Kingdom of Wallachia
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Kingdom of Wallachia Valašské kralovství Micronation | |
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Status | Association |
Capital | European, Moravian Vlach |
Demonym(s) | Moravian Wallachian |
Organizational structure | Self-proclaimed Constitutional monarchy, Oligarchy |
• King | Vladimir II |
• Premier | Tomáš Harabiš |
Establishment | |
• Declared | 1997 (Claimed 1993) |
Population | |
• 2020 estimate | 34 |
Purported currency | Jurovalsar (pegged in value to the Euro) |
Time zone | CET |
The Kingdom of Wallachia (Czech: Valašské kralovství), named after the region of Moravian Wallachia, is a tongue-in-cheek recessionary association that was founded in 1997 by the photographer Tomáš Harabiš as an "elaborate practical joke". The location is in the southeast corner of the Czech Republic. Since foundation a reported 80,000 Czech citizens have acquired "Wallachian Passports".[1]
After the official proclamation of the Wallachian kingdom in 1997, actor Bolek Polívka was enthroned as King Boleslav I the Gracious with his coronation occurring at a lavish ceremony in 2000. The "Government" led by Tomáš Harabiš established state institutions and issued passports to around 80,000 officially Czech citizens. A new currency, the Jurovalsar, was launched which was pegged to the euro at a rate of 1:1. Enthusiastic attempts to forge official ties with other countries have so far proved disappointing and the Kingdom of Wallachia enjoys no formal diplomatic recognition.
Constitutional Crisis of 2001
In 2001 the Wallachian government deposed King Boleslav in a
"Kings of Wallachia"
- Boleslav I, 1997–2001 (deposed). The start of Boleslav's reign is disputed, with the former monarch claiming it began in 1993.
- Vladimír II, 2001–present.
King of Wallachia | |
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Incumbent Vladimír II since 2001 | |
Inaugural holder | Boleslav I |
Formation | 1997 (claimed 1993) |
References
- ^ a b "Court to hear appeal in "Wallachian Kingdom" dispute, Rod Cameron, Radio Praha, 2 September 2008". Archived from the original on 15 September 2008. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
- ^ "Coup in a fantasy kingdom inside the Czech Republic (The Independent, 2008-10-13)". Archived from the original on 22 October 2017. Retrieved 22 April 2022.