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The rise of armchair rulers: inside Australia’s micronation boom

Legal experts say disdain for authority has fuelled the phenomenon of people creating their own tiny kingdoms

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Paul Delprat posing for a photo at his home as the self-appointed Prince of the Principality of Wy, a micronation spanning his home in Mosman, northern Sydney. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

Lounging on a sofa in his flowing robes, a gold crown resting on his snowy hair and a stuffed white toy tiger at his feet, Paul Delprat looks every bit a monarch.

The 76-year-old is the self-appointed Prince of the Principality of Wy, a micronation consisting of his home in the northern Sydney suburb of Mosman.

Micronations – entities that have proclaimed independence but are not recognised by governments – have been declared around the world.

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The first head of nation of the proposed new state Asgardia, Russian scientist and businessman Igor Ashurbeyli (centre) gives a speech during a lavish ceremony in Vienna’s Hofburg Palace on June 25, 2018. According to Ashurbeyli, Asgardia's citizens now number some 200,000 people from across the world, drawn by a vision of ‘space politics’ instead of geopolitics. Photo: AFP
The first head of nation of the proposed new state Asgardia, Russian scientist and businessman Igor Ashurbeyli (centre) gives a speech during a lavish ceremony in Vienna’s Hofburg Palace on June 25, 2018. According to Ashurbeyli, Asgardia's citizens now number some 200,000 people from across the world, drawn by a vision of ‘space politics’ instead of geopolitics. Photo: AFP

One of the latest is Asgardia, started by Russian scientist and businessman Igor Ashurbeyli, who in late June declared himself leader of the utopian “space nation”.

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But the pseudo-states are particularly popular in Australia, with the island continent home to the highest number in the world – about 35 – out of an estimated 200.

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