoria", as his house was absent from all maps of Quahog. He annexed his neighbor ]'s pool and spent a night violating numerous laws in Quahog, exploiting his diplomatic immunity. The USA, provoked by the invasion of Joe's pool, then shut off Petoria's water and electricity and established a military blockade.{{fact}} Peter surrendered when the army threatened to blow up his house with a missile.{{fact}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Strauss|first=Erwin S.|author-link=Erwin Strauss|date=1999|orig-date=1979|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781581605242|title=How to Start Your Own Country|publisher=]|edition=3|isbn=978-1-58160-524-2|via=the ]}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=O'Driscoll|first=Fabrice|date=2000|title=]|language=French|publisher=] |isbn=978-2-87867-251-0}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Lasserre|first=Frédéric|date=14 March 2000|url=http://journals.openedition.org/cybergeo/4397|title=Les hommes qui voulaient être rois. Principautés et nations sur Internet|language=French|journal=] |doi=10.4000/cybergeo.4397|via=]|doi-access=free|hdl=20.500.11794/864|hdl-access=free}} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Ryan|first1=John|last2=Dunford|first2=George|last3=Sellars|first3=Simon|year=2006|title=]|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-74104-730-1}} | |||
* {{cite thesis|last=Ferguson|first=Bennie Lee|year=2009|url=https://soar.wichita.edu/bitstream/handle/10057/2410/THESES2009SPRING_5.pdf?sequence=1|title=What is a Nation: The Micronationalist Challenge to Traditional Concepts of the Nation-state|publisher=]}} | |||
* {{cite thesis|url=https://pure.royalholloway.ac.uk/portal/files/22951152/moreau_thesis_finalsubmission.pdf|last=Moreau|first=Terri Ann|year=2014|title=Subversive Sovereignty: Parodic Representations of Micropatrias Enclaved by the United Kingdom|publisher=]}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Simpson|first=Isabelle|date=27 September 2016|url=https://www.shimajournal.org/issues/v10n2/e.-Simpson-Shima-v10n2.pdf|title=Operation Atlantis: A case-study in libertarian island micronationality|journal=Shima|publisher=Shima Publishing|volume=10|number=2|pages=19–35|doi=10.21463/shima.10.2.05}} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Mislan|first1=David Bell|last2=Streich|first2=Philip|year=2018|title=Weird IR: Deviant Cases in International Relations|publisher=]|isbn=978-3-319-75555-7}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Furnues|first=David|date=2018|title=The Rise of Non-territorial Sovereignties and Micronations|url=https://cris.unu.edu/sites/cris.unu.edu/files/W-2018-10.pdf|publisher=]}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Hayward|first1=Philip|date=2018|url=https://opus.lib.uts.edu.au/bitstream/10453/130709/1/n.-Hayward-Shima-v12n1-3.pdf|title=Secessionism, submergence and Siteresponsive art: The Embassy of the Commonwealth of New Bayswater at the 1st Fremantle Biennale|journal=Shima|volume=12|pages=163–168|doi=10.21463/shima.12.1.14|s2cid=195031869 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Hobbs |first1=Harry |author-link=Harry Hobbs |last2=Williams |first2=George |author-link2=George Williams (lawyer) |date=2021a |url=https://academic.oup.com/icon/article-abstract/19/1/71/6247754 |title=Micronations: A lacuna in the law |publisher=]; ] |journal=] |volume=19 |issue=1 |pages=71–97 |url-access=subscription |doi=10.1093/icon/moab020}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Hobbs |first1=Harry |last2=Williams |first2=George |year=2021b |author2-link=George Williams (lawyer) |author-link=Harry Hobbs |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/micronations-and-the-search-for-sovereignty/B0414A3A322695D9EE71E4CDDFDA06DE |title=Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty |series=Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-009-15013-2 |url-access=subscription}} | |||
* {{cite book |author-link=Harry Hobbs |url=https://unsw.press/books/how-to-rule/ |title=How to Rule Your Own Country: The Weird and Wonderful World of Micronations |last1=Hobbs |first1=Harry |last2=Williams |first2=George |author-link2=George Williams (lawyer) |year=2022 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-742-23773-2 |url-access=subscription}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
On September 9th 2006, ] newspaper reported that the travel guide company ] had published the world's first ] devoted to micronations. | |||
{{see also|Bibliography of works on micronationalism}} | |||
== |
===Nonfiction=== | ||
* {{cite book|last=Fuligni|first=Bruno|author-link=Bruno Fuligni|year=1997|title=L'État c'est moi: Histoire des monarchies privées, principautés de fantaisie et autres républiques pirates|language=French|publisher=]|isbn=978-2-90529-169-1}} | |||
*''']''' | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Fuligni|first1=Bruno|last2=Hanne|first2=Isabelle|year=2013|title=Micronations|publisher=Diaphane|language=French|isbn=978-2-919-07719-9}} | |||
=== General entries === | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Hobbs|first1=Harry|last2=Williams|first2=George|date=2021|url= https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10361146.2021.1935450?scroll=top&needAccess=true|title=The demise of the 'second largest country in Australia': micronations and Australian exceptionalism|publisher=]|journal=]|volume=56 |issue=2 |pages=206–293|url-access=subscription|doi=10.1080/10361146.2021.1935450|hdl=10453/149325 |s2cid=235598841 |hdl-access=free}} | |||
*] / ] | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Riding|first1=James|last2=Dahlman|first2=Carl T.|date=2022|title=Montage space: Borderlands, micronations, terra nullius, and the imperialism of the geographical imagination|publisher=]|journal=]|volume=12|issue=2|pages=278–301|doi=10.1177/20438206221102597|s2cid=249051290 |doi-access=free}} | |||
*] | |||
* {{cite journal|last1=Hobbs|first1=Harry |last2=Hayward |first2=Philip |last3=Motum|first3=Robert|title=Cyber Micronations and Digital Sovereignty|publisher=]|journal=Digital Society|date=2023 |volume=2|issue=3|page=44|doi=10.1007/s44206-023-00069-9|s2cid=264147592|doi-access=free}} | |||
*] | |||
*]s | |||
*]s (TAZ) | |||
*] — "countries" created mostly by ] producers. | |||
=== |
===Fiction=== | ||
* {{cite book |first=Robert A. |last=Heinlein |title=] |year=1966 |location=] |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-312-86355-5 |trans-quote=Award-winning SF: penal colonies on the Moon form a micronation which declares and defends its independence from Earth, becoming a microstate. Presciently for 1966, computer-aided communications play a crucial part.}} | |||
*] — places that are locations for fictional stories in literature and film. | |||
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nqcUCJYasx0C&q=knight&pg=PT58 |first=Marvin |last=Kaye |author-link=Marvin Kaye |year=1977 |title=The Laurel and Hardy Murders |location=] |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-525-14397-0 |access-date=July 2, 2020 |via=] |trans-quote=Fictional mystery using real people as characters, among them ], president of the ], either an extended political satire or a micronation in Manhattan. Across three pages, pp. 58–60, the character Richmond declares his '''complete''' title for the record.}} | |||
*] — San Francisco resident who proclaimed himself "Emperor of the ]". | |||
* {{cite book |first=Thomas |last=Perry |author-link=Thomas Perry (author) |year=1988 |title=Island |location=] |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-399-13327-5 |url=https://www.publishersweekly.com/978-0-399-13327-5 |via=]|trans-quote=A couple fleeing the mob build upon an uninhabited Caribbean island and start a successful micronation→microstate, then must defend it.}} | |||
*] — a cyber-diocese with a real Roman Catholic bishop. | |||
*] — a film in which the London neighbourhood of ] proclaims itself independent. | |||
*] — A regional Pacific Northwest (North America) secession movement. | |||
*] (now Rijeka), a seaport in ] that was ruled for a short time by Italian nationalist poet ] | |||
*] — a partially self-governing neighborhood in the city of ], ]. | |||
*] — a small ] town with anomalous claim to being a royal parish of the Swedish monarchy. | |||
*] — rebelled against the Confederacy. | |||
*] — rebelled against the Confederacy. | |||
*] Union enclave in Confederate state. | |||
*] — quasi-independent homelands in ]. | |||
*] — a self-declared and officially tolerated "independent republic" established by Israeli hippy and former sailor Eli Avivi on the Mediterranean beach at Akhziv in ]. | |||
== External links == | |||
==References== | |||
{{Wikibooks|Micronations|Starting your own micronation}} | |||
* ''Ref United Oceania'': , Thursday, ] ], page 20, "Prince finds if all else fails, secede". | |||
{{Commons category|Micronations|Micronation}} | |||
* E. S. Strauss: ''How to start your own country'', ISBN 0-915179-01-6 , ISBN 1-893626-15-6. | |||
* at ], the free micronational encyclopædia | |||
*Samuel Pyeatt Menefee, "Republics of the Reefs": Nation-Building on the Continental Shelf and in the World's Oceans, ''California Western International Law Journal'', vol. 25, no. 1, Fall, 1994, pp. 81-111. | |||
* at ''] UK English Dictionary''. ]. {{small|}} | |||
* ''Wired'' 8.] ]. | |||
* Kochta/Kalleinen (Ed.): ''Amorph!03 Summit of Micronations – Documents/Asiakirjoja'', 2003, ISBN 3-936919-45-3. | |||
* ''The Sydney Morning Herald — Good Weekend'', "If at first you don't secede..." by Mark Dapin, , ] ], pp 47-50. | |||
* '''', "Mini-states Down Under are sure they can secede" by Nick Squires, ] ]. | |||
* iberkshires.com , by Kathy Ceceri, ] ]. | |||
* * ''Ref Republic of Saugeais'': ] ]'']. | |||
* ''. | |||
* - Sunderland, UK exhibition. | |||
* - New York City exhibition. | |||
* {{cite news|title=Born to rule|author=Peter Needham|work=]|date=]}} | |||
{{Micronations|state=expanded}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{wikibookspar|Making an Island|Declaring Independence}} | |||
* — University paper discussing the prevalence of right wing political ideologies among Australian micronations. | |||
* — list of failed secessionist states, alternative governments and other historical oddities | |||
* — Comprehensive online catalogue of stamps, coins, banknotes, awards and ephemera issued by various secessionist states and micronations. | |||
* On-line directory of micronation, independence and seditionist websites | |||
* - A selection of newspaper reports about micronations, scanned from the original publications. | |||
* — Online micronational portal and resources | |||
* | |||
* — Online micronational forum | |||
* — IRC chatroom associated with online micronations (this link is for Java-based page) | |||
* — Wiki focused on online micronations | |||
* | |||
* website with information about various micronation banknotes. | |||
* — coin club specialising in coins and banknotes from micronations. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:48, 5 December 2024
Self-proclaimed political entity This article is about self-proclaimed political entities that are not recognised as states. For small countries that are officially recognised, see Microstate. For recognized small countries larger than microstates, see Small state. Not to be confused with unrecognised state.
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A micronation is a political entity whose representatives claim that they belong to an independent nation or sovereign state, but which lacks legal recognition by any sovereign state. Micronations are classified separately from de facto states and quasi-states; they are also not considered to be autonomous or self-governing as they lack the legal basis in international law for their existence. The activities of micronations are almost always trivial enough to be ignored rather than disputed by the established nations whose territory they claim—referred to in micronationalism as macronations. Several micronations have issued coins, flags, postage stamps, passports, medals and other state-related items, some as a source of revenue. Motivations for the creation of micronations include theoretical experimentation, political protest, artistic expression, personal entertainment and the conduct of criminal activity. The study of micronationalism is known as micropatriology or micropatrology.
Although several historical states have been retroactively called micronations, the concept was formulated in the 1970s, with a particular influence from the International Micropatrological Society. Micronationalism saw several developments thereafter, with several micronations being founded in Australia in the 1970s and Japan in the 1980s. As a result of the emergence of the World Wide Web in the mid-1990s, micronationalism lost much of its traditionally eccentric anti-establishment sentiment in favour of more hobbyist perspectives, and the number of exclusively online or merely simulation-based micronations expanded dramatically. This has allowed several intermicronational organisations to form, as well as allowing for many diplomatic summits to take place between micronations since the 2000s, including the biennial MicroCon convention.
Definition
See also: SovereigntyMicronations are aspirant states that claim independence but lack legal recognition by world governments or major international organisations. Micronations are classified separately from states with limited recognition and quasi-states, nor are they considered to be autonomous or self-governing as they lack the legal basis in international law for their existence. While some are secessionist in nature, most micronations are widely regarded as sovereignty projects that instead seek to mimic a sovereign state rather than to achieve international recognition, and their activities are almost always trivial enough to be ignored rather than challenged by the established nations whose territory they claim—referred to as a macronation in micronationalism. Some micronations admit to having no intention of actually becoming internationally recognised as sovereign. Geographically, most micronations are very small, are often the outgrowth of a single individual, rely on their sovereign state to some extent, and mimic sovereign states by creating their own government, legislation, proclaiming national symbols, holding national elections and engaging in diplomacy with other micronations. While most micronations claim sovereignty over physical territory, others are based solely around the Internet or do not claim sovereignty at all, a hobbyist paradigm of micronationalism that arose with the rise of the Internet from the mid-1990s onwards.
In 2021, legal academics Harry Hobbs and George Williams, in their Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty, defined micronations as "self-declared nations that perform and mimic acts of sovereignty, and adopt many of the protocols of nations, but lack a foundation in domestic and international law for their existence and are not recognised as nations in domestic or international forums".
Online dictionary Collins English Dictionary, published by HarperCollins, gives a similar definition: "An entity, typically existing only on the internet or within the private property of its members, that lays claim to sovereign status as an independent nation, but which is unrecognized by real nations."
History
See also: List of micronationsRetrospective micronations
Several historical political entities have been retroactively described as micronations in academic and journalistic works, including the Islands of Refreshment (existed 1811–16), Kingdom of Araucanía and Patagonia (since 1860), State of Scott (1861–1986), Republic of Parva Domus Magna Quies (since 1878), and the more contemporary Kingdom of Elleore (since 1944), Republic of Saugeais (since 1947), Principality of Outer Baldonia (1949–1973) and Sultanate of M'Simbati (1959–fl. 1964).
Libertarian micronations and seasteading projects: 1964–1972
Several entities that can be considered micronations by contemporary standards were established throughout the 1960s and early 1970s and based on ideals of libertarianism and many of them created via seasteading.
New Atlantis was founded in 1964 by writer Leicester Hemingway, claiming a bamboo raft that he had constructed with steel, iron piping and rock. Hemingway had it towed 9.7 kilometres (6.0 mi) off the coast of Jamaica and argued that it was technically an island and fully sovereign based on the Guano Islands Act of 1856. Although Hemingway had plans to expand the raft, it was destroyed within a few years by a cyclone, and the project was completely abandoned in 1973. In 1967, Paddy Roy Bates squatted on HM Fort Roughs, an offshore platform in the North Sea used during World War II approximately 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) off the coast of the United Kingdom. Bates had intended to broadcast a pirate radio station from the platform, however ultimately never did so. He instead declared the independence of Fort Roughs and declared it the Principality of Sealand. Bates died in 2012, and Michael Bates has since succeeded him as Prince of Sealand.
Operation Atlantis was a project started in 1968 by Werner Stiefel, aiming to establish a new, libertarian nation in international waters via seasteading. The operation launched a ferrocement boat on the Hudson River in December 1971, piloting it to an area near the Bahamas with the intent to permanently anchor it as their territory. Upon reaching its destination, however, it sank in a hurricane. After a number of subsequent failed attempts to construct a habitable sea platform and achieve sovereign status, the project was abandoned in 1976. The Republic of Rose Island was an artificial platform originally constructed as a tourist attraction in the Adriatic Sea in 1968. However, Italian architect Giorgio Rosa soon declared it sovereign. The micronation had its own currency, a post office and commercial establishments. In 1969, the Italian Navy used explosives to destroy the facility, claiming it was a ploy to raise money from tourists while avoiding national taxation. The Republic of Minerva was a libertarian project that succeeded in building a small artificial island on the Minerva Reefs in 1972 by importing sand. It was invaded by troops from Tonga that same year, who annexed it before destroying the island. During its brief existence, Minerva was a media sensation.
Conceptualisation
As of January 1973, the Office of the Geographer of the United States Department of State had a file cabinet for "countries which are only partially real", which included the Kingdom of Humanity, Outer Baldonia, Minerva and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta—not a micronation—among others. Writer Philip J. Hilts added, "We know the Eastern bloc, the Western bloc, and the Third World nations. But there is another universe of nations which exist apart from the familiar countries." The International Micropatrological Society (IMS), an American learned society and research institute, was founded in 1973 and dedicated to the study of micronations, a discipline it named micropatrology. By 1976, it had documents pertaining to 128 micronations and similar political entities. The earliest attested use of micronation in its current meaning appeared on 28 March 1976 in an article by the New York Times about the IMS. The first use of micronation in a book was in an eponymous dedicated section of the 1978 The People's Almanac#2 by David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace. In 1979, the first book about micronations, How to Start Your Own Country, was published by Erwin S. Strauss. The IMS contributed considerably to the work. However, the word micronation is notably absent from the book. A second edition of the work was published in 1984 by Loompanics, followed in 1999 by a third edition published by Paladin Press. According to the Yearbook of International Organizations, the IMS was disestablished in 1988.
Initial developments in Australia: 1970–1981
Australia has a disproportionate number of micronations compared to other countries. The first micronation founded within Australia was the Principality of Hutt River in 1970. It was declared independent by farmer Leonard Casley over a dispute concerning wheat production quotas. In 2017, the Supreme Court of Western Australia ordered that Casley pay $2.7 million in unpaid tax, and that his son Arthur Casley pay $242,000 in unpaid tax. Casley abdicated in 2017 in favour of his son Graeme. Leonard died in 2019, and Hutt River dissolved the following year amidst continued disputes with the Australian Taxation Office as well as the financial impact caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. In 1976, the Province of Bumbunga was declared by Alec Brackstone in response to the 1975 Australian constitutional crisis. Brackstone, an ardent British monarchist, became alarmed by what he saw as a drift away from the Australian system of constitutional monarchy toward outright republicanism. Thus, to ensure that at least one portion of Australia would remain loyal to the British Crown, Bumbunga was declared.
The Sovereign State of Aeterna Lucina was proclaimed in 1978 by German migrant Paul Neuman. Aeterna Lucina came to public attention in 1990 when Neuman faced fraud charges in the New South Wales court system relating to land sale offences; the case was abandoned in 1992. In 1979, the Independent State of Rainbow Creek was declared by Thomas Barnes in protest of alleged incompetence by the Government of Victoria in regards to the flooding of his and others' properties. He was inspired by Hutt River. The Grand Duchy of Avram was established in Tasmania in the early 1980s by politician John Charlton Rudge, and issues its own banknotes. In recognition of his status, Rudge legally changed his name to John the Duke of Avram. In 1981, the Empire of Atlantium was founded in Sydney as a non-territorial global government based on the ideals of secularism, progressivism and liberalism. Among the causes Atlantium supports are the right to unrestricted international freedom of movement, the right to abortion, and the right to assisted suicide.
Micronational community in Japan: 1981–1991
Main article: Mini-dokuritsukokuIn 1981, drawing on a news story about Hemingway's New Atlantis, novelist Hisashi Inoue wrote a 700-page work of magic realism, Kirikirijin, about a village that secedes from Japan and proclaims its bumpkinish, marginalized dialect its national language, and its subsequent war of independence. This single-handedly inspired a large number of real-world Japanese villages, mostly in the northern regions, to declare independence, generally as a move to raise awareness of their unique culture and crafts for urban Japanese who saw village life as backwards and uncultured. These micronations, known as mini-independent countries (Japanese: ミニ独立国, romanized: mini dokuritsu koku), held intermicronational summits, and some of them formed confederations and intermicronational organisations. The Ginko Federation held an intermicronational Olympic games in 1986. However, the economic impact of the Japanese asset price bubble in 1991 ended the boom. Many of the villages were forced to merge with larger cities, and the micronations and confederations were generally dissolved.
Protest micronations: 1980s
The 1980s saw the establishment of several micronational entities in protest.
The Free Republic of Wendland was a protest camp established in Gorleben, West Germany, in 1980 in order to protest against the establishment of a nuclear waste dump at the site. The residents created a border checkpoint and built a temporary village with more than 100 huts, ranging from elaborate round houses to tents. After 33 days, the local police moved in and evicted the camp. Also in 1980, the Independent State of Aramoana was declared by residents of the eponymous settlement during the Save Aramoana Campaign, which was opposed to the proposed construction of an aluminium smelter at Aramoana in New Zealand. This was because the project called for the destruction of the villages of Aramoana and Te Ngaru, and also threatened a local wildlife reserve. The project was ultimately abandoned in the early 1980s, and the micronation of Aramoana peacefully reintegrated into New Zealand.
The Conch Republic was founded by local residents of the Florida Keys in 1982 after the United States Border Patrol set up a roadblock and inspection point on one of the only two roads connecting the Florida Keys with the mainland. The Key West City Council complained repeatedly about the inconvenience, claiming that it hurt the Keys' tourism industry. Though the roadblock was soon removed, the claim to sovereignty of the Conch Republic has persisted as a tongue-in-cheek venture meant to bolster tourism.
In 1986, the Kingdom of North Dumpling was declared by inventor Dean Kamen after a denial from local officials to build his own wind turbine on North Dumpling Island in Long Island Sound, which Kamen privately owns. Kamen wrote his own constitution and created a flag, currency and national anthem for the micronation. In 1992, despite still being recognised as part of New York State in the United States, Kamen was able to leverage his personal relationship with then-president George H. W. Bush to sign an unofficial non-aggression pact.
Artistic micronations: 1990s
Several conceptual art projects with micronational claims arose in the 1990s, usually as a means to challenge the idea of statehood.
In 1991, Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK), a Slovenian political art collective, declared independence. NSK describes itself as a "State in Time", claiming no territory in order to be a "stateless state". Elgaland-Vargaland is a conceptual art project founded in 1992 by Swedish artists Carl Michael von Hausswolff and Leif Elggren. According to them, everyone who dies is automatically granted citizenship. Among Elgaland-Vargaland's territorial claims include graveyards, people's mental states and "the distance between high tide and low tide" of France. They also claim to operate embassies around the world. In 1996, Swedish artist Lars Vilks proclaimed the Royal Republic of Ladonia as a result of a court battle between local authorities over Vilks's illegal construction of two sculptures in the natural reserve of Kullaberg in southern Sweden. Ladonia's claim of independence has since persisted following Vilks's death in 2021, with Carolyn Shelby serving as Queen since 2011. In 1997, the neighbourhood of Užupis in Vilnius, Lithuania declared tongue-in-cheek independence as a republic consisting of laidback artists.
Effects of the Internet and media attention
In the mid-1990s, the emerging popularity of the World Wide Web made it possible for anyone to create their own virtual state-like entity with relative ease, and many micronations launched their own websites. As a result, micronationalism lost much of its traditionally eccentric anti-establishment sentiment in favour of more hobbyist perspectives, and the number of exclusively online or merely simulation-based micronations expanded dramatically. Several intermicronational organisations were also established, with the League of Secessionist States, originally founded in 1980 by the Kingdom of Talossa, and the United Micronations being at the forefront. The French Institute of Micropatrology (French: l'Institut français de micropatrologie) was founded in 1996 by Swiss academic Fabrice O'Driscoll to study this phenomenon. Other online micronational services during the 1990s included MicroWorld, a monthly micronational magazine, and alt.politics.micronations, a Usenet newsgroup dedicated to discussions regarding micronationalism. In 2000, O'Driscoll authored Ils ne siègent pas à l'ONU: revue de quelques micro-Etats, micro-nations et autres entités éphémères (They do not sit at the UN: a review of some micro-states, micro-nations and other ephemeral entities), which details over 600 micronations.
In 2000, the Republic of Molossia and the erstwhile Kingdom of TorHavn hosted an Intermicronational Olympic Games online to coincide with the 2000 Summer Olympics. Six micronations competed and were asked to record their performances then report it to a Molossian message board. In 2003, the First Summit of Micronations summit commenced in Helsinki, Finland, coinciding with a performance art festival called Amorph!03. Six micronations were represented. An art exhibition exhibiting various micronational miscellanea, We Could Have Invited Everyone, occurred in 2004 and 2005 at the Reg Vardy Gallery, University of Sunderland, England and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York City, United States respectively. The items were featured alongside artwork by artists including Yoko Ono and Nina Katchadourian. Both exhibitions coincided with an intermicronational summit. In 2005, the six-part BBC comedy-documentary series How to Start Your Own Country aired on BBC Two, in which comedian Danny Wallace attempts to create his own country in his apartment in Bow, London. The micronation he created was eventually named the Kingdom of Lovely. The following year, the travel guide company Lonely Planet published a light-hearted guide to numerous micronations titled Micronations: The Lonely Planet Guide to Home-Made Nations.
In 2007, two self-proclaimed princesses of the Sunda Democratic Empire, sisters Puteri Lamia Roro Wiranata and Puteri Fathia Reza, were detained by Malaysian immigration authorities for attempting to enter from Brunei using diplomatic passports from the Sunda Empire. They claimed to be the princesses of the historical Sunda Kingdom and that their parents were in exile. In early 2008, they were freed by the Sessions Court, but maintained their claim of Sundan citizenship, thus making them ineligible for deportation to Indonesia. The Malaysian authorities subsequently deemed them stateless individuals, and they were interned at an immigration depot under supervision of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
2010s
In 2010, the documentary film How to Start Your Own Country, directed by Jody Shapiro, was screened as part of the 35th Toronto International Film Festival. The documentary explored various micronations around the world and included an analysis of the concept of statehood, seasteading and citizenship. The film was inspired by Erwin Strauss' eponymous book. Also that same year, an intermicronational summit, PoliNation 2010, was held at Dangar Island in Sydney, Australia. It was organised by Judy Lattas of Macquarie University, Princess Paula of the Principality of Snake Hill and George Cruickshank of the Empire of Atlantium. Between 2013 and 2014, two Aboriginal Australian nations declared independence from Australia as part of the concept of Australian Aboriginal sovereignty—first the Murrawarri Republic, comprising the Muruwari, in 2013, and the Sovereign Yidindji Government, comprising the Yidindji, in 2014. In both cases, the declarations of independence went wholly unrecognised by the Government of Australia.
In 2015, the first convention of the biannual MicroCon was held in Anaheim, California, United States. Hosted by the Republic of Molossia, several presentations were held by micronationalists regarding various topics in micronationalism. The Organisation de la microfrancophonie, a French intermicronational organisation, was founded in 2015. The organisation organised its first summit in 2016, hosted by the Principality of Aigues-Mortes. In 2018, the Principality of Islandia was established by two individuals aiming to build a crowdfunded micronation. Successfully purchasing the uninhabited Coffee Caye in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Belize in 2019, Prime Minister of Belize John Briceño dismissed the project in 2022, calling them "stupid" and stating "We will never allow anybody to have their own country within this country - what a stupid thing. If you stupid enough to pay a lot of money to buy piece of land, good for you."
2020s
During the COVID-19 pandemic that began in 2020, several micronations imposed their own restrictions, mimicking countries. Some inactive Internet-based micronations also returned to activity as people were commanded to stay home and quarantine. In 2020, Netflix released the film Rose Island, based on the story of engineer Giorgio Rosa and the Republic of Rose Island. In 2021, academics Harry Hobbs and George Williams published Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty, a book exploring various aspects of micronationalism. It was published by Cambridge University Press. A follow-up book on micronations by Hobbs and Williams, entitled How to Rule Your Own Country: The Weird and Wonderful World of Micronations, was published in 2022 by the University of New South Wales Press. Also in 2022, illusionist Uri Geller purchased Lamb, an uninhabited island off the coast of Scotland and declared it independent as the Republic of Lamb. Geller offers citizenship, with proceeds going to Save a Child's Heart, an Israeli charity.
Territorial claims
Many micronations claim private property. Wrythe, the capital of the Empire of Austenasia, is a house in Carshalton, LondonThe micronation project Liberland has claimed a piece of land it considers terra nullius due to technicalities in a border dispute between Croatia and Serbia.While most micronations claim land they can administer, often private property, some have made claims to uninhabitable tracts of land. For instance, some micronations have claimed Bir Tawil in Africa and Marie Byrd Land in West Antarctica, lands which are terra nullius—unclaimed by any other sovereign state. Several others have also made claims to other portions of Antarctica. Examples are the Grand Duchy of Westarctica and Grand Duchy of Flandrensis. However, due to Antartica's remoteness, no micronation has yet to establish a permanent residence on the continent. On the other hand, at least one micronationalist has physically reached Bir Tawil; in June 2014, Virginian farmer Jeremiah Heaton travelled to the area and proclaimed the Kingdom of North Sudan. Heaton stated that he claimed the territory in order to fulfil a promise to his daughter to make her a princess, however Heaton has appeared to have other motivations, offering several initiatives—such as the implementation of a national currency and the construction of an international airport and capital city—via crowdfunding.
Other micronational claims have been made to small pockets on the west bank of the Danube between Serbia and Croatia. Some micronationalists argue that the land is terra nullius because Croatia states the pockets are Serbian, whilst Serbia makes no claims on the land. However, the Croatian Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs has rejected these claims, stating that the differing border claims between Serbia and Croatia do not involve terra nullius and are not subject to occupation by a third party. The most prominent example is the Free Republic of Liberland, which was proclaimed in April 2015 by Czech right-libertarian politician and activist Vít Jedlička, and claims the largest pocket, Gornja Siga. The land lacks infrastructure and lies on the floodplain of the Danube.
Other claims
Some micronations have attempted to establish themselves in international waters—parts of the sea that cannot be claimed by any sovereign state—by seasteading. This involves the creation of permanent dwellings at sea. Some micronations are associated with the Seasteading Institute, a non-profit organisation formed to facilitate the establishment of these seasteads.
The Space Kingdom of Asgardia, founded in October 2016, claims an artificial satellite that orbited the Earth. Named Asgardia-1, the two-unit CubeSat was successfully launched by Orbital ATK in November 2017 as part of an International Space Station resupply mission. Asgardia-1 reportedly re-entered the atmosphere in September 2022. The Nation of Celestial Space claims all of outer space, whilst the Empire of Angyalistan lays claim to garbage patches around the world's oceans in protest against their existence.
Other claimed micronations may fit more into a cultural category were territorial claims are not as easily defined such as Aynvaul, what appears to be an Irish-American and Irish language revival micronation based in or around Long Island, New York and the Atlanta, Georgia based Kingdom of Ruritania based on the fictional country of Ruritania from Anthony Hope's Prisoner of Zenda, the latter of which hosted MicroCon 2017 in Atlanta, Georgia.
Functions as a sovereign state
Micronations function in the same way as sovereign states in that they have their own government, constitution, legislation, and (if a democracy) hold national elections. Micronations often have national symbols such as a flag, coat of arms or seal, motto and anthem, and many micronations also issue coins, banknotes, stamps, passports, passport stamps, orders of merit and bestow honours and titles of nobility, although these are not recognised internationally. Some micronations have made profits by selling these items as souvenirs and memorabilia to tourists and via their national websites, and others have even sold citizenship and titles of nobility. Some micronational coinage and stamps, if professionally made, have become valued as collector's items by numismatists and philatelists (stamp collectors) alike. In addition, both Sealand and Seborga have their own national association football teams. The Sealand national football team was founded in 2004 and became an associate member of the N.F.-Board, a federation made up of unrecognised states, stateless peoples, regions and micronations that are not allowed to join FIFA, in 2006. The Seborga national football team was founded in 2014 and is run by the Football Federation of the Principality of Seborga.
Community
Diplomacy
Like countries, micronations engage in intermicronational diplomacy with one another. This includes the signing of treaties, non-aggression pacts and intermicronational conventions, diplomatic missions and declarations of war. Several intermicronational organisations also exist, with some having as many as 80 member states. Most of these organisations generally work to maintain peace, strengthen micronational cooperation and to improve diplomatic relations between member states.
Intermicronational summits
Further information: summit (meeting)Intermicronational summits are also commonplace within the micronational community, and several reoccurring summits have taken place. These include the sporadically-held PoliNation, biennial MicroCon; and the Organisation de la microfrancophonie has hosted three intermicronational summits between its member states. PoliNation 2010 was held at Dangar Island, Sydney, Australia and was organised by Judy Lattas of Macquarie University, Princess Paula of the Principality of Snake Hill and George Cruickshank of the Empire of Atlantium. PoliNation 2012 was held in London, United Kingdom, and PoliNation 2015 commenced at Umbria, Italy. MicroCon 2015 was held in Anaheim, California and hosted by Molossia; MicroCon 2017 in Tucker, Georgia by the Kingdom of Ruritania; MicroCon 2019 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, by the Kingdom of Slabovia; and MicroCon 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada by Westarctica, having been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The first summit hosted by the Microfrancophonie was held in 2016 in Aigues-Mortes, Occitania, and hosted by the Principality of Aigues-Mortes; the second summit took place in 2018 in Vincennes, Paris, and was hosted by Angyalistan; the third summit took place in 2022 in Blaye, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, organised by the Principality of Hélianthis. Since 2022, the Micro Euro Summit has been held regularly as a congress for European micronations.
Websites and online communities
There are thousands of micronations which exist and operate solely online. Micronationalists convene and engage with one another through several online platforms, especially social media and historically forums (message boards), where micronationalists can share lessons and ideas as well as gain inspiration for establishing their own micronation. MicroWiki, the largest micronational wiki and encyclopaedia, has thousands of articles on various topics related to micronationalism "with many country pages longer than those of real nations ", and a number of micronations exist and conduct diplomacy solely on the wiki, utilising it as an online community. As of October 2023, the largest micronational group on Facebook, Micronations and Alternative Polities, had 3,400 members, and the subreddit forum r/micronations on Reddit had another 8,000.
Legality
Arguments for sovereignty
Micronation as a word has no basis in international law. Despite this, several micronations have attempted to justify their claims to sovereignty by citing loopholes in local laws. A commonly attempted tactic used by micronationalists to legitimise their claims is the declarative theory of statehood as defined by the Montevideo Convention, which defines a state as: "a person of international law possess the following qualifications: (a) a permanent population; (b) a defined territory; (c) government; and (d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states."
In 2019, a couple seasteading off the coast of Thailand went into hiding after being accused by the Royal Thai Navy of violating Thailand's sovereignty. If found guilty, they could face life in prison or the death penalty. As of 2020, they relocated to Panama.
Based on historical claims
Some micronations are founded on the basis of historical anomalies. The Principality of Seborga was founded in 1963 by Giorgio Carbone, who claimed to have found documents from the Vatican archives which, according to Carbone, indicated that Seborga had never been a possession of the House of Savoy and was thus not legally included in the Kingdom of Italy when it was formed in 1861, meaning that Seborga had remained sovereign. The Romanov Empire, created by chairman of the Monarchist Party of Russia Anton Bakov, claims to be a re-creation of the Russian Empire that holds Prince Karl Emich of Leiningen as the rightful heir to the imperial throne.
See also
- Fictional country
- League of Small and Subject Nationalities
- List of micronations
- List of unrecognised countries
- Nation-building
- State-building
Footnotes
- Both terms also refer to the study of microstates.
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Bibliography
- Strauss, Erwin S. (1999) . How to Start Your Own Country (3 ed.). Paladin Press. ISBN 978-1-58160-524-2 – via the Open Library.
- O'Driscoll, Fabrice (2000). Ils ne siègent pas à l'ONU: revue de quelques micro-Etats, micro-nations et autres entités éphémères (in French). Presses du Midi. ISBN 978-2-87867-251-0.
- Lasserre, Frédéric (14 March 2000). "Les hommes qui voulaient être rois. Principautés et nations sur Internet". Cybergeo (in French). doi:10.4000/cybergeo.4397. hdl:20.500.11794/864 – via OpenEdition.org.
- Ryan, John; Dunford, George; Sellars, Simon (2006). Micronations: The Lonely Planet Guide to Home-Made Nations. Lonely Planet. ISBN 978-1-74104-730-1.
- Ferguson, Bennie Lee (2009). What is a Nation: The Micronationalist Challenge to Traditional Concepts of the Nation-state (PDF) (Thesis). Wichita State University.
- Moreau, Terri Ann (2014). Subversive Sovereignty: Parodic Representations of Micropatrias Enclaved by the United Kingdom (PDF) (Thesis). University of London.
- Simpson, Isabelle (27 September 2016). "Operation Atlantis: A case-study in libertarian island micronationality" (PDF). Shima. 10 (2). Shima Publishing: 19–35. doi:10.21463/shima.10.2.05.
- Mislan, David Bell; Streich, Philip (2018). Weird IR: Deviant Cases in International Relations. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-3-319-75555-7.
- Furnues, David (2018). The Rise of Non-territorial Sovereignties and Micronations (PDF). United Nations University.
- Hayward, Philip (2018). "Secessionism, submergence and Siteresponsive art: The Embassy of the Commonwealth of New Bayswater at the 1st Fremantle Biennale" (PDF). Shima. 12: 163–168. doi:10.21463/shima.12.1.14. S2CID 195031869.
- Hobbs, Harry; Williams, George (2021a). "Micronations: A lacuna in the law". International Journal of Constitutional Law. 19 (1). Oxford University Press; New York University School of Law: 71–97. doi:10.1093/icon/moab020.
- Hobbs, Harry; Williams, George (2021b). Micronations and the Search for Sovereignty. Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-15013-2.
- Hobbs, Harry; Williams, George (2022). How to Rule Your Own Country: The Weird and Wonderful World of Micronations. University of New South Wales Press. ISBN 978-1-742-23773-2.
Further reading
See also: Bibliography of works on micronationalismNonfiction
- Fuligni, Bruno (1997). L'État c'est moi: Histoire des monarchies privées, principautés de fantaisie et autres républiques pirates (in French). Éditions de Paris. ISBN 978-2-90529-169-1.
- Fuligni, Bruno; Hanne, Isabelle (2013). Micronations (in French). Diaphane. ISBN 978-2-919-07719-9.
- Hobbs, Harry; Williams, George (2021). "The demise of the 'second largest country in Australia': micronations and Australian exceptionalism". Australian Journal of Political Science. 56 (2). Routledge: 206–293. doi:10.1080/10361146.2021.1935450. hdl:10453/149325. S2CID 235598841.
- Riding, James; Dahlman, Carl T. (2022). "Montage space: Borderlands, micronations, terra nullius, and the imperialism of the geographical imagination". Dialogues in Human Geography. 12 (2). SAGE Publishing: 278–301. doi:10.1177/20438206221102597. S2CID 249051290.
- Hobbs, Harry; Hayward, Philip; Motum, Robert (2023). "Cyber Micronations and Digital Sovereignty". Digital Society. 2 (3). Springer Nature: 44. doi:10.1007/s44206-023-00069-9. S2CID 264147592.
Fiction
- Heinlein, Robert A. (1966). The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 978-0-312-86355-5. [Award-winning SF: penal colonies on the Moon form a micronation which declares and defends its independence from Earth, becoming a microstate. Presciently for 1966, computer-aided communications play a crucial part.]
- Kaye, Marvin (1977). The Laurel and Hardy Murders. New York: Mysterious Press. ISBN 978-0-525-14397-0. Retrieved July 2, 2020 – via Google Books. [Fictional mystery using real people as characters, among them Barry Alan Richmond, president of the Most Serene Federal Republic of Montmartre, either an extended political satire or a micronation in Manhattan. Across three pages, pp. 58–60, the character Richmond declares his complete title for the record.]
- Perry, Thomas (1988). Island. New York: Putnam. ISBN 978-0-399-13327-5 – via Publishers Weekly. [A couple fleeing the mob build upon an uninhabited Caribbean island and start a successful micronation→microstate, then must defend it.]
External links
- Micronation at MicroWiki, the free micronational encyclopædia
- micronation at Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.