Tylen

Tylen (Pronounced Tie-linn) or officially the Colonial Republic of Tylen (German: Kolonialrepublik von Tylen) is a in. It is bordered to the North by the, and the ; to the east by , , ; to the south by  and to the west by the Fatherland-. The Territory of Tylen covers 1,636.104 square kilometers (1,016.628 sq mi). With only 63,014 it is one of the smaller, yet more influential members of the Nordreich Alliance.

Tylen is the result of unification efforts by Germany between the formerly independant countries of, and. Tylen was conquered and established as a colony of Greater Germany on the 5th of November 2009 as the final stage of the GDNP's Pröjekt Großdeutschland. The formerly poor and under developed nations accepted the unification efforts and their newly appointed leader with open arms, despite tensions and high levels of opposition from the. With the creation of Tylen the former Eastern European peoples were accepted into the first world with open arms by Nordreich- the opposition group to the socialistic EU.

History
The Nation of Tylen is situated over the three formerly independant nations of, , and which became extensions of the Greater German Union (Großdeutschanschluss) in November of 2005 in a celebration of their shared history.

Early History
The Regional History of Tylen dates back as far as the era with numerous discoveries of stone tools, and settlements across the region from the foot of the Inovec mountains to the river valleys of Nitra. Between the 4th and 7th century the regions was subject to repeated invasions ultimately being settled by the early slavic tribes, and becoming the heart of the which resulted in the removal of Frankish influence from the region.

Habsburg Era (1000-1919)
From the year 1000 up until 1919, The Slavic people of what is now Tylen had belonged to the and the  under the. In the revolution of 1848, they supported the Austrian Monarchy, ultimately leading to the expulsion of Hungary from the Empire and the revocation of citizenship to thousands of Jewish residents who were thought to have been providing funding to pro-Hungarian groups through out the empire. In 1914, communist revolutionary group called the (officially Unification or Death) assassinated heir to the Habsburg thrown-  catapulting Europe into the first world war, and masking communist efforts in Russia which would reach it's peak in the October of 1917  during which the Romanov's were executed by the  resulting in the international spread of communism- thousands of workers were reached and decieved by lies of Classless society masking the torture and murders of millions by the  in the name of the Communist agenda.

In 1918 with the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire imminent, Slovakia and the regions of Bohemia and Moravia formed a common state of Czechoslovakia, with the borders confirmed by the Treaties of Saint Germain and Trianon, both of which proved unsuccessful in their goal of providing protection against Communism.

First Soviet Depression (1919-1939)
With the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire following the First World War, The people of Tylen had lost their protection from the rising communist menace of the Soviet Union and were ultimately forced to succumb to it on threat of genocide. Under the Soviet regime millions of citizens of what is now the prosperous nation of Tylen fell victim to the cruelties of the communism, suffering under engineered famines, Political assassinations, and mass executions carried out as demonstrations against percieved dissidents of the. Most notable of these human rights violations was the burning of three churches during a christmas mass. The churches, established by the Habsburg monarchy in the early 14th century were land marks in the region and stood as a tributes to kindness and prosperity under the monarchy.

The Second Wold War (1939 - 1945)
The second world war brought with it a salvation in the form of the who provided liberation from the  tyranny of the. Unfortunately with the liberation of the former soviet territories brought with it a rise up of pro-communist insurgents. While these groups were in the minority- and highly unstable (estimated memberships fluctuating between 300- 500 membership) they did pose a significant threat to the new government carrying out a number of ambushes, bombings and other terrorist activities which lead to the carrying out of Cauldren Operations ultimately causing a loss of faith in the German government. As the war continued the occupied territories continued to be plagued by these sorts of operations costing thousands of residents their homes and ultimately their lives as they failed to be able to find shelter through the winter. In the end the occupying government was defeated causing the expansion of USSR borders to Berlin ending the war, and re-instating the communist reign of tyranny behind the safety of the.

Second Soviet Depression(1945-1993)
By the end of the second world war the soviets had regained control of the the conquered territories and had begun a re-indoctrination process in the involved areas. While some welcomed the stability of the communist party as a much needed reprieve from the war, many viewed the victory of the Red Army as re-shackling of the people and the destruction of freedom under the weight of broken ideals. The first proof of this came all too soon with the flood of returning soldiers and volunteers from the west. The Union's Heroes of the People were violent and cruel personifications of the policies enacted by their government.

A study published by the German government in 1989 estimated the death toll of ethnic German civilians across eastern Europe at 635,000. With 270,000 dying as the result of Soviet war crimes, 160,000 deaths occurring at the hands of various nationalities during the expulsion of Germans, and 205,000 deaths in the Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union These figures do not include at least 125,000 civilian deaths in the Battle of Berlin.

Following the Red Army's capture of Berlin in 1945, one of the largest incidents of mass rape took place. Soviet troops reportedly raped German women and girls as young as 8 years old. Estimates of the total number of victims range from tens of thousands to two million between 1945 and 1947. The rapes continued despite threats of prison and in some cases execution, until Soviet occupation authorities finally confined Soviet troops to strictly guarded posts and camps, completely separating them from the residential population in the Soviet zones.

In 1993 the Soviet Union fell finally unveiling the millions of travesties that had taken place behind the gilding Iron Curtain. Unfortunately by this time the people of what would later become Tylen were pre-occupied by a brutal civil war fueled by ethnic tensions. The fall did little but fuel the struggle as millions of operational soviet weapons flooded the open market.