Principality of Freedonia

The Principality of Freedonia was a micronation based on libertarian principles. It was created as a "hypothetical project" by a group of teenagers in the United States in 1992. The project was formalized as a new country project in 1997, which included attempts in 2001 to lease territory in Somaliland. The attempt to lease land was rejected.

Principality of Freedonia
Micronation
Flag of Freedonia
Flag
National arms of Freedonia
National arms
Motto: Superibimus!
LocationNone
Official languagesEnglish
Demonym(s)Freedonian
Organizational structureConstitutional monarchy
 Prince
John I (1997-2004)
Establishment
 Declared
1997
Membership< 300 (1997-2004)
Purported currencyFreedonian Dollar (based on precious metals)

It was headed by a Texas university student named John Kyle, who used the title Prince John.[1][2] The Principality of Freedonia itself was based in Boston, Massachusetts.[3]

Coinage

While the Freedonia project was active, it minted its own currency.[3] It had a number of 50 Freedonian dollar 1 oz silver coins minted.[4] It offered these coins for sale on the organization's website.[5]

Current status

The Freedonia project's website has not been updated for a number of years and its discussion forum no longer functions, e-mail communication with the self-styled Prince does not work, and the entire project appears to be defunct. E-mail statements from the founder indicate the project is not being actively pursued as of 2004.[4]

As of 2013, the Freedonia website is no longer available.

See also

References

  1. Micronations: The Lonely Planet Guide to Home-Made Nations, John Ryan, George Dunford, and Simon Sellars, Lonely Planet Publications, 2006 ISBN 1741047307 (paperback)
  2. "Wanted: Homeland for 300 Webheads". Metroactive. 22 November 2000. Retrieved 2 January 2006.
  3. Blumberg, Alex. "It's good to be king". Wired. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  4. "Bank of Freedonia". The Principality of Freedonia. Archived from the original on 20 August 2012. Retrieved 2 January 2006.

Further reading

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