Reformed State in Grenedene

The Reformed State in Grenedene (Grenedeneish: An Wenden Stait Grenedene / An Wenꝺen Ꞅꞇaiꞇ Ᵹꞃeneꝺene) also referred to as the Reformed State or the Wendenstait was the regime instituted across all church and religious ground in the Kingdom of Grenedene, organized into an extremely strict regimen, the State operated without any restrictions and by its own laws in all church ground, and while its entire regime was only made up of exclaves, it found itself as the primary social and religious order experienced by the vast majority of Grenedeneish people until its deposition during the Poppy Revolutions, which brought an end to the, by that point fledgling entity, which would go into exile and eventually be declared extinct in 1956, being replaced by the Unified Church of Reformed Kaurissem in Grenedene.

The Reformed State began shortly after the Deposition of the Carrick Monarchy, heralded by the Grenedeneish Separation Act, which gave the monarch support in his efforts to cut ties between the Holy See and began the Grenedeneish reformation, this was done, not out of greed, but primarily out of two religious issues, the use of the in prayer, as well as the religious issues caused by what was known as the Question of the Sundish Yoke, raised by a monk in Bryhtūn, which sought to expose the church for being dominated by Katal and Sundemark in nature, and therefore unable to be trusted in Grenedene by its populace.

The Reformed State became enforced by law in 1698, with the Grant of the Reformed State, which granted it all land formerly belonging to the Orthodox Church, the State was given the right to take this land and do as they wished on it independently so long as it did no go against the regulations of the grant, meaning that the reformed state had massive amounts of power, with its land in some cases expanding, into Tyrdene and even into some colleges and castles, where the Palace of the Temporal Bishop of Eagorm was held, and where the Bishop went so far as to raise his own Dioesanian Militia, which acted as a sort of guard.