Cheezy the Wiz
Socialist In A Hurry
Istanbul. Safe from wars and in a place of culture.
So, you're worried about the religious warfare that's several decades away from hitting the Germanies in 1492, but you're completely unconcerned about the Italian Wars that are raging all over that peninsula right that freaking decade? And which will continue for the next sixty-odd years?
Meh. If you're halfway important you'll probably end up a victim of the incessant intrigue (reprisals against potential supporters of the erstwhile prince Cem, for instance, or the purges that surrounded the Kızılbaş crisis), and if you aren't halfway important, one early modern hellhole is as good as any other.Point taken. Istanbul then?
Istanbul is in the Balkans. The Balkans are a choice on the Pole.The Ottoman Empire, preferably Istanbul. Odd that it isn't a choice on the poll.
Karakoyunlu's were gone by 1492.Istanbul is in the Balkans. The Balkans are a choice on the Pole.
It's not really done by country, on the grounds that people here, by and large, are not capable of associating countries with the territory they controlled in 1492. If tk had added, say, the beylik of the Qaraqoyunlu, people wouldn't have had a clue.
Right, Aqqoyunlu. My mistake.Karakoyunlu's were gone by 1492.
True, but I wouldn't be a peasant based on the OP.I doubt the Renaissance or the discovery of the new world had much effect on the general peasants anyway
Depends where and when. Somebody halfway up Ben Shoogleighboogleigh might not have noticed the difference, but an agricultural petty-proprietor in Piedmont, Holland or even Kent wouldn't have been so oblivious. There was no single "peasant" experience.Either China (around Nanjing and Hangzhou) or Northern Italy, and maybe Istanbul, just for the wealth
I doubt the Renaissance or the discovery of the new world had much effect on the general peasants anyway
Soooo going with coastal Southeast Asia. Varied diet; low taxes and corvee obligations; can flee from overbearing nobles; nice houses and reasonable material culture; good potential for social advancement; attractive women in loin cloths; a high degree of religious freedom; and a large degree of latitude in socio-cultural practices (accepting of homosexuality for instance).
Orthodox priests are allowed to be married (not to marry), but Monastics aren't. You could be the parish priest somewhere though. Any of the scenarios you describe would be pretty sweet to me.I'd probably be a merchant in what was left of Novgorod republic. I'd have a nice estate somewhere near Archangelsk, an area to which no epidemy, serfdom or any kind of steppe-dwelling scum ever come close. With frosty and clear air in winter and mild summers, it's just the right place to be Russian.
Spoiler :
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Alternatively it might have been interesting to be a clergyman in one of the monasteries which are there in abundance. Since Orthodox priests were allowed to marry, it could be a decent career and self-realization, since it allowed a considerable amount of creativity, like painting icons, writing beautiful books or taking part in designing churches.
Spoiler :
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On an entirely different level, being an American native somewhere in Oregon somehow looks rather intersting too.
Orthodox priests are allowed to be married (not to marry), but Monastics aren't. You could be the parish priest somewhere though.
Any of the scenarios you describe would be pretty sweet to me.
And you'd be correct. It's not a gender issue. It's a tense one. Married priests always marry before their ordinations. After you've been ordained into a Major Order of clergy, you can't marry.So women marry and men get married? I always thought it was to marry for either of them. Believe it or not, I heard it now for the first time
Learn something new everyday. In Russian it's different constructs for male and female too.
Maybe. Any of these places could offer good lives and really really terrible ones. Western Europe would definitely be cool for the opportunity to be one of the early explorers,although I'm not sure I'd take it. It's pretty difficult to imagine to what circumstances I'd like to be born and grow completely accustomed. In the meantime, USA #1 in the 21st century is good for me.
Honestly, there're probaly better places to live in that epoch than Russia
It's only hardcore [foolish] patriotism on my part![]()
Having been to the Maldives... that would be quite a life!Judging from chronicles complaining about how liberal the Maldives were, I would have liked to lived there from a merchant family - Trade in the area was also very lucrative, especially with East Africa.