Evenaria

Evenaria (Dutch: Evenaar), officially the Kingdom of Evenaria (Dutch: Koninkrijk van de Evenaar), is a country in northern South America. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and north-east, and the following countries from top counter-clockwise: Guyane, Suriname, Essequibo, Bolivaria, Nueva Grenada, Peru, Bolivia, Mato Grosso and Brazil. At 4.05 million square kilometers (1.56 million square miles), it is the third-largest nation in the Americas by area.

Its population of 58.3 million people are mainly descendants of Dutch settlers from the northern and western Netherlands and Flanders and slaves from West Africa, the Indian subcontinent and the Malay archipelago, as well as early Brazilian settlers, the indigenous tribes of the Amazon, German and later Portuguese immigrants, and recent arrivals from neighboring Spain. Evenaria, being situated on the equator, is a tropical country and is dominated by the Amazon rainforest which is vital to the country's efforts in the mitigation of climate change and the maintenance of carbon negativity.

Inhabited nearly four millennia ago by Native Amazonians, in 1616 the town of Belém do Pará (today's Belem) was founded by the Kingdom of Portugal. In 1630 the Dutch seized the eastern area of the country and expanded its conquests into the interior of the Amazon. In 1810 Evenaria gained independence before descending into a short period of crisis known as the Anarchy. Between 1878 and 1881 the War of the Chains occurred in which African slaves revolted against the government, and in 1985 the country entered a brief communist regime which was ended in 1988. Evenaria continues to maintain close diplomatic, economic, and cultural ties with the Netherlands.