stevep
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Post by stevep on Aug 18, 2020 16:54:35 GMT
How did he become king of England? There was enough doubt about the OTL James I despite him having Tudor ancestry. Ah read his Wiki entry but assuming that he doesn't marry Mary unless he makes a good marriage in England I'm surprised he would have much chance of claiming the crown given his erratic behaviour. Sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.
Thanks anyway for clarifying.
Steve
Trust me, it was a disaster and led to this hot mess:
Well that's a damned bloody battle for 17thC Britain. Also a Protestant supporter of divine right of kings is going to be a real mess apart from his other shortcomings.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 18, 2020 16:56:55 GMT
Trust me, it was a disaster and led to this hot mess:
Well that's a damned bloody battle for 17thC Britain. Also a Protestant supporter of divine right of kings is going to be a real mess apart from his other shortcomings. Puritan domination of England was not a very good time for it. And it had other knock-on effects for nations like Scotland, but we'll get to that.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 18, 2020 21:37:06 GMT
Timeline 31 - High Speed Rail in CaliforniaFrom 1988 until 2016, California was actively engaged in the construction of a high speed passenger rail network that would replace the existing network that used standard diesel engines. The original passenger system was considered outdated and had been steadily losing money, and President Sáenz saw such a massive infrastructure investment as justified to help stimulate the economy, as well as ensure that CalRail would stay profitable and relevant.
After its completion was delayed by a decade and going several billion over budget, the HSR system was finally completed in 2016, and was already a technological marvel. Nowhere else in the world did a high speed rail network travel over so many varied terrains and climates, especially in several zones at such a high risk for earthquakes (outside of Japan, of course). The network had become profitable that same year, and has continued to earn higher and higher profits ever since. In fact, the system has proved so popular that internal air traffic in California has dropped sharply since 2005 (when several lines were already in operation). This has helped significantly with decreasing California's carbon output as per its goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, along with the electrical trains proving to be highly efficient in resource consumption.
The system is one where a train can leave San Francisco and arrive in Los Angeles within 3 hours, while a train can leave Oakland and arrive in Salt Lake City within 6. These trains are split into two types: HSR, which are faster and stop at major stations, and Intercity, which are slower and stop at every station. These trains have also proved highly popular with tourists, and "rail tourism", in which visitors sightsee California's cities and landscapes from the trains, has become a significant portion of CalRail's profits and have created an entire industry catering to rail tourists.
The HSR system is a revolution in California's transportation infrastructure, modernizing the passenger rail network and bringing trains back into a new era of relevancy. Passenger traffic is at an all-time high, and CalRail is planning on unveiling its second generation of HSR train in 2020. As a shining example of the success of HSR in North America, CalRail has also begun profiting from foreign nations in the North American Union coming to them for assistance in constructing their own HSR networks, in particular New England, Appalachia, and Texas. It is a new era of rail travel, and California is at the forefront of it.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 19, 2020 0:16:33 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - The End of the Sixth FitnaThe House of Islam is now divided.
Faced with untenable collapse on all fronts, the new "Mamluk Caliphate" has been forced to surrender to all opposing forces. While Anatolia descends into a free-for-all between remaining Muslim, Christian, and Mazdayasna warlords and the invading "Crusaders", the core of the former Rasulid lands has now come fully under control of the Mamluks, who have now openly dropped any pretense to loyalty to the Rasulids and have crowned the former Grand Vizier as Caliph Qalawun II, still claiming spiritual authority over all Islam even as the Hejaz Sultanate, ruled by the Sharif of Makkah and Madinah, remains free from their grasp. And to make matters even more complicated, the ancient Rasulid lands in Yemen have been re-consolidated under the rule of the former Caliph's son, who styles himself Yusuf II as a protectorate of the Iranian Empire.
And in regards to the Empire, Iran has once again become the dominant power of the Near East.With lands reaching the Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea, combined with firm control over Mesopotamia and the western coast of the Gulf of Fars, their power is only further extended through the pledged loyalty of the Sultan of Oman and the declared protection of the rump Rasulid state, Iran is without doubt once again one of the world's great powers, its lands stretching from Cappadocia to Afghanistan, from Central Asia to the Gulf of Fars. With this victory, the Mashmughan Shahanshahs have re-asserted that Iran is a force to be reckoned with, forcing Europe to take notice as the Iranian armies move to fortify their new borders, along with playing around in the broken states of Anatolia.
To the west, the Ahmadiyya Caliphate has been unable to advance further than Tunisia, and Calipha Ajlal now settles herself into Algarz to continue her opposition against the Rasulid rump caliphate as well as the Mamluk Caliphate. For reference, that is a grand total of three Caliphs claiming spiritual authority over all of Islam. The faith is now broken in many different directions, while many new, smaller states continue to vie for what space there is to maneuver under the now all-dominating influence of Iran, which is hellbent on keeping firm control over the Near East and effectively replacing the former Rasulid Caliphate as the dominant power in the region, already moving its armies and administrators to consolidate its power and rebuilt New Ctesiphon as a show of this claim.
The Caliphate is broken, in its place three Caliphates now exist. Islam is broken. The "Sixth Fitna" has ended. But still the jihad continues.
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Post by american2006 on Aug 19, 2020 0:25:30 GMT
Is this one TL or several things?
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 19, 2020 3:27:59 GMT
Is this one TL or several things? Three different timelines, actually. Timeline 31, Celtiaid Am Byth, and Highland Cathedral are all separate things entirely, they all take place in different "worlds" as it were.
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stevep
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Post by stevep on Aug 19, 2020 9:31:05 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - The End of the Sixth FitnaThe House of Islam is now divided.
Faced with untenable collapse on all fronts, the new "Mamluk Caliphate" has been forced to surrender to all opposing forces. While Anatolia descends into a free-for-all between remaining Muslim, Christian, and Mazdayasna warlords and the invading "Crusaders", the core of the former Rasulid lands has now come fully under control of the Mamluks, who have now openly dropped any pretense to loyalty to the Rasulids and have crowned the former Grand Vizier as Caliph Qalawun II, still claiming spiritual authority over all Islam even as the Hejaz Sultanate, ruled by the Sharif of Makkah and Madinah, remains free from their grasp. And to make matters even more complicated, the ancient Rasulid lands in Yemen have been re-consolidated under the rule of the former Caliph's son, who styles himself Yusuf II as a protectorate of the Iranian Empire.
And in regards to the Empire, Iran has once again become the dominant power of the Near East.With lands reaching the Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea, combined with firm control over Mesopotamia and the western coast of the Gulf of Fars, their power is only further extended through the pledged loyalty of the Sultan of Oman and the declared protection of the rump Rasulid state, Iran is without doubt once again one of the world's great powers, its lands stretching from Cappadocia to Afghanistan, from Central Asia to the Gulf of Fars. With this victory, the Mashmughan Shahanshahs have re-asserted that Iran is a force to be reckoned with, forcing Europe to take notice as the Iranian armies move to fortify their new borders, along with playing around in the broken states of Anatolia.
To the west, the Ahmadiyya Caliphate has been unable to advance further than Tunisia, and Calipha Ajlal now settles herself into Algarz to continue her opposition against the Rasulid rump caliphate as well as the Mamluk Caliphate. For reference, that is a grand total of three Caliphs claiming spiritual authority over all of Islam. The faith is now broken in many different directions, while many new, smaller states continue to vie for what space there is to maneuver under the now all-dominating influence of Iran, which is hellbent on keeping firm control over the Near East and effectively replacing the former Rasulid Caliphate as the dominant power in the region, already moving its armies and administrators to consolidate its power and rebuilt New Ctesiphon as a show of this claim.
The Caliphate is broken, in its place three Caliphates now exist. Islam is broken. The "Sixth Fitna" has ended. But still the jihad continues.
So we have a female Caliphate in the Maghreb, or at least dominating most of that area as well as still holding Grenada? Those are both big changes for Islam, but especially the 1st. Is this related to a better position for women in Islam here or just one powerful person being a significant rulers for her lifespan?
The 2nd suggests that no strong Spanish state has managed to appear and drive the 'Moors' from Iberia. Which could also explain why as late as this date there are still crusades going on, as well as jihads. Although with a challenge to the dominance of the Catholic church appearing in Europe I would assume that such activities would increasingly be directed to opposing the Protestant heretics.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 19, 2020 15:29:55 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - The End of the Sixth FitnaThe House of Islam is now divided.
Faced with untenable collapse on all fronts, the new "Mamluk Caliphate" has been forced to surrender to all opposing forces. While Anatolia descends into a free-for-all between remaining Muslim, Christian, and Mazdayasna warlords and the invading "Crusaders", the core of the former Rasulid lands has now come fully under control of the Mamluks, who have now openly dropped any pretense to loyalty to the Rasulids and have crowned the former Grand Vizier as Caliph Qalawun II, still claiming spiritual authority over all Islam even as the Hejaz Sultanate, ruled by the Sharif of Makkah and Madinah, remains free from their grasp. And to make matters even more complicated, the ancient Rasulid lands in Yemen have been re-consolidated under the rule of the former Caliph's son, who styles himself Yusuf II as a protectorate of the Iranian Empire.
And in regards to the Empire, Iran has once again become the dominant power of the Near East.With lands reaching the Black Sea and Mediterranean Sea, combined with firm control over Mesopotamia and the western coast of the Gulf of Fars, their power is only further extended through the pledged loyalty of the Sultan of Oman and the declared protection of the rump Rasulid state, Iran is without doubt once again one of the world's great powers, its lands stretching from Cappadocia to Afghanistan, from Central Asia to the Gulf of Fars. With this victory, the Mashmughan Shahanshahs have re-asserted that Iran is a force to be reckoned with, forcing Europe to take notice as the Iranian armies move to fortify their new borders, along with playing around in the broken states of Anatolia.
To the west, the Ahmadiyya Caliphate has been unable to advance further than Tunisia, and Calipha Ajlal now settles herself into Algarz to continue her opposition against the Rasulid rump caliphate as well as the Mamluk Caliphate. For reference, that is a grand total of three Caliphs claiming spiritual authority over all of Islam. The faith is now broken in many different directions, while many new, smaller states continue to vie for what space there is to maneuver under the now all-dominating influence of Iran, which is hellbent on keeping firm control over the Near East and effectively replacing the former Rasulid Caliphate as the dominant power in the region, already moving its armies and administrators to consolidate its power and rebuilt New Ctesiphon as a show of this claim.
The Caliphate is broken, in its place three Caliphates now exist. Islam is broken. The "Sixth Fitna" has ended. But still the jihad continues.
So we have a female Caliphate in the Maghreb, or at least dominating most of that area as well as still holding Grenada? Those are both big changes for Islam, but especially the 1st. Is this related to a better position for women in Islam here or just one powerful person being a significant rulers for her lifespan?
The 2nd suggests that no strong Spanish state has managed to appear and drive the 'Moors' from Iberia. Which could also explain why as late as this date there are still crusades going on, as well as jihads. Although with a challenge to the dominance of the Catholic church appearing in Europe I would assume that such activities would increasingly be directed to opposing the Protestant heretics.
One thing to note about the Ahmadiyya Caliphate is that it's basically a newer splinter sect of Islam, one based around more progressive ideas centered on a more modern interpretation of the Koran. For instance, the Calipha promotes the rights of women in both spiritual and political affairs, has encouraged the establishing of democracy, and generally positions herself in opposition to the more conservative Sunni and Shia Islam. Garnatah meanwhile is still around because of Spain's inability to conquer the region, especially because of their constant efforts to try and conquer Cymru, their colonial ventures overseas, and the highly defensive military that Garnatah developed.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 20, 2020 2:28:16 GMT
Timeline 31 - New Common Sense"...and while many would tar me a Marxist socialist, or others as an instigator of revolution, I have never considered myself either of those things. I have, as I always have, only ever professed to exercise common sense in all matters. It would do the governments of this now-broken nation a great deal of good to do the same."
- Abraham Lincoln, 1879
The 19th century saw the development of socialism into two major schools of thought. In 1848, Karl Marx published the Communist Manifesto, laying out the groundwork for the "European School" of socialism that would go on to influence Lenin and Trotsky. Several decades later, after writing several essays on the topic, a back and forth with Marx through letters, and his own experience in politics both before and after the War of Dissolution, Abraham Lincoln published New Common Sense, which laid the groundwork of the "American School", which became notable for an insistence on bringing about socialism through democratic reform and spurned the idea of a violent revolution, as well as the idea that capitalism could be hybridized with socialism to create a more prosperous economic model.
The title of the essay (often published in a book with the Lincoln-Marx letters and other related writings) was meant to draw an allusion to Thomas Paine's Common Sense, a similar manifesto written to promote the cause of independence of the 13 colonies from the United Kingdom. In fact, the essay starts with an appeal to Thomas Paine, and paints itself as an appeal to the people of the former United States for "independence" from slavery to large corporations. However, it also draws a clear line between the violent political revolution of the United States and the ability to bring about a peaceful revolution through the ballot box, saying "At the time of independence, the necessary infrastructure to enact democratic reform was not in place. Now, we enjoy this luxury in many nations, and the need for revolution has passed."
It was not solely about economic reform, however. It also had a great deal of political commentary, going into each of the 7 post-American nations and specifically pointing out a flaw that Lincoln observed in their governments through his travels. California was the lack of a cohesive government agenda, New England was the influence political machines held on its government, Texas was the increasing internal debate over slavery, the Confederacy was slavery and the weakness of the government in Richmond, Freedonia was its abandonment of a democratic government and the power Philadelphia held over the states, the Plains Federation was its failure to properly bring its territories into the influence of its central government, and Cascadia-Montana was the dissonance between its two subdivisions. In summation, the essay was Lincoln arguing in favor of a strong, central government elected by the people that had authority over its states (but that allowed states some self-government) and enacted reforms designed to protect workers in all industries against the interests of large businesses.
The essay, despite being controversial, was an absolute smash hit in North America, published in cities from Toronto to Mexico City and selling out in locations across the continent. It was even published overseas in Europe, where it didn't gain as much traction but became notable when Marx himself, in ill health and approaching his own death, made a response to the essay: "Lincoln naively assumes that all people of all nations enjoy equal access to democratic freedoms. What can be said to the serf in Russia, the laborer in Austria, the slave in the Confederacy? How can he hope to see that all can see his work equally?" The split in socialist thought arising from this essay would mark a division in European and American socialism for the rest of the 19th and first half of the 20th century; European socialists primarily took influence from Marx while American socialists took influence from Lincoln.
New Common Sense would serve as a catalyst for social change across the former United States. In California, it caused a schism in the Freedom Party that led to the creation of the Progressive Party, which remains the dominant liberal party in California to this day. In New England, an industrial powerhouse, it resulted in a wave of strikes and demonstrations that led to a series of reforms from 1890 to 1910 that slowly rooted out the political machines, although their hold wouldn't be fully broken for several more decades. While its publishing was banned in the CSA and Freedonia, it nonetheless began to circulate underground, especially among Confederate slaves. In Texas, it actually touched off a major slave uprising along the Mississippi from April to June of 1885 that intensified the slavery debate. Published in book form even to this day, New Common Sense rivals its namesake in publishing numbers, being the second most best-selling title in North America.
Footnote: As a book, its most common printing is as follows:
- New Common Sense - Several related essays - The Lincoln-Marx Letters - Various scholarly analyses
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 20, 2020 4:53:25 GMT
Highland Cathedral - The Scottish Empire, 1750
Scotland's empire is small, but any empire is better than none when you're a small European nation. Beginning with a few settlements in what is now New Caledonia, Scotland has spread its presence across the major continents and continues to grow.
The growth of Scotland's empire was a very slow burn at first. In 1585, Scotland's parliament created the New Caledonia Charter to begin settlements in the modern colony of the same name, which began to bring Scotland revenues from the fur trade, and at the same time Scotland began to establish trading outposts across Africa and India to facilitate its trade in the Old World. This new wealth began to move back to Scotland at a time when favorable deals with the Kingdom of Denmark had given Scotland increasing presence with trade in the North Sea, further enriching the homeland.
This period coincides with what is known to historians as the "Scottish Renaissance", a period of cultural and economic development in Scotland brought on by both the new peace with England to the south and the new prosperity of its overseas investments. A cultural renewal of Scotland as a nation, the Scottish Renaissance developed Scotland's identity beyond simply being in opposition to England, and the patronage of new wealthy mercantile groups allowed for artists, playwrights, and authors. In fact, for all intents and purposes Scotland would displace England as the primary arbiter of culture from the British Isles, as the period of Puritan rule stymied England's cultural development. Because of this, Scotland's presence and prestige in Europe would grow dramatically to a position well beyond its station. Despite its growth, Scotland's ascendancy would not come without opposition, as is typical of the history of the world. The best example would be during the St. Lawrence War of 1670-1673, when France and Scotland would clash over France's claims in Canada, where despite Scotland being a much smaller nation nonetheless was able to maintain naval superiority in the North Sea, and New Caledonia being more densely populated was more able to resist attacks from the relatively sparse French colonies. Eventually the war would end inconclusively, but with England continuing to languish under the rule of Puritans Scotland took the opportunity to rekindle relations with France.
This period of prosperity would not be unbroken. One consequence of Puritan rule in England was that many of the pro-democracy and anti-totalitarian philosophers and politicians fled to Scotland for security, where once there they began to agitate for many of the same ideas of parliamentary supremacy and anti-authoritarianism, which clashed with the ideas of "Divine Right" that had been developing in Scotland since the rule of David III, and had now put King Robert IV in opposition to an increasingly bold Scottish Parliament. It would come to a head in 1684 when Robert IV attempted to illegally dissolve Parliament and issue royal decrees limiting its power. This would be the start of the Scottish Civil War (1684-1688), during which time Scotland would undergo an intense conflict over its political future. Despite support from the Puritans in the south, Robert IV would finally be defeated and forced to abdicate in favor of his son, who as King Robert V was forced to accept new political reforms that not only abolished the Privy Council's political power and curtailed the Crown's authority in favor of the Parliament, but also reshaped the Parliament to a bicameral model with an elected House of Commons and a hereditary House of Clans, designed to bring the Clans back into the fold.
After this period of conflict, Scotland would again go on the upswing and is considered by some historians to have recovered by 1715 (that is, in economic terms, Scotland's demography would remain severely impacted for many more decades). Having settled itself, the victory of anti-authoritarian and democratic forces in Scotland would soon have a knock-on effect in its neighbor, where the death of King Charles II (and with him, the rule of the House of Stewart in England) and a contested succession touched off the English Civil War of 1723-1735 that in many ways resembled the Scottish Civil War, where the pro-Parliament forces (the "Moderates") engaged the pro-Puritan forces. Scotland's involvement began almost immediately but would escalate to full-scale military support in 1730, after which Scotland's army would move to support the Moderates and finally marched all the way to London, putting King Edward VII on the English Throne and finally restoring English democracy after generations of authoritarian Puritan domination.
By the middle of the century, the restoration of order and stability in the British Isles has allowed Scotland to prosper as a growing force in Europe, increasingly able to act in a way that gave Edinburgh the ability to weigh in on European affairs. In the Anglo-Spanish War of 1734 - 1736, for example, Scotland proved to be a deciding factor in supporting England's colonies in the New World against Spanish efforts at conquering English holdings in the Caribbean. Meanwhile, Scotland could also end up standing on its own through the ascendancy of the Royal Scots Navy in the Spanish-Scots War of 1741 that gave Scotland the power to claim the mostly unsettled region of Patagonia as a new colony for itself. The prestige of this victory alone has given Scotland an increasingly prestigious and influential position in Europe, particularly as English support gives Scotland a buffer from most of the chaos in Europe. And now, Scotland prepares to enter a new era of its history, one that will make Scotland a truly powerful influence in Europe: the Scottish Enlightenment.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 21, 2020 0:55:20 GMT
Timeline 31 - The United States of America, 1860Before there was the California Republic, before the Plains Federation, before the Republic of New England and Lakotah and Cascadia-Montana, there was a single, gigantic country about the size of Europe called the United States of America. The country was formed by 13 former British colonies who had declared solidarity against the British Empire, and achieved independence with the assistance of France and Spain. It was the first time in history that a nation as large as it had attempted to create a republican system of government.
On paper, they seemed like a nation destined for great things. Representative democracy, constitutionally enshrined civil liberties, and a society that allowed freedom of movement up and down the social hierarchy. Of course, what gets written down is ultimately only theory. In practice, the United States were little changed from before their war of independence. The representatives were overwhelmingly from the rich and wealthy quasi-aristocratic merchants, who greedily sought their own profits often at the expense of those who worked for them. Women were afforded almost no political rights. And of course, a vast portion of the nation's population toiled in slavery. Good was there, but many historians have taken the view that the bad outweighed it. After all, they had to fall apart for one reason or another.
In its early days, the United States were split primarily on issues of slavery, but their rapid growth from 1803 to 1848 nearly tripled their land area, and a new problem came to the fore: what political scientists call "Americanization"; the process by which an otherwise culturally unified nation can experience division based on areas of a country feeling disaffected with the leadership and often develop much more localized identities based around states/provinces/etc. Indeed, this process was already well underway by the time that the nation had begun: there were three different regions to the young nation: the New England states in the northwest, the Midatlantic states that would later form the core of Appalachia, and the southern states that would someday come to be the easternmost states of the Confederacy.
As the United States grew far beyond its means to govern, politics became increasingly more unstable. The annexation of Texas was controversial enough, even more so when it led to war. Anti-war sentiment was strong in New England, while Texas itself never fully gave up its national identity as "Texan". In 1848, a gold discovery in California forced it to spring into existence, but even though it was ready to enter by 1849 it wouldn't be until 1853 that various arguments over slave and free states, economic issues, and even the borders of this new state itself were solved. And by then most Californians had already become vastly unhappy with the government of the United States, feeling that they had been nothing more than a pawn in the game of the eastern states, useless to Columbia unless as a tool.
Between 1853 and 1860, the nation slowly came apart at the seams through problem after problem. In 1856, a controversial election saw no candidate gain a majority in the Electoral College, leading the Democrat-controlled Congress to appoint James Buchanan to the Presidency, a move that outraged massive parts of the nation that had voted for the Republican candidate John C. Frémont (California among them). The very next year, the Supreme Court decided in Dred Scott v. Sandford that slavery was effectively legal everywhere in the country, which some consider the final spike through any hope for the nation holding together. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected on an even more contested vote by virtue of the Democrats splitting north/south, leading many in the south to begin calling for secession.
South Carolina lead the charge, followed by several other states throughout the South, including Texas. On the 4th of February, the states of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, and Louisiana met in Montgomery, Alabama (modern-day Sojourner City) to declare the "Confederate States of America". Texas was invited to this confederation, but while it voted in favor of secession, it voted against joining the CSA and thus was firmly established as the first Post-American Nation to actually secede from the United States, with the CSA only forming after this. Soon, war had broken out, and more states had joined the CSA, while various tribes in the Indian Territory had begun to sign treaties with Texas (aside from the Cherokee). In October 1861, the California State Legislature removed Governor Downey from office, and seceded as well, later absorbing New Mexico, Nevada, and Utah before settling its border with Texas peacefully.
The situation only deteriorated from there. Soon after, the territories of Washington, Oregon, and Idaho voted to secede and form "Cascadia", followed not long afterward by Montana, which absorbed Absaroka Territory. Texan meddling in the territories of the Great Plains resulted in them coming together to secede from the Union under the banner of the "Plains Federation". By this point, foreign nations had begun recognizing the separatist nations, starting with the CSA, Texas, and California. The last nation to secede was New England, which seceded out of a belief that the Union was doomed and they would have to leave for their own safety. This was the final blow. Lincoln announced an end to hostilities, and officially gave up the majority of the nation's territory. Days later, a coup led by General George McClellan deposed Lincoln and exiled him to Canada, followed by the reshaping of the rump United States into the "Federation of Freedonia", which was effectively a military dictatorship.
Thus, the "American Experiment" died. A month later, Montana and Cascadia voted to form a single nation, thus finalizing what would become the first seven of the Post-American Nations, 7 nations that while weakened, would come to be highly influential in the politics, economics, and culture of the world, even as that number would expand to 13 in the present day. And even with the American Experiment dead, the "Californian Experiment", the "Texan Experiment", and so on continued onwards. Some were successful, as in New England's becoming a major industrial power. Others were less successful, such as the CSA's preservation of slavery to a point that it utterly crippled their nation for the first half of the 20th Century.
The United States began with 13 stars, and grew to 31 before they fell from the sky. 7 replaced them, and now 13 shine over the land of the free and the home of the brave once again.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 23, 2020 2:36:44 GMT
Highland Cathedral - Colonization of the Eastern SeaboardFive nations have laid colonies in eastern North America. We will discuss them here, from north to south.
New France, divided between Louisiana in the north and Canada in the south, is a vast and largely unsettled area controlled by the French fur trappers. While France has been actively working to defend its territory from encroachment by the English, Dutch, and Spanish, the French have been content to simply leave their colonies largely uninhabited save for a few outposts and cities, the largest of which are New Orleans in the south and Stadacone in the north. It is because of these two that France claims Michigania, to connect its two main regions.
New Caledonia is Scotland's colony, and the smallest of the colonial holdings on mainland North America. That having been said, it is relatively densely populated, growing under its own accord without having to rely on settlers from Scotland proper. Initially settled to provide a base for the Scottish fur industry, this has declined in favor of herding, fishing, and shipbuilding. In fact, as of 1750 half of all ships in the Royal Scots Navy are built in New Caledonia's port cities. Despite being relatively poor in resources compared to its neighboring colonies, New Caledonia is nonetheless a tremendous source of pride and prestige for Scotland.
New Netherlands is a large Dutch colony that has seen meteoric growth in recent years owing to its strategic position for trade, centered largely on the city of New Amsterdam. Currently the second most populous of the colonies, its success has allowed it to not only succeed in its own right but as a means of buffering Scotland from England's colonies. Intriguingly New Netherlands has also incorporated the Six Nations of the Iroquois as a semi-independent protectorate. The rapid growth of New Netherlands, though, has led to some rumblings that it could survive on its own and doesn't need the assistance of the mother country...
Virginia is England's own troubled colony, having gone through a great number of ups and downs. Settled during the reign of Elizabeth I, its purpose was originally to find riches on par with the Spanish in Mexico and Argentina, then prospering in the growth and trade of tobacco. For the most of its existence however it functioned as an English penal colony, where the Puritan-dominated government would deport religious dissidents and enemies of the state. This has only ended in recent years following the English Civil War, and since then the colony has struggled to adapt to civilian government, though it is currently the most populous of the colonies.
Florida is a Spanish afterthought that resulted from Spain pushing inland from its holdings in what is now Baja Florida. While the bulk of its efforts lay in colonizing and exploiting the more gold-rich and plantation-capable lands of the Caribbean and Central America, Florida languishes purely because Spain refuses to allow England easy access to the Gulf of Mexico. Florida is thus only important militarily, and the majority of its land is still dominated by pre-colonial Native groups.
As well there are several Disputed Territories in this region, the largest and most consequential being Michigania. Defined largely as the region surrounding the Great Lakes and south to the Ohio River, this region has caught the interest of England, France, and the Netherlands for its strategic and economic importance, given that control of the region would allow whichever nation that owns it to dominate the region. A smaller but no less significant area is "Mesopotamia", a region sandwiched between two rivers claimed by both England and Spain as the result of poor surveying and definitions in the 1717 Treaty of Balboa that was meant to create the current border. Minor disputes also exist between Virginia and New Netherlands, and between Canada and New Netherlands, but the two larger areas of dispute promise to cause the most trouble in current European affairs.
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mobiyuz
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 25, 2020 7:50:06 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - Celtic Ceiniogau
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mobiyuz
Chief petty officer
I have returned.
Posts: 167
Likes: 161
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Post by mobiyuz on Aug 26, 2020 5:40:13 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - The Iranian Empire, 1622 ADIran is ascendant. With its overwhelming victory in the Third Iranian-Rasulid War, Iran has reclaimed lands from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean, expanding her territory to extents not seen since the reign of Shahanshah Khosrow II nearly a thousand years prior. Having now reached the Mediterranean, Iran is once again a nation of interest to the Europeans, rather than being a strange nation on the other side of the Caliphate. As well, Iran is once again an undisputed great power, holding hegemony through the Near East and asserting control not just directly over Syria, Cappadocia, Lesser Armenia, and Mesopotamia, but hegemonic control over Oman and a rump state of the Rasulid Dynasty in the southern portions of the Arabian Peninsula.
With his victory, Shahanshah Sukhrah III has been venerated as Sukhrah Anushirvan, the first to be given such an honor since Khosrow I battled the Eastern Roman Empire. While his capital remains in Aspahan, he has already begun an effort to rebuild the once great city of Ctesiphon into a great imperial city once again. Already efforts begin to create an Atash Behram that will reside in the Taq Kasra, once the palace of Khosrow Anushiravan and soon to be re-dedicated as a Fire Temple of the Masdayazna, the centerpiece of a city that may someday eclipse Baghdad in its splendor and magnificence. His generals in this war are similarly honored, many being made governors of the newly reconquered provinces.
Having expanded west of the mighty Zagros Mountains, Iran's immediate future is now tied into integrating the newly-conquered lands and consolidating the power of the Mazdayasna-dominated imperial government. Sukhrah III has stated his intention to treat the conquered peoples with a light touch, being allowed to maintain their Islamic faith with minimal disruption so long as they prove loyal, though even now the armies once dedicated to conquest are reassigned to stamping out the small rebellions flaring against the rule of the Shahanshah. Many are unconvinced that Iran will truly leave the Muslims be, and just as many expect that at some point, an effort to spread the Mazdayasna faith back through the region may occur. Already new Fire Temples are being built in the conquered cities, and new Mazdayasna governors and administrators are being prepared to take the reins of the reconquered provinces.
For one empire to rise, another must fall. And as the Rasulid Caliphate crumbles to ashes, the Iranian Empire rises, bolstered by military might and political supremacy. And the flames of Ahura Mazda burn just as bright as they did when lit by Asho Zarathustra many, many years ago.
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stevep
Fleet admiral
Posts: 24,856
Likes: 13,238
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Post by stevep on Aug 26, 2020 10:47:44 GMT
Celtiaid Am Byth - The Iranian Empire, 1622 ADIran is ascendant. With its overwhelming victory in the Third Iranian-Rasulid War, Iran has reclaimed lands from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean, expanding her territory to extents not seen since the reign of Shahanshah Khosrow II nearly a thousand years prior. Having now reached the Mediterranean, Iran is once again a nation of interest to the Europeans, rather than being a strange nation on the other side of the Caliphate. As well, Iran is once again an undisputed great power, holding hegemony through the Near East and asserting control not just directly over Syria, Cappadocia, Lesser Armenia, and Mesopotamia, but hegemonic control over Oman and a rump state of the Rasulid Dynasty in the southern portions of the Arabian Peninsula.
With his victory, Shahanshah Sukhrah III has been venerated as Sukhrah Anushirvan, the first to be given such an honor since Khosrow I battled the Eastern Roman Empire. While his capital remains in Aspahan, he has already begun an effort to rebuild the once great city of Ctesiphon into a great imperial city once again. Already efforts begin to create an Atash Behram that will reside in the Taq Kasra, once the palace of Khosrow Anushiravan and soon to be re-dedicated as a Fire Temple of the Masdayazna, the centerpiece of a city that may someday eclipse Baghdad in its splendor and magnificence. His generals in this war are similarly honored, many being made governors of the newly reconquered provinces.
Having expanded west of the mighty Zagros Mountains, Iran's immediate future is now tied into integrating the newly-conquered lands and consolidating the power of the Mazdayasna-dominated imperial government. Sukhrah III has stated his intention to treat the conquered peoples with a light touch, being allowed to maintain their Islamic faith with minimal disruption so long as they prove loyal, though even now the armies once dedicated to conquest are reassigned to stamping out the small rebellions flaring against the rule of the Shahanshah. Many are unconvinced that Iran will truly leave the Muslims be, and just as many expect that at some point, an effort to spread the Mazdayasna faith back through the region may occur. Already new Fire Temples are being built in the conquered cities, and new Mazdayasna governors and administrators are being prepared to take the reins of the reconquered provinces.
For one empire to rise, another must fall. And as the Rasulid Caliphate crumbles to ashes, the Iranian Empire rises, bolstered by military might and political supremacy. And the flames of Ahura Mazda burn just as bright as they did when lit by Asho Zarathustra many, many years ago.
Hell I didn't realise that in TTL Iran is again - or stayed] Zoroastrian. That's going to make huge butterflies especially if its a case of stayed as your unlikely to get much of central Asia converted to Islam. Probably no invasions of India either so other than by merchants Islam isn't going to spread in much of south and south-east Asia so OTL Indonesia is likely to stay predominantly Hindu in faith and culture. Also potentially more contact with and also probably tension with China as it could well be clashing with Indian interests in the region if it has a maritime centred dynasty, or at for a period.
Was there any great Mongol type empire at this time, plus possibly later upsurges such as Timur and if so what areas did they come to control.
Steve
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