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The Kingdom of Italy, 1848-1852: Silver Bullet
Excerpt from 'The Great Game: Spycraft and Diplomacy in 19th-Century Europe', written by Eleonora Engels (Amsterdam: 1989)

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(...) Amsterdam had a reputation as a city of spies from the 1840s onwards. The shadow wars of French, Italian and British agents wreaked havoc on the strategically placed Kingdom of the Netherlands. Anecdotes from the time claim that one could not find a park bench or quiet alleyway that was not already in use as the location of a discreet meeting or a running battle between foreign operatives. Fresh outrages came with every season. 1846 saw the bombing of the French embassy on De Boelelaan - reported as an anarchist attack but almost certainly the work of Italian saboteurs. The spring of 1847 witnessed the assassination of an up-and-coming politician of the anglophile faction by an 'infernal machine' installed within his carriage. Wintertime followed this up with several aides to the Italian ambassador washing up drowned in an out-of-the-way canal.

These incidents were merely the very visible tip of an iceberg composed of equal parts espionage, diplomacy and investment. Italian industrialists in particular were swaying public and government opinion with their generous investments in Dutch infrastructure and ship industries. This economic cooperation slowly built up in Italy's favor, but France had advantages of its own. Its proximity and long cultural ties naturally helped. The same could be said for the British, but the bumbling amateurs of the British service had little to offer over their counterparts. Dutch nervousness about French ambitions and nationalist desire to reclaim ethnic Dutch territories presently under French rule somewhat undermined French victories, however. The French were, regardless, considerably more persuasive and capable in their operations than the inefficient Italians or the British. The tug-of-war would continue for decades before any clear victor could be made out. (...)

***​

Notations found on the margins of a copy of 'The New Physician's Friend', a 1846 medical textbook

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I defy thee, ye wretched mistress of the hospice
Behold the ingenuity of Man!
In time all your wicked designs shall be defeated
The bountiful one guides my hand
Know that your time is at an end
Our children shall cast out death itself!​

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) The Bejan victory in the Spanish War strengthened a friendly power devoted to absolutist principles, weakened what appeared to be a dangerously liberal constitutional monarchy, and forced underground the 'Young Spaniard' movement which had been based mainly in Aragon. Iberia would remain troublesome and turbulent for over a decade, but the worst of it was over. No more were Italian holdings in the region in danger from these nationalists. This victory is generally thought to be the culmination of the Iberian realignment. Beja, the old enemy of the Italians, had now transformed into their foremost ally. (...)

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Food shortages in the late 1840s were blamed on the government's regulation and interference in the markets. The violent bread riots caused by high grain prices largely targeted the usual minority scapegoats and held little danger for the state, but the arguments it armed the liberal opposition with was received with embarrassment and alarm. In 1849, the conservative Minister for Trade Lazzaro de Lucca was dismissed and replaced by outspoken liberal economist Luigi Bargnani. Bargnani immediately proposed an ambitious programme of economic reform and liberalization that promptly met the staunch opposition of his cabinet comrades.

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After years of debate, soured relations and useless campaigning, the King approved merely one point of Bargnani's many demands - that slavery in all its forms should be abolished in Italy.

This change was less dramatic than it might appear. The profitability of the slave trade had been going down for decades by this point and slaves were rare in Italy, kept mainly as status symbols by some wealthy families. It should not be ignored that the King was personally in favor of the abolitionist cause and had advocated ending slavery privately for years. His marriage to a missionary woman who had worked in West Africa had made him sympathetic to the plight of Italian slaves. Even so, a desire to appease the slave-trading companies had delayed the Abolition Proclamation until now. Many liberal activists entertained hopes that the end of slavery might lead to further liberal reforms in Italy, but they were to be gravely disappointed. The King had no intention of appeasing 'the students and the housewives' any further, as he saw the matter. (...)

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In early 1850, King Galeazzo Maria was part of the Western embassy intervening in the 'Tver Crisis' in Russia. A diplomatically isolated Persia was faced by an united front of European great powers who demanded it return the region of Tver to the Kingdom of Vladimir and cease its attempts at converting its Quranist populace. This unlikely adventure united Wallachian, Greek, French, British and Italian representatives in their condemnations of 'Oriental barbarism'. Beneath the surface, the move was likely motivated by the proposed reform of the Majlis parliament in Persia. A new law would have turned this aristocratic, semi-representative assembly into a broader and more powerful legislative institution at the expense of the Shah's authority. This liberalization of Persia was perceived as a threat to the international absolutist system and an embarrassment to Western powers still clinging to rule by decree.

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The Persian government failed to call the Europeans' bluff; it acceded to the embassy's demands and withdrew from Tver. This failure of the Persian state to defend itself against diplomatic 'bullying' provoked an immediate counter-reaction at home. Conservative nobility orchestrated a coup that dissolved the Majlis and ended the democratic experiment in Persia before it had a chance to truly begin. The reformer Shah Abbas IV was replaced by his domineering and reactionary brother Ismai'il. The European embassy had effectively achieved its goals without firing a single shot.

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The co-operation of the Europeans would not last - except between Galeazzo Maria and the British envoy, Lord Pitcairn. Their personal friendship would pave the way for an Italo-British alliance in July. France's allies-turned-enemies were now growing closer together, united in their desire to contain the ambitions of 'Perfidious Gaul'.

***​

Letter dated 26 October 1851 by an unidentified author to Dutch Minister for War, Alexander Vermeer

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Dear Alexander,

I wish you a merry day wherever you are. I have met a charming Austrian scientist to-day by the name of Gregor Mendel, who enlightened me at length on the processes through which Nature passes on certain traits and qualities across the years. While much of what he said astounded and intrigued me greatly, the basic assumption of inheritance and heredity certainly did not. I still see myself in those countless souls of my flesh and blood. Every some generations a spitting image of the long-dead man I was comes forth and bewilders me with their likeness.

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But I suppose you have no descendants, for the self-evident reason. I will write instead of the thing you love most. There is war here in the Near East once more. The Arabs have invaded the Sinai and seek to drive the Somali out of Egypt. How much blood has been shed over these sands? Not enough, you would say. I enlisted as an advisor for the Iraqi armies, claiming to be a veteran of Italy's wars. And I certainly am one at that! You will be interested to hear of the treatments and medicines they have crafted in these parts; there is something of the Alchemist in them, though I suspect the mortals begin to outpace even her genius. I send with this letter some elixir they distill from opium into a draught that takes away all pain.

The end result is far fewer men dead, though one wonders if those crippled and dismembered would rather have perished than live on in this manner. But I suppose the Muslims will always have the charity of their pious neighbors to draw upon. My perspective is naturally biased.

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You will observe, dear friend, how my writing has improved since my last letter. I have attended a modern Italian school in the Maghreb, where I have relearned my native tongue. Why they keep changing the ways it is written and spoken is beyond me! The locals here care little for any variant of the tongue, though they get by with a pidgin when they have to speak to bureaucrats and the like. I remember your hatred for bureaucrats, and the people here certainly share in your opinion, at least for Italian bureaucrats.

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It is quite convenient that your present persona should be so easily reached. Pray write to me of your work and the wars you have planned. I shall visit when I find the time.

Respectfully,
Your Wanderer

P.S: They've come a long way with ale and wine, it must be admitted. I am quite overcome as I write this. No matter. Raise a toast for me, as I now raise one to you!

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) Italian reluctance for war had faded by 1851. When Polish envoys raised the prospect of war against the Wallachian Empire, King Galeazzo Maria was eager to agree. On December 6, 1851, the Kingdom of Poland declared war upon Wallachia with the aim of reclaiming the ethnic Polish territories western Galicia. Italy raised its banners for war only days later. The mass mobilization put into effect was made far faster and far-reaching by the growing network of railways running through the most populated parts of Italy.

Even with the great host gathering for the invasion, Italian strategists were nervous. Wallachia would not be an easy foe to fell. Or so it was assumed.

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(...) When Italian forces crossed into Wallachian territory on the 13th of December, however, they found a nation in flames. The closed Italian border had admitted little in the way of news or travelers for many years. The picture of Wallachian strength had been preserved, but it was now revealed to have been an illusion of such. Wallachia in 1851 existed in a state of civil war, with serf revolts, bickering nobility and nationalist uprisings all working to tear the vitality out of the Empire. The Wallachian armies had been hard-pressed to battle these rebel armies - and now they faced a full-on invasion by their enemies.

Wallachia was joined by their sole ally in Europe, the Republic of Gotland. (...) The war would not be over swiftly. Despite their weakness, the Wallachian Empire was geographically vast and difficult to traverse, and its armies reportedly fought 'like demons themselves'. (...)

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When the extent of Wallachian weakness became apparent, Italian diplomats were quick to press further claims against their enemy. The desire to create a buffer state and block Wallachian access to the Adriatic led to a promise to liberate and protect the Serbs in January, laying the foundation for an independent Serbian state. This represented the loss of a vast amount of territory if realized, though less than 4 million people - centuries of brutal royal rule had effectively depopulated the region by the 19th century.

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(...) Wallachian fortunes turned from bad to worse in February. The Kingdom of Greece declared the liberation of Crimean Greeks and jumped into the fray, backed up by its French benefactor. Faced with a two-front war, what little resistance Wallachia was able to muster now began to rapidly collapse. Only the sheer size of the Empire and widespread guerilla night attacks - attributed to supernatural monsters for the sheer ferocity and skill of these partisans - now delayed Wallachian capitulation.

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(...) The Greek and Italian fronts met in Craova in April, ending the first stage of the war. Battles still raged on in Wallachian Slovakia, where most of the royal armies had been mustered. New regiments of conscripted serfs were raised up and gathered in the east, but these unmotivated and untrained slave-soldiers had little hope of matching professional Greek and Italian forces. Wallachian victories in Trencin and Gyor only provided temporary relief, as their enemies were bringing more and more men to the field every day.

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(...) Gotlander forces arrived in northern Poland in June, but these expeditionary corps proved a distraction rather than a reversal for the war. Western Wallachia was under Italian occupation by the end of summer, with the Crimea and the south-east in Greek hands. Now only the great Ukrainean plains held out against the invasion. The Empire was falling. But what of its King? (...)
 
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The Kingdom of Italy, 1852-1858: Rise and Fall
Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) The rapid collapse of Wallachian resistance emboldened its invaders into making ever more ambitious claims. Late 1852 saw proclaimed Greek ambitions over Bulgaria and Italian demands that Gotland give up its border territories in Lithuania, which held modest minority populations of Poles. The aim of both powers was to cripple Wallachia and end it as a credible rival in Europe. The co-belligerents practiced an increasing degree of cooperation in their operations. While King Galeazzo Maria in Italy distrusted and disliked the Greeks immensely - seeing them as usurpers of his Nikaean crown kingdom - the rest of the Italian government was coming to terms with their new neighbor. Greece's ties to France made any prospect of actual alliance impossible, of course; but the ice was thawing.

(...) Now something extraordinary happened. Even at the time the events that followed were confused and understood by few contemporary spectators. In what was likely a palace coup, King Tibor XV of Wallachia disappeared without a trace, leaving the reins of power entirely in the hands of a suddenly empowered cabinet. The loss of the King appears to have precipitated an immediate collapse in morale and war readiness. (...) The ministers who approved the treaty would not speak of what had happened. The only, cryptic comment on the matter was that they had been "at last freed"; perhaps a criticism of the stifling nature of absolutist rule. But the exact details will likely remain one of history's great mysteries. (...)

***​

Transcript from the interrogation of Matteo Bombacci, a rifleman in the 3. Corps of the Italian Royal Army, on March 20 1855; regarding events in the Polish-Wallachian War

INTERROGATOR: Be seated. (a brief pause) You are Matteo Bombacci, son of Giovanni Bombacci, a small farmer from Salerno? Enlisted rifleman in the Second Campanian Brigade, Third Army Corps?

BOMBACCI: I've done nothing wrong. Who are you people?

INTERROGATOR: Calm yourself, rifleman Bombacci. You are not accused of any crime. I must beg you to answer the question, for the record. Are you the aforementioned Matteo Bombacci?

BOMBACCI: Uh, I- Yes.

INTERROGATOR: Tremendous. Would you care to theorize why it is that you are here, rifleman Bombacci?

BOMBACCI: No.

INTERROGATOR: Very well. You were overheard some days ago at a public house in Rome as you spoke to an associate about your experiences in the last war. We would like you to repeat what you said then to us. For the official record.

BOMBACCI: I, I don't think so. I don't know what you people think you heard. It was nothing. It was all nonsense. A soldier's tale. Idle phantasms, you know... I'm not proud of it, but when I have a drink or two, my imagination-

INTERROGATOR: This is not how you represented yourself then. You were willing to swear the veracity of your tale upon the Blessed Virgin. An oath that we do not believe a pious Papist like yourself would give casually, rifleman Bombacci.

BOMBACCI: No, no, I... It's not like that at all.

INTERROGATOR: You are not accused of any crime, rifleman Bombacci. At least, not yet. If you refuse to comply with us, that may very well change.

BOMBACCI: No, no! I'm a loyal King's man. (a pause) It's only that, you'll surely think me mad. I swear, my mind is my own. I'm not going to the madhouse.

INTERROGATOR: That is not likely to happen, rifleman Bombacci. But I must ask you to begin, so that we are not forced to resort to less pleasant means of persuasion. If you please?

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BOMBACCI: Alright. Well, I. The thing is. (A pause.) This was after we'd trounced the Swedes in Königsberg. I remember hearing about that in the mess tent the night before. So, it must have been, the August of '52? It's been years. I can't place the date, I don't think. I was fighting in the south, myself. We'd driven the Wallachians back over miles, victory after victory. It'd been poor country, though. The people there, well... they were so wretched poor and hungry you couldn't find anything worth taking. And besides, the General didn't like that sort of thing, anyway.

INTERROGATOR: General Di Canio, this would be?

BOMBACCI: Yes, that's him. Old Bear, we'd call him. He was one of those Alpini, I think, before they gave him his promotion. Big man. Fierce-tempered, or so we understood. Drilled us pretty hard, even when we was marching to fight. But, anyway. He's got nothing to do with what happened. See, we'd been given this mission, well, recon duty. There was this old castle up in the mountains looking down at us, and they wanted us to see if the General could set up there. There was a dozen of us or so, led by this captain, um, Captain Graziani. So we-

INTERROGATOR: One moment. Please describe the men with you as well as you are able.

BOMBACCI: Right, uh. There was Graziani. He came from money and, uh, a title, you understand. Seemed like a decent fellow. We didn't really get to know him. Then there was Valenti, who I was good friends with, and Leonetti, who I knew a little. And little Rivera, who we called Lucky, him being so uncommon good-fortuned, and a friendly lad besides. I think the others were Ricardo, Martelini, Bondavalli, and, uh. Oh, Müller - he was an Austrian from Tirol, a Catholic also, so we got along. He was a replacement, I think. I don't know if I remember the rest. I didn't really know them, and, well, there wasn't much left to know by the end. But then there was the Lieutenant.

INTERROGATOR: The Lieutenant?

BOMBACCI: He said he was a Guerra. Like the King, you see? Well, we thought it was some kind of joke. See, his coat said Grieco, so that's his real name, I guess. He had this odd accent. I don't know how to describe it, just odd. Nothing like you usually hear. I've pretty good ears, myself, everyone says. I can hear that kind of thing. Well, he said he was from Toscana. Don't think that was true. But maybe he was running from something, or such. I've no idea. There's a lot I don't know about him. Not really.

INTERROGATOR: What did he look like?

BOMBACCI: Well, uh. Handsome fellow, I suppose. Uh, dark hair. Strong, he looked strong. I don't know how... Ricardo said he looked like the King, and that maybe he was a Guerra after all. But I didn't think much of that.

INTERROGATOR: Captain Graziani was killed in action during this mission, yes?

BOMBACCI: Uh, yes. Or well, no. I don't know. We'd set up camp on this mountain path, on the way to the castle. The Lieutenant and the Captain were discussing something. Only then, the Lieutenant left, and when he came back in a few hours, he went into the Captain's tent and came to tell us he was dead. Killed by enemy partisans who'd slipped into camp, he said. I never did see any partisans. But maybe it was something like that. So that's how he died. Or what we saw of it.

INTERROGATOR: What happened then?

BOMBACCI: Well, the Lieutenant took over. He told us to break camp and head up for the castle, even though night was falling and we was dead tired. We didn't even bury the Captain... He said we'd come back for him later and, well, what could you do? He was in charge. So we hurried up that path like the Devil was on our... well, behind us. And when we came to a stop just before the castle, well, that's when the first of us died.

INTERROGATOR: You were attacked?

BOMBACCI: Yes. I think so. I didn't really see it, except out of the corner of my eye. Something rushed past and snatched up poor, uh, one of the fellows whose name I can't recall. He was just a boy, really. He was keeping the rear, but, uh, maybe he slipped, or maybe something reached for him. I think it was probably one of those things that we, uh. Anyway, he went down into the rocks and out of sight, and we couldn't see him in the dark. But he kept screaming. Screaming, calling for help. The Lieutenant forbid us from descending into the, uh, the ravine where he'd gone down. That was for the best, I think, but at the time we thought him then the coldest son of a... Well, you know.

INTERROGATOR: And then?

BOMBACCI: We moved into the castle. And he was still screaming, the boy, until we couldn't hear him no more. So we hurried inside the castle. The doors were open, you see. There were no lights there, so the Lieutenant had us light torches as we went along. That place.... It was something else. Damned big, with a whole lot of money put into it. Old, old stuff. Paintings and the like. Müller, who knows these things better, he was acting all very impressed. The Lieutenant, though, he moved about the place like he'd been there before. Like he was already searching for something. Anyway, we didn't have a lot of time to gawk around. They started coming at us in the dark. (A pause.) People, I guess. Things.

INTERROGATOR: Things, rifleman Bombacci?

BOMBACCi: Well, I've never seen people like that. All pale and horrid, like there was no blood in them. No fear in them, either. And when we shot them, they kept coming back up. Only, the Lieutenant had told us to light their bodies on fire once we shot 'em, and we had a little oil with us. His idea, that. We'd thought him mad, but now... Everything was mad. That's when most of us went down. Leonetti, Martelini, Bondavalli, and a lot of the others. Snatched into the dark. And those things, they was gutting them open and starting to eat them. Call me mad, but that's how it was! I saw 'em tearing off pieces, and drinking blood!

INTERROGATOR: Calm yourself, rifleman Bombacci. What then?

BOMBACCI: Eh... We went deeper. The Lieutenant wouldn't let us stop. He led us on until we came to this, uh, this big hall. Like a throne room, I guess. There were lights here, though. And people. All very proper, waiting for us. Like a welcoming committee. Some of 'em were like the.... the things that attacked us, but some of 'em looked normal. Like you and me. Later, the Lieutenant told us they was sons and daughters of ministers and the like, for the Wallachians. Hostages, he said. Only I don't know how he could tell any of that. In the middle of it all was this pale, big man, I think their leader. The Lieutenant and him seemed to know one another. But we couldn't understand any of it; they spoke in the local tongue, though Rivera, who knew it a little, couldn't make heads or tails out of it either. So there we stand, pointing our guns at the lot of them, praying that those things don't come at us from behind...

INTERROGATOR: What happened then?

BOMBACCI: The pale man gave some kind of order, but now his people, they wouldn't move a muscle. He didn't like that one bit. One of them others, this woman, she comes up and challenges the old man. Now, I know I said I don't speak the tongue, but you didn't need to, to see what was going on there. So the woman and the man start going at it. God, they... They were monsters. They didn't have weapons, but they tore eachother apart, with their bare hands. And all the rest of 'em were just watching. Waiting to see who came out on top. And the Lieutenant, he was watching too. All of us were. You couldn't take your eyes off it.

INTERROGATOR: I see.

BOMBACCI: You see. You see? What is this, huh? I'm telling you a madman's tale, and you don't even have the decency to look surprised. Are you humoring me, or what? You can't actually believe me. Do you?

INTERROGATOR: Allowing for exaggeration, faulty memory and lack of understanding, yes. I do. But let us finish your tale before we discuss the ramifications of that.

BOMBACCI: The hell.... Alright. Well, those two, the ones fighting, they'd worn themselves down pretty bad. I don't think the old man thought the girl'd be so much trouble. I sure as Hell wouldn't have. So I say to the Lieutenant, just voicing my thoughts, that it looks like the old man's getting the upper hand. And he says, Matteo, I think you're right. And he grabs the canister, the rest of the oil we have, and he pours something in it, a little vial, something he has in his shirt pocket. He runs down the middle of the hall and flings the whole damn thing at the monsters. And the two of 'em, they go up like matches. Screaming and thrashing. My God, the fire was white-hot. That oil shouldn't have burned as good as it did. Wouldn't have, without that something he mixed into it, I think. And once they're gone, once they're piles of ash, the whole damn room goes mad. The monsters start fleeing every which way. Ignoring us, except when we get in their path, and then they tear us right apart. But the Lieutenant, he just says that we ought to make sure the hostages - that's the normal people they had there - are alright, and not to bother him. And he goes to the pile of ash and pokes around it and shakes his head.

INTERROGATOR: He was angry?

BOMBACCI: Disappointed, more like. So I go up to him, to tell him about the hostages, and he says to me that "It didn't work" and that "They'll return". And I say, how's anyone going to come back from that? But he says nothing, 'cept then he says he's sorry to the ashes! To someone called Ruxandra, I think. And then we're just told to head out and leave the castle. And that's the end of it. The Lieutenant made some report, I guess, but they never asked us anything. And I, I guess I didn't really tell anyone, since I didn't really know what to tell. For a while I figured I'd dreamed it. But I don't think so.

INTERROGATOR: That is all?

BOMBACCI: Well - the peace was made only a few days after that, I hear. And maybe it's foolish, but I feel, I always felt, maybe what we did that night had something to do with it. I know their King died, sometime around then. And I saw a portrait of that one later on, and there was a resemblance to, you understand, to the leader of those monsters. So it don't feel like just coincidence. The Lieutenant would know, for sure.

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INTERROGATOR: Very good. I believe this shall do for a preliminary examination, but rest assured we will be returning to your testimony again. Thank you for your cooperation, rifleman Bombacci.

BOMBACCI: Now hold on just a moment. I've told my tale. I want some answers. Who are you people? Why aren't you surprised at any of this? What do you know about those things?

INTERROGATOR: I should hope you will not have heard of us. Let us just say that our institution serves His Majesty, rifleman Bombacci, whether He is aware of that or not. I suppose it would be best to say we serve the Nation. We protect it against... less obvious threats. Our means and weapons are no less necessary than your rifle when it comes to it. It is a different kind of war. But we will discuss this at length on another date. For now, I would ask you to follow me. It is time we discussed your prospects for employment at the present time...

Transcript ends.

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) The war was a triumph for Poland and Italy. The latter had gained a large buffer state in the region in the form of Serbia, leaving Wallachia with only a handful of Adriatic ports and bereft of Serbian resources and industry. The Serbian Kingdom was formally restored in a jubilant affair and months-long festivities, with promises of friendship and alliance made by King Galeazzo Maria of Italy and King Lazar Petrovic of Serbia. For the former, Poland's ascendancy was only beginning. The power of the two nations united had brought down the Wallachian behemoth, but Poles still lived under foreign rule. Where would Polish eyes turn next?

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Greek negotiations went perhaps even further than those of Italy and Poland. Wallachia was demilitarized and disarmed, while the westernmost tip of the Caucasus was returned to Greek rule and a part of Wallachian Bulgaria annexed into Greece. These harsh terms crippled the Wallachian military for decades to come, and left the nation incapable of maintaining more than an internal security force to quell unrest - and even that would prove unreliable. (...) The new 'interregnum government' of Wallachia delayed the choice of a new King and instead began drafting ambitious plans for the emancipation of the vast serf underclass in Wallachia. This grand ambition would be extremely difficult to realize without the military strength or concessions to ensure the obedience of the nobility, and this the new government did not possess.

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(...) Inevitably, on June 4 1854, a nobles' revolt overcame the much-reduced state forces and seized control of the government. Foreign observers were driven from the country, the borders were closed once more, serfdom was enshrined as a central pillar of Wallachian government, and thousands of liberal- and reform-minded officials were slaughtered in mass purges. Soon enough, a new King of the Draculesti line found his way to the throne. Little appears to have changed in the end for the people of Wallachia, though the state itself was still considerably weakened. (...)

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Serfdom did not exist in Italy, but more and more Italians were driven into wage slavery with little difference in their quality of life to those toiling in bondage in Wallachia. Child labor in particular had become an issue that drew a great deal of criticism by the new generation of liberal and proto-socialist authors interested in societal ills and dangers. Many liberals were firm defenders of child labor, however, arguing that it benefited both the laborer and his employer and resenting perceived attempts at further regulating the market. For its part, the government had little interest in legislating against the practice - though liberal members of cabinet would at times raise the subject for official discussion. (...)

***​

Excerpts of 'The American Empire: How the United States Enslaved A Continent', written by Édith Laurent (Port-Royal: 1972)

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'Bush wars' continued to break out in North America in this period. Indian-descended settlers in Columbia were provoked into attacking an outpost on the Canadian frontier, sparking the Columbo-Canadian War. This low-intensity conflict saw Columbian skirmishers drive back Canadian militias and occupy much of the western frontier. The fortunes of war would only be reversed by an American intervention in support of Canada with the aim of asserting American hegemony over the continent. (...) The United States, on the other hand, would in November 1853 betray all promises to the Mexican government and demand Texas and Arizona to be ceded to the US. The appalled Mexican government refused to give up what constituted almost a third of its territory. Predictably, the Americans invaded. This invasion was led by militias of the Southern states, who indeed began hostilities weeks before the declaration of war was hurried through the Senate. The aim was the expansion of Slave Power by any means necessary.

(...) Mexican resistance crumbled quickly. The Mexican government offered its surrender on December 1854. The US annexed Arizona and Texas; the latter was invaded a second time immediately after, this time internally, as Southern slavers fell upon the vast territory as a ravenous horde to lay the foundation for their slave state. This mass of slave-owner immigrants ensured a successful vote for the expansion of slavery into the new state of Texas. (...) The Bengali-American remnant of New Mexico would fall next in a bloodless invasion usually treated as a mere footnote to the conflict. (...)

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Their political opponents were outraged, though generally for the sheer size of this new 'mega-state'; plans had already been made to form at least two, if not more, new states out of the territory. The western parts of Texas were dominated by Indian-descended populations, while the east had been settled by Dutch colonists. This cultural and political divide alone should have guaranteed two separate states. Canny Southern politicians raised a storm over the division plans, however, claiming that Mexico had governed the region as one province, and that any talk of dividing the area was merely an attempt to abolish the 'Southern way of life' - that is, chattel slavery - through a pretext. Fearful of secession, Northern politicians bent over and accepted this. A more radical proposal to ban slavery entirely in any new states annexed from Mexico failed in the Senate, serving only to stoke Southern hostility to the government in Saguenay. (...)

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The death toll, devastation and instability which followed the war in Mexico had a noticeable effect on immigration rates. For the first time in decades, Mexico was a net exporter of people. Immigration from the Old World had effectively ceased and Mexicans now fled to neighboring nations, including the Italian colony of Nicaragua, the Bolivian Republic, and the very cause of Mexican misfortune, the United States. The latter group were often families with ties to Texan and Arizonan Mexicans annexed into the US, though they were generally not allowed back on the lands which American settlers had stolen from them. (...)

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) May 1854 brought news of a war in the north. Bavaria sought to reclaim lost territories from Denmark, which held considerable territory in German and Sorb lands. The Danish alliance with France had ended some years before from a spying scandal, leaving Denmark isolated and vulnerable to invasion. (...) The war was costly and did not see an end until 1857, when the Danish government accepted the loss of Franken. This wealthy and populous region joined Bavaria and strengthened German hopes that Bavaria could become an unifier of Germany. Italian diplomats thought this prospect unlikely, and so endeavored to align Bavaria with Italy and bring it into the Italian sphere of influence.

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(...) Italy's colonial ministry saw reason for joy in December 1855, with the Filippino revolt against their Ceylonese overlords. With the established powers of the Pacific weakening, Italy saw an opportunity to expand its own holdings there - preferably without expensive military campaigns. While the Philippines were eventually deemed too volatile to approach, the Sultanate of Brunei became the focus of Italian imperialist aims. A slow, insidious infiltration of Bruniean government was underway, with consequences to follow. (...)

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In the Maghreb, a network of 'flying universities' was taking shape. With higher education closed from locals due to their religion, ethnicity or the arbitrary whims of Italian administrators, many middle-class Maghrebis founded their own societies for study and debate. It is not surprising that from the beginning, these universities had a radical and revolutionary character. Increasingly, they attracted early socialist thinkers and agitators, whose descendants would feature in far more radical pursuits in the region half a decade later. (...)

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Unwelcome news came out of South America in 1857. Brazil, a long-time Italian ally and the premier power in the region, had fallen to military coup. The progressive republic born of the War for Independence was gone, replaced by authoritarian generals who governed through a permanent state of emergency. Their inexperienced and painfully reactionary rule would see Brazil fall into steep decline. Military leadership could not prevent military defeat either, as the Argentine invasion of 1858 would go on to show. (...) Brazil was on the fast track to becoming a lawless failed state. Italian influence on the continent was gone just as well.

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(...) Imperial ambitions also meant the expansion of Italian rule in Africa. Beginning from December 1857, Italian envoys and military expeditions subjugated the tribes of the Angolan coast, forming the foundation for Italian South-West Africa and the massive growth of its African empire.

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(...) The question of the Netherlands was settled - at least for a time - in early 1858. In secret negotiations, Dutch officials agreed to an anti-French alliance with Italy and proposed war to reclaim ethnic Dutch territories in Gelderland. This modest aim was accepted as the first step in reclaiming all Dutch lands in the region. But when to attack? The Wallachian victory had emboldened Italian generals, but they were aware of France's vast military strength and strong defenses. The French also could rely on allies in Aragon and Bohemia. The opportunity, when it finally came, was a surprise. Bavaria had refused French 'patronage' in a very public manner, causing widespread outrage in France. The French launched an invasion of Bavaria in April 1858, which also brought the British Empire to defend its ally against French aggression.

The chance to force France into a two-front war was too good to pass up. On the 2nd of June, the Netherlands declared war upon France. For the first time, Italy would go on the offensive against their once-dear neighbor. The Dutch-French War had begun.

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***​
 
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The Kingdom of Italy, 1858-1860: the Franco-Dutch War
Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) The situation in June 1858 was optimal. British forces had made landfall in the French Low Countries in strength. Britain, eager to avenge the loss of Brest in 1847 and to sate revanchist feeling within the military establishment, was investing a great deal of coin and men into the 'Bavarian Expedition'. Even so, they were vastly outnumbered by French numbers and generally outfought when odds were even. They needed Dutch - and far more importantly, Italian - assistance. (...) The French opened the new front with an aggressive gambit, blockading and raiding the Dutch coast while the superior British navy was otherwise engaged. Naval bombardment leveled the heart of the Dutch financial empire in Amsterdam and caused severe damages to much of the city. The toll of the war years for Dutch trade and finance would be extreme.

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(...) The French had not expected war in the south as well. The border corps had been drawn away for the invasion of Bavaria, leaving the Franco-Italian border catastrophically open. Italian forces advanced with caution, however, wary of overextending. This would end up giving the French armies precious time to consolidate and regroup. To accomplish this, however, the French general staff essentially gave up the South as lost. Occitania would suffer the humiliation of an Italian occupation once more. (...) Italian forces also deployed into Bavaria to provide much-needed relief against the invading French forces. Bavarian citizens put aside a history of differences to cheer for Italian soldiers as they marched into Münich after routing the French V. Corps from the area.

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Lessons from the last wars had been taken to heart. The vast population reserves of Italy could now be mobilized and organized into regiments of the line far more efficiently than had been possible before. The combination of railway and bureaucratization of the military was bearing fruit. (...) Victory was not so easily assured in the Netherlands. An overeager Dutch thrust into Wallonia had resulted in heavy casualties and a chaotic retreat. The French now pressed the offensive, advancing rapidly through aged Dutch fortifications that could not withstand the sheer destructive power of modern artillery.

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With this, the French hoped to force the Dutch quickly to terms. The arrival of Italian reinforcements at Cambrai and Maastricht in September 1857 marked the end of such hopes. While the French still had the upper hand in this theater, they did so at the cost of the war elsewhere. Southern France was falling rapidly to Italian occupation, while the British armies swept over the north and marched unresisted into Paris in October. The French cause was well and truly in trouble. (...) This unexpected success emboldened the Italian leadership. At the behest of King Galeazzo Maria, the Italian envoy announced - to the delighted surprise of his Dutch counterpart - that Italy would not settle for anything less than the full liberation of all Dutch-speaking inhabitants of France. This in effect meant the annexation of considerable territories into the Netherlands proper, (...)

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As far as the British were concerned, however, the war was won. An empowered Netherlands was not in their interest. As such, Great Britain negotiated a separate peace with France in the February of 1859, accepting 'merely' the acquisition of various historical treasures and imperial valuables from the French treasury. The loss of the Imperial Standard - later placed on display in the British Museum in London - was particularly harshly felt in France. (...) Despite this humiliation, France's position was improved. They could now attempt to repulse the Italo-Dutch invasion and hopefully tip the balance of war back in their favor.

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(...) Many European liberals had counted upon wartime deprivation and hardship to radicalize the common people for revolution. Bitter disappointments in previous conflicts had sapped the fervor of the organized revolutionary movement in Italy bit by bit despite success abroad. The Franco-Dutch War proved to be the death blow for this 'dreamer generation' of jacobins. No real discontent or resistance to the Italian Crown manifested during the bloody conflict. Indeed, the state had co-opted the nationalist rhetoric of the revolutionary cause with such sophistication that many would-be revolutionaries gave up the cause to champion the King and the absolutist state instead, seeing it as the best way forward for all Italians. (...) Later generations of rebels would look to other doctrines instead; liberalism in Italy had died in most ways that mattered.

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(...) French hopes of recovery in the war were crushed in March-April 1859. The Kingdom of Aragon capitulated first, overwhelmed by the forces of Italy and their Iberian allies and fearing the forced restoration of a Guerra claimant to the throne if they resisted further. Bohemia followed soon after, ceding the Sorbian-majority region of Bramborska to Italian ally Poland. France now stood alone against a triumphant foe. (...)

Bohemia, shorn of its Sorbian corridor to the coast, endured a government crisis soon after capitulation. The difficulty of administering territories on the Baltic coast, now separated from the centre by hostile Poland and Denmark, resulted in the foundation of autonomous Duchies of Sorbia and Pommerania. These Czech satellites would be granted some measure of self-rule - a necessary sacrifice with the new state of the realm. Bohemia itself would reform as the Kingdom of the Czechs in a bid to capitalize on nationalist feeling in the heartland. (...)

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After the Czech exit from the war, French resistance collapsed like a deck of cards. The Dutch and German provinces of France were under enemy occupation by June. The few battles fought in this period were disasters for the French. The impact of the new long-barreled Mazzini rifles has been overstated in past historiography - since they only began arriving in the final months of the war to Italian troops and thus played no role in the earlier stage of the conflict - but it should be noted that these new, highly accurate weapons caused heavy casualties when French forces encountered them. The demoralizing effect of being unable to engage at similar long ranges further reduced weak French desire to fight. (...)

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On August 6, 1859, the French government accepted the inevitable. Dutch-speaking regions of the French Empire would be ceded to the Netherlands and any claim to these territories given up permanently. The Italo-Dutch negotiators interpreted 'Dutch-speaking regions' very loosely, resulting in the annexation of many ethnically German territories into the new Greater Netherlands as well. (...) The war had demanded 600,000 dead on the Italo-Dutch side and 540,000 on the French; a considerable bloodbath, but one made possible by the growing reach of mobilization and industrially fueled warfare in this period.

(...) The victorious Netherlands had suffered not only in men, but in profits as well. The mercantile-minded nation saw bleak economic collapse in the years following the war. Only months after the end of the war, a cadre of generals and admirals seized power in the nation, beginning the long period of military dictatorship in the nation's history.

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(...) For Italy, the war had been a lesson in the need for military reform. The aristocratic deadwood of military academies were done away with during the years of war, opening up the final bastion of noble influence in the Kingdom to the 'new men' of the bourgeois classes. Further reforms in training and organization followed as the war revealed weaknesses in the Italian military institution, gradually creating one of the strongest armed forces on the planet. Italy's continued military triumphs did not go unnoticed by the great powers of Europe.

***​

Excerpts from the 1860 Report on Foreign Affairs, drawn up by the Foreign Ministry for internal use in the Kingdom of Italy

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(...) The Somali-Alodian War has ended with the victory of the latter. The Sudanese of Alodia have extended their reach to the sea and thus cut off Somalia from its Egyptian possessions. The Somali Emperor has been forced to grant some measure of self-rule to the Catholic Egyptian elites, who have elected a King from among themselves. This theoretical state appears internally weak. We are of the belief that Italy should capitalize on this weakness and expand its influence in Egypt in the coming years. (...) It is evident that the Somali are the sick man of the Near East and cannot be counted upon to maintain their dominion for much longer; Persia is thought to benefit and we believe swift action could still blunt Persian influence in the region. (...)

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The Celestial Empire has been restored in China. The Liang Dynasty have consolidated their power and successfully modernized their administration to the level where we believe them capable of asserting their hegemony over all of China in the coming decades. The claimants of Yue, Kumtag and the Manchu have not attempted to deny the Liang their claim to the Empire. The Republic of Shun remains a protectorate of the Liang, and we have noted a significant degree of industrial development within this small aristocratic republic. We believe patronage and investment into the Shun Republic may allow a counterweight to be created to the Liang. The Manchu also present a likely prospect for Italian investments, with the power to resist Liang expansionism and thus ensure the division of the Middle Kingdom. A powerful and industrialized China is not in the interest of Italy at this time. (...)

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The United States continues to advance in industrial capacity, population and military strength. However, its internal instability has only grown worse in the past year. (...) This latest ill-advised military venture against Mexico is likely to plunge the nation into political deadlock, as neither side will accept compromise when it comes to the status of slavery in territories to be annexed. Tensions are at a breaking point. We beseech His Majesty's Government to advise us in the matter of America. Shall Italy support the industrialists of the North, or the Vinlander slave-owning elites of the South? The possibility of a peaceful solution to the Slavery Question in the United States now appears extremely unlikely. We do not consider civil war impossible; indeed it seems likely such a conflict will begin either after the Mexican War, or perhaps even during it. (...)

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***​

Someone messaged me about whether I'll put up the saves for these games up here, but I can't seem to find the message anymore. In case I didn't just dream that up - sure, I can do that. As promised, the HoI4 part will be a full-on mod with as much content as I can give it, but I can put up the saves and converter mods for the EU4 and V2 saves as well at some point.
 
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The Kingdom of Italy, 1860-1867: the War of Southern Rebellion
Letter dated 10 November 1862 from Goffredo Guerra, Prince of Italy and Imperial Heir, to Kazimierz II Andrzej Guerra, King of Poland

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My dear cousin,

How are you? I write to tell you that I have finished the Manifesto which you were kind to mail me. It is testament to the zeal of our censors that my man only narrowly saved it from the pyre at the border! It proved a most riveting read; certainly imaginative, however nonsensical its principles may be. I am confounded by your concerns! This will matter little to the hoi polloi; it is far too dense and worldly. Its message is not for the common laborer. I tell you, they look blankly at you should you mention the name of these strange Germans to them. It is all far too academic, far too high-brow. The students have gone mad for it, on the other hand, as is to be expected. The once-Utopianists and cooperationists have jumped ship in droves to this far more fashionable strain of their cause. There is some concern they may rile up the masses, but I think that unlikely. They're of different worlds.

There is a curious strain of orthodox Waldensianism in the text, is there not? It portrays the fathers of our noble church as a breed of proto-Communists and decries the corruptions of its modern edifice. This, I suspect, to win over the radical kind of priest. But it's a long way from vows of poverty to the socialist creed. But I am told there are already groups in our great nation who join the humble candle of the Waldensians with the working man's hammer and axe.

They are very small and insignificant, of course. These ravings do not seriously threaten the order of our state and they never shall. Every man and woman in Italy knows their place in the grand scheme of things. It is the same place their families have filled for hundreds of years.

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But enough of the Communists. You have begged me for a narrative of the American War, and I shall provide. You will know that the fighting began in April. The sensationalistic tales of the atrocities at Fort Lombardia and the Ponte are well known by now. Let us speak of politics and maneuvers. In the South, the Confederates and the Mexicans of course made peace so as to focus on their mutual enemy. Alas if this had come six months earlier! The Mexicans had little fight left in them by 1860. They'd lost their taste for war. The regiments in Mexico remained almost wholly loyal to the Union, I have understood, and so there situation for the Mexicans changed little. These loyalists now continued their offensive with renewed zeal - seeking to subdue Mexico with haste and then swing east into the rear of the Confederacy.

In August the Mexicans threw out the white flag. They ceded a handful of territory in California - a modest gain for the Americans, but such swift victory was its own reward. With Mexico bowing out of the conflict, the Union forces could double up upon their Confederate opponents. The Southerners had seen some success in the north, but this new front forced them to redeploy and forfeit their advantage there.

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The situation was chaotic, I have understood, until the April of 1861. Then the Mexican Corps of the Union began to arrive in Texas, where they wrought such havoc and terror among the 'traitors' of the civilian populace that the vast state jumped to sign a separate peace with the Union, forsaking the Confederate cause. Now the modest gains of the Confederates melted away as they faced enemy forces both south and north of their heartland. It was an untenable situation. Imagine a Poland beset so! How far would your people follow their young warrior king against such odds? To the end, perhaps. Certainly these Confederates expended a great deal of blood to deny their once-brothers easy victories.

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Ah, but I have forgotten to address the matter of the Emancipation Proclamation! The American President, that Mr Abramo Lincolo, penned this in the August of 1862 - when victory seemed assured, and he held the political capital to do so. With one fell stroke the contentious issue of the slavery question was resolved forevermore. A great liberation - a shattering blow against the corrupt institutions of the VInlander magnates. Latin liberty has overcome Northern reaction once more. That this Proclamation also roused the blacks to fight for the Union should not be overlooked. The Union's conscription acts were unpopular and fresh manpower was greatly welcome. A triumph in many ways.

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The Canadian-Columbian conflict also came to an end in 1863, with American support in arms and money tilting the balance in the favor of Canada. The Christian power of the North is now supreme over the heathen Indians. I expect Columbia shall be subjugated in due time by the unity of America and Canada. And with this little support the Americans guaranteed their northern border and ensured that Canada would not give aid to the Confederacy. The President has my sincere admiration for his skill at managing the rambunctious and unsteady house that is American republicanism.

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The latter part of the war is of less interest, or at least my advisors have less to tell me of. The Union's victory march did not stop until it reached the Atlantic at every point. Even so, it was no foregone conclusion. The Southerners fought back like rabid dogs. They chained up their slaves to do battle for them, by the end. A dangerous choice, to put arms in the hands of those you oppress. They have certainly paid the price. Peace came at last in February 1865 - the South surrendered without conditions, to be readmitted into the great American nation.

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The news coming out of the South tell of the wholesale collapse of Slave Power. The President's wolves have torn apart the old world of the South in favor of a new, a land for blacks to do as they like. One hopes this is the total end of that foul institution and its worshipers, not merely a delay for fifty years. The militants in the Senate have won the votes and so now have free rein to punish the South and redistribute the slave-lands as they like. One hopes it shall be the once-slaves who benefit.

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As for other things - I am enclosing with this letter the most extraordinary amulet out of China. I say extraordinary, because it is reputed to depict our common ancestor, the great Mario Guerra! But it is from five hundred years ago, and claims to show him on a mission to China long after his death. I am inclined to dismiss any such claims, but remembering your fondness for these occult tales of our family, I have obtained it for you. Our advisors in the Emperor's court are shown great favor - and given great treasures also for their service - and so we learn more and more of the situation in China every week.

The restored Empire expands rapidly. The Liang forge a modern, civilized state, and they do it with every trick up their sleeve. This dizzying pace of change has its problems. The locals resent European civilization, of course. We expected as much. But the introduction of our racial understanding, hygienic ways and Christian conduct will go a long way in healing that wartorn and superstitious land. But what a rich land it is still! Centuries of violence and yet incredible wealth jumps out at you from every corner. Or so my agents tell me. We strive to open markets in these undeveloped places so that our industries shall benefit.

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On the island of Japan they have attempted something similar to the policies of the Liang. But alas! The forces of ignorance were too strong. The Japanese have toppled their own Emperor and imprisoned him within his house. Now a shogun - some manner of military governor - rules the land instead, and denies our ships access to its ports. These barbarians cling so tightly to their backwards ways that they shall never understand the benefits of our trade, unless we force them to terms with it.

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An aside - we may do away with the business of letters in the coming years. They have built a great many telegraph lines in this country and will be eager to do so in yours. It is a far swifter means of correspondence, though of course one cannot be as certain as with the the privacy of a sealed letter. But my generals and industrialists are both besides themselves with the potential of these machines. I regret the blemish they leave upon pristine fields and shores, though - as if the factory chimneys and slums were not already enough.

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What else, cousin King, what else? The Persians have dealt with the Iraqis without much issue. The Arabs have ceded a great deal of land - parts of the historical Persian realm, as I understand it. We are not overtly concerned with the squabbles of the Muslims unless they threaten our hold on the gates of Egypt, and the Red Sea trade routes. But for now we may treat Persia as merely one neighbor among many. These deserts have little to offer in any case, and I doubt any great treasure waits underneath their sands.

The Somali and the Sudanese are at war also, and the latter have summoned the hordes of the Sofalan Empire in the south to aid them. These savages have humbled the legions of Ajuraan. They have fallen very low indeed. A footnote ending to a once-mighty force which failed to follow in the footsteps of the enlightened West. Good Christian men will not mourn their passing. But we do hear rumors that the Somali Emperor has sworn fealty to great Persia, and that Persian armies shall soon make landfall in the defense of their ally. The first step to Somalian submission beneath the Persian heel, of course, but they are a desperate people indeed. The Sudanese of Alodia are such savages that Persia shall not face much difficulty mopping up their sorry mobs.

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Almost all Slovak provinces (light blue) are outside Czechoslovakia proper for now.

Now, let me ask you in turn. What do you know of the mood in Bohemia? One supposes they are to be called the Czecho-Slovaks, now. A curious attempt at union; the Slovaks all labor under different masters, but it appears the Bohemians have designs on these lands also. Let me guarantee now that Italy shall protect Poland against any Czech aggression, however they will dress it up as liberation. Write to me swiftly of your plans for the Czechs and how Italia might assist you in their completion.

Your friend and cousin,
Goffredo Guerra
Prince of Italy

Up next, a State of the World update.
 
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The situation in the American South should be really interesting, I'd think. You'd have slave owners who are this time part of an ethnicity that the Americans conquered and forced into subjugation, with the Americans now actively cultivating blacks as a loyal ethnicity as a means of asserting imperial control over the Vinlanders. I'd be really interested in seeing what the modern day American south would look like.
 
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Finally caught up on this, so I can properly sing its praises. Truly a wonderful story woven into a strong AAR narrative. I love how you use bits of different texts to elaborate the story, so that the authors also become part of the narrative. I was especially taken recently with the interrogation of the rifleman who fought in the Wallachian War.

I am inclined to dismiss any such claims, but remembering your fondness for these occult tales of our family,
It's interesting that the quality of the ruler seems correlated to the degree that they accept the true history of the family.
 
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State of the World: 1866, the Great Powers
I.
The Kingdom of Italy


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Population: est. 55.90M (+14.42M from 1836)
Capital: Firenze, est. 4.8M in capital area (+1.3M from 1836)
Government: Absolute Monarchy
Head of State: King Galeazzo Maria I Guerra
State Religion: Waldensian Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 327 000 standing, 1 308 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 176 (#2)
Top Producer Of: Steel, Sulphur, Clippers, Fabric, Fruit, Luxury Furniture, Ammo, Artillery and Small Arms

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Recent History:

Italy has been successful in several wars against is former ally France and its eastern neighbor Wallachia. Colonial expansion has granted Italy a stronger foothold in Africa as well. The Italian sphere of influence aims at containing and weakening France before all else. Staggering economic growth has rapidly industrialized Italy, but even so an approximate 65% of the population are employed in agrarian labor.

Government:

Italy is governed according to the principles of absolutist rule. The King is the final authority in all things. No representative assembly exists. Public rallies and meetings are allowed, though subject to arbitrary repression should the state take offense. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery remains legal in Italy. The economic policy of Italy can be described as state capitalist and protectionist, leaving the reins of economic activities tightly in the hands of the state. Minority religions face persecution and their adherents are not allowed in public office. Non-Italian citizens face discrimination.

The government of Italy sponsors a rudimentary and limited public healthcare system.

***

II.
The United States of America


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Population: est. 25.67M (+5.77M from 1836)
Capital: Guassese, est. 160 000 in capital area
Government: Republic
Head of State: President Abramo Lincolo
State Religion: Waldensian Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 48 000 standing, 240 000 reserves (post-war situation)

Industry Estimate: 103 (#7)
Top Producer Of: None

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Recent History:

The United States has over the course of several decades annexed most of North America under its banner. Wars against Canada, Mexico and the powers of the West Coast have won it huge reaches of territory. The Republic has essentially claimed the entire Americas as its own sphere of influence, demanding non-interference from European and Asian powers. Tensions over the Slavery Question broke into bloody civil war in 1860, which has only recently ended in Northern abolitionist victory. The US continues to industrialize steadily, aided by growing immigration to the North American continent. The capital has recently been moved to the small wartime administrative center at Guassese.

Government:

The United States is a democratic republic. The voting franchise comprises all male citizens. Each state sends representatives to the American parliament, the Senate of the United States. The Senate debates, proposes and passes legislation. The electorate also votes in a President to serve fixed four-year terms. The office of the President represents the executive branch of government and has significant political powers. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. Trade unions are legal in any form. Slavery has recently been outlawed after a bloody civil war against a slave-owner rebellion.

The current government party of the United States, the Partito Democratico Americano, supports free trade with an interventionist policy in the economy. The Waldensian state religion is promoted, with minority religions discriminated against. All free citizens of the United States enjoy the same equal legal and political rights, though gaining citizenship has been made difficult.

***

III.
The Chinese Empire


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Population: est. 130.71M
Capital: Kaifeng, est. 3.9M in capital area
Government: Absolute Monarchy
Head of State: Emperor Xizong Liang
State Religion: Confucian/Mahayana Buddhist
Estimated Army Size: est. 510 000 standing, 2 550 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 77 (#9)
Top Producer Of: Timber, Tea, Luxury Clothes​

Recent History:

The Liang Dynasty declared the Empire of China restored in 1860. Since then, they have been embarked on a near-continuous campaign of conquest and consolidation against their neighbors, utilizing Western armaments and tactics to overcome the opposition. The Liang seem set on uniting all of China under the Imperial standard. China has begun to industrialize quickly, specializing particularly in the production of luxury fabrics and clothes using native silk, as well as mass cultivation of tea and industrial forestry.

Government:

China is governed according to the the principles of absolutist rule. The Emperor is the final authority in all things. No representative assembly exists and political activities are banned by law. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery remains legal in China. The economic policy of China can be described as state capitalist and protectionist, leaving the reins of economic activities tightly in the hands of the state. Minority religions face persecution and their adherents are not allowed in public office. Minority citizens face discrimination.

***

IV.
The Kingdom of Czechia


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Population: est. 8.24M (-2.91M from 1836)
Capital: Prague, est. 1.8M in capital area (no significant change from 1836)
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Jan IV Guerra
State Religion: Catholic Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 42 000 standing, 168 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 54 (#10)
Top Producer Of: None​

Recent History:

The Kingdom of Bohemia reformed as the Kingdom of the Czechs in 1859, releasing its former possessions on the Baltic coast as the autonomous duchies of Sorbia and Pommerania. Defeat in war has cost the Kingdom a considerable amount of its population and its international prestige, but Czech excellence in the cultural sphere and its strong industrial base have allowed the small nation to remain a Great Power in the eyes of most observers. With hopes of reclaiming its lost territories unlikely, industrial growth seems to be the way forward for the Czech state.

Government:

Czechia is a constitutional monarchy. The King serves as the head of state and may veto legislation, but must sign it into law after it has been reconsidered and passed again. Each state sends representatives into the Czech Parliament, who propose and pass legislation and form His Majesty's government. The voting franchise encompasses all Czech citizens. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. State-governed trade unions are legal. Slavery is illegal.

The current government party, the CSL, practices a protectionist and interventionist economy. Minorities face persecution and efforts to Czechify the population are widespread.

***

V.
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland


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Population: est. 29.0M (+2.37M from 1836)
Capital: London, est. 2.9M in capital area (+0.7M from 1836)
Government: Semi-Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Oswald Augustus I Guerra
State Religion: British Waldensianism (Anglican)
Estimated Army Size: 174 000 standing, 696 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 197 (#1)
Top Producer Of: Machine Parts, Lumber, Fish, Furniture​

Recent History:

Britain has become the greatest industrial power in the world thanks to a lack of homeland wars and profitable natural resources. Wars against France and other European powers have generally ended in victory, ceding both reparations and glory to the British throne.

Government:

Britain is best classified as a semi-constitutional monarchy. The King is advised by a parliament which is composed of British peerage. The King retains the power to intervene in legislation and dismiss Parliament as desired. Public rallies and meetings are tolerated to some extent. Political parties are banned by the state. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery is illegal in Britain. The economic policy of Britain can be described as interventionist and protectionist, allowing the state great power in regulating and directing the economy. Minority religions face persecution and their adherents are not allowed in public office. Minorities are subjected to discrimination.

***

VI.
The Empire of France


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Population: est. 43.54M (+1.37M from 1836)
Capital: Paris, est. 1.9M in capital area (+0.3M from 1836)
Government: Semi-Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: Emperor Charles VI Guerra
State Religion: Waldensian Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 153 000 standing, 459 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 170 (#3)
Top Producer Of: Coal, Tobacco​

Recent History:

France has come out of the wars of the past decades poorly, losing its Dutch and northern German territories to the Netherlands. Strong economic growth and industrialization have allowed the nation to recover from these blows. It retains a large military and diplomatic influence across Europe.

Government:

France is best classified as a semi-constitutional monarchy. The Emperor is advised by a parliament composed of elected representatives from the middle and upper classes. Political parties are harassed and repressed according to the whims of the state. Public meetings and activism is tolerated. The state employs censors to fine and suppress damaging publications. Slavery is outlawed in France. The economic policy of France can be described as interventionist and protectionist, allowing the state great power in regulating and directing the economy. The government of France functions on secularized principles, with religion in theory a private matter. All inhabitants of France are considered citizens with full legal and political rights.

***

VII.
The Shahdom of Persia


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Population: est. 29.22M (+3M from 1836)
Capital: Tabriz, est. 1.4M in capital area (+0.2M from 1836)
Government: Absolute Monarchy
Head of State: Shah Mohammad Khan I Ustadh
State Religion: Sunni Islam
Estimated Army Size: 135 000 standing, 540 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 120 (#4)
Top Producer Of: Grain, Cattle, Cotton​

Recent History:

Persia has enjoyed over a decade of peace since its loss of face and reactionary coup after the defeat of . This internal stability has allowed the new Shah to consolidate the state's hold on the many minority peoples within its borders and to invest in industrial development. Steady, strong growth in key industries and mass development of agrarian fields have made Persia one of the great economic movers of the globe.

Government:

The Shahdom of Persia is governed according to the the principles of absolutist rule. The Shah is the final authority in all things. No representative assembly exists and political activities are banned by law. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery is outlawed in Persia. The economic policy of Persia can be described as interventionist and protectionist, allowing the state great power in regulating and directing the economy. The Sunni faith is promoted, but all religions are tolerated and face no official discrimination. Minority peoples are subject to discrimination.

***

VIII.
The Kingdom of Greece


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Population: est. 18.76M
Capital: Athens, est. 411K in capital area
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Alexandros I Manos
State Religion: Bogomilist Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 96 000 standing, 480 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 39 (#12)
Top Producer Of: None​

Recent History:

Since its inception in 1840, the Greek Kingdom has been engaged in a campaign of unification with the Caucasus and Crimean Greeks. Success against Persia have made this Greater Greece possible, though economic stagnation and slow industrial efforts have dimmed the Greek flame. The Greeks face threats from Wallachia in the north and Persia in the east, necessitating strong allies to stay upright.

Government:

The Kingdom of Greece is a constitutional monarchy. The King serves as the head of state and may veto legislation, but must sign it into law after it has been reconsidered and passed again. Each state sends representatives into the Greek parliament, which proposes and passes legislation and forms His Majesty's government. The voting franchise encompasses only the wealthier propertied classes of the ethnic Greeks. Political parties and activism are allowed. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Trade unions are illegal in any form. Slavery is legal in Greece.

The current government party of Greece practices a protectionist and interventionist economy. Religion is a private matter, but Bogomilist Christianity is promoted by state institutions. Ethnic minorities face persecution.

***​
 
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Long live Polish-Italian alliance!
Also if Lithuanians are basically another breed of Polish, wouldn't establishing PLC be something of a nationalistic movement? And is it even possible to achieve it in this converted save?
 
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Long live Polish-Italian alliance!
Also if Lithuanians are basically another breed of Polish, wouldn't establishing PLC be something of a nationalistic movement? And is it even possible to achieve it in this converted save?

There is a Lithuanian culture, but the nation called Lietuva has Polish culture. It's a bit confusing. There is no state for Lithuanians ruled by Lithuanians. The PLC can be created in converted saves, but the conditions required are pretty specific. Polish-Lithuanian Pan-Nationalists are a rebel type in Vicky 2, and I have gone with interpreting them as seeking the union of Poland and (Polish-ruled) Lietuva.
 
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State of the World: 1866, the Secondary Powers
The Kingdom of Poland

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Population: est. 19.33M
Capital: Warsaw, est. 735K in capital area
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Kazimierz II Andrzej Guerra
State Religion: Waldensian Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 120 000 standing, 480 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 82 (#8)
Top Producer Of: None​

Recent History: The Kingdom of Poland was catapulted from ruin to triumph in the 1813 Polish War, reclaiming ethnic Polish territories from the neighbors which had sought to partition the venerable realm between themselves. Since then, Polish Galicia has also fallen into the state's hands after war with Wallachia. After these conflicts, internal development and an industrial boom have preoccupied the Polish kingdom. Constitutional reforms in the 1850s elevated a new Sejm to parity with the King, ending a good century of social upheaval and struggle for control. With its large army and steady industrial growth, Poland seems likely to ascend into the ranks of the Great Powers in the near future.

Government: Poland is a constitutional monarchy. The King retains strong executive powers, but serves essentially as a 'citizen-king' in partnership with a powerful Sejm parliament. This representative assembly is open to all Polish men and elected by an universal electorate, although votes are weighted to favor propertied citizens. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. Non-socialist trade unions are legal. Slavery is outlawed.

The ruling party of Poland favors a conservative, protectionist and state capitalist policy. Minority peoples and faiths are repressed by the state.

***

The Shun Republic

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Population: est. 15.01m
Capital: Luan, est. 4.0M in capital area
Government: Republic
Head of State: Councillor Weng Chongjun
State Religion: Confucian/Mahayana Buddhist
Estimated Army Size: 108 000 standing, 432 000 reserves

Industry Estimate: 105 (#6)
Top Producer Of: Explosives, Guns​

Recent History: The Shun Republic was born from succession crisis in the vestigial imperial state of the brief Shun Dynasty. Rather than place an Emperor on the throne, the small state reformed into an aristocratic republic. In the decades since, the republic has extended the voting franchise to wealthy men of lesser families as well. In theory a vassal state of the Liang Dynasty, the Shun Republic has led the charge of Chinese modernization and become one of the most industrialized corners of the globe. Shun gunworks and explosive factories dominate the world markets. It seems likely that this growth of Shun wealth and influence will inevitably lead to conflict with the Chinese Empire - a progress encouraged by rivals of the Chinese eager to see them stumble.

Government: The Shun Republic is an aristocratic republic. An assembly of wealthy and noble forms a government from among themselves, elected in turn by all male citizens of similar breeding and property. Public meetings and activism is tolerated. The state employs censors to fine and suppress damaging publications. Slavery is legal.

***

The Empire of Ceylon

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Population: est. 50.14M (+0.14M from 1836)
Capital: Kandy, est. 336 000 in capital area (+57K from 1836)
Government: Semi-Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: Emperor Vijayaditya I Lakshmi
State Religion: Hinduism
Estimated Army Size: 240 000 standing, 960 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 9 (#25)
Top Producer Of: Opium

Recent History: The Empire of Ceylon has successfully modernized its administration and completed wide-ranging reforms of its economy and military. While industrialization has been slow, a shift towards mass opium cultivation has brought great wealth into the country. Ceylon's neighbors are less than pleased by its opium trade, which may provoke war in the future.

Government: Ceylon is best classified as a semi-constitutional monarchy. The Emperor is advised by an elected assembly composed of noble and propertied members. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery remains legal in Ceylon. The economic policy of Ceylon can be described as state capitalist and protectionist, leaving the reins of economic activities tightly in the hands of the state. Minority religions face persecution and their adherents are not allowed in public office. Minority citizens face discrimination.

***

The Wallachian Empire

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Population: est. 30.87M (-4.93M from 1836)
Capital: Bucharest, est. 429 000 in capital area (-9K from 1836)
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: Emperor Vlad III Draculesti
State Religion: Bogomilist Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 135 000 standing, 270 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 106 (#5)
Top Producer Of: Cement, Steamers, Fertilizer

Recent History: The past decades have been turbulent for the Wallachian Empire. Coups, counter-coups and destructive wars reduced the once-mighty power from the ranks of the Great Nations, culminating in the 'silent revolution' of 1865, when millions of serfs and liberal-minded freemen essentially went on strike against the reactionary imperial government. Mutinous sentiments in the army prevented the usual bloody crackdown and the state was forced to back down. A liberal wave swept the Wallachian government, leading to the establishment of constitutional monarchy - though claims are frequently made that the apparently free representative assembly and new independent judiciary are somehow in thrall to the House of Draculesti behind the scenes. Regardless, Wallachia stands poised to reclaim its place on the world stage. Strong industrial and economic growth and military success seem to pave the road to fresh triumphs.

Government: Wallachia is a constitutional monarchy. The Emperor has little open power, with most old imperial rights held by a prime minister chosen by the Parlamentul. All citizens meeting certain property requirements are eligible to vote and stand for seats in the parliament. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. State-governed trade unions are legal. Slavery and serfdom are outlawed, with the recent liberation leaving millions of landless freedmen flocking to cities for work.

***

The Kingdom of Bavaria

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Population: est. 6.86M
Capital: München, est. 819 000 in capital area
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Ludwig II de Bourcq
State Religion: Catholic Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 39 000 standing, 195 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 53 (#11)
Top Producer Of: Clothes

Recent History: The Kingdom of Bavaria has excelled recently mostly in cultural pursuits and economic growth, including the development of a profitable textile industry. It has ambitions on southern German territories in the region, however, and may find its war footing soon enough. Constitutional reforms in the 1850s have made Bavaria an exemplar constitutional monarchy, stabilizing its internal situation.

Government: Bavaria is a constitutional monarchy. The King serves as the head of state and may veto legislation, but must sign it into law after it has been reconsidered and passed again. Each state sends representatives into the Bavarian Landtag, which proposes and passes legislation and forms His Majesty's government. The voting franchise is universal and standing for office open for all Bavarian citizens. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. Non-socialist trade unions are legal. Slavery is outlawed.

The current government party, the Konservative Partei, practices a protectionist and interventionist economy. Minorities face persecution.

***

The Dutch State

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Population: est. 10.42M
Capital: Amsterdam, est. 444 000 in capital area
Government: Military Dictatorship
Head of State: Admiral Johannes de Vries
State Religion: Lollard Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 132 000 standing, 528 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 31 (#15)
Top Producer Of: None

Recent History: The Netherlands have enjoyed victories and expansion in recent decades. A destabilized political situation has, however, led to a military coup in 1859, and a military junta continues to serve as a 'caretaker government' for the indefinite future. This cadre of admirals and generals has maintained order with a strong hand and overseen a revitalization of the Dutch dockyards, but otherwise have allowed the Dutch economy to stagnate.

Government: The Netherlands are governed as a military dictatorship. Legal government has been dissolved under martial law. With official institutions stripped of their power, Dutch administration is essentially a chaotic, amorphous mass of competing ministries and factions fighting for the ear of the junta. Private presses must only print material approved and directed by the state. Slavery has been relegalized in the Netherlands. Unions are outlawed. The ruling faction practices an interventionist and protectionist economic policy. Minorities are persecuted.

***

The Kingdom of Beja

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Population: est. 5.15M
Capital: Lisbon, est. 2.1M in capital area
Government: Constitutional Monarchy
Head of State: King Ernesto I Suleyman
State Religion: Catholic Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 102 000 standing, 408 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 24 (#17)
Top Producer Of: None

Recent History: Beja is the ascendant power in Iberia. With Italian aid, it has crushed the 'Young Spaniard' popular unification movement and checked the ambitions of Aragon. Steady growth and military investments have made Beja a strong regional power.

Government: Beja is a constitutional monarchy. The King serves as the head of state and may veto legislation, but must sign it into law after it has been reconsidered and passed again. The parliament proposes and passes legislation and forms His Majesty's government. The voting franchise is restricted to Portuguese and Spanish men meeting certain property requirements. Political parties and activism are allowed. No restrictions are placed upon the freedom of the press. Non-socialist trade unions are legal. Slavery is outlawed.

***

Republic of Argentina

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Population: est. 1.66M
Capital: Antofagasta, est. 737 000 in capital area
Government: Republic
Head of State: President Cornelis Klaver
State Religion: Lollard Christianity
Estimated Army Size: 102 000 standing, 408 000 reserves

Industrial Estimate: 0
Top Producer Of: None

Recent History: The Argentine Republic has strengthened its position in South America through war and diplomatic triumphs. It seeks to claim all of the Argentine region and is thus in frequent conflict with the Platinean and Catholic nation of Buenos Aires on its eastern borders.

Government: Argentina is a democratic republic. The States General debates, proposes and passes legislation. The electorate also votes in a President to serve fixed four-year terms. Only Dutch-speaking citizens of certain property limits are allowed to vote and run for office. The office of the President represents the executive branch of government and has significant political powers in the American model. Political parties and activism are allowed. The state employs censors to fine and suppress offensive publications. Trade unions are legal in any form. Slavery remains legal in Argentina.​
 
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The Kingdom of Italy, 1867-1874: Eastern Questions
Excerpts from 'European Classics, Vol. V: the Modern Novel', a 1972 German-language literature textbook

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Luigi Raphael Bardaro: THE MYSTERY OF THE ORIENTAL LINE, 1874

Bardaro's classic short novels of the 1870s pioneered the detective fiction genre and laid down many of the devices and tropes used in the formula today. Most famous and well-received of these works is without doubt the 1874 tale, THE MYSTERY OF THE ORIENTAL LINE, which is the first of his books to feature the protagonist of William Lancer, the Scotland Yard detective. In this at times humorous, at times terrifying mystery, Lancer is caught in the turmoil of the Second Greek-Wallachian War of 1868 while on cruise aboard a luxury steamship of the Oriental Line. The strong narrator's voice deftly depicts the savage warfare and tension under the genteel mask of Europe's society in this period, showing this fundamental contradiction through characters such as the Italian arms merchant Pietroniro and the Wallachian hussar captain Bologa.

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The steamship becomes a personal purgatory for those passengers trapped within it as the narrative progresses. With hostile waters all around and uncertain fates looming on the mainland, secrets come to light and polite appearances give way to harsh truths. Bardaro weaves expertly through the eyes and feelings of each character, even as the central mystery remains clouded from the reader. This deeply psychological and introspective look into the hearts of men and women is something sorely lacking from many later works of Bardaro; indeed, the climax is more standard fare for him even here, as the crucial clue of the murder weapon is a purely technical and technological breakthrough for the detective - a shot thought to be impossible with weapons of the time is realized to have been fired with a novel breech-loading rifle from the arms merchant's stores.

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Bardaro's fascination with the rapidly advancing technology and society of the time shines through from the first page to the last. From new forensic methods and criminal studies to the sheer wonder Bardaro's voice conjures for the powerful steamship that he sets the story in, the narrative allows a reader fascinating glimpses into how contemporary audiences and the author himself perceived these innovations. New machines and technologies provoke both joy and curiosity - the experimental camera, the steamship, the character of the engineer Diakos - and horror, as in the case of the commerce-raiding torpedo corvette which comes out of the night and almost sinks the cruise.

(...) The identity of the killer and the rather gruesome details of the murder play into a long tradition of occultism and folklore, with the strong implication of the Wallachian Bologa being a supernatural vampyr, though Bardaro's staunch rationalist worldview appears to have stopped him short of outright stating it to be so. (...)

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) This meant that Italy would merely wait and watch as its old enemy, Wallachia, fought a vicious two-front war in the east. Italian feeling was hardly pro-Greek after the perceived humiliation of the King by the Greek independence movement and its alignment with the French - general opinion appears to have been that of wishing for both sides to suffer. Czechoslovakia and Croatia's entrance into the war was of some concern for Italian strategists - a stronger northern neighbor was not desirable, with Czechoslovakian feeling generally anti-Italian according to reports. Croatia was feared to fall to Wallachia if the tide turned against the Czechoslovak-Croat alliance, potentially removing them as an useful buffer on the Wallachian border.

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(...) In any case, Italy was more concerned with the ongoing 'hunt for the Nile'. The Morini-Hofler expedition had been for three years sending back enthralling reports of Africa as they delved deeper into the territories of Alodia and Ajuraan, searching for the source of the Nile. The expedition had, of course, more to do with espionage than actually trying to locate the origin of the great river, which in any case was well known to the states of the East African coast as the Nyanza Lake in the Sofalan Empire. Giovanni Morini, the leader of the expedition, had been tasked by Prince Goffredo with ascertaining the military strengths of the local powers and mapping out the region to the best of his abilities. Local authorities were rightfully suspicious of the Italian adventurers, but a combination of bribes, gunboat diplomacy and assistance from local rebels allowed the expedition to bypass them.

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(...) Wallachia's remarkable resilience in the War is a story for another book - an impressive triumph brought about by the 1865 liberation of the serfs and constitutional reforms among other things - but in Italy it was met with some apprehension. Wallachia had failed in its original invasion of Greece, but it had repulsed the Greek counter-attack and earned itself a truce, while the Czechoslovakian offensive had been thoroughly broken and turned back. Croatia, the ally of the Czechs, was thrown to the wolves to avoid a Wallachian occupation of Czechoslovakia - forcing the Croatians into a separate peace where they ceded the Hungarian-majority region of Transdanubia to Wallachian control.

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(...) The Czechoslovakian war effort collapsed entirely with the surprise invasion of Czechoslovak Krems by Bavarian forces. Czechoslovakia had attacked a distracted Wallachia, only to suffer the same fate in turn. Bavarian forces quickly overwhelmed Czech militias. The Czechoslovak government rushed to accept the loss of Krems and then turned around to accept a white peace with the Wallachian Empire. The chaotic conflict was finally over, but where Greece was concerned, it was going to be merely a ceasefire. (...)

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1869 saw the Akan Incident, as a visiting Italian diplomat in the Akan Sultanate in western Africa was taken for a slaver by local abolitionist militias and beaten publicly. The assault provoked widespread outrage in Italy, a fervor of racialist and nationalist antipathy which allowed the Italian government to sweep under the fact that the diplomat had, in fact, been engaged in illegal slave trade on behalf of Brazilian plantation interests. (...) The Italian ultimatum appears to have only stiffened Akan defiance. The Italian mission in the nation's capital was besieged and burned to the ground. Within the month, Italian forces were marching into Akan to 'restore order'.

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(...) For the Italian Army, the conflict offered an opportunity to try out new armaments bought on a trial basis from the Campanian Vulcan Company only weeks before. These proto-machineguns were cumbersome, ammunition-hungry and unreliable, but the horrifying effect they had when used against Akan line formations in pitched battle stunned contemporary observers. The small African sultanate had invested in modern rifles and artillery, but its tactics still lagged behind modern doctrines, held back by powerful and conservative warrior elites in its military. (...) In October 1870, the Sultan of Akan surrendered into Italian custody, ending its history as an independent state. From now on, Italy would dictate the policies of the small nation - with the first step being the dissolution of all tariffs and import bans, flooding the local populace with Italian currency and Italian products. The nation's modest economy effectively collapsed overnight in the face of this onslaught. (...)

***​

Letter dated 9 April 1876 from Goffredo Guerra, Prince of Italy and Imperial Heir, to Kazimierz II Andrzej Guerra, King of Poland

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My dear cousin,

You write with keen insight on the American situation. The South has been well and truly shackled by now, which is well. Now the Americans seek to complete their conquest of the West. The Columbian heartland on the Pacific high coast has fallen, annexed as the state of New Bengal. The remaining Columbians have fled north into the frigid wasteland of Alaska, for reasons that cannot be fathomed. Likely they will rather perish in that hell than admit their defeat. No true enemies now remain for the United States, and it appears that the border with Canada is settled to satisfaction at last. I cannot say if the same applies for Mexico; the American takes some wicked pleasure out of dominating their less fortunate sibling in the south, I find.

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Our brave explorers in the eastern parts of Africa continue to send the most thrilling reports. The Alodian Sultanate is, as you will have heard, far stronger than we have thought. They have seized the Egyptian deserts has thus forged a border with our holdings in Matruh. Of course it scarcely matters who holds those sands, as long as trade northward is guaranteed. For this, I welcome the ascendancy of the Alodians. Their rule is far stronger than that of the Egyptians ever was. No more shall caravans go missing on their way to Alexandria. I expect the Iraqis to seize what remains of Egypt soon enough.

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The Draculesti have renewed hostilities with the Greeks once more, which you will know by now. Perfidious Gaul supports the Wallachian cause. Our Father is not interested in intervention at this time. A pity! But if the Greeks lose, I shall not weep for them. We have crushed Wallachia in the past, and we may very well do so again if they demand it of us. But the Greeks can stand to be humbled. We have given up all hope of restoration there, so it is in our interest to see them weakened.

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The Persians, also, are on the march. They have given up the peace to battle an old friend, the Mughal Empire. The Mughals have accomplished curious reforms in the past decades, which might give them a fighting chance. Our sympathies are for Persia. We share an irritant in the Greeks and Wallachians. Matters of faith and race may be put aside - I have told Father frequently that it is in the East where we must find allies. The Chinese, perhaps, if the Persians prove too stubborn to take the olive branch offered.

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I am told the Chinese rule over one hundred and fifty million souls. And that is only in their present territories! Their reach grows by the year. What numbers! And somehow they are all fed and reasonably content. The ignorant and small mind is easy to please, of course, but even so - what a triumph! With such numbers, who could oppose us? I have given orders to encourage the cultivation of rice. Surely there is the secret of their fecundity. But I fear Italy offers a less fertile soil for such growth.

The Chinese now go to war against the Avan Empire, seizing lost provinces of the previous Dynasty in their quest to reunify all of China. Oh, their tactics are primitive, their armies low in modern armaments. But by Jove! With so many bodies, who needs a rifle? Of course, we have now witnessed the terrible power of the machine gun against mass infantry: but such weapons have only so much ammunition to waste. There is no end to these Chinamen.

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P.S.: You predicted well, my friend, when you warned me against the Red scourge. It is not merely the students and the utopianists who have been taken by this rot, as I thought. A sinister hand appears to move even the common worker to partake in and spread their doctrine. Now we are plagued by professional agitators. Theirs is an international brotherhood and they move unchecked by our border guards and censors, peddling their subversion at every factory yard in this country. Oh, most of the workers care nothing for their dreams. But enough do to concern Government, and the industrialists. We have taken steps to appease them. If the common worker chooses to spit on the hand that aids him, we have no choice but to give the rapacious banker and the factory magnate what they want. Father has agreed to shuffle the Imperial Cabinet. We shall have some new blood in our halls - a loosening of the reins of the economy, so to please these company men. A slight loosening, to be clear. They shall remember who rules in Italy still. We pray for the restoration of your Throne to its proper position likewise.

We have strengthened the police when it comes to these union agitators. I expect these troublemakers will be behind bars soon enough, and that'll be the end of that. Such devilry we are beset with in this day and age!

Your friend and cousin,
Goffredo Guerra
Prince of Italy
 
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The Kingdom of Italy, 1874-1881: High Imperialism
Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) The 1870s and 1880s brought the Iberian Question back into the spotlight. The extermination of the Young Spaniard movement had crushed the hopes of the old unionists, but the new generation coming to the stage were daring to speak once more of an united Iberia. Despite widespread popular support, the political situation did not favor unification. The central Iberian states of Beja, Aragon and Galicia were unwilling to compromise or concede any measure of their power in an union state. Such a nation would be dominated by one of these powers, and the rough balance of power within the peninsula prevented any one of them from pressing their claim by force.

Politics of the time were chaotic. The Iberians were not the only ones concerned with the future of the region. Beja and Sevilla, in the south, aligned themselves with the great power of Italy; Galicia in the north with Britain; and Aragon with France. The tense relationship of these empires meant that any attempt at reconciliation and cooperation between the Iberian states was taken as a sign of interference by a rival. Peaceful union was made impossible by international politics. (...) Italian influence waned in the late 1870s as French and British diplomatic efforts managed to realign the southern powers away from Italy. Canny Iberian leaders declined to kowtow entirely to either Britain and France, however, leaving them to benefit from the bribes and favors of the three powers each in turn. (...)

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Persian triumph in the Khorasani War in 1876 was a cause of some celebration in the Italian court. Persia was seen by this point as a valuable counterweight in the East, checking Greek expansion and helping maintain the weakness of South East Asia through its gunboat diplomacy. Persia's lack of interest in an alliance prevented these strategic considerations from ever developing into something closer, but relations between the two powers became comfortably cordial by 1880. (...)

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Wallachian success was less welcome, even if it did come at the expense of the Greek. The military alliance between France and Wallachia threatened an encirclement of Italy and a familiar two-front war in the near future. (...) The Wallachian star was certainly on the rise once more. The new model of parliamentary constitutional monarchy had produced a gifted stable of ministers and statesmen. French investment, new exploitation of natural resources and the liberation of the workforce had revitalized a stagnant and backwards economy. A far more reliable army composed of professionals and advised by French officers had replaced the old institution of conscripted serfs and cruel aristocratic officers.

Against this force, the Greek state faltered. Rumors abounded at the time of terror attacks against the Greek leadership and King by shadowy assassins and betrayals by Greek officers and ministers somehow manipulated by Wallachian agents. Certainly, political instability in Greece played a role in its defeat and the loss of Bulgaria and the Macedonian coast. (...)

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This 'mutilation' of the Greek nation, as contemporary authors put it, came as a shock to a people used to thinking themselves superior to the backwards and superstitious savages of the Wallachian Empire. Greece's enormous loss of face in the international sphere, as French diplomats demanded acts of humility and surrender in front of Wallachian representatives, reduced it from a junior Great Power into just one of many among the nations of the world. (...) Wallachian influence grew quickly in the following years, even in Serbia, where hatred of the Draculesti and their realm came as a result of centuries of bloody-handed oppression. Italy was fast losing its grasp on the Balkans. (...)

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***​



Excerpts of a chapter dealing on the formations of modern Sweden and Catalonia, from 'Nationalism and Imperialism in the 19th Century', a 1996 German educational textbook

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(...) 1876 saw the formal dissolution of the Gotlander Republic in Scandinavia, reformed into a far more nationalistic Republic of Sweden. This long-awaited proclamation was pushed through despite the opposition of the Finnic faction in the Riksdag, who were now second-class citizens in a nation which had previously at least maintained the illusion of their equality. If the Republic was for the Swedes, what did this mean for the Finns, Sami, Norwegians and other minority peoples under its rule? On the other hand, what did it mean for those Swedish-speaking inhabitants of Denmark?

(...) In 1877, Catalonia assumed its modern name and identity. Years of political struggle between so-called Unionists and Nativists was ended in this symbolic victory for the latter. The Unionist Party had advocated union of all Spain under the Catalonian government, while the Nativists rejected such pan-nationalism and advocated for the advancement of a Catalonian culture and state. While this did not mean the end of such aspirations - especially as the new Catalonian state considered itself the heir of Aragonese claims to territory then under Bejan rule - an united Iberia had ceased to be a practical goal for government. (...)

***​

Excerpts of 'Crimson-Taloned Dragons: The Struggle for Chinese Supremacy', written by Wong Yung (Saguenay: 1979)

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(...) The Avan Empire, once the terror of East Asia, was on its knees. Chinese armies had occupied the Avan heartlands by mid-1876. Surrender came not long after, with the expected ritual kowtowing of the Avan Emperor publicized across the world. Chinese unity seemed likely - but the Liang had not yet matched their growing might against a truly equal power. The Avan adventure had won the Emperor Guangxi, but it had done something more. It had proven that the modernized Chinese armies could be relied upon to wage war even through the extensive losses incurred in the Avan jungles and highlands.

The time had come to strike at the Manchu and liberate the North. On August 1876, on the very same day of the Avan surrender, the Chinese Empire declared war upon the Manchu. The battle-hardened core of the new Chinese military was still in the west, but the northern armies had undergone the same transformation in training and doctrine as those which had conquered Ava. The general staff held full faith in their ability to overcome the Manchu, who still clung to the detritus of old traditions and limited technology.

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It was the greatest war seen in history up until that point. Both sides had armies that numbered in the millions. Such forces were inconceivable in any other corner of the globe. The numbers are misleading, it has to be noted - only a fraction could actually be equipped by modern weaponry despite the booming Chinese industry and technological base. But even those armed with the relics of the past had benefited from new training and military administration, advantages which their similarly armed opponents lacked. (...) The Manchu and their Kumtag allies had dominated northern China for decades. The Manchu had expanded into the most populous areas of the world and vanquished local states with ingenious strategies and well-drilled forces, and these advantages had not vanished into the aether. But they had been left behind by time.

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(...) Peace terms came only a year later, in August 1877. A bleeding Manchu agreed to exceedingly harsh terms, ceding a huge portion of its population and land area. The state remained, with considerable territories and military strength, but its most vital regions had been torn out after twelve months of incredible slaughter. Over one and a half million fighting men are recorded to have been lost. China fared little better, with almost 800 000 lost. Millions of civilians perished in the fighting; economic and social devastation must have been inconceivable. (...) The China of the Liang had proven its supremacy. It had overcome the final challenge. The Empire was back. (...)

***​

Excerpts of 'The American Empire: How the United States Enslaved A Continent', written by Édith Laurent (Port-Royal: 1972)

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(...) The American government piled fresh outrage upon outrage. The war had been an imperialist campaign to bully Mexico into submission from the beginning, but American greed now showed itself even more openly. The Senate voted to seize the state of Sonora from Mexico as 'reparations' for a conflict they had begun in the first place. Mass ethnic displacement and aggressive Americanization campaigns in the aftermath of the war effectively constitute cultural genocide. 'Unreliable' Mexicanos were deported en masse across the border to make way for 'loyalist' white Italo-Americanos from the north. (...) No memorials exist in present-day Sonoran State for this legacy of racialist and exceptionalist excess. (...)

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In the shadow of the Scramble for Africa and the High Imperialist project, American imperialism is often left unnoticed. They do not exist separate from one another, however. The colonization of the United States by its white majority and the colonization of Africa are twin projects, reflecting one another in many ways. (...) Even as Italian, French, British and Persian administrators drew up their plans for annexation of African native kingdoms and tribes, the government in Saguenay drafted racial laws and enforced conformity from the barrel of a gun. Indeed, American writers and policymakers were eager investors and sponsors of colonial projects, seeking to simultaneously 'civilize' the African continent and their own.

***​

Excerpts from 'Italy and the World: the Italian Empire in the Modern Period', written by Hugo Fourier (Firenze: 1977)

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(...) Dreams of African hegemony suffused the Florentine court. The Maghreb was ever more volatile by the year, but colonial officers plotted increasingly more ambitious schemes to bring the 'savage' territories of the Earth under Italian rule, Africa foremost among them. The problem of the Maghreb received much attention in the early 1880s. Imperialist rhetoric painted the Maghreb as a land too close and integrated into the European sphere for comfort; inflaming the passions of the native Arabs with wild liberal ideas and practices unsuitable for them, thus causing the disorder and disturbances the region was increasingly known for. In comparison, sub-Saharan Africa was a virgin land, untainted by the degeneracy of the European lifestyle - a land of noble savages who would welcome Italian development and administration.

(...) Later thinkers would take on a harsher bent, having experienced the resistance to European rule by natives. In these racialist screeds, Africa is a dark and primitive continent waiting to be subjugated by the white Italian man. With his immigration and strong hold on the land, he will in time replace the simple-minded and genetically inferior black native. Many colonial officers went further and 'eased the way' for this expected natural 'whitening' of Africa by massacring native populations in one-sided 'wars' and labor camps. (...)

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The Hausan 'Purchase' marks the beginning of this new era of High Imperialism. The vast Hausan Empire had for nearly a century served as a protectorate of Italy. In the past two decades, Italian infiltration of this once-prosperous realm had shackled it tightly to Italy. The economy of Hausa was reliant on Italian currency and goods; domestic production had collapsed, with Italian imports feeding, clothing and entertaining the Hausan millions. The Kings of Hausa lived in excessive luxury paid for by Italian diplomats and armed their personal guards with Italian arms.

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Such a relationship meant that Italy virtually ruled in Hausa. In 1880, this rule was made official. Hausa had slipped into an political and social crisis thanks to a price hike on Italian imports. With drought and rebellion looming, the Hausan government rushed to accept generous Italian loans which saved their personal fortunes and preserved the realm. The only price was the installment of an Italian governor over the King - and the consolidation of Hausa into the Italian West African colonial government. The last dregs of Hausan independence were gone. (...)

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Similar developments in the small Kingdom of Luba followed in 1881. British Royal Marines supported a palace coup that saw the new pretender sign his realm over to British mercantile interests. Within the year, Luba had been reorganized into the British Colony of Angola. (...) Slowly but surely, Africa was tumbling into the arms of European empires.

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These triumphs did little to ease tensions at home. In Italy, popular 'chartist' movements seeking political representation and enfranchisement for the common people were growing rapidly. Though still more liberal- and reform-minded than outright revolutionary, these mass movements were building the foundations of italian Socialism and the boundless masses it would in time reach. Fears of revolution gripped the ailing King, marching him faster and faster towards death's door. Italy would soon face one of its greatest challenges yet. (...)
 
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On Catalonia screenshot there is real interesting sentence. Why Barcelona would become the capital of German Empire? Are Catalonians Germanic?

No, it's just a bug. Sorry to disappoint.

I hope that some indigenous African powers survive; it would make for a very interesting political landscape in Africa.

I have certain conditions for these annexations. Nations which have Westernized are safe and will be left alone, except where the AI decides to invade them. Nations which are still uncivilized after 1880, are in the sphere of influence of a colonial Great Power and have been that way for at least a decade have a high chance to be annexed by said Great Powers.

This is meant to simulate similar events and developments in vanilla V2 and cut down on the number of nations for HoI4. Plenty of African nations don't fit this criteria and are left on the map even so, no worries.
 
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