| |||||||
Capital | Kalingrad | ||||||
Largest city | Kalingrad | ||||||
Language official |
Russian, German, Polish, Lithuanian | ||||||
others | English | ||||||
Religion main |
Protestantism | ||||||
others | Orthodox Christianity, Roman Catholicism, Lutheran | ||||||
Ethnic Groups main |
Russian | ||||||
others | Lithuanian, Polish, German, Baltic German | ||||||
Demonym | Prussian | ||||||
Government | Democratic Republic | ||||||
Population | 941,873 | ||||||
Established | 1994 | ||||||
Currency | Euro |
Russia's Collapse (1990-1994)[]
Despite Russian population in Kaliningrad(Now Konigsberg) being a Majority, it was always unstable considering the countryside was mostly ethnic Germans. Within the years from 1949-1989, the Germans had been segregated between Majority Ethnic Germans and minority Lithuanians and Poles in the country side and the Majority ethnic Russians in the Cities. In the years to come, Rioting like that of Lithuania still occurred in the country sides and in ghettos.. In 1990, Lithuania gained her Independence. With this, Lithuania started to bundle money and guns to these rebels. Within a couple months, The majority Ethnic Germans along with the minority Polish in Prussia rose up and conquered Prussia without any resistance.
After this, Many Ethnic Russians left for Mother Russia, while the remainder stayed and intermingled with the newly freed Germans to start Germans unsegregated. After East Germany fell to the West, even more Germans migrated back to their homelands in Konigsberg, bringing Jobs and equal opportunity along with them. Because of this, They started heavily advertising Protestantism among the appressed Germans of both sides. Because of this, today the Majority of Konigsberg Germans are protestant, with the 10% Russians remaining all adhering to Orthodox Christianity. With the Full Russian collapse on its way, the economy flourished along with it.
With this opportunity, they reached out to China and America for Money. This caused Konigsberg to become one of the richest parts of the former eastern Bloc. However, an identity crisis was emerging....