MotF 145: We've Always Been at War with Eastasia

MotF 145: We've Always Been at War with Eastasia

The Challenge

Make a map of a country that controls a huge part of the world, likely one of the only ones left. It doesn't need to be dystopian, but, much like 1984, the world should be divided up into only a couple of nations. Feel free to make a map of the whole world or just one of the major powers.

The Restrictions
There are no restrictions on when your PoD or map may be set. Fantasy, sci-fi, and future maps are allowed, but blatantly implausible (ASB) maps are not

If you're not sure whether your idea meets the criteria of this challenge, please feel free to PM me or comment in the main thread. Sometimes it isn't as clear as I intend it to be.

Please try to keep images posted in this thread a reasonable size - feel free to post a smaller version of your image and provide link to a full-size version if you want to.


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The entry period for this round shall end when the voting thread is posted on Sunday, October 9th.

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THIS THREAD IS FOR ENTRIES ONLY.

Any discussion must take place in the main thread. If you post anything other than a map entry (or a description accompanying a map entry) in this thread then you will be asked to delete the post. If you refuse to delete the post, post something that is clearly disruptive or malicious, or post spam then you may be disqualified from entering in this round of MotF and you may be reported to the board's moderators.

Remember to vote on the previous MotF round!
 
A map of Indo-Europe, 2084
Capital: Moscow
Language: Neo-Indo-European, based on a reconstruction of PIE
Currency: Euro
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From the document Predictions of the Federation 1994-1997, Appendix D: Selected Predictions (held in Global Archives, Unity City, Unity Capital District [formerly Istanbul, Ottoman Empire]). Declassified under terms of Transparent Government Act of 2015.
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I made this map for an earlier contest, but didn't finish it in time. But it fits for this contest too :) Behold, the Habsburg World-Empire! The PoD is that Charles V managed to also inherit the throne of France, and cement Habsburg domination of Europe and the Americas. With this power base, the Habsburgs took their tactic of marrying into local elites and sticking an oar into other folks' disputes global, aligning with Kongo, Dai Viet, Persia, and a Christian Daimyo in Japan, to name a few. For those states they couldn't marry into, brute force sufficed: though only in the last century has the World-Empire achieved domination of China - a Habsburg brother was finally placed on the throne, inaugurating the Ximing (Western Ming) dynasty after a brutal 15-year war, 1860-1875. Inland Africa was also difficult to control, and rebellion still simmers there and in the rump Sultanate of Rum, as well as in India. But in A.D. 1900, Charles XIII is the undisputed ruler of the world, in the twelfth year of his reign. Technology is about 50-75 years behind our world in most fields, and industrialization for nonmilitary purposes proceeds slowly. Since about 1700, the Habsburgs have mostly only provided lip service to the Church's goal of crushing the Protestant heresy and converting the heathens of the world, though missionary efforts continue and it's difficult to rise to high office if one is not a Catholic.

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The world anno 1985:
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There are only 12 independent nations/multinational federations left:
  1. The Dual-monarchy of North America (which evolved out of personal union between the Empire of Mexico and the Kingdom of America.)
  2. Grand(est) Colombia (Which got joined by Peru-Bolivia out of fear of Brazilian and Platinian expansionism.)
  3. La Plata
  4. The Empire of Brazil
  5. The British Empire (the name is kind of becoming a misnomer as Britain has been reduced to India's unsinkable aircraft carrier aimed at dettering the reds from overrunning Persia and Arabia.)
  6. The European Commonwealth of Socialist Republics (created out of the states created by the Revolutionary Syndicalist and Agrarian Socialist revolutions from the aftermath of the Second Mondial War between the empire of France and National Menshevik Russia.)
  7. The kingdom of Scandinavia
  8. The Roman Confederacy (A federation led by integralist Italy with the goal of dissuading the Syndies from exporting the revolution south.)
  9. The Ottoman empire (which lost its capital to the Greeks and Kurdistan to rebelling Syndies, the only thing which keeps the rest of the empire from rebelling is fear of ending up as an Italian or British colony.)
  10. Persia
  11. The United States of Africa
  12. The Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere (originally started as an alliance between the Qing Empire, Imperial Japan and Siam they used the Second Mondial War as an opportunity to 'liberate' a lot of colonies and then launched an intervention in the 2nd Russian civil war to restore the Romanov dynasty, lately the Chinese are using their increased economical might to concentrate ever more power in Beijing.)
(excuse me, if my map is of low quality it is the first (digital) one I ever made.)
 
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The British Empire
(sorry it's so insanely big)

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This map is from the world of The Century, a world-building project of mine, in the year 1890. Here’s a quick reminder of the structure of the British Empire ITTL in the 1830s from The Kingdoms of North America:


The Great Convention of 1829-30 came at a very difficult time for the British Empire, but then again it was because the Empire was having difficulties that the Convention was necessary. After many disastrous events, one thing became plain for anyone to see: the Empire was massively, disgustingly, overstretched.

The build up to the Great Convention began with the Cape Wars of 1802-1809, an total disaster for all parties involved. Despite the fact that neither of the rebelling factions actually managed to capture anything and were generally characterized by gross incompetence and panicked disorganization, it still took British forces seven years to regain control of the entire Cape, a worrying sign.

The next major event worrying away at Parliament were the Western Revolts. The Revolts were not exactly wars, closer to a prolonged period of intense unrest in the less-settled west of the American colonies. The King had banned settlement beyond a certain line, but his proclamations were mostly ignored by American colonists hungry for all the land they could get. Unfortunately, this meant they had to set up effectively independent governments, which aren’t exactly taxable. Quite a few Royal Governors eventually got tired of tax revenues slipping out of their fingers, and began clamping down in the west, establishing their own authority and formalizing the governments there. Of course, there was the small problem that the colonists weren’t supposed to be there in the first place. Both the King and Parliament told the colonial governments in no uncertain terms to stop formalizing western settlement. The colonial governments acknowledged this and continued to do it anyway. The central British government was completely unable to do anything, with tensions in Europe holding its attention.

Then, of course, came the War, lasting for nearly eight years and leaving Britain in possession of all the former Dutch colonies across the globe, as well as several other spoils of war including effective control over most of the Indian subcontinent. Needless to say, this was a lot to handle for anyone. Thus, while at first glance, the British Empire seemed to be at its highest peak, it was in fact an overstretched house of cards ready to collapse at the slightest provocation.

Most everyone in positions of power in Britain saw this, and realized that if the Empire was to maintain its power, something would have to be done. Thus, the Convention was called to determine the future course of Britain all over the globe. What finally came out of it, after a drafting and ratification process taking over a year, was a complete restructuring of the British Empire: the Charter.

The Empire would be divided into several categories of state:
  • The Colonies would be ruled in much the same way as before, with an increased role for Companies under Crown charter like the East India Company being the only significant change.
  • The Provinces would be given some measure of self-government; on the local level mayors and representatives would be elected, and Provincial Assemblies existed in an advisory capacity. However, the Royal Governor appointed by HM would have final say on most matters of importance. The various provinces would have their own militias, but any standing armies would be a part of the British military structure.
  • The Kingdoms would be effectively independent, ruled in Personal Union by HM, free to run their own domestic and some of their foreign policy. They were so independent they were allowed to write their own Charters or Constitutions, if they so pleased (and most of them did). On military matters, they were allowed to keep their own standing armies and navies, but they still had to co-operate on the broader strokes of foreign policy, and were a fully integrated part of the Empire’s economic sphere.
Though the first Kingdom created would be that of the Cape, the vast majority of the Kingdoms would be in North America, hammered out of the former Colonies during the Great Convention. They were, of course, fully allowed to settle their western lands (if they had any) and determine their own form of government. Despite this, Pennsylvania was the only Kingdom that really adopted a radical system, having a unicameral parliament with no upper house and no voting requirements. Slavery is still prevalent in many of the southern Kingdoms, though the slave trade has long been abolished and the land is beginning to grow tired in many states. The current hope of HM’s Government is that it may die out on its own in the Kingdoms soon, but no one can be certain.



And now, some of the events in the intervening years:

After a few fixes here and there, the relation of the British Parliament to the various Provinces and Kingdoms was decided. An Imperial Parliament was created, where each Province (as well as Britain proper, which itself effectively became a set of Provinces under the Charter) would send voting members, and the Kingdoms would send “advisory” ones, who effectively acted as lobbyists for their homelands. The Imperial Parliament would decide matters of foreign policy and inter-Provincial/Colonial trade, somewhat akin to the early OTL American federal government. The Great Convention allowed the British Empire to largely overcome its massive overextension by devolving many powers to local authorities, but the Empire proper still had its hands full enough that it was mostly unable to expand for a few decades.

This inability to expand, however, did not extend to the Empire’s various Provinces and Kingdoms. The Hudson’s Bay Company would continue to expand across the western plains, their traders and settlers often illegally entering French Louisiana. Their illegal entries, however, paled in comparison to those from the North American Kingdoms. By the early 1840s, the largest group (with a nearly two-thirds majority of the population) in French Louisiana was settlers from the various Kingdoms. After numerous small-scale and a few not-so-small-scale Anglo settler revolts, the French king recognized the untenability of the situation and elected to sell the relatively unprofitable colony to the British, who created a Province of Louisiana (thanks to the mixing of the Kingdoms’ settlers effectively eliminating their various local identities) after carving off the parts of it above the 50th parallel and adding it to the territory of the Hudson’s Bay Company, which was shortly before merged with its rival, the North West Company, into the Province of Rupertia.

Another region that had been subject to heavy Anglo settlement in the 1840s and 50s was the New Spanish provinces of Alta and Baja California, thanks to the discovery of gold in the region. During the Spanish Rising and subsequent civil war that had followed the Great War, New Spain had become effectively self-governing, with the Viceroy of New Spain taking de facto power while still remaining de jure subordinate to the Spanish king. After the civil war, however, with the only remaining Spanish king being the infant pretender in Peru, it was clear a choice had to be made between monarchy and republic. The Viceroy, of course, opted for the former. Much of the populace of New Spain…disagreed. In the subsequent civil conflict, the Californias broke off and formed the Anglo-dominated Republic of California. Unfortunately for the young Republic, the conflict in New Spain was brief, and the winners soon wanted the two breakaway provinces back. So, to preserve their independence, the Californians technically gave it up, becoming the Kingdom of the Californias under the British monarch, with the same privileges and responsibilities as any other Kingdom in North America. This, of course, angered the New Spanish to no end, and there remains animosity between the two powers.

The next great crisis that faced the British Empire came from the jewel at the center of its crown—India. In the Great Revolt of the 1850s, populations across British India rose in rebellion against local and general colonial mismanagement and oppression. While eventually the revolt was put down, it required massive amounts of blood and money to do so, and like OTL, the British government realized that a new approach was needed in India. Unlike OTL, however, the East India Company was not removed, merely reformed. (It was deemed unwise to dissolve it, thanks to its relatively effective governance of possessions in the East Indies, and the sheer cost and effort it would require to set up new government across all of its possessions.) The Empire also did something it had never done before: created non-white Kingdoms. However, these Kingdoms differed distinctly in structure from the ones in North America and the Cape. First of all, most of them were federal in nature, as well as mostly being absolute monarchies with little to no room for democracy. Effectively, what they did was give independence to local princes to run their own affairs, as long as the money kept flowing into Company coffers and the Sepoys kept coming into the Company’s army.

The final major event before 1890 was the Division of Africa. With the rise of new technologies that allowed for the colonization of the previously untamable Africa, representatives of the various colonial powers (the Empire, France, Brazil-Portugal, and to a lesser extent Scandinavia, Sicily, and the various German states) convened in Amsterdam. When the delegates left, they had hammered out a plan for the division of Africa. The Empire, of course, took the lion’s share as not just the premier world power, but the one with the most African territory already held. Construction immediately began on the much-hyped Cape-to-Cairo railway, and was complete within just a few years.

Now, the Empire spans the world much as the Cape-Cairo railway spans Africa. The King-Emperor’s word may not be law in its every corner, but so long as the people there take tea, sing God Save the King, and send (at least observatory) members to Parliament, nobody really minds too much.
 
1784

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(As a note, I'm aware how ASB this is, but the prompt was kinda ASB to begin with. Sorry if it's too weird, though! :p Also, sorry about the lack of editing, I didn't have much time! D:)
PoD: King John of the Angevins dies during childbirth, leading to the rebellions against Richard the Lionheart never occurring.

Scenario: After the return of Richard the Lionheart to the Angevin Empire, he continued to consolidate his rule and ownership over England until his death in 1221. With John never having been in the picture, Richard had been free to continue his conquests over the Holy Land with little to no resistance from his family back home. His brother, Phillip, was weaker without the encouragement of John, and after Richard's ransom was finally taken care of, he was free to return back to his homeland without having to defeat a royal rebellion. And, without any precedent for successful rebellion in the Angevin Empire under Richard's rule, any protests by Occitan lords were put down with quick and easy force. Of course, there was a bit of a revolt against him in 1199, but he was able to survive and spent the former part of the next decade fixing up his reputation as an "Oc e No" (a yes and no). By the end of his reign, he had completed military conquests against Navarre, making it swear fealty to the growing Angevins, and absorbed the lands held by the French king a bit more. In addition, even though he spent more time in Vascony and Foix, he preferred to act as if he was English. While his family was originally from Anjou, Richard was a bit of an Anglophile, and the rest of his family was too. He died in 1221 after being killed in a battle against the Scottish.

His successor kept up the military might of his father, but responded a bit less to any orders from the Pope. With his father spending the last 25 years of his reign on the homefront, he thought it necessary to not romp around the Holy Land. He wasn't benign, though. While the lords of Wales and France all tried to use him for money or power, he was sometimes described as being harsher on that kind of manipulation than any king before him. As time went on and the 13th century came to a close, Richard and his successors all kept up the similar pace of growth the Angevins had worked hard to achieve. Of course, as time went on and the Empire grew, it became more and more authoritarian. In 1259, a royal marriage with Aragon forced Castile into begrudgingly declaring war, which in turn lead to a stronger unification of the various knights and nobles in England and France. In 1306, Portugal also allied with the Plantagenets, and full unification finally occurred in 1333. And, while the culture was becoming more homogenous with time, the languages spoken by the king was forced to constantly grow. So, new policies were made to bring the Angevin Empire together, and they had to be harsh.

The first policy involved the class system. For years, the feudal hierarchy within the Empire had been King>Clergy>Nobles>Knights>Peasants. The King believed that this allowed for too much rebellion again
';<L:>, especially because he still sometimes let himself be controlled by the Pope. So, the King, along with the nobles he felt were closest to him, became known as the Partie Intérieure (Inner Party), and the Knights and rich Peasants slowly amalgamated themselves into the Partie Extérieure (Outer party). The clergy wasn't allowed any more influence over the Empire, which involved a bit of excommunication on the part of the Papal States. Most of the priests became members of the Outer Party, kept on careful watch by the king. That didn't mean they banished religion, quite the opposite. Instead, the Angevins used religion and the entire concept of feudalism to keep the peasants, or Prolétariat, from getting smart enough to overthrow the monarchy. The rigid class system had kept the majority of the population from reaching literacy for centuries, but the king assured they'd never get the chance to educate themselves. This way, all he'd have to do was focus on reprimanding the Outer Party members, as the Proles barely knew their own language.

Meanwhile, the outside world was becoming just as royally fucked as the Angevins themselves. The Papal States extended their reach to the HRE, as well as the rest of Catholic Europe, using similar tactics to the Plantagenet family in order to actually gain an empire. Plus, with the king of the largest empire in Europe banishing Papal control, the Pope felt it necessary to create an empire large enough to counter that. The Byzantine Empire fell in 1377 to the Eshrefids, after multiple failed crusades lead to their speedy demise. The Muslim states were also turning themselves into a force to be reckoned with, and pushed any and all Christian influence out of the Holy Land.

The fifteenth century was an age of growth for every major empire on the planet. The Plantagenets were strong, and finally defeated Scotland as well as absorbing the Italian states who resisted the Papal takeover. While English culture had taken over in some regards, French was still the lingua franca of the Empire. So, the Kingdom of England demanded autonomy from the Angevin Empire itself, plunging itself into civil war before the Plantagenet King caved in. The nobles who rebelled created their own little duchies in Cornwall, Wight, and many other places who preferred direct rule rather than risking the destruction the Inner Party. After seeing the rebellion in England, the King changed his system slightly. France, Aragon, and Portugal had had their own separate kings for a while, and he applied this system to Navarre, Chambery, and Scotland in hopes the knights of the Outer Party wouldn't rebel and break away. The kings he appointed were just figureheads, though, and it lead to the creation of a new title; Grand Frère (Big Brother), the leader of the entire empire. The King of the Angevins was synonymous with being Grand Frère, and the other kings were seen as people who carried out His orders. This system lasted for hundreds of years, with the Proles never even learning the name of their King; the Grand Frère had no need for a name, as whoever held the title might as well have been immortal.

In 1461, a French ship landed on the island of Arsenault (OTL Marie-Galante), alerting people to the New World for the first time. There wasn't much of a race for it, though. The Castilians had been tamed by the Plantagenets, and the rest of the Empire fearfully listened to the Grand Frère when it came to colonization plans (he HAD stepped up his torture game, after all). France took a few islands, Portugal took large parts of the southern continent, while the Angevins took most of the rest. Castile was eventually given the Middle Islands (Cuba and Dominica) as well as a colony they named New Salamanca (OTL Eastern Venezuela) out of appreciation (and vassalization).

Time passed, and the Eshrefid Caliphate grew, feeding off holy war with the Papal States. The Russian principalities fearfully joined the Christian Empire as the Eshrefids took Bulgaria and Crimea and the Pope took Warsaw and Budapest. After there was no more land to be taken, war became a thing of life. Sides constantly flipped, people were constantly killed, and sometimes there was said to be a war even when no fighting was occurring. The Plantagenets, who took to calling themselves the "Empire of Oceania" due to their quad-continental status (Europe, North America, South America, and Africa), sometimes allied with the Caliphate out of sheer hatred for the Christian rite, and other times they allied with the Pope who had fought so hard with Grand Frère just centuries earlier. From the declaration of "La Guerre Pour Mettre Fin à la Domination Étrangère" (The War to end Foreign Rule) in 1501 to 1784, there was war. It was said by some to be not one war, but a collection of many. However, most saw it as an ongoing world struggle with ceasefire from time to time. Big Brother vs. the Pope of Eurasia vs. the Muslims in Westasia in a war with no end, fueled by the bodies of millions of uneducated Proles. In 1784, there is nothing but Big Brother.
 
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