Alright, got my sheet ready, try my hand at something different from a nation: [hider=Anglican Communion] Name: The Anglican Communion Flag: [img]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6c/Anglican_rose.svg[/img] Government: Theocracy, it’s a church, so, theocracy? The Anglican Communion is an Episcopal body consisting of Anglican churches in full communion with each other. Led by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the communion focuses mostly on matters of faith and charity and theological discussion. Territory: No territory as per se, but spread across the world in numerous churches. History: Emerging from the English Reformation, the Anglican Communion’s story is entwined with the history of the Church of England. Of its struggles and intertwining with the history of Britain, of its rapid spread under the aegis of the empire and its slow decline after the first world war (Assuming it occurred in ttl), where the faith of thousands was lost in the mud and blood of Flanders fields. Pre-Visitation: Prior to the visitation, the communion was focused on the worrying decrease in church attendance in the first world nations, and looking towards missionary activities in the third world. As well as dealing with issues regarding funding, and adjusting to the changes in laws around the world that affected its position in some countries. The Visitation: What can be said of the visitation upon people of faith? Whether believing in a higher power or believing there was not? That it inspired and terrified them in equal measure? Driving them to their church or from it? That it upended the world and everything in it? The old order turned over and a new order in its place, and the Anglican Communion seeking its place in this changed state of existence, as with everyone else. Recent History: The Anglican Communion has shakily found its feet after the visitation, but found itself beset by the crises of faith that afflicted the population of the world entire after the event. Aliens. Intelligent life on other worlds. An act of god? Or an act disproving god? What good can prayer do in the face of such power? Perhaps they are gods and deserving of our worship? Or are they a sign from above telling us to wash out our sins in preparation for the end of times? At the head of it all, the Archbishop struggles to answer the questions on the lips of the faithful and faithless, for the world has changed, and the church must decide what it has to do next in reply. Pressing Issues: Faith, the love of it or the lack of it following the visitation. Budget: 55% to administrative matters, 45% to charitable endeavours. It's a church? [/hider]