New NESes, ideas, development, etc

Sounds great. I've tried collective world creation, it's hard work. Good luck, an I'm in!!!
 
Pretty nice set of rules.
 
None of it is my own creation, I included the creators of the rules in the attribution at the top of the spoiler. I just took what was in the pdf and wrote is out for the forum layout.

I don't have a lot of time to actually do anything w/ it at the moment (school just started n' all that). But if anyone else wants to run with it, by all means. (I'm actually looking at starting an RPG game at some point, which I put higher on priority list than this :p)

I don't really see it as a competitive "game" though, it is more of a cooperative story/world-building system.
 
So, as some of you may know, I've been slowly working on turning the PoD map I posted a while back into a NES, and I said I'd have something to post by the end of this week. I'm still tinkering with the numerical components of the stats, but I have written most of the descriptive stuff. So here are the descriptions for Europe and the interesting bits of Asia. This is intended partially to solicit interest, or determine lack thereof, from the community, and partially to get some feedback on whether any of this looks at all decent.

Spoiler descriptions :
Longphort League
Government: Loose League of Oligarchic City-States
Culture: Hiberno-Norse, with strong English influences; Irish minority in the interior, Danish and Icelandic Nordic populations overseas; Monastic Catholic; mostly League Norse speaking, with a native-Irish speaking minority
Nation Background: The scattered and disparate Viking longphorts in Ireland were united by the Danish pirate Oleg Ragnarsson, who led an agglomeration of continental raiding bands to Ireland in the ninth century in pursuit of greater conquests, but never truly integrated into his Kingdom of Dublin. A longphort revolt against royal centralization efforts in the late tenth century led to the overthrow of the Kingdom and establishment in its place of a loose confederation of Hiberno-Norse polities. Held together by the need for mutual defense against the Irish and fear of English aggrandizement, the League followed a fairly nondescript course for the succeeding centuries. That course changed dramatically in the late fourteenth century, when a combination of the plague virtually bypassing Ireland, continental competitors being ruined by the Eighty Years War, and fortuitous innovations in the longphorts' financial and shipbuilding sectors allowed the League to rapidly attain a virtual monopoly on the north Atlantic carry trade and become the single most important source of credit to all of northern Europe. Suddenly a transformed almost overnight into a commercial powerhouse, the League began to accept associate members, and the thing-banks became some of the greatest merchant enterprises in Europe. Still not a military power, the League was able, when it could agree on collective action, to have great influence on European affairs anyway. League financial backing was perhaps the single most important factor leading to the Danish revival. In return for a limitless supply of cheap credit, the Danes acknowledged the entry of Visby and Bornholm into the League, and granted significant commercial concessions to League merchants. The League, or more precisely the merchants of Dublin, thus gained a virtual monopoly on Baltic trade, and the Dublin-Visby axis was formed that has dominated League affairs since. The League has spent the last half-century protecting and expanding their commercial predominance. While some among the lesser longports grow resentful of Dublin's dominance of League affairs, the League still closes ranks at any threat to their general interests.

English Empire
Capital: London
Government: Semi-Parliamentary Centralized Bureaucratic Monarchy
Culture: English; Celtic minorities in Wales and Scotland, Bretons in Brittany, Anglo-Franks on the continent, small Gascon and Lotharingian populations in the south and east; entirely Monastic Catholic; mostly English or Anglo-Frankish speaking
Nation Background: The House of Offa, rulers of Mercia, united the English kingdoms, after a fashion, by the mid ninth century. By the early tenth, the Celtic fringe had been largely suppressed, and the English emperors, in need of further expansion to secure their hold on power, turned to the continent. English intervention in Neustrian affairs sent the Dissolution Wars into their most intense phase, but turned out well for the English, as they carved out the great Ealdordom of Neustria. Having reached the limits of expansion, the emperors found themselves having difficulty keeping their sub-kingdoms in line. From the later tenth century through to the early thirteenth, the empire almost fell apart entirely on several occasions, and the English emperors spent most of their time putting down revolts. By the thirteenth century, though, the loose early empire had become a state more powerful and efficient than anything seen in northern Europe since Charlemagne. The increasingly assertive continental policy pursued by the emperors, with their newly stable power-base, destabilized the European structure. A series of minor conquests, revolts and wars culminated in 1331 when Gascony and an alliance of lesser Frankish states acted to prevent the accession of the English emperor to the Breton crown, in the opening salvo of the Eighty Years War. The successful campaign to drive the Gascons out of Brittany morphed into an attempt to eliminate the Gascon threat for good, and then, under the great soldier-emperor Cenwulf, into a drive for oecumenical empire that seemed, by Cenwulf's annus mirabilis of 1394, to be on the brink of success. The continental war dominated and warped English politics for generations, and when it ended in failure and the loss of nearly all the hard-won gains England moved seamlessly into a long and complicated civil war between, broadly speaking, parliamentary and aristocratic factions. Since the settlement at the end of the civil war, England has reemerged as a force in continental politics, but the emperors have stayed their hand in several instances, fearful of provoking another coalition against them, and as the Frankish territories grow in population and prosperity, the old balance between England and continent grows precarious.

Kingdom of Denmark
Capital: Copenhagen
Government: Centralized Administrative Semi-Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Danish; Monastic Catholic, with a large Roman Catholic minority in Pomerania and Prussia; German, Slavic and Ost Dansk minorities, though with numerous Nordic elements, in the Pomeranian coast; mostly Scandinavian Norse speaking
Nation Background: In the middle tenth century the Skallagrimning kings at Jelling conquered a kingdom encompassing all Jutland and Skane; by the end of the century they added Norway, and began to look further afield for the raiding opportunities the monarchy required. Shut out of the west by the English, the Danes turned east, first going to Sweden. Converted by English monks in the middle of their campaigns in Sweden, the Danish conquest quickly acquired pronounced religious overtones, and even before Sweden had been fully brought into submission Danish attacks on the pagans around the Baltic began to intensify. The Wendish Crusade inaugurated the long crusading age in the Baltic, and for two hundred years Danish-led multi-national armies conquered the polities of the Baltic littoral one by one. The empire peaked in the first half of the thirteenth century, when the Danes controlled the entirety of the Baltic coast and their network of clients and vassals stretched into Russia nearly to Tver; the long decline began shortly afterwards. The Danes turned inwards after the end of the crusades, and the empire withered as the magnates squabbled. In the fourteenth century, the retreat from empire turned into a rout, as military defeats snowballed and general revolts broke out all over the empire. The Baltic empire was all but gone by the turn of the last century, when the Norwegian magnate Hakon Magnusson seized the Danish crown, ruthlessly suppressed all threats to royal supremacy, and perhaps most crucially forged an alliance with the Longphort League. Secure at home, Hakon focused on restoring the Danish position in the Baltic, and the years since have seen a dramatic revival of Danish fortunes: the Poles beaten in two long, bloody wars, the Lithuanians split and the Order of Canute brought, however tenuously, into the Danish alliance system. The government established by Hakon remains efficient and powerful, and with strife in Sweden growing the Danish revival may yet have further to run.

Kingdom of Sweden
Capital: Stockholm
Government: Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Swedish, with massive Danish influences, Lapps in the north; entirely Monastic Catholic; Scandinavian Norse speaking
Nation Background: Neglected and cut out of power by the eastwards facing Danish empire, the Swedish territorial magnates revolted during one of the myriad Danish civil wars in the fourteenth century. Initially, there was no central authority, in the country, there being no tradition of one. The newly independent lords tried an uneasy coexistence that rapidly, naturally, broke down into a struggle for supremacy. After a bloody series of wars, the lords of Stockholm emerged victorious. The seeking legitimacy for their fragile government, the new Swedish kings turned outwards, to foreign conquest. Initially they enjoyed some success, in Friland at least, but had no such luck in Skane. Alas for the kings, the Swedes were no happier to support unsuccessful Swedish imperialism than they had been Danish. A renewed struggle for control broke out in the middle thirteenth century. The kings were forced to grant significant concessions to the great magnates in order to restore their authority. By the time the dust settled after the unsuccessful drive for empire, the Danes were back. Repeated renewed attacks on Skane were unsuccessful, and in the years since, Sweden has seemed to be slowly decaying, her kings paralyzed by squabbling nobles, her mercantile economy gradually being devoured by Danish and League competitors, and Denmark always gaining in power.

Kingdom of Lotharingia
Capital: Aachen
Government: Decentralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Lotharingian Frankish; Provencal minority in the south, Frisian in the north, and minor Saxon and Alemannic German population in the east; Monastic Catholic with minor Roman Catholic elements in the far south
Nation Background: Lotharingia survived the Dissolution Wars better than any Carolingian domain save Italy. Since emerging from the chaos of the tenth century, Lotharingia's fortunes have been uneven: periods of near hegemony in trans-Alpine Europe alternating with periods of extreme decentralization and feudal strife. It was by exploiting such strife between the great dukes and the Burgundian dynasty of Lotharingian kings that England was able to reduce Lotharingia, in the Eighty Years War, to near total servitude. In the aftermath of the collapse of English power, a new dynasty, the Welfs, claimed the crown of Lotharingia and by a combination of conquest and amicitia brought most of the old Lotharingians territories back under control. This reinvigorated Lotharingia, however, retains many of the problems that doomed the previous dynasty, and with aggressive new rivals on the borders time is running out to fix them.

Principality of Frisia
Capital: Utrecht
Government: Decentralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Friso-Norman, with major English and Danish influences; small but influential Lotharingian minorities in the southeast; wholly Monastic Catholic; mostly Frisian speaking, with some Lotharingian, Saxon and Danish
Nation Background: Frisia traces its origins to the grant of the march of Dorestad to the Danish pirate Ivar in the ninth century. Ivar's successors detached the province from the Carolingian power structure and by a combination of intermarriage and conquest expanded their rule over most of the Frisian territories. The principality pursued a determinedly north facing policy, and so was spared the worst of the tenth century chaos and became an important mercantile power. Alas, central power was eroded by conflicts between east and western Frisans, and as the principality fell apart in the eleventh century, it was conquered by the ascendant Lotharingians. Most of Frisia spent the next quarter millenium as an exceptionally troublesome duchy of Lotharingia, seemingly always either in revolt against central authority, or at war with their neighbours in the name of central authority. When the Eighty Years War came to Lotharingia, the Frisians, naturally, revolted. This time, though, with English backing, they were ultimately successful, and formed a new principality that became one of the strongest supporters of Cenwulf's imperial project. With the collapse of English power and the reconstitution of Lotharingia in the early fifteenth century, Frisia found itself isolated. Two Lotharingian invasions were barely defeated. A third, in the middle of the century, was momentarily successful, but Frisia's freedom was again secured by English help, and since that last war, Frisia has moved firmly into the English orbit. Thus protected from Lotharingian aggression, the principality has of late prospered.

Kingdom of Gascony
Capital: Bordèu
Government: Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Gasco-Norman, with minor Provencal and Lotharingian minorities; almost entirely monastic Catholic; tiny Muslim minority in the extreme southwest; mostly Gascon speaking
Nation Background: As the regnum Normanorum fell apart, Gascon control over the great kingdom acquired in the previous centuries waned. It was partially a desire to reverse the decline that led Sancho IX to make the most ruinous decision in Gascon history, when he intervened in Brittany and inadvertently ignited the Eighty Years War. Gascony was methodically destroyed by overwhelming English power, was shired, and spent nearly half a century as a mere province of the English empire. The English civil war following Cenwulf's death allowed the Gascon leadership to first reduce English influence, and finally to expel it entirely. The revived Gascon state is far more centralized than its predecessors, and has recovered many of the lost territories while managing to avoid a renewed confrontation with England.

Emirate of Liyun
Capital: Liyun
Government: Decentralized Monarchy
Culture: Liyunese Andalusian, with fairly large Mozarabic population in the north; mostly Rushdite Islamic, with a small but visible Monastic Christian minority; almost entirely Andalusian Arabic speaking
Nation Background: The Banu Abbad seized control of Liyun during the breakdown of Cordoba into regional kingdoms. Allying with residual Christian elites in northern Spain, the Emirs of Liyun created a particularly stable and efficient power base by the standards of the taifas, but nevertheless quickly fell into the orbit of the empire of the Banu Zannun of Tulaytulah. After the Zanata crushed the Zannun on the Wadi al-Kabir, Liyun escaped conquest by the new Berber threat and gradually assumed control over the old Zannun power structures in the north of Andalusia. Secure in the north by the late twelfth century, the Liyunese expanded into broader Andalusian power struggles. A Liyunese engineered alliance brought down Isbiliya in the the mid thirteenth century and Liyun replaced Isbiliya as the greatest of the Andalusian kingdoms. Under Sayf al-Daula in the late fourteenth century Liyunese power reached its peak, and the emirate seemed on the brink of resurrecting the Caliphate. Alas for Liyun, their pressure forced Malaqah to turn to the Muwahhidun. Fanatical Berber armies inflicted a series of devastating defeats upon the Liyunese army, and Liyun was forced to abandon the south and east and fall back in defense of the heartland. Since the Muwahhidun invasion, scarcely a year has passed without a campaign on the border, and since the initial Berber surge was blunted the balance has shifted slowly but surely towards the northerners. The Liyunese may have another chance to unite Andalusia, but the decades of war have sapped the state's resources, and they may not have the strength to seize it.

Emirate of al-Isbunah
Capital: al-Isbunah
Government: Oligarchic Mercantile Monarchy; de facto Republic
Culture: Cordoban Andalusian
Nation Background: al-Isbunah was the center of a minor taifa after Cordoba fell. That kingdom quickly fell to Tulaytulah, ending the independent existence of the city for some centuries. Under the rule of Tulaytulah and the Zanata al-Isbunah declined in importance as administrative functions were removed to Yaburah and trade along the Tadjoh dried up. The city and its hinterland thus passed the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in comparative obscurity. Al-Isbunah's fortunes reversed in the fourteenth century, when the merchants of the city began forming a close association with the Longphort League that would dominate their later history. Buoyed by the rising tide of Atlantic trade, al-Isbunah prospered, and became once again the administrative center of the region. The increasing wealth and sophistication of the area reached a denouement during the Muwahhidun invasion, when the governors of the province took advantage of Liyunese distraction to sever ties with Liyun and establish an independent emirate. al-Isbunah has since survived as a militarily weak state between greater powers by maintaining a scrupulous neutrality and being more valuable independent than conquered. Meanwhile, the merchants of al-Isbunah have reduced the emirs to the status of powerless figureheads, and tied the state ever closer to the Atlantic maritime economy.

Dominions of al-Muwahhidun
Capital: Malaqah
Government: Theocratic Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Increasingly syncretic Zenaga Berber among the Muwahhidun core; Cordoban Andalusian in Andalusia; various Berber strains dominate in the Maghreb, but with significant Andalusian and Arabic presences as well; overwhelmingly Islamic, with the Muwahhidun version of Dahabi Islam predominating, but particularly in Andalusia there are large numbers of Rushdites; Berber and Andalusian speaking
Nation Background: The fragmented polities of North Africa that followed Fatimid rule were conquered starting in the late eleventh century by the first great Berber empire, that of the Zanata, who even crossed to Andalusia in the wake of Cordoba's collapse into regionalism and briefly controlled most of the peninsula. Following the inevitable rapid decline of the Zanata, power in North Africa passed to Arabic tribal confederations, Andalusian imperialists, and Sicilians. Berber alienation and the penetration of North Africa by Rushdite Islam created fertile ground for Dahabi teachings when that school arrived in the early fourteenth century. In the 1360s,Yaqub al-Mansur established himself as the leader of the most prominent group of Moroccan pseudo-Dahabis, politicized and militarized his sect, and began a revolt against Malaqan rule. By the first decade of the next century, his Muwahhidun controlled nearly most of North Africa. When Malaqah turned to the Muwahhidun in desperation for aid against Liyun, Berber armies crossed to Andalusia, drove back the Liyunese in concert with Malaqah...and then killed the Emir of Malaqah, destroyed his kingdom, and conquered half of Andalusia. Since that peak, the Muwahhidun have been declining, losing territory to Liyun, Saraqusta and Sicily, suffering revolts and increasing discontent among the Maghrebi Berbers, and seeing their support base in Andalusia steadily erode. The Muwahhidun increasingly seem a relic of a bygone era, and drastic action may be necessary to ensure their survival.

Emirate of Saraqusta
Capital: Saraqusta
Government: Centralized Administrative Monarchy
Culture: Provenco-Andalusian syncretic; mostly Rushdite Islamic, but with large Roman Catholic and much smaller Sicilian Catholic populations; Andalusian Arabic speaking, but with a large Provencal minority
Nation Background: Deeming the Ebro valley strategically irrelevant in the face of the Muwahhidun threat to Liyun itself, the Liyunese abandoned its defense to the locals; these not unreasonably sought an accommodation with the oncoming Berbers, which allowed them to preserve a certain independence under the new regime. The Muwahhidun tended afterwards to leave their northeastern province largely to itself, but maintained an army there to defend against Provencal expansionism and occasionally menace Liyun's eastern flank. Suspicion in the Muwahhidun court of the stubbornly liberal and independent minded northeasters soured the local elites' views of the center, and in 1478 court intrigue and the suspicion that he had 'gone native' brought about the recall of Sayf al-Din, commander of the Saraqusta army and the most successful Muwahhidun general for half a century. Convinced that returning to Malaqah would mean his execution, Sayf al-Din chose instead to revolt against Muwahhidun rule. With Liyunese and, more significantly, Sicilian aid, he beat back the Muwahhidun counter stroke and extracted their recognition of his new state. Driven by fear of Liyunese or Provencal aggression, the Saraqustan administration tore down the existing governmental structures and with astonishing rapidity erected an admirably efficient fiscal-military apparatus, and drove back an opportunistic Provencal attack. Sayf al-Din is dead, but with a remarkably united populace and modern army the state he created does not lack for opportunities.

Duchy of Swabia
Capital: Augsburg
Government: Administrative Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Alemannic German with strong Lotharingian influences; Lotharingian and minor Slavic minorities; Monastic Catholic, with Roman Catholic pockets, mostly in the Alps; mostly Alemannic German speaking, with pockets of Slavs, Lotharingians and Italians.
Nation Background: Swabia was a Lotharingian creation in the fourteenth century, carved out of the Bavarian march and administered by a cadet branch of the Burgundian dynasty. With the rest of Lotharingia, Swabia fell under English influence during the Eighty Years War; unlike the rest, it refused to follow the Welfs when they rose to the Lotharingian throne after the English defeat. A succession of competent Dukes first fought the Welfs to a standstill, then created a powerful, efficient state apparatus, and then, by a combination of skillful opportunism and extreme good fortune, expanded Swabian power throughout most of the old Kingdom of Bavaria. Swabia does not lack for further opportunities, but its opponents now are far more formidable than any it has yet faced.

Italian Empire
Capital: Rome
Government: Decentralized Monarchy
Culture: Lombard Italian, with South Italians in southern Italy, Greeks and Slavics in Dalmatia and Epirus, Slavs and Hungarians in Carinthia; almost entirely Roman Catholic in Italy proper, with Eastern Orthodox minorities in Dalmatia and Epirus, as well as a small but growing Gaborite minority in Carinthia
Nation Background: The Carolingian Kingdom of Italy was eventually seized, after the end of Carolingian rule and an exciting contest, by the Dukes of Spoleto, who conquered the Catepanate and the Lombard Duchies, reduced the Papacy to servitude, and initiated the Norman conquest of Sicily. Secure in Italy, the Emperors turned abroad, to Provence, and the Balkans, and above all to Sicily. The eventual triumph over Sicily in the fourteenth century brought Italy to the peak of its power; the rising clout of the cities, Roman resurgence, and Sicilian unrest brought it down. Following the crushing Italian defeat at Novara, central power was gradually dissipated to the municipalities, who were not at all inclined to spend more treasure maintaining the more distant imperial possessions; Sicily broke free once again, influence in Hungary was almost entirely lost, and Balkan possessions came under Roman attack. Italy is now effectively ruled by a confederation of squabbling municipal governments, and without reform it is likely that they will allow Italy to be surpassed by new powers.

Kingdom of Provence
Capital: Aix
Government: Centralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Provencal, with major Italian influences; almost wholly Roman Catholic, but a small Muslim minority in the south and Monastic in the north and west; mostly Provencal speaking, with small Italian and Gascon areas in the east and west
Nation Background: A direct Carolingian successor state, Provence acquired the territories of the old Spanish March in the early eleventh century. Distracted by the defense of those territories, Provence played little role in broader European politics in the post-Carolingian world. Falling slowly under Italian control in the twelfth century, Provence for the next two centuries saw its territory gradually lost to Gascons and Andalusians, while its resources were deployed into the seemingly eternal Italian struggle with Sicily. Italian-instigated Provencal interference in Lotharingia provoked an English invasion during the Eighty Years War, and the Italian response to that invasion led to the English victory at Novara. The crushing Italian defeat freed Provence replaced Italian domination with English; the collapse of English power shorty afterwards ended even that. Its rulers truly independent for the first time in century, Provence entered a golden age. The merchants of Catalonia and Marseilles brought great prosperity to the kingdom, Liyon was taken from Lotharingia, the decaying Muwahhidun pushed back, and a great cultural flowering took place. But the crushing defeat of Provencal arms at the hands of Saraqusta brought a rude end to the military success, and Provence's economic position is increasingly threatened by the Sicilian hegemony. Decisive action may required to prevent Provence falling again under foreign domination.

Principality of Sicily
Capital: Palermo
Government: Centralized Administrative Monarchy
Culture: Sicilian Norman; Berber and Arab minorities in Ifriqiya; mostly Sicilian Catholic, with a very large Muslim minority and much smaller Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox minorities; mishmash of Arab, Berber, Italian and Sicilian dialects, but most people speak at least some Sicilian
Nation Background: Sicily was conquered from its Arab rulers starting in the late tenth century by northern adventurers acting under the auspices of the Italian crown. These mercenaries carved out fiefs of their own, and, while technically subject to the Italian emperor, mostly managed their own affairs. By the mid eleventh century, the Gascon lords of Palermo attained ascendancy over the whole of the island and established a brilliant syncretic state. The unprecedented power of the Norman Duchy of Sicily upset the balance, and so there ensued the long contest between Dukes and Emperors, as the Italians sought to bring Sicily back into line. Sicilian diplomacy and naval power stymied Italian efforts for decade after decade, and all the while Sicily's power waxed, as Ifriqiya and Sardinia were conquered and Sicilian merchants rose to dominate Mediterranean commerce. By the early thirteenth century Sicily had become sufficiently powerful as to no longer really fear Italy, and then Roger III inherited the Kingdom of Gascony. This so-called regnum normanorum saw the peak of Sicilian glory: Egypt conquered, at least after a fashion, Italy and Rome humbled, and Sicily utterly dominant in the Mediterranean; it also saw the beginning of the decline. Subsequent decades saw Sicilian resources frittered away, the dominant Sicilian commercial position gradually eroded, and the loss of the Maghrebi possessions to al-Muwahhidun. Things finally came to a head in the mid-fourteenth century, when, in the midst of a civil war in Sicily and a revolt in Ifriqiya, Italy invaded and, after nearly four hundred years, finally destroyed the Duchy of Sicily. For fifty years, Sicily was ruled from Rome, but Italian mismanagement and intolerance comprehensively alienated the population. After Italy was thrown into disarray by her defeat at Novara, the Norman Counts of Tunis launched an invasion of Sicily which triggered a general revolt on the island. After a decade of fruitless war, the Italian Emperor was forced to recognize an independent Sicily. In the decades since, Sicily has been making up for lost time, expanding in all directions and acquiring a virtual stranglehold on commerce in the western Mediterranean. The Muwahhidun have been pushed back in Africa, the Romans defeated by the unmatched Sicilian fleet, and Italy has been too preoccupied with internal affairs to intervene. But the success has brought new power groups into the state and destabilized old ones, and the state will have to adapt if it is to continue successfully.
 
Spoiler more descriptions :
Thuringian League
Capital: Erfurt
Government: Feudal Aristocratic Federal League
Culture: Saxon German; mostly Monastic, very small Roman Catholic minority; mostly Low German speaking, with small minorities of west Slavic speakers
Nation Background: The original Thuringian League was a purely Lotharingian creationin the thirteenth century, the innumerable cities and petty lords of central Germany bullied into a league with the Lotharingian king as its head. As Lotharingia began to withdraw from German affairs in the late thirteenth century, the Federation broke free from Lotharingian domination, and coerced or convinced many of the feuding German and Slavic statelets to join. For a brief time, it appeared possible that the federal Thuringian state could become a really major player in European affairs. Naturally, this suited Lotharingia and the revived Poland not at all, and their combined efforts served to break the effective government of the League. Most Thuringian members withdrew, and in those that remained League institutions became irrelevant. They remained as such until the mid fifteenth century, when, by a combination of the capable leadership and, more importantly, Lotharingian money, the old Thuringian institutions underwent a dramatic revival. The revived federal state is not particularly unified or powerful, and is under the watchful eye of the Lotharingians, but with capable leadership could conceivably prosper.

Duchy of Saxony
Capital: Celle
Government: Decentralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Saxon German, with a few Frisians and Lotharingians; Monastic Catholic; Low German speaking,
Nation Background: Saxony suffered terribly to Norse raiders in the ninth and early tenth centuries. Ironically, this spared it the worst of the Dissolution Wars; there was nothing left worth attacking over, and the Dukes had too few resources to really take an independent course. Saxony was one of the only places that emerged from the wars with its Carolingian leadership structures more or less intact. As the economy recovered, Saxony's influence in Germany increased; for a time in the eleventh century, it appeared that Saxony might beat both Lotharingia and Poland to the punch in securing the north. Unfortunately for Saxony, it was surrounded by powers that had a shared interest in avoiding a powerful Saxon state; a recurring theme in German politics. Danish, Polish and Lotharingian pressure broke Saxon power, and sent north Germany back into its previously fragmented state. In the aftermath, Saxony lost the North Sea coast to the Frisians, and the ensuing loss of the commercial revenue greatly reduced the power of the Saxons. Since then, Saxony's story has largely been one of a pawn of greater powers in their struggle for influence in Germany, with occasional opportunities for freedom of action generally squandered. After the Lotharingian withdrawal from German affairs in the late thirteenth century, Saxony eventually was convinced/coerced into joining the Thuringian League, but was the first to jump ship when troubles arose, and was in large part responsible for the League's death. The Eighty Years' War provided another opportunity, and Duke Henry IV made the best of it, conquering a wide swathe of Thuringia and even pushing across the Elbe and holding off the Poles. But his sons squabbled over the succession, the Poles took advantage, and Saxony was again reduced to its ancestral domains. The later fifteenth century saw no such opportunities for glory, but the dukes have done a comparatively good job of balancing Poland and Lotharingia and building Saxony's strength, and with Poland weakening and Lotharingia dangerously divided, another opportunity may not be long in coming.

County of Lusatia
Capital: Chemnitz
Government: Centralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: West Slavics and Saxon Germans; mostly Roman Catholic, with a fairly large monastic minority; Polish and Low German speaking
Nation Background: The Lusatian Slavs were conquered by Poland in the early eleventh century. They were for a long time not particularly happy with this fact, although the Polish suppressed them, they were never trusted under a single administrator and were kept under close royal supervision. Partially as a consequence, when central authority collapsed the Lusations broke into a plethora of competing statelets, and barely recognized even the nominal authority of the Polish crown. After Casimir reunited the Polish heartland, Poland attacked Lusatia, and systematically destroyed the existing polities. The Lusatian, organized now into a single county, played an important part in the Polish attacks to the southwest following the conquest of Bohemia. When the Poles abandoned their ambitions in the south to attack Denmark, the Counts of Lusatia were left on their own to hold the gains in the southwest; against all expectations, they managed to not only hold, but expand still further into the German statelets. Spared much participation in the Pomeranian and Pomerelian Wars, Lusatia's prosperity became an critical resource for the Polish crown, particularly after the Bohemian revolt. Without the regional and personal divisions that proved fatal in Bohemia, Lusatia met the increased taxation demands with little incident. As the century progressed, the Lusatians became increasingly conscious of the asymmetry of the relationship, and consequently took a firmer stance with the Polish center. Although still technically a part of the Polish state, Lusatia now has its own army and taxation, and little stake in central politics, and should it decide to break away, there seems little chance that Poland could prevent it.

Duchy of Polabia
Capital: Schwerin
Government: Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Polabian Slavic with a large Saxon population; mostly Roman Catholic with a large monastic minority; Polish and Low German speaking
Nation Background: Unlike the other West Slavs, the Abodrite confederacy of Polabian Slavs joined Poland willingly in the tenth century, and consequently always had something of a special administrative status. As central authority weakened, the Polabians were the first to pursue an independent policy. During the period of Polish decentralization, the Polabians pursued a notably energetic and outward-looking, though not very successful, policy. When Casimir of Stettin set about reuniting Poland, the Polabians were his first and greatest obstacle, and were only subdued by the guarantee of continued special status. In the renewed Polish state, the Duchy of Polabia alone maintained a degree of regional autonomy. In the late fourteenth century, being on the front lines of the Polish drive north and west, the Polabians received many of the spoils of that war. Alas, when Polish fortunes turned, Polabia bore the brunt. The long war with Denmark saw Polabia repeatedly despoiled, and the power of the Dukes greatly diminished. And as the Polish center became more preoccupied with events in the heartland, the Polabians were forced to rely ever more on their own means. By default they became increasingly independent of Poland, since Poland no longer cared to issue directions, the Polabian Dukes felt themselves incapable of maintaining their position without Polish backing. By the end of the century, they were in the somewhat unusual position of being devoted vassals of a king that no longer wanted the attention.

Republic of Bohemia
Capital: Kutna Hora
Government: Decentralized Aristocratic Republic
Culture: Czech with heavy Polish influences; small, scattered German populations in the south west; Roman Catholic, small Gaborite minority
Nation Background: Carved out of the wreck of Great Moravia, the Duchy of Bohemia was long closely connected to Poland in the north, as an ally initially, and then later, after Poland outgrew Bohemia, as a client and later still as a directly subordinate duchy. As central power waned in Poland in the thirteenth century, the Dukes of Bohemia charted an increasingly assertive and independent course that culminated in the Bohemian victory over the Bavarian alliance that established Bohemia as, briefly the hegemon of southern Germany. The arrangement was never really accepted by the Germans, though, and strife between the Bohemian overlords and their subjects, as well as Bavaria proper's increasing power, sapped Bohemian strength. The Polish revival brought a final end to the hegemony in the early fourteenth century, and shortly later Polish dynastic claims caused a conflict that led to the conquest of Bohemia by the Poles in the mid fourteenth century. Bohemia remained a part of the Polish kingdom until the fifteenth century. In the aftermath of the Pomerelian War, the constant Polish need of money provoked a revolt of the Bohemian aristocracy. After the failure of reconciliation attempts, the Bohemians, unable to agree on a monarch, established a republican confederacy, drove back Polish royalist armies, and expanded into the southwest. Bohemia has lately stalled, unable to take Prague and unwilling to leave it be, while threats grow internally and on the other borders, but the government and army remain, for now, united and organized.

Kingdom of Poland
Capital: Poznan
Government: Decentralized Feudal Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Polish; Roman Catholic; mostly Polish speaking, with some Saxon, Danish, and Volynian Slavic
Nation Background: The earliest Polish state was formed in the 940s in the Warta basin by Siemowitz. Aligning closely with Bohemia to the south, the Siemowitz quickly conquered the immediately surrounding tribes, and then turned towards West Frankia, where the Polabian Slavs were driving back the distracted Germans. The union with the Abodrite confederacy, achieved in the late tenth century, cemented Poland's status as the dominant power in central Europe, and the other western Slavics were brought under Polish overlordship early in the eleventh century. A succession of uninspired kings, coupled with the growing power of regional interests and Danish incursions from Pomerania, sapped central strength throughout the later twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. This led ultimately to the 1223 Statute of Gniezo, that established an elected monarchy and federal structure in the kingdom, and that led to the virtual end of Poland as a state for nearly a century. In the early fourteenth century, the princes of Stettin parlayed victories over the Danes into a dominant position in Polish politics, and then used that position to seize the throne, repeal the Statute, and crush the ensuing massive reactionary rebellion. As its primary competitors either retrenched, as in Lotharingia, or entered general crisis, as was the case for the Danes, the reinvigorated Polish monarchy launched expansionist campaigns in every direction, and by the turn of the century attained an utterly dominant position in central Europe. The fifteenth century proved far less congenial: defeats against the Lithuanians, the Volynians, and above all in the long, grinding Pomeranian and Pomerelian Wars had a catastrophic impact on central royal resources. The weakened monarchy proved unwilling and unable to hold the outlying territories, and desperate attempts to raise revenue triggered a wave of revolts, most notably in Bohemia. The Polish monarchy now faces an increasingly intransigent nobility as it tries to maintain its position against growing foreign threats.

Kingdom of Hungary
Capital: Esztergom
Government: Theocratic Decentralized Monarchy
Culture: Magyar; Gaborite, with numerous underground Roman Catholic and much smaller Eastern Orthodox populations; mostly Magyar speaking, with small Italian and Slavic minorities
Nation Background: The first Magyar kingdom, formed in the tenth century, was for two hundred years a great power in eastern Europe, easily dominating the northern Balkans and contesting with Lotharingia and Italy for the old Carolingian eastern marches. In the late twelfth century, that Kingdom of Hungary was drawn into a long struggle with the ascendant Roman Empire of the Doukids over Croatia and Transylvania. The Hungarian monarchy, incapable of matching the enormous resources of the Roman state, was gradually ground down, until Roman forces killed the last king and sacked Buda, and the local dukes split from what was left of central authority. The successor principalities, devastated by Roman attempts to secure control and then by the Mongol invasion, spent the fourteenth century as little more than pawns in the Italian-Roman contest in Pannonia, until in 1445 the Duke of Esztergom embraced the heretical sect founded by Gabor Bethlen around the turn of the century. Distracted as they were, neither Rome nor Italy took note of Esztergom's steadily increasing power until it was too late. Esztergom defeated half-hearted Italian and more serious Roman attempts to restore the balance. Riding the wave of prestige after those victories, disciplined and devoted Gaborite militia swept over the Pannonian plain and declared a restored Kingdom of Hungary. Hungary's momentum has since stalled in the face of Roman and Italian opposition, and the Gaborite movement has proved difficult to export, but either obstacle could yet be overcome.

Roman Empire
Capital: Konstantinoupolis
Government: Centralized Administrative Semi-Theocratic Monarchy
Culture: Greek; Turkish majority in Anatolia, significant Slavic, Albanian, Vlach and Bulgarian populations in the northern Balkans; almost entirely Orthodox everywhere but the Anatolian interior, where the population is mostly Muslim; tiny but growing Gaborite minority in the far north; mostly Byzantine Greek speaking, but with various Slavic, Vlach, and Bulgarian dialects prominent in the northern Balkans, and Turkish in Anatolia
Nation Background: The ninth century Roman resurgence came to a screeching halt in the tenth, as the imperial attempts to hold Italy led to a military catastrophe that snowballed into a political crisis. After half a century that saw a dozen emperors come and go and vast tracts of land lost on all fronts, order was restored by the Doukid soldier emperors, who instigated a series of political and military reforms that, though initially painful, led to the general renaissance of the late eleventh and twelfth centuries. Those centuries saw Rome reclaim all the land lost in the tenth century, and then far more. Conquests in the Balkans culminated with the destruction of Hungary, while in the east Roman territory stretched nearly into Palestine. By the mid thirteenth century, Roman planners were realistically contemplating the conquest of the decaying Usfurids. At that moment, the Roman golden age was cut dramatically short, like so many others, by the Mongols. The subsequent obliteration of the Roman military and loss of all the Asiatic possessions put the Romans on the back foot for a century. The situation did not really materially alter until the rise of the Smyrna-based Kantakouzenids in the early fifteenth century. Under the Kantakouzenid dynasty, pressure on the Artuklu Sultanate increased tremendously, and as that sultanate collapsed in the middle of the century Roman forces overran most of Anatolia in little more than a decade. But while the Great Reconquest capped two hundred years of effort, new threats are rising on all the Roman borders. Preserving the recent gains may prove challenging.

Emirate of the Banu Ghaniya
Capital: Barneeq
Government: Decentralized Tribal Monarchy
Culture: Arabic, with various Berber tribal minorities; Ismaili Shiite with large Sunni minority
Nation Background: After the fall of the Fatimids and the end of the brief Zanata overlordship, Cyrenaica and Tripolitania spent the next few centuries passing under the rule of various tribal confederations, most of them clients of their western or eastern neighbours. As Sicilian power waxed, the territories fell gradually into their orbit, and were administered for a time practically as Sicilian provinces. The fall of Sicily, and Egypt's disinclination to focus on the west when more profitable enterprises beckoned, threw Libya into turmoil, as the Sicilian-backed incumbent elites lost power and various alternative power blocks struggled to succeed them. The Banu Ghaniya emerged as the eventual victors in Cyrenaica in the early fifteenth century. Their emirate was initially energetic and powerful, by Libyan standards, and overran Tripolitania shortly afterwards, but the reemergence of Sicilian and Egyptian interest in Libya had a deleterious effect on their fortunes. The Banu Ghaniya have seen Christian efforts systematically undermine their authority, and Sicilians and Egyptians nibble at the frontiers. The emir in Barneeq now has some areas less power than Egyptian merchants, but it is still possible that the Christians could be thrown out.

Kingdom of Egypt
Capital: Alexandria
Government: Administrative Monarchy
Culture: Egyptian Norman ruling class and in most of the Delta; most of the populace outside the Delta, is Egyptian Arabic; Sicilian Catholic among the Normans and upper classes, Hanafi Islam prevalent especially among the lower classes and in Upper Egypt, and Coptics forming the balance; the Egyptian dialect of Sicilian is the language of government, but the majority speaks Arabic, with a few Coptic pockets
Nation Background: After the Fatimid Caliphate was destroyed by Turkish invaders, Egypt passed through a succession of short-lived Turkish dynasties until a native revolt overthrew the last and established the Arabic Usfurid dynasty. This ruled Egypt, initially with some distinction, for the better part of a century and a half. By the thirteenth century, however, Usfurid rule was weakening, as their slave soldiers became an increasingly active force in internal politics and Sicilian ascendancy in the eastern Mediterranean diminished the value of the traditional Italian alliance. The disastrous Usfurid response to a Sicilian raid in force on Alexandria precipitated the collapse of the Usfurid state. Egypt descended into warlordism. The Normans, finding themselves in a vacuum, first shored up their control in Alexandria and then, slowly and with only nominal central backing, began to conquer the various Egpytian splinters. It took three generations, but eventually the Norman Admiralty of Egypt secured the whole of Egypt. Always practically independent of Sicily, the Italian conquest of Sicily severed the few ties there were, and Egypt stuck out on its own. After a few initial scuffles over the authority of the newly royal admirals, a fairly harmonious administration was developed and Egypt gradually began asserting itself in foreign affairs. The prime direction of expansion was to the north, where Egypt turned the inherited commercial position in Crete into political control, persuaded the orphaned Cypriots to accept Egyptian lordship, and fought and won a succession of naval scuffles with Rome. The reestablishment of Sicily complicated matters for the Egyptian crown, but the two Norman states have been mostly allied for the last century, cooperating against Rome and Italy, and the potential flashpoints have been avoided. The last half of the fifteenth century saw the beginning of a change of direction for Egypt. Her focus began to turn away from the Mediterranean towards the Red Sea and beyond. Egyptian presence in Ethiopia and Yemen has been growing steadily, and there is potential for great gain in the Indian Ocean, but at the same time the old positions in the Mediterranean are coming under increasing threat from the resurgent Romans.

Chobanid Empire
Capital: Antakya
Government: Centralized Administrative Monarchy
Culture: Syrian Turk with reasonably large Arabic and Turkmen minorities, and smaller Kurdish and Armenian minorities; almost entirely Hanafi Sunni, with some Orthodox Christians and Hanbali Muslims; mostly Artuklu Turkish-speaking, with various other Turkish languages scattered about, a large Arabic-speaking population and smaller Kurdish and Armenian populations
Nation Background: The Turco-Mongol Chobanids have been a presence in Syria since Amir Choban, founder of the dynasty, was given responsibility for the administration of Antioch by Temur in the immediate aftermath of the Mongol conquest. They were for generations loyal servants of greater powers, but when the Artuklu sultanate collapsed under Roman and Persian pressure, the Chobanids at last struck out on their own, first securing their Syrian hinterland, and then rapidly suppressing the warring splinters of the sultanate. Having in that process constructed an admirably efficient state apparatus and disciplined army, the Chobanids have since brought the Roman reconquest in Anatolia to a dead stop and driven the Persians out of Mesopotamia. Persia seems to be weakening with every year, and the Romans face many other threats, so it is conceivable that the Chobanids could leapfrog both and become the Middle Eastern great power.

Kingdom of Georgia
Capital: Tblisi
Government: Feudal Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Kakheti Georgian with minor Turkish and Armenian and stronger Greek influences, excepting a Greek majority in Pontos, a Turkish and Persian majority in Shirvan, and an Alan majority in the north Caucasus; mostly Eastern Orthodox Christian, but with significant Islamic populations in Shirvan and much smaller populations among the Alans
Nation Background: Georgia has survived the centuries by managing always to be on the winning side: first backing the Doukids in their campaigns in Anatolia and beyond, and then switching allegiance to the Mongols of Temur shortly before Ctesiphon, and receiving Pontos for her trouble. The late fourteenth and early fifteenth century saw Georgia in the unfamiliar position of possessing local supremacy, which she used to conquer Shirvan and subjugate many of the tribes north of the Caucasus. The situation is no longer so congenial: the resurgent Romans covet Pontos, the Persians Shirvan, and the Horde looms menacingly to the north. But Georgia has been here before, and survival is the great Bagrationi talent.

Ardabilid Empire
Capital: Qazvin
Government: Decentralized Aristocratic Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Persian, with a large Turkish minority and Pashtuns in the east; Dhahabite Islamic, with some small, underground Sunni populations; mostly Persian-speaking
Nation Background: Persia was dominated for centuries by Turks and Mongols. The revival of native Persian power began with the extreme fundamentalist and anti-Mongol teachings of ibn al-Dhahabi in the thirteenth century. His followers were suppressed by the Temurid Khans, but survived in odd corners, most notably around Ardabil. There opportunistic local Persian elites allied with the sect and raised a rebellion against the Khans. The emirate thus founded was the first crack in Temurid power, and first fought off the Khanate's attacks and then, as the vast Turco-Mongol edifice crumbled, expanded into Iran . The Ardabilids dominated the immediate post-Mongol world, as fanatical Dhahabite soldiers overran much of the old Temurid domains and the Artuklu Sultanate only just held Mesopotamia. The collapse of the Artuklu Sultanate under Persian and Roman pressure marked their high-water mark; since then, concerns have mounted for the Ardabilid Shahs. The once feared army has been repeatedly defeated, regionalism is on the rise, the Dhahabites are growing dissatisfied with the Shahs, and ground has been lost in every direction.

Principality of Friland
Capital: Torvo
Government: Decentralized Semi-Parliamentary Monarchy
Culture: Danish with heavy Finnish influences; Finnish population in most of the interior; almost entirely monastic Catholic, with a small Orthodox minority; the dominant language is a Norse dialect with many Finnish loanwords, while the Finns of the interior speak Finnish, oddly enough
Nation Background: The settlement-cum-conquest of the Finns had, after the initial assault on the Tavasts, little to do with the broader Baltic Crusades, being instead largely propelled by individual Danish adventurers acting independently of the crown. This resulted in the curious development of the territory compared to the rest of the Danish empire. The frontier culture that developed made practically a cult of the freeman, and never looked kindly on interference from abroad; on this point the Danish monarchs, concerned with the far richer and more populated areas of their empire, were happy to oblige. Thus never a particularly integral part of the Danish empire, the freelanders broke away entirely relatively early in the decline of the empire, though the precise date varied in different parts of the country. Initially the country possessed virtually nothing in the way of government; this made it an easy target for the vengeful Novgorodians, who conquered the land in the mid fourteenth century. The freelanders proved no more willing to do the Prince of Novgorod's bidding than they had been to do the King of Denmark's, and after a few years of chronically rebellious rule from Novgorod succeeded in throwing out the Russian presence. This time, the freelanders established a monarchy, but with its power carefully checked by the assembly of freemen. Small and generally disinterested in adventurism, Friland has since made little mark on broader affairs, only defending itself from the occasional Swedish or Novgorodian attack, but Friland is feeling increasing pressure to align more closely with Denmark, which would surely provoke an attack from Novgorod.

Principality of Veliky Novgorod
Capital: Veliky Novgorod
Government: Decentralized Mercantile Semi-Parliamentary Monarchy
Culture: Russian with residual Danish influences, and Sami and Ugric peoples in the hinterland; Novgorodian Orthodox, with paganism still prevalent among the Ugrics of the empire; mostly Novgorodian Slavic speaking, with Sami, Ugric and minimal Baltic minorities
Nation Background: As the great prize of the early conflicts between Chernigov and Kiev, Novgorod played the contenders against each other to its own gain for a time. But at the end of the eleventh century Novgorod badly overplayed its hand, and the loss of its independence was prevented only by opportunistic Danish support. This episode inaugurated a long alliance between Novgorod and Denmark. The alliance was initially beneficial to Novgorod, as, safeguarded by Danish military might, it could focus on growing and exploiting its vast northern empire, but as Danish power increased Novgorod grew to resemble a client more than an ally. In the early fourteenth century, the merchants and aristocracy of Novgorod revolted against the Danish-backed ruling prince and installed in his place the fabulously wealthy fur-trader Yaroslav Kalita. The Danes, preoccupied with their internal struggles, could do nothing to maintain their position, and accepted Kalita's elevation in exchange for commercial guarantees. The Yaroslavovichi, freed from the Danish alliance, pursued an aggressive strategy towards their western neighbors while using diplomacy and money to try to keep their eastern borders pacified. While initially successful, Novgorod fell on hard times later in the century, as the Order pushed them back in Estonia and the Finnish Danes successfully revolted. Meanwhile, Nizhny Novgorod's power was growing in the old principality of Chernigov. Novgorod was forced, in the fifteenth century, to spend ever increasing amounts of blood and treasure securing its empire and fighting to maintain its position in the upper Volga. Novgorod appeared to be gradually losing the struggle for dominance when the appearance of the Horde gave Nizhny Novgorod better things to worry about, although Novgorod's relief was tempered by the worrying implications of the contemporary Danish revival. For the moment, Novgorod seems secure, but the contest with Nizhny Novgorod has only been placed on hold, not resolved, and some sort of conflict with Denmark seems inevitable.
 
Spoiler even more descriptions :
Order of Saint Knut
Capital: Lyndanisse
Government: Theocratic Bureaucratic Monastic Order
Culture: Danish and Ost Danskere in the Order itself and in the cities and garrison towns; Chuds, Balts and Russians in the countryside; officially Monastic Catholic, but pagan and Orthodox practices survive in the countryside; Danish is the language of the Order, but the populace mostly speaks Ugric or Baltic dialects.
Nation Background: Several militant monastic orders appeared during the Baltic Crusades. During the period of Danish greatness, they were generally not very important, as the Danish state handled administration and the orders had a habit of interfering in the orderly running of the Danish empire. As the Danish empire waned, however, the center delegated more and more authority to the regional powers in the empire, the orders prominent among them. By and large, this did not go very well for the monastics; they were incapable of navigating the difficult political situation in dying Danish empire and were mostly destroyed during the great pagan revival in the fourteenth century. The Canutians alone survived as a unified force, initially largely simply by virtue of their center being in the comparatively stable areas around Lyndanisse. Faced with growing turmoil and pagan and Russian aggression, Erik of Jamt, master of the Order in the mid fourteenth century, took drastic action. The Order was remade as a strictly military, rigidly disciplined, and entirely Danish body. Seeing itself as the sole defender of Christianity and Danish influence on the far shores of the Baltic, the completely militarized order managed, after a century of nearly continuous warfare, to subjugate the Chuds, drive back the Russians and Balts, and establish control over a wide swathe of the old Danish empire. The Order has recently come under increasing criticism from Ramsey for perceived shortcomings, and the reappearance of Denmark as a force has complicated relations with that kingdom, but for now, at least, the Order seems finally secure.

Duke's Lithuania
Capital: Kaunas
Ruler: Grand Duke Zygimantas
Culture: Lithuanian, with residual elements of various other Baltic groups, minor Slavic populations and a large population of Ost Danskere; Monastic Catholic, paganism still a force in the countryside but mostly underground; mostly Lithuanian-speaking, with some minor Baltic languages strewn around, Polish and Volynian among those respective groups, and Ost Dansk among the Ost Danskere.
Nation Background: The Lithuanians emerged from their early obscurity to become a a favored Danish client in the late twelfth century. The real beginning of the present Lithuanian state was in the mid thirteenth century, when the Danes delegated significant local authority to the Dukes of Kaunas in an attempt to preserve order in the Baltics. The Dukes of Kaunas stayed tied to Denmark longer than any other Baltic client, a policy that saw them receive, especially towards the end, substantial resources from the Danish center, which played a significant part in the early growth of the state. As the Danish empire collapsed entirely in the fourteenth century, the Lithuanians, although they did take part in the general pagan revival, alone of the successor states sought an accommodation with the Ost Danes. The alliance with the Ost Danes and the takeover of residual Danish royal interests gave the Lithuanian dukes greater resources than their competitors, which they used to subdue a large portion of the Baltic territories by the middle of the century. The Lithuanian dukes then turned east, where the Russian principalities had been thrown into turmoil by the end of the Horde. By the end of the century, Lithuanian arms had conquered Polotsk and Pinsk and established a loose hegemony over most of the rest of the princes of western Russia. A generation's pause ensued, as Lithuania suffered revolts and fought a series of inconclusive wars with the Order, but then the steady march to the southeast resumed, faster than ever. Lithuania's upward progress was interrupted in the late 1470s, however, by a succession struggle between the young Zygimantas and his older, more experienced and more popular uncle Algirdas. The struggle quickly acquired ethnic, regional, and above all religious overtones, as Zygimantas was a Christian. Things culminated in a Danish intervention on Zygimantas' side, ostensibly to assure the victory of Christianity. This intervention secured the throne for Zygimantas, but drove many of the Lithuanian powerful into the arms of the exiled Algirdas, who established a court in the east and detached most of the Lithuanian empire from Zygimantas. For the nearly two decades since Algirdas and Zygimantas have eyed each other warily, neither powerful enough to displace the other, each waiting for an opportunity to strike.

Prince's Lithuania
Capital: Minskas
Culture: Lithuanian ruling class over a largely Volynian population; Paganism dominates among the Lithuanians, Volynian Orthodoxy among the Slavs.
Nation Background: Denmark's intervention in the Lithuanian civil war secured both Algirdas' defeat, as Danish troops swung the military balance against him, and his survival, as large sections of the Lithuanian nobility followed him into exile, unwilling to follow a Danish puppet. Fleeing east after his defeat at Kaunas, Algirdas established an exile court at Minsk, fought off Zygimantas' attack, and declared himself prince of Lithuania. Algirdas managed to outcompete Zygimantas and gain the loyalty of most of the broader Lithuanian empire. In the near two decades since, Algirdas has tried to keep the empire together, with middling success, while always staying focused on Zygimantas.

Principality of Polotsk
Capital: Polotsk
Government: Centralized Feudal Monarchy
Culture: Volynian Slavic with heavy Lithuanian influences; a largish Ost Dansk population and a smaller Lithuanian one concentrated in the western half, and a Russian minority in the northeast; mostly Novgorodian Orthodox, with Monastic Catholicism among the Ost Danes and some paganism among the Lithuanians;
Nation Background: Polotsk was formed as an appanage of Kiev in the eleventh century, and conquered by Danes pushing up the Dvina in the twelfth. A native principality was reestablished in the late thirteenth century, and turned east towards Russia. Unlike the other Russian principalities, Polotsk remained outside the Mongol system, and free from Mongol domination, did well for a time, conquering Smolensk and establishing quite a credible dominion in western Russia by the early fourteenth century. The sudden fall of the Horde in the middle of the century kicked off a chaotic scramble for position in post-Mongol Russia, and Polotsk came out of it severely weakened, defeated by Novgorod and losing Smolensk to revolt. While Polotsk was focused on eastern affairs, Lithuania in the west was rapidly gaining in power, and Polotsk came under increasing Lithuanian pressure starting from the late fourteenth century, and culminating in the conquest of the principality by Lithuanian arms in 1396. Polotsk spent the next eighty years as a component of the Lithuanian empire, permitted more autonomy than most but strictly subordinated to the Lithuanian Duke. When the Lithuanian civil war broke out, Polotsk supported Zygimantas. When it became clear that Zygimantas had neither the intention nor the means of contributing to the city's defense, the native boyars expelled the Lithuanian administration, elected one of their own as prince, and resisted Algirdas' seige on their own. Polotsk has since established a small but moderately powerful principality along the Dvina, while being heavily courted by both sides in the Lithuanian struggle, but should that struggle ever end in victory for one contestant or the other, it seems clear that their first action would be to attempt to reclaim Polotsk.

Metropolitanate of Kiev
Capital: Kiev
Government: Centralized Theocratic Bishopric
Culture: Volynian Slavic; Kievan Orthodox; almost wholly Volynian speaking
Nation Background: Kiev was the center of the first united Rus state around the turn of the eleventh century, and the center of the Orthodox Church in Russia. The territory of Kiev was split early in the eleventh century into principalities at Chernigov, controlling the northeast, and Kiev, controlling the southwest. The political center of the latter rapidly removed to Volynia, and Kiev itself declined as the principalities fought over it. It remained, however, the center of the Orthodox Church, even after the Chernigov church broke away. After the Mongol invasion broke Chernigov and weakened Volynia, their ability and willingness to exert power in Kiev declined still further, and the Metropolitans, allying with the local notables, assumed gradually increasing authority for civil administration in the city and its hinterland. After the fall of the Horde, the Metropolitans operated as an independent power in the region, before being conquered by the pagan Lithuanians in the 1420s. While the Lithuanians successfully pacified a series of Metropolitans, the Russians who filled the lower ranks of Church administration were never particularly inclined to accept pagan rule, and a low level of rebellious activity and conspiracy was normal for Kiev. The Lithuanian civil war gave new impetus to these efforts. In 1480 the young Metropolitan Isidore arrived from Constantinople and immediately, to no small shock on the part of the Romans, repudiated the agreements with the Lithuanians, joined forces with the disaffected Russians, and raised a civic militia. With covert Volynian backing, Isidore resisted a halfhearted counterstrike from Algirdas, and has since established a fairly effective theocratic government over a wide area of Kiev's hinterland. Without luck, however, the Kievan Metropolitanate may prove shortlived; Volynia cannot be trusted, and should Lithuania be reunited the winner will doubtless come against Kiev sooner or later.

Principality of Volynia
Capital: Vladimir
Government: Centralized Federal Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Volynian Slavic, with some Poles in the northwest, Vlachs in the south, Tatars on the lower left bank of the Dneister; largely Kievan Orthodox, with a small Catholic and Orthodox minority; mostly Volynian speaking
Nation Background: Volynia was a possession of the Princes of Kiev after Kievan Rus split in the eleventh century. It quickly became one of the three most important principalities of the rota system. Changing Mediterranean trade patterns in the late eleventh and twelfth centuries increased the commercial prosperity of Volynia and the power of the Volynian princes increased accordingly. As the prosperity of Kiev declined, the seat of the Grand Principality removed in the middle of the twelfth century to Volynia. The principality turned gradually away from eastern affairs and the struggle with Chernigov in the later twelfth century, as ties with the Roman Empire strengthened and Volynia became enmeshed in the Roman wars with Hungary. In contrast to Chernigov, the Volynian rota system continued to function quite well into the thirteenth century, due to the proportionally greater power of the Grand Prince, the state consequently maintained a high degree of unity throughout that time. When the Mongol army appeared on Volynia's borders, the Grand Prince , having witnessed the annihilation of the rota principality of Pereyaslavl, submitted to the Mongol khan, and Volynian arms formed an integral part of the Mongol invasion of the European Roman Empire. Having entered the Mongol empire by submission, rather than conquest as with the other Russian principalities, the Grand Princes of Volynia were favored by the Mongol khans, turned away from European affairs, and were granted successively greater authority over the eastern principalities, until it appeared that the old dream of reuniting Russia was within reach. However, at the beginning of the fourteenth century, Volynia, unwisely assuming tacit Mongol approval, made a dramatic power play in the north east. The furious Horde response to this transgression broke the power of the Grand Princes and virtually depopulated large areas of Volynia, and the various ex-rota principalities went their separate ways. Once its economy recovered, which took the better part of a century, Volynia began a political revival. Prince Mikhail inherited Galicia in the early fifteenth century, granting the revival further impetus. Volynia lost out to Lithuana in the east, but had better luck in the south, subjugating the northern Vlach polities and reaching an understanding with the Tatar confederations of the western steppe. Expansion stalled in the later half of the century, as the Horde arrived on the steppe, and Volynia became increasingly involved with Roman affairs. The composite Volynian state is somewhat unwieldy, and conflicting regional interests are beginning to take a toll, but for the moment, at least, the authority of the Princes in Vladimir is not seriously questioned.

Principality of Tver
Capital: Tver
Government: Centralized Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Russian; Novgorodian Orthodox; almost entirely Novgorodian Slavic speaking
Nation Background: Tver was formed relatively late in the lifetime of the Grand Principality of Chernigov, and as as a minor appanage, rather than as a part of the rota. Capable leadership brought prosperity and power to the principality, but its Princes lacked dynastic legitimacy and so never ascended to the highest position of the state, even as the orderly rota began to break down in the thirteenth century. As a consequence, the Princes of Tver were forced to work outside the established forms, becoming willing accomplices of first Novgorod and then the Mongols. With Novgorodian silver, they bought a high position in the Mongol order of things, and for a time at last had a virtual monopoly on the Grand Principality. However, their position was always dependent exclusively on Mongol backing rather than on the strength of their patrimony or dynastic legitimacy. When the Horde collapsed in the 1360s, Tver for a time soldiered on, but following Grand Prince Daniil's death in 1376, Tver lost its hold on Vladimir, lost out in the interminable dynastic struggles over the succession, and by the middle of the next century were effectively a non-factor in Russian politics, as the Novgorods struggled for influence over the upper Volga principalities. As Nizhny Novgorod gained the upper hand in that struggle, Tver fell gradually into its orbit, and by 1470s was virtually a domain of the Grand Principality. At the end of the decade, however, two occurrences rapidly changed Tver's status: the throne passed to the brilliant and ambitious Vasily Ivanovich, and the attack of the Horde precipitated a crisis in Nizhny Novgorod's politics. Vasily first exploited the Grand Prince's desperate need for troops to extract numerous concessions, then used Novgorodian silver to forge an alliance with the Princes of Yaroslavl and Moscow, and finally explicitly rejected the authority and legitimacy of the Grand Prince and, with Yaroslavl and Moscow, defeated Nizhny Novgorod's counterstrike. Since then, Tver has developed a great deal of influence in Yaroslavl and Moscow, and increasingly established itself as an independent player along the upper Volga. Tver remains less powerful than the Novgorods, but Vasily is still alive and energetic, and while Nizhny must keep an eye always on the Horde, and Veliky must watch the Danes, Tver remains largely free of entanglements.

Principality of Yaroslavl
Capital: Yaroslavl
Government: Decentralized Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Russian; Novgorodian Orthodox; almost entirely Novgorodian Slavic speaking
Nation Background: Yaroslavl was a rota principality in Chernigov, albeit low on the ladder, and was one of the last such principalities to remain in the system. In the early days of the Mongol dominion, Yaroslavl, having escaped a sack, did well, and its princes contested with Tver for the Grand Principality. Tver, of course, won that contest, but Yaroslavl's power remained intact, and it became a center for discontent with Tver's rule. When Mongol rule ended, it was Yaroslavl that organized the coalition that broke Tver's hold on the Grand Principality, and Yaroslavl that replaced Tver. However, without Mongol backing, the Grand Principality became little more than a prestige position. The struggle for real power was between its constituent principalities, and there Yaroslavl lost out. Sacked by Nizhny Novgorod in 1389, Yaroslavl declined precipitously, as power shifted south and east. As Nizhny Novgorod's power waxed, Yaroslavl fell under its influence. For most of the century, the Princes of Yaroslavl ineffectually attempted to navigate between the Novgorods and secure some independence. In the 1470s, Yaroslavl fell under the influence of Vasili of Tver, and allied with him managed to throw off Nizhny Novgorod's influence. However, Yaroslavl's renewed independence is precarious, dependent on the delicate balance between the Novgorod and Tver.

Principality of Moscow
Capital: Moscow
Government: Centralized Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Russian; Novgorodian Orthodox; almost entirely Novgorodian Slavic speaking
Nation Background: Moscow is a young principality. The city was founded only after the Mongol attack, and, until the Prince of Suzdal in the late fourteenth century established it as an appanage for one of his sons, had a wholly unremarkable history. Suzdal fell upon hard times shortly afterwards, and was conquered by Nizhny Novgorod, and, while Moscow remained titularly independent, thereafter its princes by and large meekly did the bidding of the Grand Prince. In the 1470s that changed, however, as the weak Prince was overthrown by a boyar conspiracy (engineered, some muttered darkly, by Vasili of Tver). His replacement promptly refused Novgorod's demands for troops, and then turned to Tver for aid against the Grand Prince's reprisal. With Novgorod defeated by the alliance of Moscow, Yaroslavl and Tver, Moscow, although comparatively weak, has taken an aggressive stance towards the Grand Principality and, alliance and Novgorod's propaganda notwithstanding, carefully maintained its independence from Tver's influence.

Grand Principality of Nizhny Novgorod
Capital: Nizhny Novgorod
Government: Aristocratic Monarchy
Culture: Russian with significant Tatar influences and a large Tatar minority on the steppe; Novgorodian Orthodox, with some Turkic paganism and Islam among the Tatars; Novgorodian Slavic and Tatar speaking
Nation Background: In the early eleventh century, the possessions of the Prince of Kiev came to be split into two principalities, with, broadly speaking, the territories northeast of the Dneiper falling to the Prince of Chernigov. Despite much rhetoric on the subject, and many attempts by one party or the other reunite the Rus, the split proved permanent. During the twelfth century, the center of the Chernigov principality shifted north and east, culminating in the shift of the seat of the Prince to Vladimir in the middle of the century. The rota system broke down, regionalism consequently increased, and by the middle of the thirteenth century, the Grand Principality of Vladimir had virtually ceased to exist as a unitary polity. It was saved, strangely enough, by the Mongols, who saw the Principality as the best means of maintaining order among their Russian conquests, and consequently provided significant backing to the Grand Prince's authority. When, after a century of Mongol rule, the Horde collapsed in the 1360s, Vladimir was thrown into flux. A succession of princes fought over the Grand Principality, and with both the rota system and the Horde gone, the search for an alternate source of legitimacy became paramount. Nizhny Novgorod, always among the closest of the Russian states to the steppe, sought an accommodation with a series of Horde successor states. None proved especially long lasting, but they legitimized Novgorod's claim of the Grand Principality, and provided military support. With Tatar military support, Nizhny Novgorod overcame and conquered its immediate rivals and turned to the west. There it engaged in a protracted struggle for influence over the Upper Volga with Veliky Novgorod, in which the new gradually gained the upper hand over the old. The appearance of the Horde on Nizhny Novgorod's borders in the 1460s, however, provoked a crisis in the state's leadership; they had based their claims to legitimacy on Tatar support, and now here was an honest-to-goodness horde. Relations between the two powers broke down in the 1470s, as Tokhta, continuing his attempt to reinstate the Mongol order, demanded tribute from Novgorod and turned his army towards the Khanate of Perm, once Novgorod's benefactor, now virtual client. Novgorod was victorious, barely, in the ensuring war, but in the aftermath saw its influence in the Upper Volga collapse and Veliky Novgorod clamp down on Nizhny's inroads in the north. Since then, Novgorod has stagnated under the ineffectual rule of Vladimir II, as central power has declined and the appanage principalities, once almost removed, have asserted themselves. But Nizhny Novgorod is still powerful, and with the right leadership still has the inside track to dominate Russia.

Tohkta Horde
Capital: Samarkand
Government: Decentralized Autocratic Khanate
Culture: Mishmash of various Turkic, Mongol, and a few residual Iranian elements; officially Hanafi Islamic, but plenty of pagans, Orthodox Christians and some Buddhists among the populace; lingua france is Jochid Turkish, but most people speak various Turkic dialects
Nation Background: The vast Mongol conquests of the thirteenth century were divided into subordinate hordes. Persia and Mesopotamia went to Temur's descendants, Russia to Guyuk's, and Central Asia to Jochi. Jochi's was the shortest-lived, falling into chaos around the end of the thirteenth century, and eventually divided between the Golden Horde of Guyuk and the Temurids. The Golden Horde was next. Devastated by plague, impoverished by the shift of trade routes away from the Black Sea, and under pressure from the Temurids, the Golden Horde spiraled into civil war in the 1360s, and by the end of the decade had ceased to exist as any sort of unified entity. In its place on the Russian steppe were a shifting patchwork of lesser Tatar khanates, none powerful enough to compel the others to submit. Central Asia then passed completely under the Temurids, who were themselves increasingly dominated by their Turkish servants, and were overthrown entirely by the Artuklu shortly thereafter. The Temurid pretenders fled to Central Asia, where without Persian resources they proved incapable of maintaining control, while the Artuklu, preoccupied with the Ardabilids, never attempted to expand int Central Asia. As in Russia, a variety of small, feuding post-Mongol kingdoms appeared in Central Asia. Half a dozen short-lived empires came and went in the space of little more than half a century. That situation persisted until the 1440s, when the brilliant young Mongol general Tokhta overthrew the last of the Temurids, who by that time ruled little more than Samarkand itself. Tokhta then ruthlessly refashioned the Temurids army and in less than twenty years systematically conquered the other kingdoms of Central Asia. Having secured a sizable power base, Tokhta's first inclination was to claim the Temurid mantle and march against Persia. Against the Ardabilids, however, he had little success. Checked in the south, he instead turned west and north, onto the steppe. There he had found more success, and by the late 1470s had conquered most of the splinter khanates, save Perm, under the protection of Nizhny Novgorod. When Tokhta came for Perm, it precipitated a war with the Russians, and he was fought to a standstill. After being stymied by Novgorod, Tokhta, now in his seventies, abandonded expansionism, having mostly reached the limits of expansion anyway, and turned to erecting a proper state to govern his vast empire. The peace imposed by Tokhta brought prosperity back to a vast swathe of territory. The trade routes across the steppe and through the Central Asian emporia, and buoyed by trade revenues Tokhta suppressed local interests and created a fairly unitary state. Tokhta, by then in his eighties, died in 1495; his grandson and chosen successor Mamai has so far proved a capable administrator of his grandfather's state, but has not yet been tested by external conflict, and it remains to be seen whether he can hold his vast domains together in the long run.


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I can't wait for you to start that nes. How are you doing reservations or something akin to that? Iberia and China certainly look intriguing.
 
Amazing.

I would play, although probably as a minor nation. Don't want to screw the game up by taking a major nation and mess it up.
 
Definitely and enthusiastically in; probably interested in England.

I actually printed all that out to read it, all 12 pages of it. :)
 
Man Frisia, Italy, all those little states in France...so much Fun though really leaning to Frisia.
 
Well, you know that I'm interested and in what. :p Good to see this out there, mang.
I actually printed all that out to read it, all 12 pages of it. :)
Moi aussi.
 
Thanks guys. I expect I'll assign nations the same way Dachs did for DaNES II, which is to say that I'll take applications and then assign nations at the end of the preview. I think it's fairer than letting people just reserve things.
Could you extrapolate on those religious differences?
An excellent idea. A quick, and rough breakdown would be
Monastics: Run by monastic orders, though they have by now proliferated beyond the original communal model; so long as a group has a rule on file in Ramsey and follows it, they count. Bishops are uniformly monastics. Headed by the Archabbot of Ramsey Abbey, which is sort of a hyper-Cluny. Officially recognizes Papal authority, but, due to the hardline stance against simony, considers every Pope for the last five hundred years or so to be illegitimate.
Roman Catholics: Doctrinally more or less your typical Roman Catholic church, but the Pope is an appointee of the Italian Emperor, and the Church apparatus in the Med has been for a long time virtually an arm of the Italian state. The Polish branch, while nominally subject to Rome, is practically a national Polish church; looks quite a bit like the Gallic church, really
Sicilian Catholics: The Sicilian branch of the Catholic church. Caesaropapist and headed by the Prince of Sicily, based largely on an ambiguously worded grant of legatine authority a few centuries back. Has lots of superficially Arabic and Greek influences (architecture, aesthetics, giving mass in Arabic, that sort of thing), that have led the Roman Catholics to label them crypto-Islamic heretics, but is actually more or less orthodox doctrinally.
Gaborites: An actually heretical offshoot of Catholicism. Initially based around a rejection of the heavily politicized Roman church, influenced to a certain extent by monastic ideals, and originally mostly just differed on the role of the Emperor in the church hierarchy. Has since developed ideas on the importance of the community of believers, strict separation of secular and religious authority, and rejection of some Catholic rituals/excesses; generally looks a bit Protestant at this point.
 
Looks quite good. I would play, but cannot both play and moderate. :(
 
I guess I might as well confirm interest in Saragossa before some jerk decides it looks like an appealing polity. And yes, a breakdown of Islam would be good.
 
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