Well, Wulfram, the set of civs that you are proposing is basically just Egypt, Babylon, Mycenae, Celts, Germanics, India, China, Japan, Aztecs and Incas..... right?
Well go ahead if you want... i'd prefer to play some non-super-ancient civs myself.
Well go ahead if you want... i'd prefer to play some non-super-ancient civs myself.
Do you have the stats to back that up?
Royal Artillery: 51
Royal Engineers 41
Royal army medical Corps 29 including two bars
Rifle Brigade 27
South wales Borderers 22
King's Royal Rifle Corps 22
Royal Fusiliers 19
Lancashire Fusiliers 18
Seaforth Highlanders 18
Gordon Highlanders 17
You can see that of the location specific regiments the top are the Borderers the the Highlanders
If that were true I would think that it was due to economic conditions not the fact that they were the best. Joining the army was a popular choice for those without formal education or other means to earn money.
Being the "best" and being the most populace does not equate. If it were then China would be the best army in the world. Or you could say Privates are "better" than Leiutenants who are better than Captains.
Being the "best" and being the most populace does not equate. If it were then China would be the best army in the world. Or you could say Privates are "better" than Leiutenants who are better than Captains.
I have no idea why you make this statement. Yes, I have been to Scotland, and the head of the Church of Scotland is the Queen, like it or not. Scottish Protestants, both at 'home' and abroad, in Canada, New Zealand and Australia, East Africa and India, have been most assiduous in cultivating a British culture and identity. The Queen of course, has Scottish ancestry, as does her mother who was of course, born there. Representation for Scotland and Wales and Northern Ireland hardly implies imminent destruction of the United Kingdom.
England in the 17th Century, the period I am referring to, possessed Dunkirk, won at the Battle of the Dunes, and then sold it back to the French for 400 000 sterling. The England you seem to be referring to may be the Anglo-Norman-French entity wiped out by the Hundred Years' War, ending in 1453. I'm not sure which English history it is you're learning, but it seems somewhat vague with respect to dates, dynasties, wars and facts.
As for the defeat of the Spanish being luck- what lucky happenstance do you mean?
As for the defeat of the Spanish being luck- what lucky happenstance do you mean?
The Vikings (by which presumably you mean Swedes, Danes and Norwegians, the hybrid Anglo-Vikings of Jorvik and hybrid Hiberno-Vikings of Dublin) were not Germans. They had a distinctive and different culture, they shared some religious beliefs, had different languages and expanded territorially in different directions. You may as well say the Romans were Greek on that basis.
If as you say, England has a distinctive culture, and it's Saxon, then back it up. To which bits of English culture are you referring?
If as you say, England has a distinctive culture, and it's Saxon, then back it up. To which bits of English culture are you referring?
[quote[Oh, and i forgot to mention that they weren't really successful despite;-
a) in fact the Britsh army is man for man one of, if not the, best in the world
Your words, not mine! [/quote]
That's now, in victorian times it was pretty bad, it's just we avoided any serious wars, when it was put to the test we did rubbish (WW1, Crimea)
Now the Army is a highly trained, well equipped but tiny force. It has just dropped to a size smaller than it was in Wellingtons time.
Other points
I'm using Germany for the Germanic Peoples as we are talking in Civ terms and Germany is an existing Civ which I can accept as the Germanic Peoples
Molly Bloom: Right so the English is a mix of Roman, Celt and Germanic all of which need to be represented, the english don't.
Comment