what if during in american civil war, some confederates try to contact to the british empire for help at exchange for british protectorate?
Some likely did IOTL, but if they did or didnt the reaction would be about the same. Some variation of, "do you speak for your government? No? Then what are you doing here, even if we wanted to almost certainly go to war with our largest trading partner to help you hillbillys we would need some actually sanctioned government representatives to deal with."what if during in american civil war, some confederates try to contact to the british empire for help at exchange for british protectorate?
Some likely did IOTL, but if they did or didnt the reaction would be about the same. Some variation of, "do you speak for your government? No? Then what are you doing here, even if we wanted to almost certainly go to war with our largest trading partner to help you hillbillys we would need some actually sanctioned government representatives to deal with."
The USSR becomes a balkanized disaster ripe for the Nazi onslaught. We can expect many, many more deaths in World War II.What if all the anti-Communist, pro-Soviet rebellions in the USSR post-Polish-Soviet war actually managed to cause an anti-Bolshevik revolution?
It would affect the third one the most, since in OTL Louis XII was surrounded on all sides by 1513. Without England getting involved he can focus his attention on fighting the Swiss, Austrians and Spaniards in the South, which could lead to a better (or possibly) worse outcome for him.How much would England not getting involved in the Italian wars change the results?
We don't rightly know since he was only 36 when he did die and was seemingly in very good health (for the times, at least). His father died of abdominal cancer but his paternal grandfather died of pneumonia. His mother died of seemingly ongoing childbirth complications and his maternal grandfather lived to age 60. So overall it doesn't really seem like there was something like haemophilia in the Romanovs, or specific cancers like in Prussia, or just general inbreeding like the Habsburgs that would have been highly likely to affect him. He could easily have lived to the 1740s, I think, perhaps even thr 1750s, if he can be stopped in continuing to lead from the front lines in war.How long could Charles XII of Sweden have lived if he hadn't died during the Great Northern War?
The inventor of the dynamo, Charles Brush, did exactly that, building a huge 12 kw windmill that powered the arc lights in his mansion.What If when the dynamo was invented someone got the idea to hook one to a windmill for semi-continuous operation?
I think and @Kellan Sullivan can correct me if I’m wrong, but before he died, there was talk of Karl marryinf Maria Luisa of Spain. So if he survives here, 5en I could see that marriage going through.Chablais marrying Maria elisabeth would be intriguing I think. Maria Josef ro Ferdinand wouls also be intriguinf I think.In January 1761, Archduke Karl Josef of Austria, the second son of Franz I and Maria Theresia, died of smallpox. He was said to be charming, extroverted, intelligent, and open-minded, and was the favorite son of his parents. He was well respected and liked by his siblings (quite a feat) and the court. Supposedly Karl Josef considered himself more appropriate to inherit than his elder brother, OTL Josef II, and even said he meant to contend with his brother for the Imperial crown.
So let's give Karl Josef his desire. It's January 1761, and a child of Franz I and Maria Theresia dies of smallpox: their eldest son, Josef. Karl Josef is now the heir to the Habsburgs. What could happen? What would happen? What should happen?
Random Questions:Open to any ideas, suggestions, theories, etc!
- Isabella of Parma is widowed after four months of marriage. Does she make a second marriage? If so, with who? Does she escape to a nunnery?
- Karl Josef's bride:
- Maria Kunigunde of Saxony (1740)
- Five years older
- Granddaughter of Josef I via her mother
- Sister to the Queen of Spain
- Maria Josefa of Spain (1744)
- One year older
- Great-granddaughter of Josef I via her mother, great-granddaughter of le Grand Dauphin via her father
- Maria Luisa of Spain (1745)
- Same age
- OTL married his brother Leopold; might still marry him here.
- Younger sister of above
- Benedita of Portugal (1746)
- One year younger
- OTL was considered as a bride for his brother Josef II after the death of his first wife
- Great-granddaughter of le Grand Dauphin via her mother, great-granddaughter of Leopold I via her father, niece of the King of Spain via her mother
- Maria Luisa of Parma (1751)
- Six years younger
- Younger sister of Isabella of Parma, wife of Josef II
- Granddaughter of Felipe V of Spain and Louis XV of France
- Archduchess Maria Elisabeth marrying the Duke of Chablais or Louis XV?
- There was an option for Maria Elisabeth to marry his cousin Benedetto of Savoy, the Duke of Chablais, around 1765 / 1766 but her brother Josef II refused to allow it as he did not consider it politically significant enough, even though Maria Elisabeth declared herself very willing to enter the marriage. Maybe Karl Josef would be more willing to let his sister, considered late in age to be unmarried, marry their cousin?
- In 1768, there was a proposal to marry Maria Elisabeth to Louis XV and her sister Maria Antonia to his heir the Dauphin as a double marriage alliance, which would ensure two Austrian queens of France in a row. The negotiations were almost complete and the marriage contract was prepared when Maria Elisabeth fell ill with smallpox. She survived but was horribly scarred and the matter of the marriage was dropped. This is easy to butterfly away.
- Maria Johanna surviving // Maria Josefa surviving
- One or both surviving the smallpox that ultimately killed them and going on to marry their betrothed, Ferdinand of Naples and Sicily
- Marriages to Spain or Portugal?
- If Maria Johanna or Maria Josefa marries Ferdinand of the Two Sicilies, could Maria Carolina marry a surviving Louis Joseph of France and Maria Antonia marry somewhere else - Bavaria or Saxony, or Spain if Maria Luisa of Parma marries Karl Josef?
@Kellan Sullivan @isabella @WillVictoria @VVD0D95 @FalconHonour
Maria Luisa was an excellent Grand Duchess and Empress OTL, so I'm sure she'd be one here. Little sad to see her and Leo split up - they're some of my favorites. Maybe with Maria Luisa married to Karl Josef, Leopold could marry Benedita of Portugal (I truly believe she can do better than marrying her fifteen years younger nephew and I will not be convinced otherwise).I think and @Kellan Sullivan can correct me if I’m wrong, but before he died, there was talk of Karl marryinf Maria Luisa of Spain. So if he survives here, 5en I could see that marriage going through.Chablais marrying Maria elisabeth would be intriguing I think. Maria Josef ro Ferdinand wouls also be intriguinf I think.
If only it had caught on!The inventor of the dynamo, Charles Brush, did exactly that, building a huge 12 kw windmill that powered the arc lights in his mansion.
Charles F. Brush - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Karl was engaged to Maria Luisa of Spain and Leopold (who was not to inherit Tuscany at that point) to Maria Beatrice d’Este, so I wonder how things would move in the Italian scenario.In January 1761, Archduke Karl Josef of Austria, the second son of Franz I and Maria Theresia, died of smallpox. He was said to be charming, extroverted, intelligent, and open-minded, and was the favorite son of his parents. He was well respected and liked by his siblings (quite a feat) and the court. Supposedly Karl Josef considered himself more appropriate to inherit than his elder brother, OTL Josef II, and even said he meant to contend with his brother for the Imperial crown.
So let's give Karl Josef his desire. It's January 1761, and a child of Franz I and Maria Theresia dies of smallpox: their eldest son, Josef. Karl Josef is now the heir to the Habsburgs. What could happen? What would happen? What should happen?
Random Questions:Open to any ideas, suggestions, theories, etc!
- Isabella of Parma is widowed after four months of marriage. Does she make a second marriage? If so, with who? Does she escape to a nunnery?
- Karl Josef's bride:
- Maria Kunigunde of Saxony (1740)
- Five years older
- Granddaughter of Josef I via her mother
- Sister to the Queen of Spain
- Maria Josefa of Spain (1744)
- One year older
- Great-granddaughter of Josef I via her mother, great-granddaughter of le Grand Dauphin via her father
- Maria Luisa of Spain (1745)
- Same age
- OTL married his brother Leopold; might still marry him here.
- Younger sister of above
- Benedita of Portugal (1746)
- One year younger
- OTL was considered as a bride for his brother Josef II after the death of his first wife
- Great-granddaughter of le Grand Dauphin via her mother, great-granddaughter of Leopold I via her father, niece of the King of Spain via her mother
- Maria Luisa of Parma (1751)
- Six years younger
- Younger sister of Isabella of Parma, wife of Josef II
- Granddaughter of Felipe V of Spain and Louis XV of France
- Archduchess Maria Elisabeth marrying the Duke of Chablais or Louis XV?
- There was an option for Maria Elisabeth to marry his cousin Benedetto of Savoy, the Duke of Chablais, around 1765 / 1766 but her brother Josef II refused to allow it as he did not consider it politically significant enough, even though Maria Elisabeth declared herself very willing to enter the marriage. Maybe Karl Josef would be more willing to let his sister, considered late in age to be unmarried, marry their cousin?
- In 1768, there was a proposal to marry Maria Elisabeth to Louis XV and her sister Maria Antonia to his heir the Dauphin as a double marriage alliance, which would ensure two Austrian queens of France in a row. The negotiations were almost complete and the marriage contract was prepared when Maria Elisabeth fell ill with smallpox. She survived but was horribly scarred and the matter of the marriage was dropped. This is easy to butterfly away.
- Maria Johanna surviving // Maria Josefa surviving
- One or both surviving the smallpox that ultimately killed them and going on to marry their betrothed, Ferdinand of Naples and Sicily
- Marriages to Spain or Portugal?
- If Maria Johanna or Maria Josefa marries Ferdinand of the Two Sicilies, could Maria Carolina marry a surviving Louis Joseph of France and Maria Antonia marry somewhere else - Bavaria or Saxony, or Spain if Maria Luisa of Parma marries Karl Josef?
@Kellan Sullivan @isabella @WillVictoria @VVD0D95 @FalconHonour
With Leopold taking the place of Karl as heir to Tuscany, I think his engagement to Beatrice would still be ended a la OTL and she would still marry Ferdinand - the argument was to keep Modena independent IIRC.Karl was engaged to Maria Luisa of Spain and Leopold (who was not to inherit Tuscany at that point) to Maria Beatrice d’Este, so I wonder how things would move in the Italian scenario.
Even with a surviving Duc de Burgundy? Maria Karolina is closer in age and thus could marry sooner.Antonia would still be the one destinate to France while Carolina could end in Parma in place of Amalia.