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{{Infobox officeholder
{{Infobox officeholder
  | honorific_prefix  = Huēyi tlahtoāni
  | honorific_prefix  = Nantzintli
  | name              = Texōccoatl
  | name              = Yauhmi
  | native_name        =  
  | native_name        =  
  | native_name_lang  =  
  | native_name_lang  =  
  | honorific_suffix  =  
  | honorific_suffix  =  
  | image              = Texoccoatl3.JPG
  | image              = Yauhmispeech.JPG
  | image_size        =  
  | image_size        =  
  | image_upright      =
  | image_upright      =
  | smallimage        = <!--If this is specified, "image" should not be.-->
  | smallimage        = <!--If this is specified, "image" should not be.-->
  | alt                =  
  | alt                =  
  | caption            = Texōccoatl with his wife, Tlalmaxxi
  | caption            =  
  | office            = Huēyi tlahtoāni (Great Speaker) of the Huenyan Federation
  | office            = Nantzintli of the Huenyan Federation
  | term_start        = 27 May 2021
  | term_start        =  
  | term_end          =  
  | term_end          =  
  | alongside          = <!--For two or more people serving in the same position from the same district.  (e.g. United States Senators.)-->
  | alongside          = <!--For two or more people serving in the same position from the same district.  (e.g. United States Senators.)-->
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  | successor          =
  | successor          =
  | prior_term        =
  | prior_term        =
  | order2            =
  | order2            =  
  | office2            =  
  | office2            = Imperial Prosecutor
  | term_start2        =  
  | term_start2        = 1 June 1972
  | term_end2          =  
  | term_end2          = 12 September 1975
  | alongside2        = <!--For two or more people serving in the same position from the same district.  (e.g. United States Senators.)-->
  | alongside2        = <!--For two or more people serving in the same position from the same district.  (e.g. United States Senators.)-->
  | president2        =  
  | president2        =  
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  | successor2        =  
  | successor2        =  
  | prior_term2        =
  | prior_term2        =
  | order3            =   
  | order3            =  <!--Can be repeated up to 16 times by changing the number-->
  | office3            =   
  | office3            =   
  | term_start3        =   
  | term_start3        =   
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  | constituency6      =   
  | constituency6      =   
  | pronunciation  =  
  | pronunciation  =  
  | birth_name      = Texōccoatl
  | birth_name      = Yauhmi
  | birth_date      = {{Birth date and age|1976|03|03}}
  | birth_date      = {{Birth date and age|1948|07|11}}
  | birth_place    = Tlālacuetztla, [[Xiomera]]
  | birth_place    = Chēcuauh, [[Xiomera]]
  | death_date      =  <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
  | death_date      =  <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
  | death_place    =  
  | death_place    =  
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  | otherparty      =  <!--For additional political affiliations-->
  | otherparty      =  <!--For additional political affiliations-->
  | height          =  <!-- "X cm", "X m"  or "X ft Y in" plus optional reference (conversions are automatic) -->
  | height          =  <!-- "X cm", "X m"  or "X ft Y in" plus optional reference (conversions are automatic) -->
  | spouse          = Tlalmaxxi
  | spouse          = [[Topilpopoca]]
  | partner        =  <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married-->
  | partner        =  <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married-->
  | relations      =  
  | relations      =  
  | children        = Tonauac
  | children        =  
  | parents        =  <!-- overrides mother and father parameters -->
  | parents        =  <!-- overrides mother and father parameters -->
  | mother          =  [[Yauhmi]]
  | mother          =  Malintzina
  | father          =  Topilpopoca
  | father          =  Timatzin
  | relatives      =  
  | relatives      =  
  | residence      =  
  | residence      =  
  | education      =  
  | education      =  
  | alma_mater      = Imperial Military Academy
  | alma_mater      = Tlālacuetztla Polytechnic University
  | occupation      =  
  | occupation      =  
  | profession      =  
  | profession      =  
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<!--Military service-->
<!--Military service-->
  | nickname        =  
  | nickname        =  
  | allegiance      = Xiomera
  | allegiance      =  
  | branch          = Army
  | branch          =  
  | serviceyears    = 1998-2010
  | serviceyears    =  
  | rank            = Colonel
  | rank            =  
  | unit            =  
  | unit            =  
  | commands        =  
  | commands        =  
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}}
}}


'''Texōccoatl''' is the ''Huēyi tlahtoāni'' (Great Speaker) of [[Huenya]]. He was previously the Crown Prince of [[Xiomera]], prior to his mother [[Yauhmi]] being overthrown in a coup in April 2020.
'''Yauhmi''' is the ''nantzintli'' (honored mother) of the Huenyan Federation. She was previously the Empress of Xiomera, prior to a coup in April 2020.


==Early Life and Education==
==Early Life and Education==


Texōccoatl was born on 3 March 1976 in Tlālacuetztla, Xiomera. He is the son of the former Xiomeran Emperor Topilpopoca and Yauhmi, who succeeded Topilpopoca to become Empress. Texōccoatl attended the Special Calmecac Montelin #1 before graduating and enrolling in the Imperial Military Academy in Tlālacuetztla in September 1994. In later media interviews, Texōccoatl acknowledged that his father, who had been a Xiomeran soldier and eventually the top-ranking Army general in Xiomera, was a major influence on his decision to pursue a military career.
Yauhmi was born on July 11, 1948 in Chēcuauh, Xiomera. She is the daughter of Timatzin, an Admiral in the Xiomeran Imperial Navy, and Malintzina, a medical doctor who held several high-profile positions in public health for the Xiomeran Empire.
 
Yauhmi grew up in Chēcuauh, an affluent suburb of the port city of Huitzitaca. She spent most of her childhood on the vast grounds of the Hichuaco Imperial Admiralty Complex, the headquarters complex and academy of the Imperial Navy. She attended the ''calmecac'' Hichuaco before attending the premier Tlālacuetztla Polytechnic University. She graduated in May 1972 with a degree in law.
 
==Political Career==
==Political Career==


===Early Career===
===Early Career===


After graduating from the Imperial Military Academy, Texōccoatl was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Xiomeran Imperial Army in 1998. After completing a year of Basic Officer's Training, Texōccoatl was placed in command of an Imperial Army platoon. During his military career, Texōccoatl would steadily rise through the ranks. His highest rank was Colonel, in command of a brigade of 5,500 soldiers tasked with the defense of the Imperial capital. Throughout his military career, Texōccoatl had a reputation as a tactically sound commander who also had a deep concern for the soldiers under his command. Despite being the son of the then-Emperor, Texōccoatl reportedly never used his family to pull strings on his behalf during his Army career, unlike many children of elite Xiomerans.  
After graduating, Yauhmi took a position as a prosecutor for the Secretariat of Justice. She held that position until September of 1975, when she married the future Emperor Topilpopoca, who was at that time a serving officer on the General Staff of the Xiomeran Armed Forces.
 
===Empress during Topilpopoca's reign===
 
When Topilpopoca became Emperor in 2001, and throughout his eighteen-year reign, Yauhmi served in many different positions in support of her husband and his policies. She was also noteworthy for trying in many ways to soften the iron-fisted reign typical of Xiomeran Emperors. Her signature program was the Rural Development Initiatives, a series of programs meant to improve the infrastructure and living conditions of Xiomera's rural citizens. Before the Rural Development Initiatives, Xiomeran citizens living outside of the Empire's sprawling cities dealt with substandard living conditions, limited access to jobs and basic utilities such as electricity and water, limited and poor Internet access, and a lacking transportation infrastructure. Crime was also a serious issue in rural areas, due to limited police garrisons and poor response times in isolated regions. These issues were especially prevalent in the western half of the Empire. Schools, libraries, clinics and hospitals were also severely lacking in rural areas. From 2001 to 2010, Yauhmi spearheaded a massive effort to improve conditions in rural areas. By 2010, the rural areas of Xiomera had been brought up to the same standard for infrastructure and living conditions as the rest of the country. A wave of new hospitals, clinics, libraries and schools were also constructed. The Rural Development Initiatives caused Yauhmi to be seen as a maternal figure by rural Xiomerans, and someone rural citizens deeply admired.
 
===Empress after Topilpopoca's assassination===
 
On 8 September 2019, the Emperor Topilpopoca was shot by a disgruntled former Cabinet official, Cētlalhui, who the Emperor had dismissed in disgrace. Topilpopoca would die on 3 October 2019. Yauhmi decided to stand for her husband's position as the head of the Xiomeran government, in the electoral process known as the Great Selection. On 4 November 2019, Yauhmi was chosen to succeed her husband as supreme ruler of Xiomera.
 
===Yauhmi's reign and the Second Xiomeran Civil War===
 
In order to win the Obsidian Throne, Yauhmi had promised the Xiomeran military, business community, indigenous religious leaders and conservatives that she would rule much as her husband had. Previous Xiomeran rulers, including Topilpopoca, had governed Xiomera in close cooperation with the wealthy, Xiomeran corporations, and conservative political and social figures as a highly conservative, hyper-capitalist state.


===Post-Army career===
Upon taking office, however, Yauhmi immediately began making decisions that would prove highly controversial to the people who had helped her take power. She instituted media reforms, ending the censorship and government review of Xiomeran journalists and media. She also ended the government program of communications monitoring and censorship known as "Happy Society" to the public and ''Project Tilmahcoatl'' to the government. Yauhmi also vastly scaled back the controversial Manauia Island Project, in a shock decision. The scaling-back of the project pleased environmentalists alarmed by Xiomeran disregard for the planet and climate change, but angered some Xiomeran officials and the business community.


On 2 December 2019, Texōccoatl resigned his Army commission at the request of his mother, Empress Yauhmi. The Empress then appointed Texōccoatl as Xiomeran Ambassador-At-Large to the International Democratic Union. The official government explanation for the new role for Texōccoatl was that the Empire needed someone in such a role to serve as a roving ambassador for Xiomeran interests, and that Texōccoatl's intelligence and natural charm made him ideal for such a role. While Texōccoatl's new role did serve such a purpose, it was widely seen throughout Xiomera and abroad as a way for the Empress to prepare Texōccoatl for future roles, possibly even succeeding her as Empress. Official Xiomeran communications began referring to Texōccoatl as the "Crown Prince of Xiomera" at that point, a title not previously given to the children of ruling Emperors or Empresses. The possible creation of a hereditary monarchy in Xiomera, with Texōccoatl as Yauhmi's successor, was one of the reasons cited by the military junta for their overthrow of Empress Yauhmi in April 2020.
Yauhmi would follow this by instituting a series of new taxes on the wealthy, and on the Xiomeran corporate and business community, to fund further planned reforms, including the institution of a social welfare program. Xiomera had previously had no social safety net whatsoever, as the general attitude among Xiomeran elites was that if people were poor or struggling, it was due solely to their own failure or lack of work ethic. The longstanding philosophy of [[Xiomeran Meritocracy]] was also a critical issue between Yauhmi and the Xiomeran elites. Xiomeran Meritocracy was seen as a fundamental foundational belief of the society, and one that Yauhmi was challenging.


During his brief diplomatic career, Texōccoatl represented Xiomera at the Maivers Conference, and also met with various officials in [[Laeral]] to discuss expanding ties with that nation.
On 10 April 2020, as the Empress was opening the first session of a new Huenyan Assembly designed to give the other ethnic groups in Xiomera more political power and to open the Xiomeran political process, a military coup was launched by the Xiomeran General Staff and the Security Secretariat. Yauhmi was detained by the military, and removed from power. The military declared a Provisional Government that charged Yauhmi with treason, conspiracy, corruption and anti-Xiomeran activities. Her whereabouts remained unknown, but the Provisional Government later claimed that the Empress had abdicated her throne. On 16 May 2020, the military staged a new Great Selection, and chose [[Xochiuhue]], the son of former Emperor Xolōtl, as the new Emperor.


===During the Second Xiomeran Civil War===
On 1 August 2020, Empress Yauhmi re-emerged from hiding at the city of Chuaztlapoc, having been freed from ASI custody by loyalist Xiomeran soldiers. In a speech widely disseminated throughout Xiomera and the rest of the IDU, the Empress denied having abdicated the Obsidian Throne, declared that she was still in charge of Xiomera, and declared further that any mandates from Xochiuhue and his government were null and void. The declaration, and Xochiuhue's response, would lead to the siege of Chuaztlapoc. The unexpected victory by Yauhmi's forces at Chuaztlapoc would prove to be a major turning point in the war.


The junta that overthrew Empress Yauhmi in April 2020 chose to launch their coup during a period when Texōccoatl was out of the country, to weaken Yauhmi's support and isolate the Crown Prince. Texōccoatl would become the leader by default of the Xiomeran resistance to the coup. Forming a government in exile based in Laeralsford, Texōccoatl would organize a coalition of Xiomeran dissidents, activists from [[Lauchenoiria]] and [[Milintica]], and others to fight against the coup. Texōccoatl achieved a significant gain of support on 27 April 2020, when the 1st Fleet of the Xiomeran Imperial Navy, along with its detachment of Jaguar and Eagle Warriors, defected to the government in exile.
===Cihuātlahtoāni of Huenya===


As resistance to the coup strengthened within Xiomera itself, Texōccoatl organized an effort to use hackers to try to defeat the ''Project Tilmahcoatl'' censorship and surveillance program which was keeping Xiomeran citizens from receiving true news about the coup and the actions of Emperor Xochiuhue. This effort also received substantial assistance from [[Eiria]] and [[Legionas]].
After the war, Yauhmi became the Cihuātlahtoāni (Great Speaker) of Huenya. She was accepted as the monarch of the new Huenyan state as a means to reassure ethnic Xiomerans that they would have representation in the new government. She was also chosen to help maintain continuity, as she was widely recognized by the international community as a leader and retained considerable popularity in the international community.


On 14 July 2020, a "death squad" assassin team from the Agency for Security and Intelligence infiltrated the government in exile's compound in [[Laeral]]. While the attack failed to assassinate Texōccoatl as intended, Secretary of State Nōlinyauh, a mentor to Texōccoatl, was killed. In the first formal military clash between the two Xiomeran governments, the Crown Prince ordered the 1st Fleet to carry out a retaliatory airstrike on Emperor [[Xochiuhue]]'s motorcade near the city of Xochiatipan on 28 July 2020. While the retaliatory strike failed to eliminate Xochiuhue, it did succeed in eliminating General Xōchhuitl, commander of the Imperial Army and one of the principal architects of the coup against Empress Yauhmi. The airstrike is considered to be the official beginning of the Second Xiomeran Civil War, as it marked the formal commencement of military hostilities between Texōccoatl's government and Xochiuhue's.
During her reign as Cihuātlahtoāni, Yauhmi focused on building the new Huenyan state and engaging with the international community. However, a series of unilateral actions would bring about a premature end to her reign. A disastrous raid on the Cauhloc, the headquarters of the Xiomeran intelligence service, that Yauhmi sponsored in secret would ultimately lead to a demand that she step down from the other Huenyan leaders. On May 27th, 2021, Yauhmi formally abdicated her role as Great Speaker, handing the position off to her son, [[Texōccoatl]].


Texōccoatl would lead the invasion at Zapotlán which would prove to be a major turning point in the war. The invasion would eventually lead to the partition of Huenya and the creation of the Huenyan Federation.
===As ''nantzintli''===


===Cihuacōātl of Huenya===
In her new role, Yauhmi continues to serve in an informal role as a representative of Huenya to the international community. Her continuing popularity among international leaders is seen as an asset to Huenya, and she often acts as a liaison between the government and other IDU leaders.


After the end of the war, Texōccoatl would be named as Cihuacōātl, a historic title given to the next in succession to the throne. Texōccoatl assumed an increasingly larger role in representing the royal family. Texōccoatl also served in both diplomatic and administrative roles within the government.
In her semi-retirement, Yauhmi moved out of Xochuaxte Palace and founded her own estate at Xomaxtli Hill, a former noble estate outside Chuzatlapoc. Despite her promise to keep a low profile, Yauhmi maintained Xomaxtli Hill as a refuge and operations center for those seeking to help people flee Xiomera. Multiple former Kerlian Auroras also resided at the site. Xomaxtli Hill was destroyed during the Golden Blade insurgency.


===As ''Huēyi tlahtoāni''===
After the insurgency ended, Yauhmi moved to the city of Calanochti in northern Huenya. She took up the role of ''tlahtoāni'' of the Xiomerans in Huenya as a member of the Chamber of Executives.


After his mother was forced to abdicate in May 2021, Texōccoatl became the Great Speaker of Huenya. He immediately began taking decisive action to secure Huenya's future. He would strongly promote closer relations between the nations of Caxcana, which would eventually lead to the formation of the Caxcanan Union. Under Texōccoatl, Huenya would also ally with [[Lauchenoiria]], [[Eiria]] and [[Milintica]] to counter the coup in Cape Auria.
===Legacy as a leader===


On the domestic front, he would counter Xiomeran nationalist terrorism by strengthening the powers of the CNR, Huenya's truth and reconciliation commission. He would give the CNR the power to arrest and prosecute suspected terrorists under emergency national security decrees. While some political experts and analysts worried that this measure was contrary to normal democratic and judicial practices, others believed that Huenya had no choice given its deteriorating security situation.
While most Huenyans, and the international community, have continued to accept Yauhmi as a leader, there have been questions raised concerning her legacy. Her previous role as Empress of Xiomera, leading a totalitarian regime which practiced many of the repressive acts she now denounces, has left her open to accusations of hypocrisy. Some Huenyans and others in the international community have expressed beliefs that Yauhmi herself should face trial for acts committed during her time as Empress. Her defenders acknowledge the complicated history of her leadership, but state that Yauhmi has changed and committed herself to making up for her previous acts in the remaining years of her life. The torture she was subjected to while being detained by Xiomeran authorities during the civil war is cited as a turning point in her beliefs and actions.


==Family Life==
==Family Life==


Texōccoatl is married to Tlalmaxxi, a former analyst for the [[ASI (Xiomera)|Agency for Security and Intelligence]]. The two married on 4 April 2010 and have one child, Tonauac.
Yauhmi gave birth to her only child, [[Texōccoatl]], on 3rd March 1976.


[[Category:People]]
[[Category:People]]

Revision as of 18:40, 23 October 2025

Nantzintli
Yauhmi
Nantzintli of the Huenyan Federation
Imperial Prosecutor
In office
1 June 1972 – 12 September 1975
Personal details
BornYauhmi
(1948-07-11) July 11, 1948 (age 77)
Chēcuauh, Xiomera
NationalityXiomeran
Spouse(s)Topilpopoca
MotherMalintzina
FatherTimatzin
Alma materTlālacuetztla Polytechnic University

Yauhmi is the nantzintli (honored mother) of the Huenyan Federation. She was previously the Empress of Xiomera, prior to a coup in April 2020.

Early Life and Education

Yauhmi was born on July 11, 1948 in Chēcuauh, Xiomera. She is the daughter of Timatzin, an Admiral in the Xiomeran Imperial Navy, and Malintzina, a medical doctor who held several high-profile positions in public health for the Xiomeran Empire.

Yauhmi grew up in Chēcuauh, an affluent suburb of the port city of Huitzitaca. She spent most of her childhood on the vast grounds of the Hichuaco Imperial Admiralty Complex, the headquarters complex and academy of the Imperial Navy. She attended the calmecac Hichuaco before attending the premier Tlālacuetztla Polytechnic University. She graduated in May 1972 with a degree in law.

Political Career

Early Career

After graduating, Yauhmi took a position as a prosecutor for the Secretariat of Justice. She held that position until September of 1975, when she married the future Emperor Topilpopoca, who was at that time a serving officer on the General Staff of the Xiomeran Armed Forces.

Empress during Topilpopoca's reign

When Topilpopoca became Emperor in 2001, and throughout his eighteen-year reign, Yauhmi served in many different positions in support of her husband and his policies. She was also noteworthy for trying in many ways to soften the iron-fisted reign typical of Xiomeran Emperors. Her signature program was the Rural Development Initiatives, a series of programs meant to improve the infrastructure and living conditions of Xiomera's rural citizens. Before the Rural Development Initiatives, Xiomeran citizens living outside of the Empire's sprawling cities dealt with substandard living conditions, limited access to jobs and basic utilities such as electricity and water, limited and poor Internet access, and a lacking transportation infrastructure. Crime was also a serious issue in rural areas, due to limited police garrisons and poor response times in isolated regions. These issues were especially prevalent in the western half of the Empire. Schools, libraries, clinics and hospitals were also severely lacking in rural areas. From 2001 to 2010, Yauhmi spearheaded a massive effort to improve conditions in rural areas. By 2010, the rural areas of Xiomera had been brought up to the same standard for infrastructure and living conditions as the rest of the country. A wave of new hospitals, clinics, libraries and schools were also constructed. The Rural Development Initiatives caused Yauhmi to be seen as a maternal figure by rural Xiomerans, and someone rural citizens deeply admired.

Empress after Topilpopoca's assassination

On 8 September 2019, the Emperor Topilpopoca was shot by a disgruntled former Cabinet official, Cētlalhui, who the Emperor had dismissed in disgrace. Topilpopoca would die on 3 October 2019. Yauhmi decided to stand for her husband's position as the head of the Xiomeran government, in the electoral process known as the Great Selection. On 4 November 2019, Yauhmi was chosen to succeed her husband as supreme ruler of Xiomera.

Yauhmi's reign and the Second Xiomeran Civil War

In order to win the Obsidian Throne, Yauhmi had promised the Xiomeran military, business community, indigenous religious leaders and conservatives that she would rule much as her husband had. Previous Xiomeran rulers, including Topilpopoca, had governed Xiomera in close cooperation with the wealthy, Xiomeran corporations, and conservative political and social figures as a highly conservative, hyper-capitalist state.

Upon taking office, however, Yauhmi immediately began making decisions that would prove highly controversial to the people who had helped her take power. She instituted media reforms, ending the censorship and government review of Xiomeran journalists and media. She also ended the government program of communications monitoring and censorship known as "Happy Society" to the public and Project Tilmahcoatl to the government. Yauhmi also vastly scaled back the controversial Manauia Island Project, in a shock decision. The scaling-back of the project pleased environmentalists alarmed by Xiomeran disregard for the planet and climate change, but angered some Xiomeran officials and the business community.

Yauhmi would follow this by instituting a series of new taxes on the wealthy, and on the Xiomeran corporate and business community, to fund further planned reforms, including the institution of a social welfare program. Xiomera had previously had no social safety net whatsoever, as the general attitude among Xiomeran elites was that if people were poor or struggling, it was due solely to their own failure or lack of work ethic. The longstanding philosophy of Xiomeran Meritocracy was also a critical issue between Yauhmi and the Xiomeran elites. Xiomeran Meritocracy was seen as a fundamental foundational belief of the society, and one that Yauhmi was challenging.

On 10 April 2020, as the Empress was opening the first session of a new Huenyan Assembly designed to give the other ethnic groups in Xiomera more political power and to open the Xiomeran political process, a military coup was launched by the Xiomeran General Staff and the Security Secretariat. Yauhmi was detained by the military, and removed from power. The military declared a Provisional Government that charged Yauhmi with treason, conspiracy, corruption and anti-Xiomeran activities. Her whereabouts remained unknown, but the Provisional Government later claimed that the Empress had abdicated her throne. On 16 May 2020, the military staged a new Great Selection, and chose Xochiuhue, the son of former Emperor Xolōtl, as the new Emperor.

On 1 August 2020, Empress Yauhmi re-emerged from hiding at the city of Chuaztlapoc, having been freed from ASI custody by loyalist Xiomeran soldiers. In a speech widely disseminated throughout Xiomera and the rest of the IDU, the Empress denied having abdicated the Obsidian Throne, declared that she was still in charge of Xiomera, and declared further that any mandates from Xochiuhue and his government were null and void. The declaration, and Xochiuhue's response, would lead to the siege of Chuaztlapoc. The unexpected victory by Yauhmi's forces at Chuaztlapoc would prove to be a major turning point in the war.

Cihuātlahtoāni of Huenya

After the war, Yauhmi became the Cihuātlahtoāni (Great Speaker) of Huenya. She was accepted as the monarch of the new Huenyan state as a means to reassure ethnic Xiomerans that they would have representation in the new government. She was also chosen to help maintain continuity, as she was widely recognized by the international community as a leader and retained considerable popularity in the international community.

During her reign as Cihuātlahtoāni, Yauhmi focused on building the new Huenyan state and engaging with the international community. However, a series of unilateral actions would bring about a premature end to her reign. A disastrous raid on the Cauhloc, the headquarters of the Xiomeran intelligence service, that Yauhmi sponsored in secret would ultimately lead to a demand that she step down from the other Huenyan leaders. On May 27th, 2021, Yauhmi formally abdicated her role as Great Speaker, handing the position off to her son, Texōccoatl.

As nantzintli

In her new role, Yauhmi continues to serve in an informal role as a representative of Huenya to the international community. Her continuing popularity among international leaders is seen as an asset to Huenya, and she often acts as a liaison between the government and other IDU leaders.

In her semi-retirement, Yauhmi moved out of Xochuaxte Palace and founded her own estate at Xomaxtli Hill, a former noble estate outside Chuzatlapoc. Despite her promise to keep a low profile, Yauhmi maintained Xomaxtli Hill as a refuge and operations center for those seeking to help people flee Xiomera. Multiple former Kerlian Auroras also resided at the site. Xomaxtli Hill was destroyed during the Golden Blade insurgency.

After the insurgency ended, Yauhmi moved to the city of Calanochti in northern Huenya. She took up the role of tlahtoāni of the Xiomerans in Huenya as a member of the Chamber of Executives.

Legacy as a leader

While most Huenyans, and the international community, have continued to accept Yauhmi as a leader, there have been questions raised concerning her legacy. Her previous role as Empress of Xiomera, leading a totalitarian regime which practiced many of the repressive acts she now denounces, has left her open to accusations of hypocrisy. Some Huenyans and others in the international community have expressed beliefs that Yauhmi herself should face trial for acts committed during her time as Empress. Her defenders acknowledge the complicated history of her leadership, but state that Yauhmi has changed and committed herself to making up for her previous acts in the remaining years of her life. The torture she was subjected to while being detained by Xiomeran authorities during the civil war is cited as a turning point in her beliefs and actions.

Family Life

Yauhmi gave birth to her only child, Texōccoatl, on 3rd March 1976.