Wabash

The Wabash Confederation, commonly refereed to as Indiana or as simply as Wabash (: Ouabache) is a  with a  situated in  bordering the nations of the  and. Consisting of 11 Departments, the nation spans from the beginning of the in  to the beginning of the  in.

Birthed during the, the nations formal creation dates earlier during the colonization of the American Northwest by the. With a united Albion-Gaul crown, French and English settlers were freely able to populate the areas surrounding the, giving rise to a diverse Ango-French frontier. French populated the late 1780's and 90's when the monarchy began to crackdown on mainland citizens in Europe. During the, Barthélemy Cahun lead a convention in the city of Duval along the that rallied support from the  settlers to support the United States in the revolution. Delegates George Malford and Jacques Glaisyer attended the, vowing support for the United States in respect of recognition of the Wabash Confederation. States such as openly rejected the demands, but forced under the circumstances ratified the Wabash-American Treaty.

Overwhelming the Kingdom of Albion-Gaul in its Canadian provinces in the Great Lakes Offensive, the cause in the thirteen colonies became easier for the Americans to win. Wabash forces marched over and secured much of Albionish assets and forced an American-Wabash victory. American relations prospered with the Duval government, and interests between the two nations were mutual. Citizens in the mid 1830's took on the name as as their official  and since the  the term has since become derogatory in the, associated much with poverty. Economic issues lingered over the great remainder of the 19 century which lead to a cultural shaped by modesty and.