Alternate History Map Thread

Witch0Winter

Witch ❄️f Winter
Location
Colorado
Pronouns
She/Her
Welcome, everyone, to the very first Alternate History Map Thread on Sufficient Velocity! Come here to post maps in any format that have something to do with alternate history. Have fun!

To start us off, here is my most recent map, a little pixel art extravaganza I set up. The description is long so I'll put it in the spoiler tag!

This is a world that diverged from our own in the years 420 and 421 AD, as the Jin Dynasty in China falls terribly hard at the same time that Constantius III, Emperor of Rome, does not suddenly perish and so the world is forever changed. The times after the point of divergence begin to truly diverge from our own as the Roman Empire, in a last saving throw, manages to stay together thanks to Constantius III and his successors. In China, the invasion of northern nomadic peoples spells doom for the tenuous dynasties that had asserted themselves after the fall of the Jin. The Northern China Plain and Yangtze River Valley were split into many competing and divided states warring upon one another. In the south, the Liu Song hold on for a bit longer, laboring under the idea that they will usher a return to China's glory, but it is not to be. The remnants of the Liu Song will instead reform in the south around Guangzhou and eventually form the modern state as Yue.

Time passes and the world changes. Rome survives through the better incorporation of Germanic peoples into the empire, particularly in border regions that allows them to the weather the storm of nomadic migrations, even if they have a few crises along the way. Some time later In Arabia, the nomadic Arab herdsmen are united by a new religion arising out of the powerful coastal towns of Mecca and Medina. They unite Arabia under a single empire led by a Caliph, and take stabs at breaking out into Roman and Persian territory. These attempts, however, fail and force the restless Muslim warriors, traders, and diplomats in another direction: Africa. Crossing the Red Sea into the land of Axum, the Arabs carry out long campaigns throughout coastal East Africa (and inland where they can survive) that sees massive tracts of land brought under control of a centralized settled government for the first time, and united even more strongly by the religion which spreads rapidly in the region. It will not be the last place Islam spreads, but it will be where it is strongest outside Arabia itself. For centuries afterward, East Africa will be the central axis of power around which the Muslim world rotates, providing great amounts of resources, trade, and manpower directly to the Caliph that allows him to stand on more equal footing with the other great Muslim rulers of Persia (converted through a mix of invasions and diplomacy) and the Muslim empires in India (converted through missionaries). The focus on the spread of Islam through seafaring trade and missionary work will later help convert much of Southeast Asia, with particularly large effects.

The Roman Empire, at the same time, is not slow to realize the potential of Africa either. Camels were brought into Rome for the first time with the Arab invasions, and left afterwards by the invaders and their numbers increased through trade with the Arabian Empire. These animals, for the first time, would allow enterprising Romans to cross the vast sands of the Sahara into the fertile Sahel of West Africa, and the great peoples that dwell there. The traders who ply the dangerous desert routes for gold, salt, and ivory bring with them new architectural techniques, Latin systems of writing and books, Roman organization, and most importantly of all: the Christian religion. Christianity spreads like wildfire across the Sahel, particularly as Rome tends to favor the peoples of the Sahel who are Christian over those who aren't, and gives them weapons, training, and supplies in exchange for spreading the word of God across Africa. The trade would go on to make all sides rich, and the great kings of the Sahel will become, in time, some of the richest men in history.

It is in China, however, that some of the greatest and most rapid strides are made in virtually every field. While Rome and Arabia struggle to keep vast empires together and play family politics and while India is stuck in a cycle of empires continually growing and shrinking, the stabilizing of the Chinese states in the 9th​ and 10th​ centuries allows for great amounts of growth. Competition breeds ingenuity, and the Chinese are no stranger to either. The warring states, stuck in a vastly long Winter Period since the fall of the Jin in 420, make great technological strides that put them ahead of much of the world. They learn how to use wooden blocks to create crude but efficient printing presses, and to use special chemical mixtures to create powder that lights upon contact with fire. The smaller states that will later be formed into Qin find themselves constantly competing for more innovations and ways to gain a foothold against each other. Literacy begins to climb for the first time since the fall of the Jin, bureaucratic reforms enable smaller states to fight far above their weight class, examinations for government officials weed out the week, and improved methods of trade and travel enrich coastal nations like Yue and the peninsular Lu. Chinese writing, art, philosophy, religion, mathematics, and economics spread rapidly through East Asia, particularly in the states of Goseon (particularly Goguryeo who uses these advantages to take over and rule the peninsula after a century of conflict), the Viet state of Cham Pa to the south, and to the Yamato of Nihon. These changes not only effectively Sinicize much of East Asia but also rapidly advance the states that lie within. These reforms even reach the nomads of the north and will eventually lead to the conflicts between the settled and nomadic peoples of the Grass Sea that form the Grand Khaganate.

Perhaps the greatest effect the Chinese states have on the world, however, is yet to come. Islam reaches Southeast Asia in the 11th​ century, and results in a vast series of wars between Muslim and non-Muslim southeast Asians. The Chinese occasionally meddle in the affairs, but largely the conflicts go ignored until the mid-14th​ century when the Malay peoples form a single dynasty controlling the straits that link the Donghai and Ratnakaran Oceans. After a century of conflict that had begun to include quarreling with the decidedly non-Muslim Chinese (though large enclaves in the Chinese states exist, particularly in Guangzhou and Lin'an), the new dynasty closed the straits to Chinese traffic except without heavy tolls and promises of special treaties with the Malays. This measure immediately impacted the profits and sustainability of coastal Chinese states and of the trade-heavy Nihon. A solution eventually arose: traders had for quite some time ventured north past the island of Ezochi and the string of islands there and towards a different string of islands that, it was said, led to an entirely different and vast land. The Emperor of Nihon had already been sending ships north to explore the lands after he had decisively claimed Ezochi just a decade before, and so sent vessels further north and to the legendary lands beyond. These lands would turn out to be the northernmost region of Jinshan (Gold Mountain), the first of two continents found by the East Asians. News of the discovery spread fast, even if not every Chinese state was interested. It would be the coastal states like Yue, Lu, and the Later Yan who would be the first to tentatively send their ships, crews, and later settlers beyond the bounds of East Asia towards the promised riches of the New World. Crossing the Donghai Ocean straight across was not possible at the time, and so a steady stream of ships turned north, around the curve of the world and cold waters of northern Asia and Jinshan, and then headed south to the warmer and richer lands there. They found areas like the Golden Bay to make land, interact with the natives, and set up trade. Some went even further south and found the great empires of the New World, the Aztecs, Mayan states, and the new but powerful Inca.

The interactions between the East Asians and peoples of Jinshan and Yinshan were complicated from the start. Disease brought from the Old World, even in far more limited forms than our own world, inflicted pain on the native populations and the population suffered. The Chinese were not ones to conquer, however, and instead worked on setting up trade, alliances, and settlement among the peoples already there. This was particularly apparently in regards to the Aztecs and Incans, who managed to hold on despite population and became well-regarded by the Chinese despite some of their violent ways. Settlement of the Chinese in their own states was largely confined to the West Coast of Jinshan, where connection to East Asia was easiest. Settlement among the Aztecs, Incans, and other peoples certainly happened but there would not be any Chinese-led states in the region. Chinese contact would instead help spur on further developed of the native states throughout the two continents, with many formerly tribal or Bronze Age peoples flourishing with new technologies, philosophies, and weapons of war and trade; the horse was something of a revolution. In the east, Norsemen happened upon the places they called Newfoundland and Vinland and established colonies of their own there, though the sparsely-populated outposts would never achieve the political or cultural dominance the way the Chinese could. The balance of power in the Shans was forever after in Southern Jinshan and Western Yinshan. Over the next few centuries, native empires grew rapidly in the Mississippi Valley (using our own term for convenience) and in the south of Jinshan where various Aztec dynasties grew northwards, creating ever-larger empires of commerce and resource exploitation. The Incan Empire itself, under Chinese influence, grew to new heights of power and extended across much of the Western Coast of Yinshan.

Industrialization brought only more complications to the world. Beginning in the 17th​ century and progressing onward, the industrialization of the Chinese states and those in the Shans spread a whole new world of technology different from anything seen before. Travel on rails, mass media and production of books, high rates of literacy and the sciences, and revolutions in warfare. A few times states almost conquered all of China, most notably the expansionist Shu Republic, which was the first of its kind in China. Rail lines crisscrossed the width and breadth of East Asia, and the Grand Khaganate began to come into its own as a major power, conquering and pacifying many parts of northern China that had once belonged to the states now part of the Han Summer Union. Africa was particularly affected by industrialization, as the new methods of fighting disease and faster transportation allowed both native African states and settlers to reach deep into the continent. The centuries-long Scramble for Nzere began in earnest, with the result being a massive organization of many industrial states of various origins. Rome was slow to catch on to industrialization for some time, even as the nations of the Riksradet caught on, and languished thus. For a time, it seemed that internal rebellion and outside intervention might topple the Roman Empire as the 19th​century began. At the same time, in the second wave of industrialization, the nations of the Shans came into their own, particularly the oil-rich nations of Anahuac and the Federation of Jinshan. The world's first collectivist state also came about in the era with the birth of the Nēhiyaw Collective in 1795.

The 19th century, however, would be the time of greatest change, and have a massive effect on the world as it is today. It would be the so-called "Ice Age Century" in which temperatures around the world dropped even as tensions heated. Wars were fought across Africa and the Shans as industrial powers jockeyed for power and alliances were formed, fought, and were broken almost constantly. The House of Islam, for a time, was all but shattered as religious divisions threatened to unwind it, and it was only the so-called "Reformation" that could reunite the quarreling wings of Islam, though not nearly to the degree it had once been. Anahuac fought wars overseas for its allies, becoming the first power native to the Shans to exert itself on the world stage. The greatest conflict, however, came in the form of the Winter War, fought from 1829-1842. It involved virtually every nation in East Asia and only ended with the total destruction of the state known today as the Late Chu state. At the time, it was declared as the Late Chu dynasty in a fit of nationalist fervor following conflicts and famine earlier in the century and sought to unite the entirety of China under a single government and used brutal means to do so. The Chu managed to conquer almost all of the Chinese states before being defeated by a broad coalition including the Grand Khaganate, Nihon, and Cham Pa, as well as the Federation of Jinshan, though at the cost of millions of lives. At the same time as this bloodshed, The Troubles raged in the Roman Empire as it came apart at the seams to a series of governments and movements and warlords that saw the empire almost completely fall, were it not for a revolutionary government that arose, spread throughout the Roman lands, and eventually united them all in the new Spartacist Republic of Rome. Never before in human history had so many been witness to the violence that gripped the world in the 19th​ century.

Now, as the world moves into the 20th​ century, the peoples throughout seek to learn from the mistakes and take advantage of the breakthroughs that occurred in the past. The world has found itself in a long peace, with the various alliances and organizations managing to hold together in peace and harmony for a time. The Spartacists rule Rome and have helped it progress to a mighty nation, even if one still struggling behind its past greatness. New nations to become powers such as the Malagasy Empire—united by brilliant rulers and industrialized by their successors into one of the most dynamic growing powers—and the Mississippi Union seek to take up the mantle from the great nations of the last century who have begun to recede from past heights. It is a time when people are far more connected than ever before, where new technologies and breakthroughs are behind every corner from outer space to cyber space. The coming challenges as the world warms up seem at times almost trivial to the potential humanity wields.

At the forefront of all this is the Han Summer Union. It was conceived in the ashes of the last war, as humans looked up from the rubble and ruin towards the sky and the stars beyond, and the boundless potential that they as a united China and world would have. The Qin, successors of the so-called Late Chu, were one of the original supporters, strange as it may seem. They and the other states of the Chinese were able to see past their petty grudges and rivalries and the endless conflict that had plagued the long and brutal Winter Period towards the birth of a new Summer Period, in which a union of all Han peoples could make them all richer, smarter, and safer. It is not an easy union to maintain and has been rough around the edges. Some of the nations immediately outside of the Chinese sphere refuse to join, and movements inside sometimes threaten to unravel it. Yet it is a union worth fighting for and the many millions of China will not stop working hard to see that the birth of this new Summer Period will usher in a new age for all Chinese and for peoples across the world, moving towards an ever-brighter future.

 
Welcome, everyone, to the very first Alternate History Map Thread on Sufficient Velocity! Come here to post maps in any format that have something to do with alternate history. Have fun!

To start us off, here is my most recent map, a little pixel art extravaganza I set up. The description is long so I'll put it in the spoiler tag!

This is a world that diverged from our own in the years 420 and 421 AD, as the Jin Dynasty in China falls terribly hard at the same time that Constantius III, Emperor of Rome, does not suddenly perish and so the world is forever changed. The times after the point of divergence begin to truly diverge from our own as the Roman Empire, in a last saving throw, manages to stay together thanks to Constantius III and his successors. In China, the invasion of northern nomadic peoples spells doom for the tenuous dynasties that had asserted themselves after the fall of the Jin. The Northern China Plain and Yangtze River Valley were split into many competing and divided states warring upon one another. In the south, the Liu Song hold on for a bit longer, laboring under the idea that they will usher a return to China's glory, but it is not to be. The remnants of the Liu Song will instead reform in the south around Guangzhou and eventually form the modern state as Yue.

Time passes and the world changes. Rome survives through the better incorporation of Germanic peoples into the empire, particularly in border regions that allows them to the weather the storm of nomadic migrations, even if they have a few crises along the way. Some time later In Arabia, the nomadic Arab herdsmen are united by a new religion arising out of the powerful coastal towns of Mecca and Medina. They unite Arabia under a single empire led by a Caliph, and take stabs at breaking out into Roman and Persian territory. These attempts, however, fail and force the restless Muslim warriors, traders, and diplomats in another direction: Africa. Crossing the Red Sea into the land of Axum, the Arabs carry out long campaigns throughout coastal East Africa (and inland where they can survive) that sees massive tracts of land brought under control of a centralized settled government for the first time, and united even more strongly by the religion which spreads rapidly in the region. It will not be the last place Islam spreads, but it will be where it is strongest outside Arabia itself. For centuries afterward, East Africa will be the central axis of power around which the Muslim world rotates, providing great amounts of resources, trade, and manpower directly to the Caliph that allows him to stand on more equal footing with the other great Muslim rulers of Persia (converted through a mix of invasions and diplomacy) and the Muslim empires in India (converted through missionaries). The focus on the spread of Islam through seafaring trade and missionary work will later help convert much of Southeast Asia, with particularly large effects.

The Roman Empire, at the same time, is not slow to realize the potential of Africa either. Camels were brought into Rome for the first time with the Arab invasions, and left afterwards by the invaders and their numbers increased through trade with the Arabian Empire. These animals, for the first time, would allow enterprising Romans to cross the vast sands of the Sahara into the fertile Sahel of West Africa, and the great peoples that dwell there. The traders who ply the dangerous desert routes for gold, salt, and ivory bring with them new architectural techniques, Latin systems of writing and books, Roman organization, and most importantly of all: the Christian religion. Christianity spreads like wildfire across the Sahel, particularly as Rome tends to favor the peoples of the Sahel who are Christian over those who aren't, and gives them weapons, training, and supplies in exchange for spreading the word of God across Africa. The trade would go on to make all sides rich, and the great kings of the Sahel will become, in time, some of the richest men in history.

It is in China, however, that some of the greatest and most rapid strides are made in virtually every field. While Rome and Arabia struggle to keep vast empires together and play family politics and while India is stuck in a cycle of empires continually growing and shrinking, the stabilizing of the Chinese states in the 9th​ and 10th​ centuries allows for great amounts of growth. Competition breeds ingenuity, and the Chinese are no stranger to either. The warring states, stuck in a vastly long Winter Period since the fall of the Jin in 420, make great technological strides that put them ahead of much of the world. They learn how to use wooden blocks to create crude but efficient printing presses, and to use special chemical mixtures to create powder that lights upon contact with fire. The smaller states that will later be formed into Qin find themselves constantly competing for more innovations and ways to gain a foothold against each other. Literacy begins to climb for the first time since the fall of the Jin, bureaucratic reforms enable smaller states to fight far above their weight class, examinations for government officials weed out the week, and improved methods of trade and travel enrich coastal nations like Yue and the peninsular Lu. Chinese writing, art, philosophy, religion, mathematics, and economics spread rapidly through East Asia, particularly in the states of Goseon (particularly Goguryeo who uses these advantages to take over and rule the peninsula after a century of conflict), the Viet state of Cham Pa to the south, and to the Yamato of Nihon. These changes not only effectively Sinicize much of East Asia but also rapidly advance the states that lie within. These reforms even reach the nomads of the north and will eventually lead to the conflicts between the settled and nomadic peoples of the Grass Sea that form the Grand Khaganate.

Perhaps the greatest effect the Chinese states have on the world, however, is yet to come. Islam reaches Southeast Asia in the 11th​ century, and results in a vast series of wars between Muslim and non-Muslim southeast Asians. The Chinese occasionally meddle in the affairs, but largely the conflicts go ignored until the mid-14th​ century when the Malay peoples form a single dynasty controlling the straits that link the Donghai and Ratnakaran Oceans. After a century of conflict that had begun to include quarreling with the decidedly non-Muslim Chinese (though large enclaves in the Chinese states exist, particularly in Guangzhou and Lin'an), the new dynasty closed the straits to Chinese traffic except without heavy tolls and promises of special treaties with the Malays. This measure immediately impacted the profits and sustainability of coastal Chinese states and of the trade-heavy Nihon. A solution eventually arose: traders had for quite some time ventured north past the island of Ezochi and the string of islands there and towards a different string of islands that, it was said, led to an entirely different and vast land. The Emperor of Nihon had already been sending ships north to explore the lands after he had decisively claimed Ezochi just a decade before, and so sent vessels further north and to the legendary lands beyond. These lands would turn out to be the northernmost region of Jinshan (Gold Mountain), the first of two continents found by the East Asians. News of the discovery spread fast, even if not every Chinese state was interested. It would be the coastal states like Yue, Lu, and the Later Yan who would be the first to tentatively send their ships, crews, and later settlers beyond the bounds of East Asia towards the promised riches of the New World. Crossing the Donghai Ocean straight across was not possible at the time, and so a steady stream of ships turned north, around the curve of the world and cold waters of northern Asia and Jinshan, and then headed south to the warmer and richer lands there. They found areas like the Golden Bay to make land, interact with the natives, and set up trade. Some went even further south and found the great empires of the New World, the Aztecs, Mayan states, and the new but powerful Inca.

The interactions between the East Asians and peoples of Jinshan and Yinshan were complicated from the start. Disease brought from the Old World, even in far more limited forms than our own world, inflicted pain on the native populations and the population suffered. The Chinese were not ones to conquer, however, and instead worked on setting up trade, alliances, and settlement among the peoples already there. This was particularly apparently in regards to the Aztecs and Incans, who managed to hold on despite population and became well-regarded by the Chinese despite some of their violent ways. Settlement of the Chinese in their own states was largely confined to the West Coast of Jinshan, where connection to East Asia was easiest. Settlement among the Aztecs, Incans, and other peoples certainly happened but there would not be any Chinese-led states in the region. Chinese contact would instead help spur on further developed of the native states throughout the two continents, with many formerly tribal or Bronze Age peoples flourishing with new technologies, philosophies, and weapons of war and trade; the horse was something of a revolution. In the east, Norsemen happened upon the places they called Newfoundland and Vinland and established colonies of their own there, though the sparsely-populated outposts would never achieve the political or cultural dominance the way the Chinese could. The balance of power in the Shans was forever after in Southern Jinshan and Western Yinshan. Over the next few centuries, native empires grew rapidly in the Mississippi Valley (using our own term for convenience) and in the south of Jinshan where various Aztec dynasties grew northwards, creating ever-larger empires of commerce and resource exploitation. The Incan Empire itself, under Chinese influence, grew to new heights of power and extended across much of the Western Coast of Yinshan.

Industrialization brought only more complications to the world. Beginning in the 17th​ century and progressing onward, the industrialization of the Chinese states and those in the Shans spread a whole new world of technology different from anything seen before. Travel on rails, mass media and production of books, high rates of literacy and the sciences, and revolutions in warfare. A few times states almost conquered all of China, most notably the expansionist Shu Republic, which was the first of its kind in China. Rail lines crisscrossed the width and breadth of East Asia, and the Grand Khaganate began to come into its own as a major power, conquering and pacifying many parts of northern China that had once belonged to the states now part of the Han Summer Union. Africa was particularly affected by industrialization, as the new methods of fighting disease and faster transportation allowed both native African states and settlers to reach deep into the continent. The centuries-long Scramble for Nzere began in earnest, with the result being a massive organization of many industrial states of various origins. Rome was slow to catch on to industrialization for some time, even as the nations of the Riksradet caught on, and languished thus. For a time, it seemed that internal rebellion and outside intervention might topple the Roman Empire as the 19th​century began. At the same time, in the second wave of industrialization, the nations of the Shans came into their own, particularly the oil-rich nations of Anahuac and the Federation of Jinshan. The world's first collectivist state also came about in the era with the birth of the Nēhiyaw Collective in 1795.

The 19th century, however, would be the time of greatest change, and have a massive effect on the world as it is today. It would be the so-called "Ice Age Century" in which temperatures around the world dropped even as tensions heated. Wars were fought across Africa and the Shans as industrial powers jockeyed for power and alliances were formed, fought, and were broken almost constantly. The House of Islam, for a time, was all but shattered as religious divisions threatened to unwind it, and it was only the so-called "Reformation" that could reunite the quarreling wings of Islam, though not nearly to the degree it had once been. Anahuac fought wars overseas for its allies, becoming the first power native to the Shans to exert itself on the world stage. The greatest conflict, however, came in the form of the Winter War, fought from 1829-1842. It involved virtually every nation in East Asia and only ended with the total destruction of the state known today as the Late Chu state. At the time, it was declared as the Late Chu dynasty in a fit of nationalist fervor following conflicts and famine earlier in the century and sought to unite the entirety of China under a single government and used brutal means to do so. The Chu managed to conquer almost all of the Chinese states before being defeated by a broad coalition including the Grand Khaganate, Nihon, and Cham Pa, as well as the Federation of Jinshan, though at the cost of millions of lives. At the same time as this bloodshed, The Troubles raged in the Roman Empire as it came apart at the seams to a series of governments and movements and warlords that saw the empire almost completely fall, were it not for a revolutionary government that arose, spread throughout the Roman lands, and eventually united them all in the new Spartacist Republic of Rome. Never before in human history had so many been witness to the violence that gripped the world in the 19th​ century.

Now, as the world moves into the 20th​ century, the peoples throughout seek to learn from the mistakes and take advantage of the breakthroughs that occurred in the past. The world has found itself in a long peace, with the various alliances and organizations managing to hold together in peace and harmony for a time. The Spartacists rule Rome and have helped it progress to a mighty nation, even if one still struggling behind its past greatness. New nations to become powers such as the Malagasy Empire—united by brilliant rulers and industrialized by their successors into one of the most dynamic growing powers—and the Mississippi Union seek to take up the mantle from the great nations of the last century who have begun to recede from past heights. It is a time when people are far more connected than ever before, where new technologies and breakthroughs are behind every corner from outer space to cyber space. The coming challenges as the world warms up seem at times almost trivial to the potential humanity wields.

At the forefront of all this is the Han Summer Union. It was conceived in the ashes of the last war, as humans looked up from the rubble and ruin towards the sky and the stars beyond, and the boundless potential that they as a united China and world would have. The Qin, successors of the so-called Late Chu, were one of the original supporters, strange as it may seem. They and the other states of the Chinese were able to see past their petty grudges and rivalries and the endless conflict that had plagued the long and brutal Winter Period towards the birth of a new Summer Period, in which a union of all Han peoples could make them all richer, smarter, and safer. It is not an easy union to maintain and has been rough around the edges. Some of the nations immediately outside of the Chinese sphere refuse to join, and movements inside sometimes threaten to unravel it. Yet it is a union worth fighting for and the many millions of China will not stop working hard to see that the birth of this new Summer Period will usher in a new age for all Chinese and for peoples across the world, moving towards an ever-brighter future.

*snip*

I don't have the mental energy needed to read through all that at the moment, but I did want to note that the pixel art is excellent! I love the borders! :D
 
Well, it may be a repost, but I still think it was pretty clever:



PoD: The Austrians, panicked about the Hungarian revolution, redeploy much of Field Marshal Radetzky's army to swiftly crunch the revolution. While Radetzky was able to avoid suffering a major defeat at the hands of Sardinia-Piedmont, he ultimately accepts his orders to establish a truce.

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The Peace of 1849 was formalized in January. With greater troubles continuing back home in Hungary and the Balkans, the Austrians reluctantly gave the Kingdom of Lombardy-Venice. In exchange, the Kingdom of Sardinia-Piedmont was not allowed to expand its borders, and the Kingdom of Lombardy-Venice would be reorganized into a pair of independent duchies. For the Italian Republicans and Nationalists that had risen up in the region during the Springtime of Nations, this act was seen as a betrayal by Charles Albert, and many believed that the duchies would be reabsorbed by Austria in due time. With the Sardinians utterly battered, Charles Albert withdrew his forces out of Lombardy. However, the provisional republics that had been established in these territories, had no love for their new monarchs, and a Second Italian Revolution broke-out in the Summer of 1849, with the Republics of Lombardia and San Marco being restored. Modena too, had suffered revolution, with the Duke being forced to flee. The provisional government in Modena allied with the new Republics. Parma was the next to fall. While the duchy had been lucky to avoid revolutionary fervor, its tranquility could not last, and a new provisional government there also forced the duke to flee.

While the Austrian government detested republicanism, and many wanted an invasion of the Lombard Republics, the Austrians ultimately decided to delay their intervention. The establishment of these new republican states, while a clear and present danger, also strengthened Austria's influence over the South. The Grand Duchy of Tuscany and the Papal State, which had both sent troops to support Charles Albert, were frightened both by domestic rebellions and the new republican alliance, and begged to reestablish stronger ties with Austria. The Tuscans even staged a small intervention of their own, sending troops north to secure the border, including seizing strips of Modenan border territory. The new alliance also threw a wrench in Charles Albert's plans to unify Italy. While the Lombardies were not against the project, they soon had the standing to negotiate on their own terms, and for many, a monarchy was no longer a nesecary evil.

The Confederation of the Four Lombardies was officially established in the Winter of 1849, when delegates from the four provisional governments met to draft guidelines for a provisional confederal government and a future constituent convention. One of the first acts of the new provisional government was to address the grievances of the Commune of Pontremoli. Pontemoli was an autonomous commune of Tuscany, had been occupied by Modena a year before the war over a trade dispute. The leaders of the Commune asked for the provisional government to restore their former status, a request to which even the Modenans were partial to. The new Comune was inducted into the confederation as a new, albeit unequal member, leading to the Four Lombardies becoming Five.

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This scenario was inspired by this quote from an article about AH.com:

"'Stupidly-named Italy' is a cliché in which, after unification, a territory called 'Kingdom of the Three Sicilies,' 'Kingdom of the Two Italies,' or, 'Kingdom of the Three Sicilies, Four Italies, and Two Lombardies' blots the timeline's landscape."

Reading that, I knew it would be possible to have at least four to five lombardies.
 
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Portugal and the Reconquista


I did a ton of research for this map. Unfortunately most of the sources for "conquered areas" comes from accounts such as:

consisting largely of mountains, moorland and forests, were bounded on the north by the Minho River, and on the south by the Mondego River​
So there was a slight amount of guess work to be done especially when it came to conquests of cities; where the city limit was quite vague during the 10-12th centuries.

It was extremely interesting to read about Portuguese history and the political situations leading to the modern borders of Portugal. For instance "Portugal was obliged to surrender as his ransom almost all the conquests Afonso Henriques had made in Galicia (north of the Minho River) in the previous years." And that's why the northern border of Portugal looks so strange... because it was a ransom.
The city of Olivenza is still contested to this day due to a treaty from the 1800's that was drafted during the Napoleonic wars but repealed following the defeat of Napoleon.
Sancho I conquered all the way to Silves, only to lose all of the lands south of the Tejo river due to in-fighting with other Christian kingdoms most notably Leon-Castile which had forged an alliance with the Almohads; to combat Portuguese expansionism in Iberia.

Notes:
I was interested in trying to differentiate my style with regards to pages being visible in the end product. The original concept was supposed to have all the border progressions on the topographic map but it was too clustered and nearly impossible to implement.
Thanks to and for tips with the creation of this map. A Special thanks to Angelo my Portuguese friend who helped me with finding facts and other details about Portugal


Sample References:


He was named a count and given control of the frontier region between the Limia and Douro rivers by Alfonso III of Asturias. 868

The regions to its south were only again conquered in the reign of Ferdinand I of León and Castile, with Lamego falling in 1057, Viseu in 1058 and finally Coimbra in 1064.

in 1095, Portugal broke away from the Kingdom of Galicia. Its territories, consisting largely of mountains, moorland and forests, were bounded on the north by the Minho River, and on the south by the Mondego River.

Condado Portucalense, known at the time as Terra Portucalense or Província Portucalense,[6] which would last until Portugal achieved its independence, recognized by the Kingdom of León in 1143. Its territory included much of the current Portuguese territory between the Minho River and the Tagus River.

In 1169 the now old Dom Afonso was possibly disabled in an engagement near Badajoz by a fall from his horse, and made prisoner by the soldiers of the king of León Fernando II also his son-in-law. From this time onward, the Portuguese king never rode a horse again, but it is not certain this was because of the disability: according to the later Portuguese chronistic tradition, this happened because Afonso would have to surrender himself again to Fernando II of León or risk war between the two kingdoms if he rode a horse. Portugal was obliged to surrender as his ransom almost all the conquests Afonso had made in Galicia (north of the Minho River) in the previous years.


 
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Xiongnu Confederacy

The Xiongnu or Hsiung-nu were a confederation of tribes that resided in the mongol steppe from the 3rd century BCE- 1st Century CE. Their presence and raiding lead the Han Dynasty to begin construction of what is now known as "The Great Wall of China". They are hypothesized to be the Proto-Huns that later ravaged Rome and the European continent; though this is heavily debated. What is known is their capability to subdue many of their neighbours and constant harassment of northern Han cities.
For more information visit Wikipedia Here

I tried to use as many varying sources on their territorial size however nearly all sources differed due to either nationalistic bias from the side of Mongolians, Chinese, and Russians; or simply because they were inaccurate.

Their intricate burial mounds are still being excavated to this day and reveal the vast wealth and power of the confederation. Some kurgan mounds are nearly 60 meters deep and measure up to half a square kilometer in circumference.

These are a uniquely fantastic people and they intrigue me greatly; hence the map

Enjoy!


 
I've seen it before and still love it. :D I figure this would be a major power in Italy as well. Would they keep Italy disunited into the 20th century?

Well, the sequel map shakes things up a bit, since, surprise surprise, the Austrians don't like having an unstable republic squatting next door, and are attempting to solve the situation diplomatically.

Of course, I still need to go back some time and create the "War of the Five Lombardies" map to wrap up the trilogy.
 
I learned SO much while researching this map. It's fascinating
That's one of my favorite parts of making maps of places that I don't know very well. :)
Well, the sequel map shakes things up a bit, since, surprise surprise, the Austrians don't like having an unstable republic squatting next door, and are attempting to solve the situation diplomatically.

Of course, I still need to go back some time and create the "War of the Five Lombardies" map to wrap up the trilogy.
I will eagerly await the next map in the series then, alternate Italies are always a fave of mine. :D
 
Also to keep up with the thread, here is another of my more recent maps. This one is done for an upcoming project (which will be posted on here) called Heart of Dixie, exploring a world in which the CSA successfully secedes from the United States, but then things go...awry. The basic POD is an earlier Civil War occurring under the far more incompetent and Southern-sympathetic James Buchanan, which heavily alters the prospects of the United States in the war. This map looks at the situation around 1900, showing what has become of the end of the War Between the States.

 
This was my entry for MotF 150: Sesquicentennial. The Kingdom of Waipuru, a fictional Pacific Kingdom I created for my girlfriend, who is a member on AH.com as well as here.

 


PoD: 636 AD (14 AH)

Saad ibn Abi's failure to push into Persia marked a change in the strategy of the nascent Islamic empire. With a defeat at the Battle of Qadisayyah, the Persian Empire seemed to difficult to defeat at the time. Rather than pushing west, the Arabs refocused on their invasions of Egypt and Anatolia. Aided by Monophysitise christians living in Syria, the invaders seemed unstoppable, and Constantinople fell in 654. While the Romans would rise in rebellion during the First Muslim Civil War (657-660), they, like the Umayyad rebels, would be crushed by Ali ibn Abi Talib.

With the consolidation of Anatolia, all of Europe would be open to Islamic incursion. It would take until 987 AD for the Frankish King of Paris to become tribute to the Caliph in Rome. While the Islamic Empire splintered between the Caliphs in Egypt and in Constantinople in 852 AD, and again between the Caliphs in Rome and Constantinople in 952, Islam was entrenched as the dominant faith of the Mediterranean.

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Now, in 1408 AH (1981 AD), the muslim states of Europe are in crisis. The Confederacy of Rum, united in 1356 to create peace in Europe and unite its Muslims under a single, rightly-guided caliph is now on the precipice. From all fronts, rings out the cry of Independence. From the legalists of Hispania that tire of Rum's secularism, to the populists of Gaul and Yunan who seek to end the office of the Caliph. Even the Christian peoples of the Confederacy, treated as equals under the principle of 'Ilm Shura, have become restless, seeking to join their northern brethren and form Christian states. While the Caliph has been disappointed with these sentiments, he and his government have recognized the inviolable right of all citizens to elect their caliph. Thus many provinces have announced their intentions to hold referendums on remaining within the union. Time will tell if the Confederacy will survive the tribulation, or if Europe is headed towards a period of conflict unmatched since the Third Communist Revolution.
 
In 1864, William Seward's National Whig/Liberty ticket defeated incumbent President Graham Fitch, and immediately his abolitionist talk set off a secession crisis across the South. As the situation developed, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana seceded from the United States, and met in Terminus, Georgia to form a unified government against "Northern Tyranny". They hammered together a Constitution for the so-called Commonwealth of Free States, and were joined by delegations from Texas, Tennessee, Comanche, Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia, and Maryland (Although the latter four were actually splinter governments from their states that voted not to secede). The Commonwealth then signed treaties of cooperation with the governments of various native tribes in Sequoyah, and with the Riograndese.

It was a hard fought six years in the First American Civil War (Or as it was known in the South, the First Southron War), but eventually it was defeated, with the various secessionists undergoing a process of "Swift Reconstruction" This process also included annexation and dissolution of the Riogrande Republic, and an attempt to squash out Southron nationalism. With a few exceptions, they failed.

In 1908-1909, Southron Nationalism bubbled up again with Pershing's coup of the US Government and the subsequent Second American Civil War. This time, only North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida seceded, and a Louisiana delegation only controlling the region immediately around the Mississippi River. Nonetheless, these states succeeded in forming an independent Southron Republic (Henceforth known as the Second Republic), it featured a segregation system not unlike Apartheid. This system held for nearly 60 years despite some flareups of violence here and there. But then in 1969, the American-funded Cumberland Free State, and Southron-African People's Front, and the Gallic-funded New African Liberation Front began a full-scale rebellion against the Second Republic. East Tennessee was almost immediately lost to the Appalachian Militias at the onset, and the 1983 Treaty of Austin saw the Second Republic reduced to only its land south of the 31st​ Parrallel North.

In the aftermath of that humiliating loss, Extremist (By Southron Standards) forces overthrew the civilian government and replaced it with a puppet government, that has remained an isolationist dictatorship ever since.
 
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This sorta feels like cheating since I didn't create the physical map itself, but here's a WIP map of the world of The Azul Chronicles as of 1910 [so steampunk time]

DISCLAIMER: I did not create the physical map. "Imperator Frank" over at AH.com did, and I use it with his permission. The link to his work is here.


Alright, here we are. I'll go over the big nations and if you're curious, feel free to ask me stuff. I do plan to expand on this more.

United Realms of Azalaia and Narsenia: Basically the "UK" of this world. Big, scary, imperialist, yet has a radical working-class streak embodied in the rising labourist Radical Party. Worships a Celtic-ish pantheon called the "Old Faith". Currently oppresses elves in that eastern continent.

Gallican Commonwealth: Your standard France analogue. Republican government, rather proud of that. Has a historic rivalry with Azalaia that goes back a long way, but is currently allied with them against Teutonia since they perceive Teutonia as threatening all of Hennodia (Europe).

Teutonic Imperium: A land of dark humour and ambitious Emperors, it was historically fragmented but is now made whole, and this seriously scares the rest of Hennodia. Currently in an alliance with Moskraya and Estalia against the "United Powers".

Tzardom of Moskraya: Eternal winter rules this harsh land always distant from the rest of Hennodia. The harsh land has bred hardy people who can handle quite a lot of pain. Known as the land of bear cavalries, they're the pride of the Army. The nobility struggles to understand Moskrayan, which is just one of many grievances the peasantry has with them. But for now it seems that this bubbling cauldron is under control. Right?

Tyzanbine Empire: The empire of tens of thousands of years, it is the direct heir to the old Reman Imperium and still maintains its Reman heritage [much to Estalia's displeasure]. Has a strong hatred of Moskraya and so allied with Gallia and Azalaia against Moskraya and their allies. Can they win victory, even with a young child as their Empress?

Allied States of Lagellania: The land of the Lagellian Dream! Where you can go from rags to riches! At least that's the promise, it's never as good as that in reality. Has a lot of immigrants who celebrate their rich heritage in the New World and is known as the "Melting Pot" for a good reason. Where else could you celebrate Novaimberfest and then have an Estalian pessa?

Dominion of Namada: Lagellania's "little brother", it's a dominion of Azalaia, and is rather divided between Gallican-speakers and Azalish ones. Still, it has a reputation for niceness and those little tensions will likely blow over. Hopefully...

Celestial Empire of Chinapa: Once the world's greatest empire, it has been brought low by that upstart Azalaia in the shameful "Occidental War", and as a result lost all its colonies in the New World. Lost control of the elven continent of Antemeridionia, lost control of their North Lagellian colonies, and now they're in a civil war between the aging Celestial Emperor, his ambitious elder son and his younger son [propped up by Hennodian companies] while the more culturally-distinct regions of Manjaria, Cathay, Dhibat and Ryunawa seek to assert their independence from the Dragon Throne. Oh, when will the Mandate of Heaven return to poor benighted Chinapa?
 
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This is a map of the Commonwealth of America from my TL. A modern world map is in development as well.

 
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Well, time to post some old stuff, I guess.



Europe 1757

Grey are Wittelsbach domains (IRL ruling house of Bavaria), who also hold the HRE crown.
Orange are Wettin domains (IRL ruling house of Saxony)
Purple are Hohenzollern domains (IRL ruling house of Prussia), the blue in Germany marks Hohenzollern cadet lines.
 
Holy hell I love everything about this and want a timeline about it
I started one years ago, but didn't come far. It would be multi-PoD: The Bavarian compromise candidate for the Spanish Succession doesn't die, so Spain becomes Wittelsbach. Also, George II of GB has no children, so a British-Prussian personal union under (OTL) Frederick II the Great ensues. And then first the Habsburgs die out (who after all had a bit of a bottleneck with Maria Theresia) and only a couple of years later the French Bourbons die out as well (there was a plague that nearly wiped them all out IOTL), and you get a War of the Everywhere Succession, with like eight different succession struggles thrown into one conflict. That map would be the aftermath of that.

It was a fun little brainstorming.
Here is the discussion thread for it.
Here are the two parts I wrote for it.
 
I started one years ago, but didn't come far. It would be multi-PoD: The Bavarian compromise candidate for the Spanish Succession doesn't die, so Spain becomes Wittelsbach. Also, George II of GB has no children, so a British-Prussian personal union under (OTL) Frederick II the Great ensues. And then first the Habsburgs die out (who after all had a bit of a bottleneck with Maria Theresia) and only a couple of years later the French Bourbons die out as well (there was a plague that nearly wiped them all out IOTL), and you get a War of the Everywhere Succession, with like eight different succession struggles thrown into one conflict. That map would be the aftermath of that.

It was a fun little brainstorming.
Here is the discussion thread for it.
Here are the two parts I wrote for it.
Mind if I add to it by any chance? It sounds pretty fantastic. :D
 
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