stJNES10: Expand and Conquer

Jason The King said:
hmm, sad how something like not getting expanded for one turn can cause someone to quit.

Do you really think this is the first time? Its the whole essence of it, if it happens time and time again, it might as well happen again. It seems you and I are always arguing about the update, even for simple little thing as just fixing a small expansion mistake you made, and quite frankly, you and I do not have time for it. So I will just save you the headache and the pain of having myself in your nes', and quit. Good luck, the nes is better off anyways.
 
Javanese Orders

Grow the economy by building more roads for better trade transportation. Have the army defend the borders, and the navy to defend the seas. Have some of the navy conduct raids against the the Malay hopefully stealing some of their wealth and making it my own. (I need economy) Try and capture the small islands off the coast of Sumatra.

Continue expansion in all places but Perth.

Thank you.
 
From: The Holy Kingdom of Moskovia
To: Knyazdom of Tripolye

We feel you are not in a position of power, with your approximated 250 soldiers and no navy. However, despite your grave position, we are willing to be leniant. We can agree to borders as they currently are.
 
To: Gauls
From: Normandy

We felt this was the best course of actions as the Sphardians would have conquered you all and slaughter you. Surrender to us and we will ensure your safety.
 
Japan Orders:
-Recruit new Galleys (-1 eco level)
-30 galleys explore south in search of the island of Taiwan that the Okinawans have spoken of.
-Army defends Home Islands and Okinawa.
-Other galleys patrols territorial waters.
-Attempt to find a use for the gray-black metal (iron) found in the rocks.
 
Insane_Panda said:
Oh, for Chinese civs you could make some Xiong Nu barbarians in the far north, Manchus in the far north, Choson, Korgyo or Silla in Korea, Qin chinese in western China, Fujian in the south, etc.

Plus the Nan-Yue, the main non-Chinese in China, they'd be Austronesian, and basically right in the Canton area.
 
OOC: Just to get us back on topic


Ah, Calicut. Gem of Dravidia.

It had been so since the beginning of time, but it was fully flowering by the 1100s BCE. A vast city sprawled along the shoreline, a large harbor encompassed almost entirely within it. The buildings lined the shoreline, piers of rock and wood extending far into the harbor, hundreds of boats tied up alongside it, galleys and even the newer caravels were in abundance.

The inner city was dominated by the structure of the massive palace, a structure that sprawled in stone grandeur with a single tower rising above it, and the large, unfinished temple that lay directly opposite it. Already, even though the building was not yet a quarter finished, you could tell that the future buildings of this complex would be awe inspiring, their arches, even supported by their scaffolds, dwarfed men and cranes alike.

Around these buildings was a large paved road, circular in shape, and from this central circle the rest of the inner city radiated outward. The inner city, at the least, was starting to see a predominance of tiled roofs as opposed to the thatch that dominated the poorer districts. The inner city was lined along its entire circumference with a high stone wall, the old stone wall that had held Calicut against all who might challenge it for centuries.

Beyond this inner wall was the middle city, a large mass of buildings, most of them thatch roofed, centered around a few streets still in the radial pattern, but most of them actually faced small winding sides streets that branched off of the main pattern, a thorough mess of accretion. The middle city, too, was ringed with a wall, newer but about the same height.

The outer city, one could call it the slums, ringed all of it, a mass of buildings which seemed not to be so much built around the roads as parted by them.

The whole city from above would have been a grand sight, a regular geometry relieved by the occasional tower rising from the lower portions of the buildings, a whitish color predominating, thatched rooftops with a few tile intermingled.

All in all, estimates put its population at anywhere from 10,000 to 50,000, but regardless of absolute numbers, it was doubtless one of the largest five cities in Dravidia, if not the world.

Calicut, though, was just one piece in the massive mosaic that was India, and those shall be explored in further such works as this.
 
The women were crying.

Because Bakoslav died.

The little children were crying.

Because Bakoslav died.

The men were crying.

Because Bakoslav died.

Who was to blame?

Who?

Only one man said who. He was called Marek Kamnev, a mighty warrior, ally and good friend of the Both Gods. He was listened to.

To blame, he said, were the priests. Not all priests, but those who betrayed Bakoslav and the Both Gods, who misinterpreted the messages, who betrayed Bakoslav and who led him to his glorious death.

Glorious, but useless. Tripolye should never have went to war with Dacia.

But it was too late to change that now.

And yet, Marek took power, not to change past but to change the future. To save Tripolye.
 
Jason, could you please update today? This is the last day I have to write orders before I have to go on a trip... Or at the least, could you tell me how my war went?
 
Update today? I'll hurry orders if he will update today. I'm all for it...
 
North King said:
:(

Could you tell me what the outcome of my war is, then? I have sent in orders, after all...

Guess not then?

Oh well, if you give a second update in the time that I'm gone, then NPC me for that turn.
 
ORDERS
Expand westward and eastward massivly. A little bit northward (who wants endless snow?)
Grow eocnomy by building up around the Caspian sea and other fertile lands (I don't have a lot I know...)
Call to arms all horsmen in the country. Soon we shall rule the world!
Form with Bactria royal marriege if they agree. Also with Nepal.
 
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