Union and Liberty: An American TL

Great update Wilcox!

Seems like we'll likely get a Greater Illyria standing in for Slovenia and Croatia in TTL (if it also bites off parts of Dalmatia from Hungary). Love that!

Keep it up.
 
Italy's days in the war seemed numbered. Will the Ottomans have the manpower to strike back at the Albanians to keep them from all their claims or is this part of the post-war settlement?
The three vilayets are just Albania's claims. They won't receive all of it.

The Albanians would claim Epirus long before claiming all of Monastir Vilayet.
As jycee said, Greece got Epirus in the Treaty of Rome. Albania still claims it as a part of Greater Albania though. The claims in the post were just the borders they desired at the time of the independence declaration.
 
Part One Hundred Twenty-Five: The Final Approach
Update's done! Map will be up this weekend.

Part One Hundred Twenty-Five: The Final Approach

Breaking Into Italy:
The entry of Illyria into the Great War was the beginning of the end phase of the war. While the size of the Illyrian armed force was small, the widening of the fronts in Italy and Hungary thinned out the New Coalition forces and allowed the German and French armies to advance quicker. As the German army built up a forward base in Conegliano and held off an Italian counterattack, the Illyrians continued to engage Italy along the Isonzo line. The difficult and costly push by the Germans through the last range of the Alps stopped that offensive for a while, and gave the Italian forces the chance to regroup and refocus toward the newly opened front. The Second Battle of Gorizia saw Italy recapture the border town on July 25.

Further south, Illyria was more successful. The Isonzo line held during the Battle of Aquileia. The battle, named after the nearby ancient Roman city, actually occurred as a back and forth series of skirmishes between the Isonzo River and the city of Sokolgora[1] between July and September. The hottest months of the year took a heavy toll on the combatants with temperaturs reaching over 100 degrees for days on end. The battle also swung back and forth, even though the contested width was barely five miles apart. Numerous Italian offensives nearly reached Sokolgora and the town itself was captured for almost a week. However, with the French launching further landings, the strip of land was conceded and the Italians fell back to beyond the Isonzo River. With Trieste now securely isolated, Illyria laid siege to the port city. After several weeks and severe damage from artillery, Illyrian forces entered Trieste on September 29, 1910. Three weeks later on October 17th, Rijeka also fell to the Alliance Carolingien.

On the western section of the Italian front, the French forces continued to pour into the upper Po valley. After Cuneo and Saluzzo fell, the Italians attempted to build up a defensive line to stop the French advance. However, the Italian command slowly became disorganized over fighting a two front war across all of northern Italy. As Illyria advanced in the east, France did so in the west. The main target was Turin, and that center of industry fell in July of 1910. The town of Ivrea on the southern edge of the Alps fell to French forces at the end of the month. The capture of Ivrea left over 20,000 Italian soldiers trapped and surrounded in the Aosta Valley. Meanwhile, the last of the Italian navy in the Tyrrhenian Sea was sunk as the small fleet tried to slip out of La Spezia harbor at night. Three Italian cruisers were sunk near the city's harbor, and the other ships were captured, with the crew taken to Corsica as prisoners of war. With the Italian front collapsing, the Liga del Mediterraneo members heavily considered overtures of peace. The Italian ambassador to London, Guglielmo Imperiali[2], sent fervent letters to the British foreign office calling for an armistice, but for a time they fell on deaf ears. As the months went on, the Alliance Carolingien continued to occupy more of the Po Valley. Alessandria fell in August of 1910, and another beachhead was soon established in Tuscany as further north France kept moving on Milan. The Tuscan front connected with the fort at Piombino, quickly capturing Livorno and Pisa and advancing as far inland as Siena and only ten miles out from Florence. Were it not for the Apennine Mountains, the peninsula would soon be split in half by the French forces.


The Thrashing Bull:
In Spain, the New Coalition military line may have been holding at the Ebro River, but within Spain the government was growing weaker as opposition to the war grew. The Cortes in Madrid, then held by the Conservative Party, refused any debate on seeking an armistice with the French despite the continued occupation of the northeast of the country. The Conservatives had seen the cessions Spain had given to France in the 1870s after the Second Napoleonic War as a great humiliation to Spain. Because of this and the continued British refusal to consider peace, the Conservative government vowed to fight on and not surrender to the French again.

The French dealt another blow to the New Coalition armies in early 1910. As the Germans pierced the Po Valley, France launched another offensive beyond the Ebro. With the Sistema Iberico now providing the backbone of the Spanish defensive line, the French concentrated the offensive on either ends of the broad front. The offensive was meant to reach Burgos and Valencia by the summer. The first goal succeeded as the Spanish defenses in the north were still largely disorganized after the loss of the Basque Country. However, British ships again prevented naval support from reaching the Valencian coast, and the French were rebuked from Sagunt in March. With Burgos captured, the French had reached the furthest into the Ibreian Peninsula of any French campaign since Emperor Napoleon. For much of the rest of 1910, the French refocused their attention on the Italian front and drawing out the New Coalition navies. However, they did advance the overall Spanish front to the other side of the Sistema Iberia. Soria and Calatayud fell to France in August. After another weeks long pitched battle at Medinaceli in October, the French marched into Sigüenza, bringing them within a hundred miles of Madrid.

As the French advanced, Spain scrambled to bring troops up from Andalusia to the front lines. However, this meant fewer garrisons in the southern towns where the largest sentiment to the cantonalist movement was. In July 1910 a heat wave sparked rioting in Cordoba and other cities as the government struggled to ration water in the city. Seeing an opportunity, the cantonalists of the city proclaimed a need for more decentralized government and the rejection of the authority of Madrid. Cordoba soon went into open rebellion. Other cities in Andalucia quickly followed. Most notably were in the industrial cities in the province of Valencia, one of the few industrial areas of the country outside of Catalunya. The workers of Alcoy and Alicante[3] rose up in support of Cordoba, as did numerous other cities in the next months across southern Spain. The city of Valencia itself hesitated due to the naval presence in the city, but the unhappy population soon rose up as the French encroached on the city. In November 1910, in order to avoid French occupation, Valencia proclaimed itself an independent republic, seeking a truce with the French forces. In a meeting between French general Hubert Lyautey and the interim mayor of Valencia, Faustí Barberà i Martí[4], the French agreed to not enter the proclaimed borders of the Valencian Republic, which included much of the area surrounding the city. The rebellion in Andalucia grew as more cities with entrenched cantonalist and syndicalist movements joined, including Cadiz, Jerez, and Seville. By 1911 it was evident that Madrid's authority over much of the south and east of the country was falling apart, and the Spanish government finally sent emissaries along with Italy to Paris for peace discussions.

[1] Monfalcone, Italy. Sokolgora is the Slovenian translation of the Italian name, meaning Mount Falcon.
[2] Guglielmo Imperiali in OTL was the Italian ambassador to London during WWI.
[3] Alcoy was the site of the Petroleum Revolution], that helped lead to the First Spanish Republic in OTL. Here its syndicalism is still there and leads to a support of the cantonalists.
[4] Barberà i Martí was an early proponent of a separate Valencian national identity.
 
Awesome!

I do like the possibility of a greater Illyria coming out of this war. Croats have had it pretty rough under Hungary; and though Illyria would be Sloven dominated my guess is that whatever Croat lands they take from Hungary they will have it easier under a slavic kingdom.

The big question in the Eastern front is what is going on with the Ottoman Empire and Rumania? They might be key in bringing the Russians and Hungarians down, or in the (surely messy) aftermath of the war.

As for the Republic of Valencia... any chance this will merge with Catalonia (already under French occupation) and the Balearics for a revived Aragon?

Keep it up Wilcox! If you got the time it be great to see a map of where the front lines are at now.
 
Beginnings of a Spanish Civil War, stronger Illyria, and Italy is on its last legs. Great update, but I would like to know how the Americans are doing against the combined Canadian states and California.
 
Now begins the speculations on a post-war Europe:

- France gets Savoia and Nizza, as well as all the Balearics, not just the return of Minorca.

- Germany probably doesn't get any extra territory (she's mighty big as it is!), but a German-client, independent Poland that includes Galicia and (hopefully) Lithuania.

- Illyria is harder to figure out. Rijeka definitely, Trieste maybe, but I doubt they'd want too many restive Italians. We'll have to see how the war plays out in he east to see what gains they can hope for in Hungary.

- Hungary is screwed! How screwed, we shall see!

- Turkey will most likely wait until the very end to join l'Alliance Carolingienne, and only to try to recoup their lost Caucasian territories.

- Britain will find themselves in the same position they always found themselves in during the Napoleonic wars: angry as well but no way to bring on the fight.

And I can't believe I never noticed this before, or that apparently I'm the only French speaker following this thread, but "alliance" in French is feminine, so it must be l'Alliance Carolingienne.
 
My thoughts on the peace,

Now begins the speculations on a post-war Europe:

- France gets Savoia and Nizza, as well as all the Balearics, not just the return of Minorca.

Savoy and Nizza defenetly, and the return of Minorca. However the other Balearics might just go to Valencia/Catalonia who's independence looks quite likely right now.

- Germany probably doesn't get any extra territory (she's mighty big as it is!), but a German-client, independent Poland that includes Galicia and (hopefully) Lithuania.

No extra territory (unless it gets Lithuania), but as you mention it likely gets a few clients. Poland most definitely (with a Hohenzollern at the throne) but Galicia might be kept as separate entity (getting Slovakia from Hungary) and a German client as well. Finland and Baltic Union are also possible German clients.

- Illyria is harder to figure out. Rijeka definitely, Trieste maybe, but I doubt they'd want too many restive Italians. We'll have to see how the war plays out in he east to see what gains they can hope for in Hungary.

As you said Rijeka ends up in Illyria. And if Hungary ends up pretty screwed, Zagreb and Dalmatia could be annexed as well.

- Hungary is screwed! How screwed, we shall see!

As above, I reckon Slovakia goes to a puppet Galicia. And Dalmatia might end up in Illyria. Hungary would be paying a high price for joining "La Lega Mediterranea" by ending up without a coast.

The bigger question is what happens with Transylvania? Will Romania join in?

- Turkey will most likely wait until the very end to join l'Alliance Carolingienne, and only to try to recoup their lost Caucasian territories.

They'll wait. But any atempt to get anything in the peace out of Russia might implode on them later on.

- Britain will find themselves in the same position they always found themselves in during the Napoleonic wars: angry as well but no way to bring on the fight.

Agree. They'll live to fight another day.

Those are my thoughts. Wilcox, can't wait to see what you come up with! Keep it up.
 
No. For God's sake, do NOT include Slovakia in Galicia. The Tatra Mountains are a very good border and a very bad internal divider. I'd suggest making Slovakia independent, with only the ethnically Slovakian areas going to it (as opposed to the OTL situation).
 
Here's the latest map for the fronts in Europe. Also the next update will be in a few days, covering North America.

And don't forget to vote for Union and Liberty in the Turtledoves here. :)

Great War Europe September 1910.png
 
With that front in Hungary they should be on the verge of collapse. Are the Slovaks planning to rebel? What about the Romanians and Germans in Transylvania?
 
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