Weall know how province religion works in EU2, in the absence of missionaries/random events/colonists:
- at the start of the game, you have a mass of Catholic provinces. When Martin Luther comes along, suddenly many of them convert to Protestant, and which ones do and don't has all been decided by the mod-maker.
- a similar thing happens with Calvin, with loads of provinces suddenly turning from Catholic to Reformed.
- other religions stay the same.
Now I don't want to discuss the other religions, as we can make them change if necessary by event. The problem is that the portrayal of the Reformation is unrealistic:
1. It didn't all happen at once
2. Some people adopted Protestant beliefs before turning Reformed
But the most important thing is:
3. Having the Reformation as a hard-wired province-based phenomenon suggests that it was a popular movement, independent of politics, which rulers had to grudgingly deal with. THIS IS NOT HOW IT HAPPENED IN REALITY. In fact, the Reformation was mostly a political phenomenon: rulers and aristocrats decided that it would be convenient to break from Rome, latched onto the new ideas and then imposed them on the populace.
This has two consequences:
A: Relatively few provinces should automatically convert
B: During the Reformation, mass conversions as a result of political events are perfectly acceptable, as this kind of thing really happened, eg England turned from Catholic to staunchly Protestant in the time between 1534 (Henry VIII's break with Rome) to Mary's ascent to the throne just 19 years later.
Here are some ideas for how the Reformation should happen, by region:
Occitania: here it really is a popular movement. Large numbers of province conversions, but not because Savoy, Burgundy etc want them. If Savoy is in charge in the South, it's as likely to want to suppress the Protestants as support them.
Scandinavia: Historically Sweden and Denmark had a really easy Reformation: the monarchs turned Protestant and the populace more or less just obeyed their masters. Hence there should be very few automatic province conversions in Sweden or Denmark; BUT the Kalmar player should get a choice of religion at some point. The Swedish and Danish provinces should pretty much all convert if they turn Protestant, but if they stay Catholic, nothing happens.
HRE: This is the most complicated one. Certainly some religions, such as Anabaptism, got somewhere because they amassed followers. But in many cases local princes simply converted to Protestantism because it allowed them to seize Church land. Hence the HRE can be a mixture:
- a few provinces convert, and this happens over time
- HRE minors choose randomly which faith to follow, and their capital converts in the process
- the majors also have a choice, and get some conversions in their 'heartland' for each choice to ensure it's stable (ie the AI won't convert straight back again). Possible default choices: Bavaria - Catholic, Swabia - Protestant (Swabia wants to control its church), Hansa - Reformed (the Hansa aren't keen on a powerful church hierarchy at all)
- If Bavaria goes counter-reformed, we can have some perverse conversions in the Netherlands: the provinces turn Reformed because the Catholic church's intolerance has alienated them. But a tolerant Bavaria can keep its part of the Netherlands Catholic.
- there's the whole UP business - basically every province they own turns Reformed up to a certain number, as they get flooded with Calvinists from all over the HRE to build their 'Kingdom of God', and they're loony enough to kill/drive out most of the people who refuse to convert. This could be coupled with province culture change.
BTW, the classic vanilla divide in the HRE (Protestant North, Catholic South, Reformed Netherlands) has no historical justification for our purposes:
- the north-south divide was largely a result of migration and religious purges during the 30 Years' War, so didn't emerge until the 17th century. In fact, Luther had a lot of supporters in Austria of all places.
- the Calvinists had some early support in the Netherlands, but they only became overwhelmingly popular because of Spain's attempts to aggressively impose its version of Catholicism and tax the region more than the local nobles could bear. Basically, a lot of people turned Calvinist BECAUSE they opposed Spain, rather than the other way around.
- at the start of the game, you have a mass of Catholic provinces. When Martin Luther comes along, suddenly many of them convert to Protestant, and which ones do and don't has all been decided by the mod-maker.
- a similar thing happens with Calvin, with loads of provinces suddenly turning from Catholic to Reformed.
- other religions stay the same.
Now I don't want to discuss the other religions, as we can make them change if necessary by event. The problem is that the portrayal of the Reformation is unrealistic:
1. It didn't all happen at once
2. Some people adopted Protestant beliefs before turning Reformed
But the most important thing is:
3. Having the Reformation as a hard-wired province-based phenomenon suggests that it was a popular movement, independent of politics, which rulers had to grudgingly deal with. THIS IS NOT HOW IT HAPPENED IN REALITY. In fact, the Reformation was mostly a political phenomenon: rulers and aristocrats decided that it would be convenient to break from Rome, latched onto the new ideas and then imposed them on the populace.
This has two consequences:
A: Relatively few provinces should automatically convert
B: During the Reformation, mass conversions as a result of political events are perfectly acceptable, as this kind of thing really happened, eg England turned from Catholic to staunchly Protestant in the time between 1534 (Henry VIII's break with Rome) to Mary's ascent to the throne just 19 years later.
Here are some ideas for how the Reformation should happen, by region:
Occitania: here it really is a popular movement. Large numbers of province conversions, but not because Savoy, Burgundy etc want them. If Savoy is in charge in the South, it's as likely to want to suppress the Protestants as support them.
Scandinavia: Historically Sweden and Denmark had a really easy Reformation: the monarchs turned Protestant and the populace more or less just obeyed their masters. Hence there should be very few automatic province conversions in Sweden or Denmark; BUT the Kalmar player should get a choice of religion at some point. The Swedish and Danish provinces should pretty much all convert if they turn Protestant, but if they stay Catholic, nothing happens.
HRE: This is the most complicated one. Certainly some religions, such as Anabaptism, got somewhere because they amassed followers. But in many cases local princes simply converted to Protestantism because it allowed them to seize Church land. Hence the HRE can be a mixture:
- a few provinces convert, and this happens over time
- HRE minors choose randomly which faith to follow, and their capital converts in the process
- the majors also have a choice, and get some conversions in their 'heartland' for each choice to ensure it's stable (ie the AI won't convert straight back again). Possible default choices: Bavaria - Catholic, Swabia - Protestant (Swabia wants to control its church), Hansa - Reformed (the Hansa aren't keen on a powerful church hierarchy at all)
- If Bavaria goes counter-reformed, we can have some perverse conversions in the Netherlands: the provinces turn Reformed because the Catholic church's intolerance has alienated them. But a tolerant Bavaria can keep its part of the Netherlands Catholic.
- there's the whole UP business - basically every province they own turns Reformed up to a certain number, as they get flooded with Calvinists from all over the HRE to build their 'Kingdom of God', and they're loony enough to kill/drive out most of the people who refuse to convert. This could be coupled with province culture change.
BTW, the classic vanilla divide in the HRE (Protestant North, Catholic South, Reformed Netherlands) has no historical justification for our purposes:
- the north-south divide was largely a result of migration and religious purges during the 30 Years' War, so didn't emerge until the 17th century. In fact, Luther had a lot of supporters in Austria of all places.
- the Calvinists had some early support in the Netherlands, but they only became overwhelmingly popular because of Spain's attempts to aggressively impose its version of Catholicism and tax the region more than the local nobles could bear. Basically, a lot of people turned Calvinist BECAUSE they opposed Spain, rather than the other way around.