Prussia/Canada

Prussia/Canada, sometimes referred to as PruCan (made by combining the names Prussia and Canada) is a pairing involving the characters of Prussia and Canada. It is popular in Fanfictions and Deviantart.

The only actual interaction the two had was when Prussia hacked Kitayume and made it his blog during April Fools '09. Canada arrived, claiming that "Maple syrup surely brings happiness to the people who eat it", and gave Prussia, who was skeptical, a bottle for free. After tasting the syrup, Prussia stated that he enjoyed it.

It should also be noted that Prussia actually remembered Canada, and never mistook him for America.

(According to many Prussia and Canada fandom: There needs to be more interaction between the two.)

Fan Speculations
Some fans like this pairing because they are both sometimes referred to as loners. Prussia being lonely (despite saying "It's so fun being alone" all the time) and Canada rarely being noticed is a large factor in foundation of the pairing.

Fans also like to use the link of New Prussia in Wilmot Township, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada as a platform for theories and fan-material.

In the the mid 1500s, the Anabaptist movement was a major religious movement in the Holy Roman Empire/Prussia following the Protestant Reformation. One of these Anabaptist groups was the Mennonites who, after several years of religious persecution, left the newly formed German nation state that was predominately controlled by Prussia, due to the Prussian military conscription and their strict policy on pacificism. The Mennonites traveled east to White Russia (Belarus) and the Ukrainian Steppe where, under Catherine the Great, they were allowed to avoid Russian military conscription in return for tending the land in the steppe. When the Russian government began to gobble up Mennonite land and instigated religious restrictions particularly aimed at non-Slavics in the 19th century, the Mennonites left Russia, and went to one of the first waves of Mennonites, who were all largely German-speaking and originally from Prussia, was to the plains of Canada as they traveled with large Ukrainian migrations.

Then, following world war one, a large number of Prussians and other northern Germans left Germany for the midwestern and western provinces of Canada. Several cities were named after German towns (only to be changed after the outbreak of WW2) as Prussia was formally dissolved.

Additionally, many of the remaining speakers of Low Prussian (commonly referred to as simply Prussian) currently reside in Canada.