StrayKirin on DeviantArthttps://www.deviantart.com/straykirin/art/Hetalia-Oc-Profile-Siberia-492076515StrayKirin

Deviation Actions

StrayKirin's avatar

Hetalia Oc Profile Siberia

By
Published:
9.1K Views

Description

Country Information
Official Country Name: Siberia
Capital: N/A
Largest City: Novosibirsk
Languages: Russian
Government: N/A
Current Leader:  N/A

Human Information
Human Name: Toma Markovich
Nickname[s]: Toma
Age Appearance: 19
Gender: Female
Birthday: 11th September
Languages: Russian, German and English

About Them
W.I.P Personality: 
A strict young girl who was never shown any love by a human, she grew up with animals which did give her affection although she is always mistaken as Russia but it doesn't bother her as she know some day that they will be sorry. She want's to travel and see what other countries have to offer, but ever since the war her view of the world has changed, although she has only made a few friends she want's to make more but there would always be a problem, so she gives up and trains to fight as she would practice fighting with bears. When someone does visit her, she would be uncomfortable and as such she does trust anyone to easily.

 When bored she travels to Moscow although filled with people she finds it quite homely as she has no capital city she simply share's with Russia who does greet her when visiting, she is scared of Belarus but living with animals taught her that she's only a threat when Russia is involved. 

Siberia is Hot-headed so if she gets angry she will take it out on anything, as such she tries to calm her self as she doesn't want to hurt anyone but when she does she will simply say sorry and forgets about it, as she doesn't want the scary reputation as Russia but knows she could never change that after years of being of mistaken as him and being told that Siberia is Russia not just a part of Russia which leads to her having rage and scaring people even more.

During each season she acts differently without even noticing, the scarf round her neck was given to her by Russia with the world she has never forgotten "We might be the same but we are different " and from that day one she would always wear said scarf and fix it when she would rip it. Siberia loves the snow and the cold while the coldest it could get there is around -100 to -200 she worries that travelling to hot countries wouldn't be good as she's not used to hot climates and her best friend would hate it too. When left alone she is quite peaceful and harmless as she loves learning about her surrounding and her country's wildlife but when approached by a human see becomes a shy, intimidating. 

When not travelling or playing she is in her surroundings riding on her friend Stuntler a deer who is one of her means of travel, Siberia wears a black hooded coat, black / Red pants and black boots with a brown belt she also carries around a bow and arrows for a weapon. 

Hobbies:
-Drawing
-Playing with animals
-Training

Vices:
-Hot-Headed
-Doesn't pay attention in she's not interested  
-Hates talking 
-Ignores others 
-Loner
-Beats people up who annoy her 
-Let's her anger get the best of her


Virtues: 
-Animal lover 
-Protective
-Knowledgeable 

Likes:
-Animals
-Russian and German Food
-Video Games
-Art

Dislikes:
-Being in big crowds
-British Food 

Fears: 
-Belarus
-Meeting new people
-Big crowds
-Being the centre of attention  

Extras: N/A

Physical Attributes
Blood Type: 
A
Height: 
182cm
Weight: 
11 St
Body: 
Pale white like snow.
Hair:
Once long and blonde but she dyed it black and cut it short
Eyes:
Purple
Mouth:
Small and have Canine like teeth 
Accent:
Russian / German 
Outfit (Military):
LividRussian
Outfit (Casual): 
LividRussian
LividRussian
Outfit (Other[s]):
A womanbaseused64a
Tattoos:
On her neck the 'Seal of Lucifer' is on it put there by Prince as they made a contract together and he will protect her with his life and until he has for filled her wish he is her Butler and pet and when he has for filled it he gets to eat her soul. 
Piercings:
N/A
Jewellery: 
-Iron Cross
Anything on your body that represents something in your country?:
-Light grey scarf
-Iron Cross
Other:
-On the left side of her neck she has the seal of Lucifer as she made a contract

Family and Foreign Relationships
Ancestor:
- Unknown

Family:
-Unknown

Friends:
-Russia
-Germany
-Prussia
-England
-America
-China
-France
-Italy
-Japan
-Ukraine
-Belarus (Somewhat of a friend)

Rivals: 
-Belarus 

Pets:
-Prince (Wolfdog)
-Moji (Bear)
-Stuntler (Deer)
-Grit (snow leopard ) 

Enemies: 
-Belarus

Potential Love Interest:
-Russia
-Germany
-Prussia


Foreign Relationships:

Brief History

Past Caretakers:
-Russia

History:
Findings made in the late 1990s indicate that Siberia was inhabited as early as 300,000 years ago, rather than 40,000 years ago, as previously thought. In the historic period, S Siberia frequently served as the point of departure for several nomadic groups, such as Huns, Mongols, and Manchus, who conquered and lost immense empires. Among the political entities emerging after the breakup of the Mongol state of the Golden Horde in the mid-15th cent. was the Tatar khanate of Sibir.

Russian Conquest
Although Russian traders from Novgorod crossed the Urals as early as the 13th cent. to trade in furs with native tribes, the Russian conquest began much later. Czar Ivan IV's capture of the Kazan khanate in 1552 opened the way for Russian expansion into Siberia. In 1581 a band of Cossacks under Yermak crossed the middle Urals and took the city of Sibir , capital of the Sibir khanate, which gave its name to the entire region. Russia's conquest of the Tatar khanate was completed in 1598 , and during the 17th cent. Russia annexed all of W Siberia.

The Cossacks rapidly penetrated eastward by land and on riverboats, building a string of small fortresses and levying tribute for Moscow from the sparse population in the form of precious furs. By 1640 they had reached the Sea of Okhotsk, an arm of the Pacific Ocean, and soon afterward they collided with Chinese troops. By the Treaty of Nerchinsk (1689), Russia abandoned to China the region later known as the Far Eastern Territory (Russian Far East), which was ceded to Russia only from 1858 to 1860. The Chinese still have claims over parts of the border, including islands in the Ussuri River.

Russian Settlement and Administration
Russian settlement of Siberia was spurred by groups of zemleprokhodtsy (literally, "crossers of land"), who came mostly from N European Russia and traversed the easy portages linking the east-west Siberian river systems to pioneer new forts and trading communities. A colony of the Russian Empire, Siberia was administered by a colonial office based first in Moscow and later (after its founding in 1703) in the new Russian capital of St. Petersburg.

Although military governors collected tribute, they interfered little with native Siberian customs and religions; while the smaller, weaker ethnic groups succumbed to Russian influence, larger tribes such as the Kazakhs and Yakuts thrived and reaped material benefits under Russian administration. Siberian furs constituted an important source of wealth for Russia and figured prominently in Russian trade with Western Europe. These furs, along with customs duties levied on all Siberian raw materials acquired by Russian entrepreneurs, more than reimbursed the state for the costs of its Siberian conquest and administration.

With the decline of the fur trade in the early 18th cent., mining became the chief economic activity in Siberia. The state was the chief entrepreneur, but wealthy private families were also involved. Silver, lead, and copper mining began around 1700; gold mining did not develop until the 1830s. Forced labor in the mines, often using convicts, proved generally unproductive; the gold miners were usually free laborers. Siberian agriculture was stimulated in the late 16th and 17th cent. by the needs of the Russian military and administrative personnel stationed there.

From the early 17th cent. Siberia was used as a penal colony and a place of exile for political prisoners; among the latter there emerged (especially after the exile of leaders of the Decembrist Conspiracy of 1825) a small but vocal Siberian intelligentsia, who agitated for an end of Siberia's colonial status. Meanwhile, Russian colonizers continued to push southward, establishing forts along the steppe to thwart nomadic raids. Newly emancipated (1861) Russian serfs were allowed to take free possession of Siberian land, but they received little state assistance and suffered intolerable hardships.

Russian settlement of Siberia on a large scale began only with the construction (1892–1905) of the Trans-Siberian RR, after which the eastward migratory movement reached major proportions. P. A. Stolypin, the interior minister under Nicholas II, made a special effort to reduce rural overpopulation in European Russia by encouraging Siberian colonization. The railroad also enabled European Russia to obtain cheap grain from W Siberia and butter from the Baraba Steppe. The railroad's needs spurred the development of coal mining and the opening of repair shops. Before the Russian Revolution, however, Siberia contributed only a minute fraction of Russia's industrial output, mainly in the form of gold.

During the Revolution
Siberia played a key role in the Russian civil war of 1918–20. An autonomous Siberian government formed in early 1918 was soon superseded by the regime of the counterrevolutionary Admiral A. V. Kolchak who made his capital at Omsk. The White forces were aided by contingents of czarist political exiles and by the Czech Legion, a group of Austrian army deserters who had hoped to fight alongside the czarist army. In Aug., 1918, a U.S., British, French, and Japanese expeditionary force joined the anti-Bolshevik units in Siberia. The main purpose of this allied expedition was probably to prevent German use of Siberian resources in World War I. Most of Siberia was in White hands by late 1918, but Czar Nicholas II and his family were murdered by the Bolsheviks at Yekaterinburg that year. Early in 1920, Admiral Kolchak's government collapsed, and he was executed.

Under the Soviets
Under the Soviet government, Siberia, especially the Ural-Kuznetsk complex, underwent dramatic economic development. Under the First Five-Year Plan (1928–33), forced labor was instrumental in mining coal and building the iron and steel complex of the Kuznetsk Basin. In addition, part of the agricultural colonization of Siberia was carried out by the forced resettlement of large segments of the Russian rural population, notably the expropriated kulaks (wealthier peasants). As a result, Siberia's population doubled between 1914 and 1946. Forced labor was also employed extensively in the E Siberian gold mines. Parts of the vast Siberian concentration and forced-labor camp network established by Stalin may still exist, but many of the political prisoners were released by Mikhail Gorbachev.

Siberia's economic development increased dramatically during World War II with the transfer of many industries from European USSR to the other side of the Urals, where they would be less vulnerable to German seizure. Siberian grain was essential in enabling the Soviet Union to resist the German wartime onslaught despite the loss of valuable agricultural areas in W USSR.

Postwar industrialization of Siberia continued at a rapid pace, with special concentration on SW Siberia and the Lake Baykal region. Siberian agriculture, which suffered during the Stalinist collectivization campaign, was revived in the mid-1950s by Premier Khrushchev's "virgin lands" program, focusing on cultivation in the steppes of SW Siberia and N Kazakhstan. The Seven-Year Plan (1958–65) emphasized construction of large thermal and hydroelectric power plants in Siberia and elsewhere.

The resulting destruction of natural areas and the gross waste of resources led to strong environmental opposition. Centered on the issue of the polluting of Lake Baykal, Siberian environmental groups became some of the first organizations to challenge the Communist party's decisions openly. Indigenous peoples also protested the destruction of their autonomous regions. With the fall of the USSR, Siberia became more open to foreign travel and trade, while local Siberians sought to distance themselves from the Russian government in Moscow. The region also suffered population losses that were more substantial than those suffered by Russia as a whole.

Template by kamillyannaKamadoka13 did and you all should go watch her and stuff because she's awesome
Siberia. (c) ME

Image size
812x1400px 468.85 KB
© 2014 - 2024 StrayKirin
Comments19
Join the community to add your comment. Already a deviant? Log In
chloerules5885's avatar
I have a Siberia oc too!