Khurat

The Kingdom of Khurat is a  located in, in the central portion of the. It is bordered by to the north,  to the east,  to the south, and  to the west. Khurat has an estimated population of 547,688 people as of 2015, making it the country in the world. Khurat also has a land area of 7,096 square kilometres, making it the nation in the world. The capital is Borkhati, which, with a population of 197,316 as of 2015, is also the largest city.

Khurat is a  with a  in which the monarch is the, the prime minister is the , and the  national assembly is the. The government is created through a within the national assembly, with the leader of the majority party or majority coalition of parties then becoming the prime minister and appointing members of the governmental administration. The legislature exists at the will of the monarch, with the monarch retaining the right to dissolve the national assembly and personally appoint members of the government. This system of governance has been in place since 1989, two years after the restoration of the monarchy following the end of the Khurati Civil War in 1987.

The earliest recorded inhabitants of Khurat emerged significantly in the region around 500 BC. For hundreds of years, the various peoples of the region would be separated into several small, warring fiefdoms. A unified Khurati culture would develop around 860 CE with the unification of various fiefs into the Khurati Theocracy after the development of Ghitism and the formalisation of the role of the Avatara in regional affairs. Khurat remained a peaceful and unified state until it was invaded by the in 1717 and occupied until 1791. The intervened and restored Khurati sovereignty that year, with the harsh terrain making direct Chinese control over the region difficult. Constant continued border disputes with the Nepali would see Khurat ally with the Britannian in the, resulting in the full restoration of Khurati territory in exchange for Britannian  over the country.