Any reason for the lumpy border in the middle of nowhere for PA's northern border?
I kinda did it in the first place just because I wanted to draw this lumpy border, but the idea is that PA takes some(probably completely useless) land from NY in the peace treaty following the said warAny reason for the lumpy border in the middle of nowhere for PA's northern border?
This is my 1st map here, it doesn't really have much of a story, the idea is just that US had been stuck with articles of confederation for a couple years longer than in OTL and in that time Pennsylvania fought a war with New York over acсess to lake Erie wich she obviously won, I just felt like doing it
I kinda did it in the first place just because I wanted to draw this lumpy border, but the idea is that PA takes some(probably completely useless) land from NY in the peace treaty following the said war
Vienna isn’t in Austria? That will take some getting used to. Did the Hungarians change its name like Poland did with the cities they acquired? I don’t think they would, since Vienna is an iconic city and I don’t think Hungarians had that much of a dislike for Austria. Maybe they would acknowledge the cities’ imperial heritage, while trying to portray Hungary as having done most of the heavy lifting in the Empire.Thanks!
Yep It's a territorial crossover allowing travel from most of Hungary to Szekelyland, as well as from Romania to Romania across the corridor. Similar to that proposed OTL by the UN for Mandatory Palestine.
The allies managed to convince both Hungary and Romania to switch sides by not treating either too harshly- and really they managed to come up with a favorable arrangement for all parties only by carving up Germany. Yugoslavia, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia all ended up with formerly-German areas.
So while the redrawing of borders in Transylvania is relatively more favorable to Romania than the Second Vienna Accord was, Hungary is compensated by gaining Vienna and some land around it.
(or "regaining" Vienna, if you listen to Hungary's version of events: Italy, Yugoslavia, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia all portray the territorial changes as "recovered" territory, similarly to the way OTL Poland did)
That's an interesting question. Of course the independent Prussia covers the original historical East Prussia, but very little of the land that Prussia ended up covering by the 19th century.
The allies actually end up allowing a referendum in the independent Prussia on the restoration of the monarchy, and the people of Prussia indeed decide to restore the Hohenzollerns to the throne in Königsberg, forming a constitutional monarchy. Germany becomes a federal republic similar to IOTL.
Culturally, Prussia is... pretty similar to the nearby areas of Germany... except that its inhabitants definitely identify as Prussian, not German. And economically, it's more closely linked with Poland and Lithuania.
Not sure what would happen linguistically. Maybe Low German would stay more popular in Prussia? It might be too late for that to happen though.
It'd be kinda cool to see PA take its claims from NY:I kinda did it in the first place just because I wanted to draw this lumpy border, but the idea is that PA takes some(probably completely useless) land from NY in the peace treaty following the said war
Hmmm... I have a sudden urge to have my home state make true on these claims and go annex Philadelphia. And Delaware, while we're at it.It'd be kinda cool to see PA take its claims from NY:
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View attachment 492943
Ladies and gentlemen - @Thanosaekk and I present to you... the first up to date QBAM map of the Kaiserreich Universe! (AFAIK anyway)
We started working together on this project back in June when I posted a portion of Europe I was working on, and from there we expanded it to a map of the world in 1936. There was a long hiatus taken, but just the other day I picked it back up and pushed through to completion. Keep in mind that because of this hiatus, there's some mapping inconsistencies here and a fair amount of it is lacking proper subdivisions (Russia and Bharatiya for instance), but I wanted to get this out before I improved upon it. Eventually, I plan on expanding the map to have the level of detail that Europe and Mittelafrika have. Feel free to add on to it and use it however you like!
Also creds to @Crazy Boris for the excellent QBAM of the western hemisphere - it's largely OTL in the KRTL except for a few adjustments in Latin America, the Caribbean, and Canada so I used much of his work to fill in that region!
Does anyone have a "16 Nations" template?
This map comes from my recently completed TLIAW, which can be found here https://www.alternatehistory.com/fo...of-prince-rupert-the-cavalier-elector.475494/, covering an alternate life of Prince Rupert the famous cavalier that ultimately leads to him become Elector of the Palatinate and King of Bohemia before his son inherits England in TTL's equivalent of the Hanoverian Succession.
At the time there wasn't really much of anything, I tried to rely on Allegheny reliefWell met! Very nice!
I think it's more a question of why that particular lumpy border. A suggestion might be to see what townships/roads/etc might have been in play in those areas at the time, just to give a fictional border a reasonably logical anchor is all.
...I really don't know what that is.![]()
KR has actually updated a few of its borders in Eastern Europe, Lithuania is much bigger, Poland now has everything west of the bug river and the revamped caucuses have been revealed
https://www.reddit.com/r/Kaiserreich/comments/da3usn/progress_report_95/
https://i.imgur.com/l66Che0.jpg
Well, most of Vienna, including the oldest part of it, is in Hungary, and is now known by its Hungarian name of Bécs. (Bécs has always been its Hungarian-language name, so they didn't actually change the name they use). Except for the suburbs north of the Danube, which are now known as the Czechoslovakian city of Vídeň. (the river Danube forms the southern border of Czechoslovakia all the way from Regensburg to Bratislava now)Vienna isn’t in Austria? That will take some getting used to. Did the Hungarians change its name like Poland did with the cities they acquired? I don’t think they would, since Vienna is an iconic city and I don’t think Hungarians had that much of a dislike for Austria. Maybe they would acknowledge the cities’ imperial heritage, while trying to portray Hungary as having done most of the heavy lifting in the Empire.
Yep- the borders outside of Germany do more closely follow ethnic lines.I’m glad that ethnic communities seem to have been considered in the border between Romania and Hungary, though. People’s rights are more important than pretty borders.
I don't know how important Baltic Sea trade is nowadays, but yep.Prussia is in a strategic position for Baltic Sea trade.
Also, you said that the Soviet Union collapsed in this would. What ended up happening with Russia and the other SSRs? Lithuanian seems to be independent, but not Belarus or Ukraine. And did Latvia and Estonia become a single country?
One more thing I forgot to ask: How is Libya nowadays? Did they eventually become independent? Living under Fascist Italy for so many years can’t have been pleasant.Well, most of Vienna, including the oldest part of it, is in Hungary, and is now known by its Hungarian name of Bécs. (Bécs has always been its Hungarian-language name, so they didn't actually change the name they use). Except for the suburbs north of the Danube, which are now known as the Czechoslovakian city of Vídeň. (the river Danube forms the southern border of Czechoslovakia all the way from Regensburg to Bratislava now)
Both Hungary and Czechoslovakia point to the fact that Vienna had large Hungarian and Czech minorities during the time of the Austrian Empire, as a way to justify their claims; Hungary would also point to the brief points in the past in which Vienna was under Hungarian control.
I think that, yeah, they won't ignore the history of Vienna. Just downplay the German element, and promote the Hungarian links to Vienna's history.
Yep- the borders outside of Germany do more closely follow ethnic lines.
Unfortunately people's rights are kinda ignored for German civilians ITTL, maybe even more so than IOTL.
I don't know how important Baltic Sea trade is nowadays, but yep.
Germany captured Leningrad, Stalingrad, and Moscow; ITTL Japan also joined the fight against the USSR further contributing to its collapse. It ended up as a situation where there were essentially a bunch of communist rebellions against German occupation, but with no meaningful central Soviet governmental control.
Once Italy joined the Allies, though, the Allies managed to first liberate France and then get through Germany and Poland. Once Germany finally fell, a Soviet government managed to spring up against the German occupiers, and reassert control, but it's much weaker than the OTL Soviet Union and has less land.
Estonia, Latvia, and Finland are all independent.
Libya ended up with a primarily-Italian population and stayed part of Italy. But following the fall of fascism in Italy, Libyan Arabs who had been forced out of their homes are allowed to return; by the present day, Libya is an autonomous region of Italy, and Arabic and Berber are recognized regional languages.One more thing I forgot to ask: How is Libya nowadays? Did they eventually become independent? Living under Fascist Italy for so many years can’t have been pleasant.
The "map of Nation X, but done in 16 different TLs".
Also I merged a bunch of stuff with Lovecraft since they were contemporaries and correspondents, so why not?
Howard actually wrote a few Lovecraftian tales himself, although being Robert Howard rather than Howard Philips, abominations often can be killed with cold steel and white magic, and in one case with humongous snake poison.