ehecatzin
Emperor
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2007
- Messages
- 1,863
That makes some sense, but I'd think that the French medieval cathedrals are more significant as monuments than Welsh castles (or even English cathedrals). As for medieval English culture, the flourishing of literature in Middle English is notable, which then continued its efflorescence in Early Modern English. (Keep in mind that the English are a culture that would be transcending to the Early Modern period per Humankind's model.) That said, it is tricky to find a non-military trait that England would have led France in during this period.
What about the Inca? I hope they are included and it doesn't really make sense to have them and the Aztecs in separate eras. And if they did do that, shouldn't the Inca be in the Middle Ages and the Aztecs in the Early Modern, because Cuzco has an older foundation than Tenochtitlan?
I guess it all depends on where do you start to count the renaissance beggining, the Aztecs could be early modern, but if you consider the Aztecs since the migration period, they are firmly on medieval. I guess a similar thing will happen with the Incas, tho I doubt they are in, maybe with later expansion we will get an actually fleshed out Andean cultural tree. and maybe a mesoamerican expanded one, Zapotecs and Teotihuacan on classical, Toltecs (tho I would prefer Itza to cover a second maya culture), Mixtecs, Purepecha on medieval.
EDIT: I don't mind Aztecs on medieval, if anything it would be a very interesting what if scenario if you trascend and take the Spanish head on.
We're largely in agreement. But observant people have already spotted the hwacha, so I'm fairly certain Joseon is in for Early Modern. Like you said, they're skipping regions, and I think the Mongols and Khmer will have to represent East/Southeast Asia for the Middle Ages. I'm not entirely sure about the theme idea; focusing on the Mediterranean for the Bronze Age and the Classical Era is par for the course.
For Early Modern, my current best guesses based on what people have dug up are Dutch (Merchant), Iroquois (Agrarian), Joseon (Scientist), Ming (Builder), Mughal (Builder), Muromachi Japan (Militarist), Ottomans (Expansionist), Polish (Aesthete), Spanish (Expansionist), and Venetians (Merchant). I could see four European civs becoming the norm.
In that case it could be Kamakura Japan on medieval, Ming and Joseon on early modern, Meiji on industrial.