In the year of 4000 Before Christ, an able leader became the ruler of several nomadic tribes. He united them and called them Germania. He was known as Bismarck.
Those were dark times and not much is known about them. Here are those few facts that have lived through the history in the form of ancient scripts. The first contact was made with the Russians. Some time later, as map-making was discovered, it turned out that the tribes leaved on a continent that is now known as North America. The two tribes coexisted peacefully and shared their technological advances. Peace ruled the pre-historic pangea. But soon an English scout was spotted. The kind-hearted Germans offered their friendship and support, but the vile-natured English denied all Bismarck's attempts to be friendly. Later, much later they paid for it.
For now there only were some minor battles, which lasted through the whole Ancient era. The Judgment day came, when Germania acquired the knowledge of Chivalry from their friends, the Russians. At approximately the same time, they found a map of the whole southern continent. It turned out that the English were sandwiched between the Germans and the French. This was a critical moment in the history of the world, for Bismarck decided that it is time for action. The English had only one supply of horses, and did not yet have the knowledge of Chivalry. The Chancellor's plan was to cut the supply of horses off the English empire before they could start building knights.
At first the advance of German army did not meet much opposition. The cities of Oxford, Coventry and Liverpool fell into German hands almost immediately. But as the troops approached the city of their goal, the Chancellor had stop and think. For that city, the only one that had the supply of horses, was also the capital of the English empire. Its name was London.
Bismarck met with his Military advisor, known as Adolf.
Bismarck: - So tell me, Adolf, what are we to do now? What are the forces defending London? Can we defeat them?
Adolf: Easily, sire. But we could extort some money from the British before. That would help us greatly. I also suggest that we ally with the French, before the English do that.
Bismarck: So be it!
The Chancellor of Germany met with the Queen of England and demanded tribute. She was furious and rudely denied further audience. Naturally, Chancellor, felt that he needed to respond to that rudeness. Some more years, knights, and catapults, resolved the matter: London became a new German colony, known as New Berlin, for it had a Forbidden Palace built in it.
Some two centuries of uneasy peace and extortion of money from the puny English followed. Presently, a new threat showed up on the horizon. The German scientists discovered the secret of Gunpowder (even before the Chinese, who, along with the Indians, the Japanese, and the Greeks, were known to inhabit the eastern hemisphere). But the scouts reported, that Germania has no sources of saltpeter! England had one source (of course, due to their lag in technology, they didn't even know that). Bismarck understood, that he had to work fast. He had to take the city with saltpeter away from the English before they could use it. The city was named York. Luckily, there were no other cities between New Berlin and York. Unluckily, York was the new capital of the English empire, since the fall of London. Therefore, it was heavily garrisoned. Despite that inconveniency, as the Chancellor stated it, it was "time to kick some behind!"
And he started doing exactly that. He sent numerous knights backed up by catapults to assault York. After a couple of years under siege, the town (it had lost a lot of its citizens to bombardment) fell. Of course, at first, the citizens tried to resist the new occupants, but some 8 divisions of elite knights and uncounted catapults garrisoned within the city walls helped them overcome the cultural barrier.
Bismarck was ready to sign a peace treaty with the English, since he had always felt that war is useless and he had achieved his goal for now - he had a source of saltpeter, while the English didn't. But a German traveler compiled a list of the most powerful civilizations. England stood last… This, coupled with the discovery of metallurgy, which allowed for the production of cannons, convinced the German Chancellor in the necessity of further English conquest. The last three English cities on the continent of South America gave in to the efforts of knights supported by cannons, easily.
Presently, the French decided to help the Germans (They understood that now they shared the border with the mighty Germania, not the English). They proposed a mutual protection / right of passage package plus the map of the remaining English settlements. Yes, by now the Germans were in the industrial age. Riflemen and cavalry were ready to what seemed like the last days of war. Indeed they were, because the last three English villages, located on an island now known as Greenland, fell to a group of two German knights and two cannons with one good old-fashioned catapult even before the modern troops could try their might on the British.
That was the end of the first World war and the beginning of the new era of global peace. The first Reich rose to power with the revolution that overthrew King Bismarck and gave power to president Bismarck of German Democracy.
What will happen next? Will the German war machine turn its eyes to the French, who are now the weakest civilization on Earth? Or will they coexist peacefully? And what about the Russians in the north?
The answers wait to be uncovered.
Those were dark times and not much is known about them. Here are those few facts that have lived through the history in the form of ancient scripts. The first contact was made with the Russians. Some time later, as map-making was discovered, it turned out that the tribes leaved on a continent that is now known as North America. The two tribes coexisted peacefully and shared their technological advances. Peace ruled the pre-historic pangea. But soon an English scout was spotted. The kind-hearted Germans offered their friendship and support, but the vile-natured English denied all Bismarck's attempts to be friendly. Later, much later they paid for it.
For now there only were some minor battles, which lasted through the whole Ancient era. The Judgment day came, when Germania acquired the knowledge of Chivalry from their friends, the Russians. At approximately the same time, they found a map of the whole southern continent. It turned out that the English were sandwiched between the Germans and the French. This was a critical moment in the history of the world, for Bismarck decided that it is time for action. The English had only one supply of horses, and did not yet have the knowledge of Chivalry. The Chancellor's plan was to cut the supply of horses off the English empire before they could start building knights.
At first the advance of German army did not meet much opposition. The cities of Oxford, Coventry and Liverpool fell into German hands almost immediately. But as the troops approached the city of their goal, the Chancellor had stop and think. For that city, the only one that had the supply of horses, was also the capital of the English empire. Its name was London.
Bismarck met with his Military advisor, known as Adolf.
Bismarck: - So tell me, Adolf, what are we to do now? What are the forces defending London? Can we defeat them?
Adolf: Easily, sire. But we could extort some money from the British before. That would help us greatly. I also suggest that we ally with the French, before the English do that.
Bismarck: So be it!
The Chancellor of Germany met with the Queen of England and demanded tribute. She was furious and rudely denied further audience. Naturally, Chancellor, felt that he needed to respond to that rudeness. Some more years, knights, and catapults, resolved the matter: London became a new German colony, known as New Berlin, for it had a Forbidden Palace built in it.
Some two centuries of uneasy peace and extortion of money from the puny English followed. Presently, a new threat showed up on the horizon. The German scientists discovered the secret of Gunpowder (even before the Chinese, who, along with the Indians, the Japanese, and the Greeks, were known to inhabit the eastern hemisphere). But the scouts reported, that Germania has no sources of saltpeter! England had one source (of course, due to their lag in technology, they didn't even know that). Bismarck understood, that he had to work fast. He had to take the city with saltpeter away from the English before they could use it. The city was named York. Luckily, there were no other cities between New Berlin and York. Unluckily, York was the new capital of the English empire, since the fall of London. Therefore, it was heavily garrisoned. Despite that inconveniency, as the Chancellor stated it, it was "time to kick some behind!"
And he started doing exactly that. He sent numerous knights backed up by catapults to assault York. After a couple of years under siege, the town (it had lost a lot of its citizens to bombardment) fell. Of course, at first, the citizens tried to resist the new occupants, but some 8 divisions of elite knights and uncounted catapults garrisoned within the city walls helped them overcome the cultural barrier.
Bismarck was ready to sign a peace treaty with the English, since he had always felt that war is useless and he had achieved his goal for now - he had a source of saltpeter, while the English didn't. But a German traveler compiled a list of the most powerful civilizations. England stood last… This, coupled with the discovery of metallurgy, which allowed for the production of cannons, convinced the German Chancellor in the necessity of further English conquest. The last three English cities on the continent of South America gave in to the efforts of knights supported by cannons, easily.
Presently, the French decided to help the Germans (They understood that now they shared the border with the mighty Germania, not the English). They proposed a mutual protection / right of passage package plus the map of the remaining English settlements. Yes, by now the Germans were in the industrial age. Riflemen and cavalry were ready to what seemed like the last days of war. Indeed they were, because the last three English villages, located on an island now known as Greenland, fell to a group of two German knights and two cannons with one good old-fashioned catapult even before the modern troops could try their might on the British.
That was the end of the first World war and the beginning of the new era of global peace. The first Reich rose to power with the revolution that overthrew King Bismarck and gave power to president Bismarck of German Democracy.
What will happen next? Will the German war machine turn its eyes to the French, who are now the weakest civilization on Earth? Or will they coexist peacefully? And what about the Russians in the north?
The answers wait to be uncovered.
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