Orthodox State (MKS)

Orthodox State (greek. Ορθόδοξη Πολιτεία, Orthodóxi Politeía;russian. Православное Государство, Pravoslavnoye Gosudarstvo) also known asGreece-Russia (греч. Ελληνικά—Ρωσικά, Elliniká—Rosiká;russian. Греко-Россия, Greko-Rossiya) is a state consisting of 3 enclaves in Northern Eurasia, Baltic Region and Balkans и в Южной Европе. Borders 20


 * Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Belarussia, Ukraine, Albania, Kosovo, Bulgaria, Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, PRC, North Korea, Japan, USA

Capital is Sevastopol but embassies of most states are placed in Moscow and Athens.

Unitary, parliamentary theocracy. Head of the state from 2025 is Bartholomew I.

The country appeared in 2025 as result of fusion of Russian Federation and Greek Republic.

Politics
Constitution declates Orthodox State as parliamentary theocracy with a unitary state structure. The basic law of the state is the constitution adopted in 2025

The head of state is His Divine All-holy Archbishop of Constantinople-New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch. Since 1991, it's Bartholomew I (Dimitros Archondonis).

A new Patriarch is elected at the holy cathedral after the death of the previous one.

Executive power
The head of the executive power is the chairman of the government of the Orthodox State (prime minister). Usually, the leader of the majority party

Legislative power
The parliament is bicameral:

Upper House is Holy Cathedral, consists of Orthodox clergy: 500 members of the House are appointed by the patriarch.

It has the right to issue laws which are valid only for those Orthodox Believers without coordination with the Zemsky Sobor.

Lower House is Zemsky Sobor: 800 members are elected by people of the State

Exarchies have one-house religious councils with 250 members in each, consisting of the clergy of religion, spread out on the territory of the exarchy. Laws issued by such councils are only valid for believer of the faith which they relate.

Administrative divisions
the Orthodox State consists of 68 eparchies, 5 exarchies, 5 metropolitan cities and the Autonomous Monastic State of the Holy Mountain (Athos):
 * Eparchies(from the Greek ἐπαρχία - destiny, province) account for the greater part (95%) of the territory of the state.
 * Exarchies(from the Greek ἔξαρχος — external authority) are formed in territories with a significant non-Christian (non-Orthodox) population.
 * Metropolitan cities (from the Greek μητρόπολις - metropoly)are the most developed and populated regions. Placed on only 0.3% of the territory of the State, but they account about 18% of the country's population.