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  1. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    ...as I feel that given the vagueness and minor nature of the Points of Divergence, they would not be able to produce the necessary changes to prevent that build up of the French Revolution. Expect a slightly different outcome to the Napoleonic Wars, which sets up the 19th and 20th centuries nicely.
  2. Hail, Britannia

    Will the French Revolution and Napoleon still exist in version 2?
  3. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    My idea was that Louis-Alexandre Berthier decisively turns against Napoleon during the Hundred Days and lives a bit longer. Much like Auguste de Marmont, he is rewarded with the Principality of Neuchatel, much to the chagrin of the Prussians, and his descendants continue to reign to the present day.
  4. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Belgium

    ...were unified as the United Kingdom of the Netherlands afer the dissolution of the First French Empire in 1814, following the abdication of Napoleon. On 25 August 1830, the Belgian Revolution began when riots erupted in Brussels, and uprisings followed elsewhere across the country. The people...
  5. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: France

    ...turmoil, with the First French Republic becoming increasingly authoritarian and militaristic, and culminated in a dictatorship under Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1804 Napoleon transformed the republic into the First Empire. The Revolution unleashed a wave of global conflicts, the Revolutionary Wars...
  6. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Catalonia

    ...Catalonia remain some of the most industrialised regions of the Iberian Peninsula. The early 19th century saw Catalonia ravaged by the Napoleonic Wars, with the northeastern provinces annexed by France, and the traditional capital of Zaragoza subjected to two brutal sieges. The Peninsular War...
  7. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Benevento

    ...control of the Papacy as an enclave of the Papal States. The principality continued to be a papal possession until 1806 when, during the Napoleonic Wars, Emperor Napoleon granted it to his minister Talleyrand with the title of sovereign prince, however Talleyrand never ruled the new...
  8. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: United Kingdom and Empire of Great Britannia

    ...closely tied to the British Empire. The outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789, followed by the Revolutionary Wars (1789-1802) and the Napoleonic Wars (1803-1815), drew the British Empire into a struggle for global pre-eminence with the French Empire of Napoleon Bonaparte, which lasted for...
  9. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    ...radicals overseas. And I imagine a fair few nobles and aristocrats escaped the chaos and fled to America and Louisiana, only to return after Napoleon rose to power and established the Empire. There was even a plan to smuggle the Dauphin to Louisiana, which failed. But that's a very common...
  10. Indicus

    Hail, Britannia

    I must state that I disagree with the analysis that delaying France's massive financial chaos by a few years (a decade at most, France was at breaking point with or without the ARW) would magically make the absolutist Louis XVI accept being reduced massively in power. I'm inclined to think...
  11. Hail, Britannia

    ...a revolution so soon fro bankruptcy from assisting the colonists, which would lead to a more than likely outcome of France becoming a constitutional monarchy, thus never allowing Napoleon to rise. This would also mean Germany would not merge into larger German States due to Napoleon's influence.
  12. Hail, Britannia

    =423117']Uhhh, Napoleon still rose to power ITTL too.
  13. Hail, Britannia

    I still find this rather implausible, due to the complete alteration of the time line, leading to so many drastic changes. Especially without Napoleon Bonaparte who united the majority of the German states from the smaller one of the HRE.
  14. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    ...prevalent in Dakota, Montana and Wyoming, but also spill into the Canadian Prairies. Unfortunately the Republic still fell to Napoleon, but the modern state is considered a successor/continuation. The modern Venetian Republic is a parliamentary republic with the Doge as a ceremonial head...
  15. Hail, Britannia

    Since Venice still exists ITTL does that mean Napoleon never conquered it and that it continues to have the same model of government as it did OTL?
  16. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Savoy; 2016 general election

    ...in the early 1790s. In 1798, King Carlo Emanuele IV was forced into exile on Sardinia when his mainland domains were occupied and annexed by Napoleonic France, the first time a king of Sardinia had resided on the island in its history. The island of Sardinia would remain free of French...
  17. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    ...Catalonia remain some of the most industrialised regions of the Iberian Peninsula. The early 19th century saw Catalonia ravaged by the Napoleonic Wars, with the northeastern provinces annexed by France, and the traditional capital of Zaragoza subjected to two brutal sieges. The Peninsular War...
  18. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Acadiana; 2015 legislative election; Prince of Acadiana; Cajuns & Cajun French

    ...to the French Revolution, they did not attempt to declare independence due to a fear of the response in Britain's American colonies. However Napoleon's victory in the War of the Third Coalition led to a shift in the mood in colonial Louisiana, and in early 1806 Donatien-Marie-Joseph de...
  19. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia

    ...the 1860s. New Granada still includes Panama, but the San Andres y Providencia islands are part of British Jamaica. Simon Bolivar pulls a Napoleon in South America, sometime in the late 1810s/early 1820s, and succeeds in establishing a "Granadine Empire" across much of modern New Granada...
  20. LeinadB93

    Hail, Britannia
    Threadmarks: Spanish Revolution (1863-1868)

    ...in the rest of Spain many Catalans recoiled from the idea, largely attributed to the memory of the wars of the French Revolution and Napoleon. On 21 April 1865 the Spanish Royalist garrison in Barcelona was defeated and captured, and Alfons was crowned as King Alfons VI of the Catalans by...
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