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C. Areas of Civilisation

Within the Charter of Asona University, there is the description of five areas of civilisation: Mediterranea, Africa, Asia, Europe, and Taínoterranea. This encompasses the aggregate of humanity, and the history of humanity through the time of the specific initiation of this ACE Plan.

Mediterranea is defined as the collective territory of land contemporarily occupied by the nations of Portugal, España, Italia, Citta del Vaticano, San Marino, Greece, Cyprus, Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Oman, Yemen, Heshemite Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Yisrael, Palestine, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, and Western Sahara.

Africa is defined as the collective territory of land contemporarily occupied by the nations situated immediately South of Mediterranea appropriately through the confluence of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

Asia is defined as the collective territory of land contemporarily occupied by the nations situated immediately East of Mediterranea from the Caspian Sea appropriately through the Pacific Ocean.

Europe is defined as the collective territory of land contemporarily occupied by the nations situated immediately North of Mediterranea appropriately through the confluence of the Atlantic Ocean and the Norwegian Sea.

Taínoterranea is defined as the collective territory of land contemporarily occupied by the nations situated West of Mediterranea appropriately between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

The Arctic and Antarctica are defined as autonomous areas, respectively.

Although the influence and biases of contemporary geopolitics are acknowledged, the establishment of these categories of identification for areas of civilisation is substantially predicated upon the respective geographic location of lands as well as upon the historic interaction of the respective civilisations and people upon these respective lands during the course of the millennia of generally recognised human history.

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