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  1. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    The Inupiat are among the least-advanced (in terms of "ability to resist Euro conquest") societies in the New World; probably the least advanced ATL. Once they start butting up against the Tlingit, though... Probably, yeah. Moscow's a long, long way from Vladizapad, but the genie's out of...
  2. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    More that the Ottomans are weaker, but yeah.
  3. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Not really their style, but they may have to.
  4. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe (Part 2) [Russia and Alaska, 1701-1711] Moscow, 1701 The Kremlin bells toll, in mourning for the old Czar and in honor of the new. The last czar was in late middle age when he took the throne and old when he died, and his reign was marked with...
  5. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    It's actually not unlike the relationship that Alaska bears to the modern US. Alaska's got a lot of a resource that's super-valuable to the modern world: oil. But in order to make the extraction of oil possible--to make it so that people are willing and able to live and work in...
  6. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Stronger relative to Russia, yes; Russia hasn't modernized as fast, and both Poland and Sweden are relatively stronger. Hence the loss of the Baltic ports.
  7. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Phillippines ain't happening. One thing I don't think people are picking up on--the Russian Empire is *weaker* than they were OTL, and Russian America was a marginal enterprise in our world. The one thing they have going for them: Their supply lines for most stuff is marginally shorter, due to...
  8. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Do you mean down Kamchatka and into the Aleutians? Yes; eventually they'll discover sea otters and that will lead them into the Aleutians, although with their weaker navigational technology they might not be able to make some of the longer crossings. Or did you mean down towards the Primorsky...
  9. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Russia's definitely not totally isolated from the West...in fact, other than in naval technology, they're not super-far behind where they were OTL. The men who rule Russia ATL don't think of it in these terms, but what Russia is really doing is giving up a strategic buffer in the west in...
  10. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Done! Thanks for the feedback.
  11. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    In the sense that he was personally responsible for significant changes to the course of Russian history, yes. The system of Czarist autocracy--autocracy in general, really--is set up so that one individual personality can make a great deal of difference. The decision of Russia to modernize...
  12. Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe

    Bronze Age New World: Empire of the Steppe (Part 1) [Russia and Siberia, 1492-1691] == The year Christopher Columbus comes ashore to find ruined Arawak cities on Hispaniola, the Russians are barely a decade out from under the Tatar yoke. The tremors from that world-shaking event will take...
  13. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    Different Copper River; Lake Izok is up by the Great Slave Lake and that neck of the woods. The Copper River at the mouth of which is Cordova is an all-Alaskan river, arising in the Wrangell Mountains. Just that there was never a tin-mining district in the Copper River area the way there...
  14. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    Probably not; I don't know *all* of the details of the Russian conquest of Siberia and the people they conquered, but I think the Tlingit were the most-advanced folks they ran into OTL. Great question. Russia is going to be a pretty different place OTL; the very different New World will have...
  15. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    Maybe...I just learned that not only is the Seward Peninsula the only considerable source of tin in Alaska, it's the only considerable source of tin in *all of what became the United States.* So the Tlingit have more of an advantage than I thought, not just over the Haida but over just about...
  16. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    Correct--some of the details can be found by googling up "Bronze Age New World" on the old shwi, although I don't recall the specific names of the episodes detailing the alt-Spanish conquest. Mike Ralls also did a long serious about the impacts of a BANW on the Old World, the Ottoman Empire in...
  17. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    The *Arawak don't, Mesoamericans do. There was artisanal (in the sense of "made for works of art") bronze in Mesoamerica in our timeline; the idea is that the increase levels of warfare induced by the far-ranging and far-raiding alt-Arawaks trigger bronze weaponry, which in turn compels various...
  18. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    I was all: My source says that there were about 15,000 Tlingit at the time of contact (which wasn't until the 1780s OTL, but I can't imagine 60 years would have made a huge difference for pre-contact New World populations). So it's probably closer to 20,000 ATL; there were dozens of Tlingit...
  19. Bronze Age New World Alaska: The Lord of Raven's Sky

    *Cordova is small; it's a frontier town. A trade frontier, but still a frontier. It's probably fortified, but only out of habit. [*Cordova did not exist before European contact OTL, as can be guessed from the name; the Eyak lived in quite small villages all around the Delta] *Yakutat is...
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