Where did I get my timeline? I made it up based on my knowledge of Anglo-Celtic history and the governments available in-game. No its not exact, but it was good enough for the use I had intended it for.
And I am well aware that 5-8 turns is a different amount of relative time at different periods... its not like I have never played the game before ;p
However, it is the same amount of absolute time: five to eight turns, a crippling delay!
And YES, it took hundred years of unrest to pass from the end of the Roman Empire to Feuds
Yes, it did indeed take that long... if you ignore the fact that there were governments in between, and that the rulers were what we would today call despots and warlords... but sure, believe if you want that there was no organization or development in the lower middle ages... or what the ignorant refer to as the Dark ages...
Also change of gov. throughout history were actually social revolutions
Total crap. The social revolution as a concept did not even enter the arena seriously until the late 18th- early 19th period (known today as the Age of Revolutions). Even then, it did not become seriously thought of until the communist revolutions, which WERE a result of a strong desire for social change. On the great timeline of history, they are a brief blip grabbing onto the end; it only happened twice. AND unless you want to argue that the people, and not the Politburo, controlled the state, it lasted for as long as the fighting did... which was not much longer than ten to twenty years at the outermost.
Hitler's changing of Germany from the Weimar Republic to the Facist 3rd Reich was accomplished without long periods of anarchy; it took a few years, five or six at the outermost. Or do you want to tell me that they were unable to produce soldiers during WWII? Same with Mussolini, and again with our friends the Memshoviks (the element that had control in Revolutionary Russia prior to the Bolsheviks), despite being in the midst of what you would have us call anarchy because of what I (again) declare to be the arbitrary decision of a group of programmers: the length of time between the decision to change a government and the implementation of that change.
Prior to that period, almost every revolution occurred as I described above: as the result of a minority capitalizing on a pre-existing situation to bring about their own control, through either the degeneration of a previous government or as a military uprising. eg: Hiero in Syracuse, Caesar in Rome, Augustus in Rome, Cao Cao in China's Warring States period.
How about Lycurgus of Sparta? HE changed the state of Sparta without any bloodshed at all. Same with William and Mary of England! Or how about Cosimo de Medici of Florence? There was some violence in Florence during his changing of the government, but this was inherent to the city; it was a violent place throughout its history, but this did not prevent it from becoming the center of the Renaissance's cultural and financial explosion! Just to make sure you understand, Cosimo was working AGAINST the wishes of the people.
I have about eight million more examples I can give you off the top of my head, but by now it should be obvious that a certain trend is expressed in what I like to refer to as 'the real world'.
Maybe you should go look up some stuff about governmental theory (and history), because you are about as wrong as you can be.
Rhye, I apologize for the serious hijack! It was clearly my fault, as I am almost OCD when people say things that are obviously wrong! Especially when that person is me ;p
I promise not to say anything more about the historical aspects of this subject ;p
OD, your ideas on how to deal with this are pretty worthless. I suggested changing the length without using the religious trait many pages ago, but it is a hardcoded value (as Rhye discovered).
And, echoing Asclepius, have you even bothered to play the mod? Or are you just spouting?
As to what Blas has to say about changes, I agree pretty much with what he has there, except about giving them a special unit. That seems a bit excessive. Giving them a better starting government sounds like a very good idea (Egypt anyone? Sumeria? Babylon and the Priest-Kings?)!
...crap, there goes that promise haha