Aritonesia

 (also known as the El Kadsreian Islands, Arito Islands, Pacific Southwest, Juan de Fuca Islands, and North Aritonazca; and historically known as New North Wales and the Sentanese Islands) is an archipelago comprising the northern part of Aritonazca located off the coast of western side of North America, consisting of twenty-nine countries, one autonomous administrative division of, and one U.S. territory. Nine El Kadsreian territories also count as part of Aritonesia despite only three of them being located in the archipelago. Aritonesia lies in the Arito plate and it was formed in 1471, when the devastating earthquake, measuring 9.8 on the richter scale, caused the Arito subcontinent to partially sink to the ocean.

Ethymology
Aritonesia is derived from Hideo Arito, a Tokugawan sailor who colonized the majority of the central part of the archipelago in the early 19th century and the Greek word “nesos” (νῆσος), which means “Arito islands”. The name “Aritonesia” dates back as early as the 1850s, when the first presidental republic in Aritonesia, New Japan, began forming diplomatic relations to the outside world. Prior to New Japan, Aritonesia was known as “New North Wales”, named by British navigator, when he discovered the archipelgo in 1778.

In El Kadsre, Aritonesia is known as the "El Kadsreian Islands" and the El Kadsreian government attempted to pressure the United Nations to use the El Kadsreian Islands as the official term for the archipelago between the 1970s and the 1990s. The El Kadsreian Islands is used in colloquial usage in El Kadsre and the United Nations refused to use the El Kadsreian Islands for sounding too self-centered towards El Kadsre.