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CK2 Dev Diary #67: Revisiting the Middle East

Greetings everyone!

I’m Emil “Servancour” Tisander. Most of you might remember me from the update I did to Hungary and the Danube with the release of 2.7. This time however, I wanted to do something of a larger scope, and with the expansion focusing on the eastern part of the map, what better time to revisit the Middle East and bring it a much needed overhaul?

Those of you who watch the streams might already have seen most of what I’ll show you here but I’ll start by explaining what I’ve done and why.

I had a few goals in mind when I started working on the update. First and foremost I wanted to improve the overall geography and move counties to where they are supposed to be. Some having been placed much too far from their actual location (I’m looking at you Damascus). Secondly, there are plenty of titles in the region that are inappropriately named for the time period, so I wanted to go through what makes sense and what doesn’t to improve the historical accuracy as much as possible. Another thing I wanted to do was to split up the kingdom of Persia somewhat. Persia in CK2 has always been a very large kingdom. Splitting it up into several kingdoms will allow for a more dynamic experience.

Empires remain very much the same, though both the Persian Empire and the Arabian Empire have been increased somewhat in size, due to the addition of new counties. Kingdoms however, have been changed quite significantly. The following kingdoms have been added or renamed accordingly:
Added the kingdoms of Daylam, Khorasan, Iraq and Yemen.
Renamed Mesopotamia to Al-Jazira, Afghanistan to Kabulistan, Baluchistan to Sistan, Khiva to Transoxiana.

01_kingdoms.png


The county layout is also something that you will notice has changed dramatically. Gone are all the weirdly shaped counties, that would either look like a square or be stretched into all manner of shapes. Every single county in the region has been moved and/or reshaped. The single most noticeable addition will be the Syrian desert. Which, in my opinion, is needed to make sure that the surrounding counties can be placed and shaped properly.

02_syrian_desert.png


As much as I would like to, I won’t go into detail for all changes I’ve done to the counties. But I’ll highlight some of the more major ones.

Both Fergana and Khuttal are now full-fledged duchies, with three and four counties, respectively.

03_fergana_khuttal.png


Several new counties have been added to Yemen, which consists of the duchies Sanaa, Taizz and Hadramut.

04_yemen.png


The duchy of Medina is renamed to Hijaz and got three new coastal counties added, making the duchy consist of six counties in total.

05_hijaz.png


We’ve also decided to increase the number of counties in the Tarim Basin, in order to make the area more fun and interesting to play in. It has about twice the number of counties compared to the old setup.

06_tarim_basin.png

07_tarim_basin.png


That’s some of the biggest changes that you’ll see on the map which is, as always for map updates, a part of the free 2.8 patch. Bear in mind that it’s still a bit of a work in progress. Some counties are likely to get another set of name changes and other tweaks.

Finally, I would like to give a shout out to @elvain, who helped me with a lot of research. Making this update possible to do to such an extent.

Don’t forget to tune into the Medieval Monday streams 16:00-18:00 (CEST)! During which you can poke me if you want to see a specific region or have any other questions.
 
Except assyria is named for the city of assur which is not in any geographical definition of Syria. Al jazira may be etymologically unrelated to Assyria. But Assyria and Syria are diffrent places.

Actually they r not. You are refering to the city of Assur, which is located near modern day Karbala, Iraq. Syria can also refer to an area, since modern day Syria fell under the Assyrian Empires zone of control. The name likely stayed because of popularity of the Syriac language.

Furthermore, names of areas can be transferred to entirely different regions, they originated from. For example Rum in south of the modern day Turkey refers to Rome.
 
Furthermore, names of areas can be transferred to entirely different regions, they originated from. For example Rum in south of the modern day Turkey refers to Rome.

Or modern Germany Saxony which isn't even in the territory of medieval Saxony.
 
Lurker reporting!

So this looks awesome. Daylam should probably have some cultural names, though - it was known pretty widely as Hyrcania, Gurgan to the Persians, and was called such since the classical period. Christians were calling it that centuries after the region became more locally known as Tabaristan (after the Arab conquests). The Daylamites were only one part of the broader region.

Honestly I think Gurgan is the better name for it.
 
Actually they r not. You are refering to the city of Assur, which is located near modern day Karbala, Iraq. Syria can also refer to an area, since modern day Syria fell under the Assyrian Empires zone of control. The name likely stayed because of popularity of the Syriac language.

Furthermore, names of areas can be transferred to entirely different regions, they originated from. For example Rum in south of the modern day Turkey refers to Rome.
Syria derives from Assyria but the Assyrian heartlands were and still are in northern modern Iraq. The exact area called so jazira in the game. You may be right there is no etymological connection but it is very much the assyrian heartland. Assyria is eastern Aramaic. Syria is western aramaic also much of nothern Syria was part of Armenia back then.
 
Except assyria is named for the city of assur which is not in any geographical definition of Syria. Al jazira may be etymologically unrelated to Assyria. But Assyria and Syria are diffrent places.


Assyria and Syria are in different places because of the Romans. The Seleucid Empire ruled over that whole area after Alexander, from Asia Minor to India. But by the time the Romans went a-conquering under Lucullus and Pompey, the Seleucids were basically left with a rump state around Antioch.

The Seleucids did once rule Assyria, but the rump state didn't contain Assyria--which was more properly located in Adiabene, which was variously a satrapy or client kingdom under the Parthians.

But as Syriac was the lingua Franca in the Seleucid heartlands (being the descendant of the language spoken under the Neo-Assyrians), the Romans called the Seleucids the Syrian kings. And so, their rump state -- despite not being in Assyria -- becane Syria.

And then the name Syria stuck for good after Pompey incorporated the Seleucid remnant into the Roman province of Syria, which became the most important eastern Roman province along with Egypt during the entirety of the imperial period.

So Syria is Syria even if it doesn't have anything to do with Assyria. Blame the Romans.
 
Assyria and Syria are in different places because of the Romans. The Seleucid Empire ruled over that whole area after Alexander, from Asia Minor to India. But by the time the Romans went a-conquering under Lucullus and Pompey, the Seleucids were basically left with a rump state around Antioch.

The Seleucids did once rule Assyria, but the rump state didn't contain Assyria--which was more properly located in Adiabene, which was variously a satrapy or client kingdom under the Parthians.

But as Syriac was the lingua Franca in the Seleucid heartlands (being the descendant of the language spoken under the Neo-Assyrians), the Romans called the Seleucids the Syrian kings. And so, their rump state -- despite not being in Assyria -- becane Syria.

And then the name Syria stuck for good after Pompey incorporated the Seleucid remnant into the Roman province of Syria, which became the most important eastern Roman province along with Egypt during the entirety of the imperial period.

So Syria is Syria even if it doesn't have anything to do with Assyria. Blame the Romans.
Syria is Syria it is however not Assyria. And wasn't Antioch in the Armenian culture sphere more than the Syrian one? Syria was the area around Damascus and palmyra not Antioch as I recall. I am also reminded of TE Lawrence who claimed Syria was a term only used by people outside Syria. They themselves considered themselves Damascian or edessan or Palmyran. Even a thousand years later there was no real concept of Syria. Meanwhile the is and has always been peel who consider themselves Assyrian. Even if the memory of the ancient empire faded.
 
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After the thread on this very subject and it's extremely thorough debunking, I have to ask, what color is the sky in your world?

Depends. In some places its blue, in others its poo.
 
So the Duchy of Arabia is only three provinces now?

I hope they rename it. A Duchy of Arabia makes as much sense as a Duchy of France!
 
Syria is Syria it is however not Assyria. And wasn't Antioch in the Armenian culture sphere more than the Syrian one? Syria was the area around Damascus and palmyra not Antioch as I recall. I am also reminded of TE Lawrence who claimed Syria was a term only used by people outside Syria. They themselves considered themselves Damascian or edessan or Palmyran. Even a thousand years later there was no real concept of Syria. Meanwhile the is and has always been peel who consider themselves Assyrian. Even if the memory of the ancient empire faded.

Antiocheia-on-the-Orodes was a Seleucid city, named after Antiochus (the second Seleucid king). Antioch was founded as a Hellenistic city, and it later became the capital (moved from Seluceia-on-the-Tigris) of the Seleucid Empire. By the time of the Roman conquest, it was probably the third most populated city in the Mediterranean (though that's debatable -- Mesopotamian Seleuceia still had a massive population well into the Parthian era, until its depopulation).

Anyway, the Armenian king Tigranes did conquer the Syrian heartlands of the Seleucid Empire (he was the one who Lucullus and Tigranes were fighting), but Armenian culture sphere? No -- though the neighboring kingdoms of Commagene was very much Armenian. Samosata, the capital of Commagene, used to be known as Antiocheia, and I wonder if that's where some of the confusion lies.

In any event, the Roman province of Syria was the key eastern province and stayed that way thru to the Arab conquests. Antiocheia was its capital except for brief periods where, usually to punish Antiocheia for its loyalties in civil wars, Damascus was occasionally made the capital.

Edessa was a much smaller and less important city, though it exercised religious importance and obviously grew in stature during the Severan period due to Julia Domna and her family.

I can't speak to TE Lawrence nor the state of play during the early 20th century, although I note that Antioch had LONG since declined by then while Damascus continued to be an important city. But as for cultural identity, Syria was an administrative unit -- a Roman province. That is where the name for the region came from, but it does not have anything to do with the Assyrian heartlands except for the etymological root of the name. There was no "Syrian culture" -- there was the Syriac language, which was much spread much broader than the Roman province of Syria and had to do with an Aramaic language that had spread through the region during the Neo-Assyrian Empire. Syriac speakers once extended throughout the Middle East, from the Assyrian heartlands to the entire Levant, including the area covered by the Syrian province (and the modern country of Syria).

Today, Syriac speakers only really live in the Assyrian heartlands but they used to be spread much further. The distinction is captured broadly in the Syriac Church (representing the western Aramaic Syriac speakers) and the Assyrian Church (representing the descendants of the Assyrian populations of Assur and Adiabene, etc.). The name of the Syrian province comes from them and their language, via the Romans and Greeks. So we have the Syrian Roman province also being the capital of a strongly Hellenistic culture, with a name derived from a much older Akkadian civilization. The whole area was very very culturally diverse, with newer Roman and Hellenistic influences next to very ancient Aramaic and Akkadian cultures.
 
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Isn't turkestan already Persian? I thought the -stan suffix was persian?
As for turan isn't that name older than the Turkish presence in the region? I think you should think more along the lines of the Turks having been named for turan rather than the other way around.
Turks have been called Turks since before the Oghuz were driven into Transoxiana. They aren't etymologically linked words at all.
 
Isn't turkestan already Persian? I thought the -stan suffix was persian?
As for turan isn't that name older than the Turkish presence in the region? I think you should think more along the lines of the Turks having been named for turan rather than the other way around.
Nah, "Turk" probably comes from the word türük in Old Turkic, which meant something like born or strong.
 
IMHO I think people should chill about Duchy/Kingdom/Empire titles. They'll never be a name that makes everyone happy. In many cases, the names are bound to be anachronistic or inaccurate but CK2 has to settle for one in the end.

Fun fact: the Arabs have no single name for "Arabia," it's simply called 'The Peninsula' or 'The Peninsula of the Arabs.' For the purposes of this game the former is rather too vague and the latter would be kind of hard to fit on the map.

Also can we please have the choice to colour in wastelands if surrounded by one country like in EU4?

:)
 
Do people not simply rename stuff to whatever they consider the 'proper' names?

And given that you're looking at the middle-east would it be possible to rework the 'Form Israel' decision so that it holds all the lands in k_jerusalem dejure. Its pretty annoying tbh considering that dejure means by law/right and you'd think that atleast the jews would consider those lands rightfully theirs. Or do something like the West-Francia -> France change and allow jews to to hold k_jerusalem.
 
Do people not simply rename stuff to whatever they consider the 'proper' names?
You need the Customization pack for that, so not everyone can do it