French Republic
République française
I will not do anything past 2020 for the history sections unless they were born after 2020, as many events are too recent. Website still incomplete.
République française
France, also known by her human name Joan Désirée Sauveterre, is a blunt and somewhat ruthless individual who has never once cared about how others perceived her.
France knows who she is and is proud of it—she will never hide under false pretenses and will be honest about herself and her intentions. While her honesty can sometimes be cruel, France doesn’t mind that, seeing it as a natural side effect. France is also very confident in herself. While that confidence was more cocky when she was younger, she has matured into being genuinely confident in herself and her actions.
France can be very self-centered and ruthless, taking what she wants and not unafraid to hurt others to get it. France will prioritize herself over others, no matter how she cares for them, and there are very few people who can get past her walls and into her heart where she will be willing and able to put them ahead of her.
France is not the best mother, not liking the process of raising kids. Instead, as France was born in the middle of a war and domestic conflict, she raises them to be self-sufficient and soldiers in their own right—but loyal to her, of course.
France doesn’t ask for loyalty as much as she demands it. She is a force of nature, unpredictable, and hard to control in the best of cases. She can be awe-inspiring, and her presence often raises strong emotions, but not all of them are good.
However, France can be kind. She finds liberation in her confidence and acceptance of herself and tries to spread her joy in that to others (to varying degrees of success).
Gender: Female
Sexuality: Polyamoureux Pansexuelle (English Translation/Meaning: Polyamous Pansexual)
Pronouns: she/her
Nicknames: Frenchie
Languages Spoken: French (Official and National), English, Portuguese, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, Arabic, Beber, Alsatian, Corsican, Breton (semi-fluent), Norman (semi-fluent), Gallo (semi-fluent), Picard (semi-fluent), and French Flemish (semi-fluent)
Religion: Roman Catholic
France is five foot six in height and a physical age of twenty-seven. She has brown hair cropped short to her chin or shoulders and amber eyes. Her eyes are narrow and she has a round, almost oval face. Her nose is on the longer side.
While in country form, her skin is that of her flag, with the stripes carrying down the rest of her body. Her right hand is blue with red fingers, and her left hand is red with blue fingers.
In human form, she looks white, with her largest ethnic groups being French, Italian, and Northwest African.
France is slim but very muscular. She normally wears masculine clothing and not feminine clothes unless forced to or attending an event for someone she highly respects.
France has a scar on her stomach from a gunshot wound during the Napoleonic wars and a scar on her arm from a fencing accident.
As an empire, she was six foot six in height. Her hair was longest between 1815 to 1848 when attempts were made to force her into a more feminine role.
From September 21, 1792 to February 14, 1794, France had this flag.
From February 14, 1794 to April 25, 1815 France had her modern flag.
From April 25, 1815 to July 26, 1830, France had the old Bourbon flag.
From July 26, 1830 to February 24, 1848, France had her modern flag.
From February 24 to March 5, 1848, France had this variant of the tricolor.
1848-Present: Joan Désirée Sauveterre
1815-1848: Joan Caroline Dufort Sauveterre
1792-1815: Joan Stéphanie Sauveterre
June 3, 1944-Present: French Republic | République française
June 1940-June 3, 1944: Free France | France libre
September 4, 1870-June 1940: French Republic | République française
December 2, 1852-September 4, 1870: French Empire | Empire français
February 23, 1848-December 2, 1852: French Republic | République française
April 22, 1815-February 23, 1848: Kingdom of France | Royaume de France
October 1808-April 22, 1815: French Empire | Empire français
September 21, 1792-October 1808: French Republic | République française