Rebuild of Revolution [Yet Another World-building Thread]

The war was a century and a half ago like Sonereal said. It has almost no relevance to the geopolitical situation of today.

In response to aggressive chinese policies, the EPAC is claiming settlement of the coast in between the Inner Dominion and Korea, up to 300 miles (3 provinces) inland from the coast.
 
1833- The War of the Nile ended with an exchange of territories and Egyptian reparations.

1843- Kuwait leaves the League.

1843- The comet impacts.

1845- Kuwait invades Egypt and seizes Syria in return for lack of forthcoming reparations.

1846- Earthquake swallows Kuwait proper for their sins.

1846- Nephew of the Emperor breaks the siege of Vancouver by the common people rioting for food, as Admiral of the 1st fleet.

1847- Order collapses in Seattle and Canada as the harvests fail and massed starvation begins.

1849- The Citadel of the Emperor on Vancouver island falls, and the royal family is murdered and their bodies defiled.

1850- The League of Urun is declared defunct by the Nephew of the last emperor. He has found refuge on Hawaii and constantly leads foraging raids on islands of the pacific.

1856- On an excursion to Japan the Nephew contacts what is left of the old government and manages to establish the core of Japanese territory.

1858- After the swearing of fealty of Melanesia the Empire of the Pacific is proclaimed.

1870- Overpopulation in Japan forces massed settling of Mainland Asia, mostly in the Vladiovostok area. Settling however remains sparse.

1901- The world's first Ironclad is created in the world's shipbuilding capital, Edo (Tokyo renamed to its older form).

1904- Japan is formally divided into 4 'colonies' with autonomic authority. Shipyards are formally under 50/50 ownership of Japanese/Hawaiian Companies with respective government backing though.

1911- Recolonization of the west coast of the USA begins.

1918- The aluetian islands are claimed.

1921- Settling of the former Qing lands begin.

1935- The War of the Dragon against China begins.

1939- The disastrous Battle of Shanghai ends after 2 weeks of maneuvering for position and minor skirmishes climaxing in a deadly battle. The Army of Japan is decimated as a fighting force. From now on the Navy in EPAC is the most prestigious branch. The battle wipes out a full generation of Japanese.

1941- The war ends and the Sino-Japanese hatred of each other increases.

1950- The first Machine Gun of the Hawaiian army. A push to install these in defensive fortifications on beaches on all owned islands begins.

1960- Settlements appear on the pacific coast of Russia ever more north.

1961- Taiwan asks to join the Empire. They are accepted.

1989- The first dreadnought of the Pacific navy is produced.

1991- An airplane research program begins for the military.

1996- Diplomatic incident with the Chinese. Diplomatic ties cut.

1997- Present Day.

And here ends the brief history of The Pacific.
 
The war was a century and a half ago like Sonereal said. It has almost no relevance to the geopolitical situation of today.

In response to aggressive chinese policies, the EPAC is claiming settlement of the coast in between the Inner Dominion and Korea, up to 300 miles (3 provinces) inland from the coast.

Are you trying to limit against the Inner Dominion? Because there is no need for you to be aggressive towards us, especially by threatening to claim Chinese lands.

Our notes were to ensure that Chinese territories are Chinese or at the least not of none-Chinese powers. None of China will be set a colony of outside powers (Taiwan being the exception) and we will hence set all of China (barring Taiwan) as part of our claimant.

They will not be a colony: China will be unified, rebuild strong and orderly as was the case pre-war. Once China is united we can focus fully on once again being the world's workshop.

China is strong in its oneness.

Also I do not recognise the false timeline, especially for its lack of co-operation with the player of China and for its deliberate attempt to insult China.
 
Colonies automatically send funds to the motherland in the form of tribute.

I was telling him to not ask for money over what I usually pay. I may be a colony but I am thousands of miles away, so I'm not giving any extra cent to the homeland.
 
I disagree with someone having such a far flung colonial empire when the world is just finished recovering from an apocalypse and would prefer if he stuck to one colonial theatre instead of three.
 
I disagree with someone having such a far flung colonial empire when the world is just finished recovering from an apocalypse and would prefer if he stuck to one colonial theatre instead of three.

You're ruining my vibe, amigo! You sound like a hornied pinko sometimes.
 
The war was a century and a half ago like Sonereal said. It has almost no relevance to the geopolitical situation of today.

In response to aggressive chinese policies, the EPAC is claiming settlement of the coast in between the Inner Dominion and Korea, up to 300 miles (3 provinces) inland from the coast.

fist-bump.png


Are you trying to limit against the Inner Dominion? Because there is no need for you to be aggressive towards us, especially by threatening to claim Chinese lands.

Our notes were to ensure that Chinese territories are Chinese or at the least not of none-Chinese powers. None of China will be set a colony of outside powers (Taiwan being the exception) and we will hence set all of China (barring Taiwan) as part of our claimant.

They will not be a colony: China will be unified, rebuild strong and orderly as was the case pre-war. Once China is united we can focus fully on once again being the world's workshop.

China is strong in its oneness.

Also I do not recognise the false timeline, especially for its lack of co-operation with the player of China and for its deliberate attempt to insult China.

Chinese ambitions for lands which are far from its current borders and which have no relevance to Chinese politics today are irrelevant. You cannot reserve territories which were formerly part of the IDC, and especially insecure border regions. Tibet and Xinjiang are not Chinese, they are effectively empty territories by now, and they will be settled by Roman settlers.
 
I was telling him to not ask for money over what I usually pay. I may be a colony but I am thousands of miles away, so I'm not giving any extra cent to the homeland.

You do realise he can revoke his acceptance of your colony status, thus preventing you from playing in the area at all? :p

Colonial players do not hold the cards in this world. They bring a pistol to an ICBM fight.
 
You do realise he can revoke his acceptance of your colony status, thus preventing you from playing in the area at all? :p

Colonial players do not hold the cards in this world. They bring a pistol to an ICBM fight.

I wouldn't go that far. I would say a gunboat to a dreadnought fight. Enough colonies revolting at once can still cause a severe headache.

Nonetheless Tani is right in principle.
 
No, that implies the colony has a standing. By Sonereal's rules, a colony cannot exist in the first place without a player's approval. Ergo, for the formative phase of the game, the mother country holds all the cards 100%.

After the player joins they'll have some stature but until then...
 
No, that implies the colony has a standing. By Sonereal's rules, a colony cannot exist in the first place without a player's approval. Ergo, for the formative phase of the game, the mother country holds all the cards 100%.

After the player joins they'll have some stature but until then...

This is a correct reading of the rules, yes.
 
Also I do not recognise the false timeline, especially for its lack of co-operation with the player of China and for its deliberate attempt to insult China.


1935- The War of the Dragon against China begins.

1939- The disastrous Battle of Shanghai ends after 2 weeks of maneuvering for position and minor skirmishes climaxing in a deadly battle. The Army of Japan is decimated as a fighting force. From now on the Navy in EPAC is the most prestigious branch. The battle wipes out a full generation of Japanese.

Which part was insulting? The part where a war happened or the part where you won a major battle?
 
No, that implies the colony has a standing. By Sonereal's rules, a colony cannot exist in the first place without a player's approval. Ergo, for the formative phase of the game, the mother country holds all the cards 100%.

After the player joins they'll have some stature but until then...

Talking in the present, yes. Once the game begins it is my understanding that the colony can choose to rebel if it wishes, meaning they can be an annoyance if not a full threat. But right now, yes, the mother country holds the cards.
 
Chinese ambitions for lands which are far from its current borders and which have no relevance to Chinese politics today are irrelevant. You cannot reserve territories which were formerly part of the IDC, and especially insecure border regions. Tibet and Xinjiang are not Chinese, they are effectively empty territories by now, and they will be settled by Roman settlers.

Our "ambitions" is but securing the land of China as a whole. Tibet and Xingjian are Chinese and to call them empty is a insult to the Chinese populace there.

Anyway: I was first to set my claim (although granted my claim to Vietnam was much: I am willing to skip that) and hence the uniting of China as China is a grand consideration.

Which part was insulting? The part where a war happened or the part where you won a major battle?

The part which he failed to consult me. Timelines involving other powers require co-operation between players, less it causes annoyance.

Anyratae the entire problem layed to the idea of colonial claiments, when in notion I have laided
 
Reign of Francesco I of Riccio (r. 1820-1848)

Spoiler :
1832
Spoiler :
The Great War may have been destructive to those who participated in its folly, but to neutral powers, it was a gold mine for opportunity. During the course of the war, Riccio was the most powerful nation on Earth in terms of the sheer economic power it could bring to bear. Besides its own resources, Riccio dominated the governments and societies of Spain, Birmingham, and West Africa through subterfuge, diplomatic history, military intimidation, and huge amounts of clout in their economies. With the assistance of its client states, Riccio commanded ¼ of the global economy, far more than the apparent superpower of the Federal Republic of Coastal Nations, which possessed merely eight percent by comparison. While the FRCN had allies, Riccio had raw domination in the form of its sphere, colloquially called the BRIG (Birmingham, Riccio, Iberia, Glory Corps) Alliance.

The FRCN and their Allies were occupied with the war, but Riccio’s government was sure this would not always be the case. Cracks were already starting to show in the Roman Empire despite the great resistance they put up, and as Riccio made plans to purchase Egypt in the event of a Roman collapse from whomever acquired it, Riccio was also arming itself for a war that would never come. The militaries of Riccio and its clients totaled sixteen percent of the world’s land forces, and twenty six percent of its naval; in comparison to the FRCN-led Allies’ thirty-four and forty-two percent, respectively, this was hardly a proud number. The Riccese government was frightened that the Allies would strike at Riccio as soon as they finished off Rome; rather than involve itself in the Great War, however, Riccio distanced itself and focused on a massive military buildup. While ships were built only to be sunk and men recruited only to be slaughtered like cattle in the belligerents’ militaries, Riccio’s forces grew by the day, with a massive industrial economy to support them as Riccio grew rich off world trade as the trade revenues of the combatants stagnated.

Francesco I chaired a government committee that set the stage for a “three year plan” that would put the Riccese sphere ahead of the Allies in both economic and military terms; that the Alliance was disintegrating from within due to lack of clear leadership and the implosion of China during the Qing Uprising would make such a task more within reach. To support its plan of national security, Riccio worked to keep its defensive alliances with China and Holy Rome together; adding these to the resources Riccio could muster 43% of the world’s GDP, 30% of its armies and 43% of its navies to the Allies’ 19% of its GDP, 29% of its armies and 33% of its navies. It was obvious that it would take but only a few years for the Riccese sphere of influence to assert itself as dominant economically and militarily, rendering it impervious to assault.

The sudden collapse of Wallachia left the great power of Riccio with an interesting opportunity. While many of the lands freed up were ones that Russia, the Holy Roman Empire, and Rome would have desired for itself, Russia and Rome were too busy devoting resources to war to risk any grand colonial ventures, whereas the Holy Romans were wracked by internal turmoil that hampered any attempts at expansion; Holy Rome could barely even keep track of how much money it had to spend as embezzlement and negligence ran rampant. Ever the opportunistic neutrals, the Riccese drew up plans for an invasion of Eastern Europe almost immediately, dressing it up as a “mission” to bring peace back to a region that was now torn by war. With the Romans and Holy Romans mute on the issue of territory and the Russians very vocal about use of force to obtain what they viewed as theirs, such a mission only was carried out with the blessings of the Russian government. No sooner had the Czar agreed to a deal where Riccio would settle and develop the lands and sell them to Russia once the war was over had ships from Birmingham, Spain, Italy and West Africa made their way to the Baltics.

While some felt that it was the proper role of Riccio to intervene in the Chinese Civil War and assist the Taoist government, the Riccese government was not of this inclination. Feeling the Inner Dominion had dug its own grave by joining a war against Taoist principles and proceeding to poorly manage its military campaigns (and also not wanting to complicate its neutrality by indirectly assisting the Allies), Riccio remained apathetic to the affair that would last for over a decade.


1833
Spoiler :
ZzseUJ0.png

Riccese claims in blue, Glory Corps in yellow-green, Birmingham claims in red, and Spanish in gold

Unsurprisingly, the local warlords and brigands that had sprouted up in the prior months were easily dealt with. Placed under several occupation governments all ultimately loyal to Florence, the former Wallachian citizens were promised that they would be given their own autonomous governments in a few years’ time, but for the moment, cooperation with Riccio’s armies was essential to make this a reality. The Riccese were known around the world for their honor as much as their wealth and power, and so many rebellious peasants became complacent. Many began to volunteer in Riccese regiments, something that would have a profound effect in the next year.


1834
Spoiler :
aukrnkD.png


Europe found no less than seventy provinces being seized by the Ricciosphere (Birmingham: 4, Riccio and Venice: 20 each, Spain: 26). As Birmingham set up small colonies in Sweden and the Baltics, Spanish, Riccese and Venetian regiments spread out over the countryside. Venetians were told to reach the Danube, the Riccese the Black Sea, and Spaniards the Volga. With some setbacks, each faction was moderately successful in its objective. While the empires of Rome and Russia put their all into destroying each other, with the former showing clear signs of economic collapse, Riccio was bringing some measure of peace and stability back to Eastern Europe.

Life in the occupied territories was exactly what one might expect: complete military occupation. Civilian government was practically non-existent, but an extremely strict policy from Florence kept most treatment of the local people fair; the military often appointed local advisers to assist with communication as well as with management of agriculture and infrastructure building. Most soldiers resided outside the major cities, thus keeping their visible presence minimal and also preventing any possible surprise revolt from overwhelming them. Officers did mingle with locals, generally to try and foster understanding; naturally the officers who attended local dinner parties or went to church with the occupied peoples were specially selected for a track record of kindness and respect.


1835
Spoiler :
KqjK7wx.png


The Riccese claimed the entirety of the Wallachian Void in 1835. As Rome teetered on the brink of destruction, Riccio set about reorganizing the territories so that the eastern portions would be sold to Russia. The Riccese occupied 30 territories, the Venetians 28 and the Spanish 29 in this year. Riccio closely tailed its client of Spain, but the huge amounts of land occupied by BRIG nonetheless pushed the alliance into global prominence, with the economies of the Riccese sphere prosperous and stable while those of belligerents’ were exhausted and in many cases ready for collapse. An influx of Russian gold would reinforce the power of the BRIG forces even moreso.

Interpreters assisted the military administration in harnessing human and financial resources to began rebuilding Eastern Europe after its brief period of chaos. Neighborhood watches were established to inform local soldiers (who were doubling as policemen for the time being) of disturbances, while those who were unable to find employment were required to give twenty hours of labor to the state each week to assist in projects that were physically demanding. The Riccese government felt that state direction would be useful in restoring the economy and society of Eastern Europe to pre-war conditions, thus making its active involvement only temporary.


1836
Spoiler :
PYNEN7e.png


The re-organization of Eastern Europe was completed in 1836. The Spanish continued to occupy a broad frontier with Russia, whereas New Venice’s territories were shifted towards Poland so that Riccio could rule a Greater Romania. The looming demise of the Roman Empire, it was reasoned, would remove any possible obstacles to use of the Black Sea ports to enter the Mediterranean, thus connecting Riccese Romania with the motherland.

Emperor Francesco commemorated the Eastern Campaign by declaring September 1st “Post-Wallachian Day,” as the stabilizing force of Wallachia was no longer deemed a necessity. Civilian governments were granted autonomy all across the region, with military troops declaring themselves subordinate to these governments in most locations. The Riccese led efforts to begin training security forces in the post-Wallachian states, so as to alleviate the need for BRIG security forces; the local neighborhood watches often were enrolled in formal police training, having a more civilian qualification than the soldiers of BRIG forces.


1837
Spoiler :
GqPeGB6.png


The process of territory transfer to Russia began in 1837. Contrary to the look of the map, it was arranged for territories to be sold in a three sets of land, with the cost of the next set decreasing in exchange. This holding of the provinces in trust was meant to deter any possible Russian betrayal; the Riccese military had become a potent force in the war years, but it remained wary of any possible conflicts over Poland.

To the south, word of the Treaty of Constantinople reached Riccese ears. While Rome had put up a great fight (even managing to secure peace with the Chinese), it was simply not enough to prevent the defeat of the Empire. With its armies outnumbered, its treasury exhausted and its people on the verge of rioting, Rome signed a relatively-generous peace accord ceding the Balkans beyond Constantinople to an Allied occupational mandate (which Russia, as an advocate of Slavs, worked to try and put beneath a unified Slavic government) and agreeing on limits to its military size so as to prevent irredentism on the Balkan Issue.

The Russians took advantage of their newfound clout in the Balkans by creating the Duchy of Croatia; it would soon be ceded to Riccio in exchange for lower prices on Eastern European land. While this left the Slavic Croats ignored (the bulk of South Slavs, after all, still remained in Allied hands) by Russia, it was most certainly a pragmatic move on the part of the Russian Empire; Riccio’s pride in its Italian heritage mandated that it acquire the Dalmatian coast, with Slavonia following so as to connect it to its Romanian provinces. While modern analysts would view the Riccese attitude as excessively paranoid given how war exhausted (and thus, reluctant to start another conflict with the most powerful economic and military alliance on the planet) the Allies were, at the time, the compromises on land by both Russia and Riccio were seen as keeping the peace in Eastern Europe, working to guarantee good faith on the part both parties to the Treaty of St. Petersburg.

Many anticipated that Riccio might lend support to the Inner Dominion of China now that the Great War was over and that Riccese neutrality would not be compromised by involvement. Those who anticipated such were wrong; Riccio did not even acknowledge the situation of its ally, quietly allowing the alliance to lapse while absorbing the most skilled Chinese refugees into its colony of Korea (and some would allege, investing in the economy of the Qing). Whereas a pact with China had been prudent during its years of economic power and where it posed a clear threat to Riccese Korea, it now seemed like an unnecessary burden to be jettisoned. The Civil War would rage without Riccese intervention for several more years, until more dire circumstances would change the politics of the region.


1838
Spoiler :
The Duchies of Romania and Croatia were declared to be in personal union with the Crown of Riccio, with Emperor Francesco I being coronated as Duke of Croatia in Zagreb only to soon make his way to Bucharest to receive a similar treatment by the Romanian parliament. While he had to make use of an interpreter to speak to his Croatian subjects, he received great applause from those in Romania for being able to demonstrate rudimentary Romanian speech, doubtlessly because of its status as a Romance language along his native Italian. The 57-year old monarch did a great deal to unite the disparate people of the Balkans with his affable personality regardless, and it is still widely-held that Francesco’s calm (yet far from incompetent) demeanor helped keep peace (at least diplomatically; crime was still very rampant in many parts of Eastern Europe, especially the Balkans, something not helped by the competing Allied occupational and popular ethnic interests there) in the region for the next several years.

It is no surprise that the New Venetians would soon have him also declared King of Hungary and King of Poland, but he was purely ceremonial within those countries, which were beneath the Venetian government’s thumb; while Riccio held sway over New Venice, Francesco had to work with the government in Florence to pass much of anything in the Venetian territories, lacking the royal initiative he possessed on his home soil. While Francesco would be able to push for better education and infrastructure in Romania and Croatia, he was not as successful in Hungary and Poland. The value of a unifying figurehead across such a vast and diverse territory cannot be understated, however.


1843-1848
Spoiler :
A large comet surging across the sky in 1843 caused great panic and severe economic dislocation as entire regions found themselves destroyed. Francesco had been able to avoid many of the problems that the Balkans suffered in his domains in Eastern Europe, but that changed with what would later be referred to as “The Fall.” People who weren’t incinerated instinctively began to move southward as crops increasingly failed and the climate became increasingly hostile, and while BRIG military forces were good at keeping a lid on ethnic strife along the southern border, pressure from the north was not so easily contained. This became doubly so when the Holy Roman Empire finally went belly up after a long period of decline, its citizens panicking to escape southward. Riccio had a reputation for housing refugees, and it seemed to have finally bit the state in its backside; Francesco requested emergency powers to govern cooperatively with the Corridore, which a desperate and confused legislature granted.

Francesco began the work of securing parts of Italy against assault, but the pressure was simply too great as Holy Rome proved helpless to stop its people from moving into Riccese land. Birmingham collapsed under pressure from Irish and Scottish refugees, while Spain lost most of its land in a series of aggressive campaigns by opportunistic Germans who saw the chance to carve new homelands that they ruled out of France and northern Spain. Even Riccio could not hold out for long, and Francesco knew it, having organized systematic evacuation of the Italian peninsula while he still could; by 1846, Romania and Croatia were essentially no more, and by 1847, Florence itself had been taken. The Riccese government relocated to Brazil, with the fall of Italia transpiring shortly afterward. While Emperor Francesco seemed poised to take command (the Corridore had died en route to the new country) despite his age of 63, he would serve only a few months before suddenly dying, his throne immediately passing to his son Francesco II, who was a victim of circumstances as much as any personal flaws.


Reign of Francesco II of Riccio (r. 1848-1849)

Spoiler :
1848

Spoiler :
With his father’s passing, the 40-year old Francesco II found himself seated upon the throne of what was once the world’s leading power, and what was now a chaotic mess to try and govern. Francesco had been bred with the typical royal upbringing, appearing at functions as he aged and regularly serving to try and connect with the common people to show their monarchs were deserving of their titles. Like all monarchs, however, he had a great deal of pleasures in his youth, but his greatest luxury was unexpected: he had been bred to command a superpower that was stable, not one that was collapsing.

The capital’s move to Rio de Janeiro seemed to be a symbolic representation of the change Riccio was about to undergo internally. It is commonly said that 1848 was the year of a quiet revolution in the Empire, as the Emperor found himself not up to the task of administering his duties as Sovereign. As a natural consequence of his inability to fill the great shoes left by his father, it wasn’t a surprise when someone else stepped forth to fill the void within them instead.

While the Emperor technically could rule by decree, the horribly-stressed Francesco II realized his own limitations and appointed several key advisors to assist him as well as pull their own strings independent of the government. The “Council of Seven” was composed of several leading families from across the Empire and its clients, each able to bring clout to the table to allow for policies. There were four Italian families (the Savoia of northwest Italy; the Ottojano-Medici of Florence; the Morosini of Venice; the Orsini of Rome) and three non-Italian families (the Borgia of Spain; the Rothschilds of Germany; the Coopers of Birmingham). First very prominent advisors, the Council developed into full-fledged co-rulers before eventually ceasing to work with the Emperor at all, who was powerless to stop them.

The eight months of 1848 that Francesco II presided over were marked, naturally, by dealing with the looming crisis. While the African territories were safeguarded by the Riccese fleets for the time being, the burning Roman Empire had caused the loss of most of India barring a few fortified outposts (these would lost later on). National pride demanded, therefore, that troops be sent to Korea, which was being besieged by refugees from Russia and China. In what was to become a rare occurrence, the Emperor and the Council of Seven agreed to deploy thousands of Riccese troops to guard the border. This strategy proved successful, as the border seemed far less porous than Europe’s had.


1849

Spoiler :
However, the Emperor (as head of state and thus, considered representative of much government policy) soon found himself being implicated in the massacres that had been a necessity to keep the border so secure, and the Council refrained to take any of the blame, insisting they were mere advisors. When he attempted to depose the Council, they proceeded to publicize the scandals, while a conveniently-timed outbreak of violence between Korean and Italian troops on the peninsula was also attributed to Francesco’s poor skills. When the Koreans rose up in revolt and managed to usurp the country from the Riccese leadership, Francesco was viewed as the most damaging part of the state apparatus. Come the national elections on November 1st, which many believe to this day still were at least partially rigged by the Council’s supporters (given the great wealth they could command), Francesco failed an approval vote, earning only 39% of the electorate.

The Riccese constitution held that rejection of a monarch also counted as rejection of their dynasty. Francesco’s son Marcos was only 16 years old, greatly hurting his ability to contest the throne. Of the alternative candidates proposed in the recall, Giorgio Borgia won by carrying 62% of the vote after several runoffs. Borgia was a charismatic, energetic leader, while also being seen as experienced to carry out the Emperor’s duties with his practice in law and his age of 51. Perhaps most important, Borgia was of one of the families serving on the Council of Seven. The Council had arranged for the monarchy to regularly rotate between them as a symbolic gesture, though they governed as theoretical equals behind the scenes. Through extensive use of coercion, bribery and other illegal activities, the Council also neutered the Imperial Council’s ability to pose a threat, seizing command of the writing, enforcement and interpretation of laws. Eager to secure their new powerbase in Brazil, the Council eagerly awaited January 1st, when Borgia would take power, and when they would curry the favor of a special set of friends…


Reign of Giorgio I of Riccio (r. 1850-1859)

Spoiler :
Despite his nominal authority, Emperor Giorgio was not even willing to make use of that. Whenever the Emperor wasn’t busy with state functions or doing the formal appointment of those the Council desired in government positions, Giorgio was generally holed up in the mansions of various Brazilian elites (an Imperial Palace having yet to be built), generally being fed exotic meals as considerable amounts of people risked starvation and indulging in various illicit activities and substances hardly befitting of a ruler. The Council kept up his good reputation however, and certainly didn’t mind keeping him away from Rio, as it ensured that he did not become a check on their power.

The Council may have been corrupt and held little regard for democracy, but one cannot deny that it was effective. With its clout in the market, it was able to bring inflation under control and able to stem the tide of immigrants to manageable levels. It sponsored public entertainment to help increase the public’s morale, while it made sure that the police forces it led were not as corrupt as the legislature whose laws they supposedly enforced. Despite their aristocratic stature the Councilors recognized the need for an educated middle class to keep the factories operating optimally, and they funded universities and public schools to help with this task. They ultimately recognized the futility of trying to keep the Riccese Empire, and before long they had signed treaties with the Congolese and Romans to pull out of their territory within ten years. In North Africa, the Morrocans were showing themselves to be incredibly vicious and determined for independence; to their surprise, the new government granted them independence in 1851. In exchange for maintaining some commercial privileges, Riccio withdrew from North Africa and even left its former client of Spain to the Morrocan hordes; similar agreements would follow with New Venice, which found itself increasingly more of a partner and less of a subject state of Rio.

The Riccese ability to cut their losses can be attributed primarily to the commercial and diplomatic power Riccio had wielded prior to The Fall. As all other great powers waged war with themselves and planted the seeds of their own destruction, Riccio was unknowingly laying the foundations for its survival.

One of the most potent sources of Riccese success came from its greatest resource: money. As law broke down, lands were burnt, and entire communities were deserted in the war zones, the Riccese were collecting increasingly-larger tax revenues and using them to stimulate their economy. Factories were being built not just in Europe but all over the wider world; many projects were constructed in Brazil in particular, as the colony’s vast resources were seen as lucrative for tapping. With Brazil having been steadily Italianized and becoming as much an Italian country as a Portuguese one, the region was less like a colony and more a “home away from home” to the government. The pragmatic Riccese had viewed the Brazilians as the least likely to rebel given their strong cultural ties to Italy, and Florence’s political and financial generosity helped secure this. The flood of cheap goods from Eastern Europe enormously improved the lot of the average Riccese lifestyle as well, fostering diversification into other industries as time went on. While most of the belligerents in the Great War had laid waste to much of their territory, Riccio had maintained a secure economic powerhouse that proved to be the perfect site of a new capital.

Labor availability was another quality the Riccese had unknowingly used to guarantee their own salvation from the fires of The Fall. Early in its history, Riccio had developed a policy of establishing refugee camps close to neighboring war zones; while Riccio preserved its neutrality in affairs, it was more than willing to profit at the expense of other countries’ conflicts by other means. Thousands (and during the peak of the War, hundreds of thousands) of people would be ferried into these camps, from Romans to Egyptians to even Chinese and Russians. While many of these people were poor, many others had skills; few educated workers sought to die on the battlefield or in harness. Riccio bombarded the most skilled refugees with offers of relocation to the cities so they could enjoy the best parts of Riccese life; many of these cities were far away from where the refugee had come from, making it incredibly difficult to ever return home. This dish was served with the spice of family reunification programs, and it is no surprise that many skilled workers took the deal. Many were often relocated to Brazil, a melting pot with Italian overtones, so as to help with the exploitation of the country’s vast land and resources; just as planned, few of the refugees (as low as 10%) ever returned home. By the time of The Fall, Brazil had developed an extremely large middle class from all the foreigners relocated to it, and they laid the foundations of a stable, prosperous society along the South Atlantic coast.

Riccio’s next advantage proved to be land. The colonization of Eastern Europe had opened up huge tracts of land for the harvesting of organics, driving prices down and forcing specialization in other fields of work. The Riccese government had taken advantage of these cheap prices to begin planting of crops throughout Brazil, hoping to have a strong agricultural background in the region to decrease the costs of the government’s food program, as well as to offset costs that would naturally come when Russia re-acquired parts of Eastern Europe. The result of the planting program was a cheap, abundant source of food; as the Empire crumbled in later years, the many fields that had been cultivated proved to be more than capable of feeding the Empire’s population, especially after the many evacuees from Europe arrived to take advantage of the large amounts of land opened up by jungle clearance.

The most prudent change the Council of Seven enacted, however, was rooted in Riccio’s final advantage: culture. The Council’s willingness to jettison Africa and Asia was motivated by something besides a feeling war would be futile; the Council had begun opening dialogues with the remnants of the Catholic Church. The shedding of extra-Brazilian territories had left Riccio a nation that was homogenous in language, religion, government, geography and economics. The Catholic Church, having endured the falls of empires for over one and a half millennia, was seen as a perfect mechanism with which to stabilize Riccese society. The Pope had debated many Catholic countries to relocate to, but the humility, flattery, and traditional location (and money) of Riccio were all very persuasive; it was no surprise the Holy See had soon relocated to Brazil in 1852, a move that was reciprocated with over a billion ducatos being donated to the Church by the Council families to aid in the construction of a grand cathedral to make up for the loss of the Vatican.

While the partnership was mostly a pleasant alliance (the Council declared Roman Catholicism the state religion in 1853, though it did not forbid free practice) and cooperative at first, in later years, the ties between the Church and the government would strengthen. While a policy of formal religious toleration would be maintained, the Roman Catholic Church and the Riccese government were to become closely interwoven, though at times it would be hard to tell who dominated who in the partnership.

After a reign of self-indulgence and many great events (the stabilization of Brazil, the end of foreign commitments, the solidarity of the Catholic Church with the government), Giorgio I abdicated in 1859. Riccio had become a stable, nominally prosperous country, if not the hegemonic beast it was. Giorgio I, meanwhile, would later be lovingly referred to as “The Fat.”


Reign of Antonio I (1860-1864)

Reigns of Frederico I (1865-1879) and Domenico I (1880-1883)

Reigns of Antonio II (1883-1889), Agostino I (1890-1893), Frederico II (1893-1902)

Reign of Marcos II "the Great" (1902-1931)

Reigns of Francesco III (r. 1931-1952), Marcos III (r. 1952-1971)
 
I was telling him to not ask for money over what I usually pay. I may be a colony but I am thousands of miles away, so I'm not giving any extra cent to the homeland.

You will, if I ask you. Of course, I will not ask you for money every turn, only when I am at war. So, there is not need to worry. Do you accept being my colony?
 
Back
Top Bottom