The Silver Knight, a Lithuania Timeline

What's your opinion on The Silver Knight so far?


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What is the Oceanian regime notorious for outside of borders aside from their crazy totalitarianism and nuclear weapons program? Harassing Lusangese and Nusantaran fishermen?
 
What is the Oceanian regime notorious for outside of borders aside from their crazy totalitarianism and nuclear weapons program? Harassing Lusangese and Nusantaran fishermen?
Well, for one, its shadow is a pretty big pain for various neo-Unitarian movements and parties, even if they denounce totalitarianism and embrace its other forms like Anarchist or Democratic Unitarianism. It's the only remaining officially Unitarian state on the planet (if you disregard East Africa - however, East Africa is a very different beast, and its ideology is very exotic even by Unitarian standards), after all.
 
Well, for one, its shadow is a pretty big pain for various neo-Unitarian movements and parties, even if they denounce totalitarianism and embrace its other forms like Anarchist or Democratic Unitarianism. It's the only remaining officially Unitarian state on the planet (if you disregard East Africa - however, East Africa is a very different beast, and its ideology is very exotic even by Unitarian standards), after all.
But I'm correct about the "harassing foreign fishermen" comment, right?
 
I wonder how Ceylon and Nadu react to the rise of populism in India.

Also in my opinion the integration of these territory in the french sphere and their success during the war should have boosted the french confidence, i could see some friction with the Germans, when the latters tries to act like the leader of the european continent.
 
Animatsiya (Lithuanian: aнима́ция (animatsiya)) is a style of hand-drawn and computer animation originating in, and commonly associated with, Lithuania, and less frequently with East Slavia.

The word animatsiya is the Lithuanian term for animation, which means all forms of animated media. Outside Lithuania, animatsiya refers specifically to animation from Lithuania or as a Lithuanian-disseminated animation style, often characterized by colorful graphics, vibrant characters and fantastical themes. The culturally abstract approach to the word's meaning may open up the possibility of animatsiya produced in countries other than Lithuania. For simplicity, many Westerners strictly view animatsiya as a Lithuanian animation product. Some scholars suggest defining animatsiya as specifically or quintessentially Lithuanian may be related to a new form of Orientalism.

The earliest commercial Lithuanian animation dates to 1917, in the form of an animated adaptation of the Lithuanian folk tale Eglė the Queen of Serpents, and Lithuanian animatsiya production has since continued to increase steadily. The characteristic animatsiya art style emerged in the 1960s with the works of Justinas Marcinkevičius and spread internationally in the late twentieth century, developing a large domestic and international audience. Animatsiya is distributed theatrically, by way of television broadcasts, directly to home media, and over the Internetwork. It is classified into numerous genres targeting diverse broad and niche audiences.

;)
so who made western style cartons then?
 
Most likely yes, sometime in the early to late 1990s. It was a fairly calm period in the world at the time, what with India still more or less a complacent partner, technology innovating every day and climate change still appearing as a distant threat, so she would be viewed positively by the Chinese after her term ended.
Any achievements/highlights of Yang Xiao Long’s tenure as Chancellor, then.
 
Would being the Chancellor during whose term the first operating Chinese satellite was launched be sufficient to you?
Yes. Anyways, how are the two Turkeys doing and any examples of "Functionalist Republican" states (or their monarchist equivalent: "semi-constitutional monarchies" aside from Britannia) in 2005?
 
Yes. Anyways, how are the two Turkeys doing and any examples of "Functionalist Republican" states (or their monarchist equivalent: "semi-constitutional monarchies" aside from Britannia) in 2005?
Doing fine. Eyeing each other. Still claiming to be the real Turkey. No official peace has been signed after the Two Weeks War.

There are a few. East Turkey is still around, Japan could still be called one. Though, what exactly is "functionalist republicanism" and what separates it from an ordinary dictatorship or from a democracy with a strong executive is still a matter of scholarly debate (much like it had been since its conception, what with the debate over Garšva Lithuania and all). Depending on what a person considers as the defining features of Functionalism, they could place anything from Tawantinsuyu to India to Lithuania under that banner.
 
Speaking of East Turkey, how are their relations with Tawantinsuyu, East Slavia, and India?
They recognize each other that they exist, but outside of East Slavia, relations kind of end there due to distance. Though Choraghad has been extending an olive branch to Gaziantep as well.

Are you trying to search for an anti-western coalition here? :p
 
Well crap, looks like I missed the ending of this. I want to congratulate you on one of the best complete TLs starting in the Medieval period I've read. The TL has great concepts and readability, and IMO it will be remembered as a classic here in the years to come.

Now if only Visegrad hadn't collapsed
 
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