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# Kingdom of England — V3 Start 1836
## Basic Info
- **Official Name**: Kingdom of England (includes Wales, Scotland, Ireland)
- **Capital**: London
- **Head of State**: Elected King (选举国王 — chosen from aristocratic families by Parliament upon previous king's death. NOT hereditary. Ceremonial/presidential role under parliamentary system.)
- **Head of Government**: Prime Minister (首相 — leader of majority in House of Commons, real executive power)
- **Government**: **Parliamentary constitutional monarchy with elected king** — evolved from:
- ~1685: Independence. Noble parliament chose first king (couldn't agree on hereditary → elected)
- ~1750s: House of Commons added (industrial bourgeoisie demanded representation)
- ~1800s: PM becomes real executive, King becomes ceremonial (like a president in a parliamentary republic, but aristocratic)
- King is elected by joint session of Lords + Commons when throne is vacant. Candidates must be of noble blood. Typically a respected elder statesman/compromise figure. NOT a political leader.
- **State Religion**: Protestant/Reformed (Church of England equivalent, broke from Rome during independence era)
- **Technology Tier**: 1 (ELECTRICAL VARIANT — leads the world in electricity, telecommunications, electric motors. Strong in traditional industry too. Contrasts with Song's steam-dominant path.)
- **Population**: Medium-large (~25-30M? England + Wales + Scotland + Ireland)
- **Literacy**: High in England/Scotland Lowlands, moderate in Highland Scotland, low in rural Ireland
## Territory
### Home Islands
- **England proper**: Industrial heartland. Coal + iron = world's most advanced heavy industry. London = global financial center. Railway + telegraph + electric grid expanding.
- **Wales**: Integrated since medieval times. Coal mining. Welsh language surviving but marginalized.
- **Scotland (ALL)**: Lowlands (~1685, integrated, Protestant, English-speaking) + Highlands (~1765, recent, Gaelic, culturally distinct, resentful).
- **Ireland**: Conquered ~1700. Catholic. Colonial governance. Anglo-Irish Protestant landlords over Catholic Irish tenants. **Second-class territory — the empire's internal colony.**
### Overseas (governed separately — not detailed here)
- **New England + Great Lakes**: Major settler colony (own profile)
- **New Wales (Mississippi west bank)**: Majority French-speaking, difficult to govern (own profile)
- **India (East India Company)**: Eastern coast + West Bengal (own profile)
- **Australia (western coast)**: Small but growing settlements
- **Congo River basin**: Quinine monopoly → "vein-shaped" colonial territory along river system
- **Various Caribbean islands, Pacific posts**
## The Language Question (语言问题)
### 400 Years of French, 150 Years of English
```
The Plantagenet era (~1250s-1685):
├ Court language: French
├ Law language: French (Law French → legal terms STILL French-derived)
├ Church language: Latin
├ Commoner language: English
└ Result: English survived as the language of the people
French survived as the language of power
Independence (~1685):
├ "English = patriotism" → speaking English becomes a political act
├ French-descended nobles who supported independence → switched to English (publicly)
├ But: 400 years of French culture doesn't vanish overnight
└ Legal system still full of French terminology
By 1836 (150 years post-independence):
├ English: undisputed national language, all official business
├ French: STILL spoken in some aristocratic families (private, at home)
│ → Publicly speaking French = slightly suspicious
│ → But also = mark of old-money education
│ → COMPLICATED: some people switch between English (public) and French (private)
│ → Huguenot descendants speak French too → but they're patriots! → further complicates things
├ Gaelic: Highland Scotland + Ireland → suppressed minority languages
├ Welsh: declining but present
└ The "language question" is not resolved — it's an ongoing cultural tension
V3 flavor events: language policy debates, French-language newspaper controversies,
"is French in schools acceptable?", bilingual aristocrats accused of disloyalty
```
## The Two Aristocracies (两种贵族)
### Norman-French Nobility (诺曼裔法语贵族)
```
Who: Descendants of Norman/Plantagenet-era French aristocratic families
History: The colonial ruling class for 400 years
During independence: MOST supported it (they'd lived in England for generations)
→ "We may have French blood but England is our home"
→ Key independence leaders were French-named nobles who chose England over Paris
→ A few loyalists fled to France → their estates confiscated
By 1836:
├ Still the LARGEST landowners (400 years of accumulation)
├ Mostly English-speaking now (publicly) but French at family dinners
├ Dominate the House of Lords
├ Some intermarried with English gentry → blurred lines
├ BUT: periodic nationalist movements question their loyalty
│ "Your name is de Montfort — are you REALLY English?"
└ The smart ones anglicized their names generations ago
```
### English Gentry (英格兰本土乡绅)
```
Who: Anglo-Saxon/English-descended landowners, knights, squires
History: The "real English" → commoner elite under Plantagenet rule
During independence: The HEART of the movement
→ "England for the English!" was their cry
By 1836:
├ Control much of the House of Commons
├ Smaller estates than French nobility but more numerous
├ English-speaking, Protestant, patriotic
├ Industrial revolution: some became factory owners (gentry → bourgeoisie)
└ View French-named nobles with suspicion (even if those nobles are patriots)
```
### Huguenot Professionals (胡格诺专业阶层)
```
Who: Descendants of French Protestant refugees (~1685+)
Paradox: French-speaking people who are among England's most loyal citizens
→ Fled French Catholic persecution → England welcomed them
→ Brought industrial skills → helped build English industry
→ French language + Protestant faith + English patriotism = unique identity
By 1836:
├ Prominent in industry, engineering, finance, science
├ Many anglicized (lost French language) → just "English" now
├ Some maintain French → but "our French isn't THEIR French" (vs Norman aristocrats)
└ A bridge group: French-descended but unquestionably English in loyalty
```
## Political System: The Elected King
### How It Works
```
When the King dies / abdicates:
1. Joint session of Lords + Commons convenes
2. Candidates nominated (must be of noble blood — any titled family)
3. Debates, speeches, backroom deals (weeks to months)
4. Vote: majority of joint session elects new King
5. King serves until death/abdication (NOT a fixed term)
The King in practice:
├ Ceremonial: opens Parliament, signs bills, receives ambassadors
├ Reserve powers: can dissolve Parliament in crisis (never used?)
├ Moral authority: respected elder statesman chosen for wisdom
├ NOT a political actor: doesn't set policy, doesn't lead parties
├ Similar to: German Federal President, Italian President, Irish President
│ → elected, ceremonial, respected, powerless in daily governance
└ Difference from continental monarchies: NOT hereditary, NOT divine right
→ England's King is an ELECTED aristocrat, not a blood sovereign
→ This is deeply unusual in this world and a source of English pride
→ "We choose our king. Others inherit theirs."
```
### Parliament
```
House of Lords (上院/贵族院):
├ Hereditary peers (Norman-French and English noble families)
├ Life peers (appointed for service — military, industrial, scientific)
├ Spiritual lords? (Church of England bishops? Or was this abolished?)
├ Powers: review legislation, delay bills, judicial appeals
└ Declining in power vs Commons (trend of 150 years)
House of Commons (下院/平民院):
├ Elected by: propertied males (property qualification)
│ → ~15-20% of adult males can vote
│ → Workers, Irish Catholics, women = excluded
├ Constituencies: geographic (county + borough seats)
├ Political parties emerging (Reform Party vs Conservative Party vs Industrial Party?)
├ PM = leader of Commons majority → real executive power
└ Trend: Commons gaining power, suffrage slowly expanding
Key reform question: EXPAND THE VOTE?
├ Workers demand inclusion (growing labor movement)
├ Irish Catholics demand inclusion (currently excluded by religious test?)
├ Women: not yet on the agenda
└ V3: Standard suffrage reform decisions
```
## The Irish Question (爱尔兰问题)
```
Ireland: conquered ~1700 (136 years ago), the empire's deepest wound.
Structure:
├ Anglo-Irish Protestant landlords (Ascendancy) → own the land, control politics
├ Catholic Irish majority → tenants on their own ancestral land
├ Penal Laws equivalent: Catholics excluded from office, limited property rights
├ Gaelic language suppressed (English mandatory in courts/schools)
├ Catholic Church: operates but restricted
└ Economic: Ireland exports food to England while Irish peasants go hungry
(sound familiar? → historical Irish Famine dynamics)
Ireland is legally part of the Kingdom but practically a COLONY:
├ No meaningful Irish representation in Parliament
├ Irish Catholics can't vote (religious test)
├ Land owned by English absentee landlords
└ Military garrison maintains order
V3 threats:
├ Irish independence movement (secret societies, republican cells)
├ Famine risk (if potato crop fails → mass starvation → revolution)
├ International sympathy (French Republic may support Irish independence)
├ Catholic solidarity (Aragon/Castile might back Irish Catholic cause)
└ The Highland Scottish question is a smaller version of the same problem
```
## Core Gameplay
### 1. Global Naval Supremacy
```
England's core asset: THE WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL NAVY
├ Electrical technology edge: radio-coordinated fleets (Song can't do this)
├ Global coaling stations / bases
├ Controls: English Channel, approaches to North Sea, parts of Indian Ocean
└ Challenge: maintaining this against Song (largest fleet by tonnage),
Japan (Pacific power), Italy (Mediterranean), Germany (emerging naval rival?)
Journal Entry: "Rule the Waves"
→ Naval arms race decisions
→ Base network maintenance
→ New technology adoption (electric signaling, torpedo boats?)
```
### 2. The Reform Question
```
England is a parliamentary state but NOT a democracy:
├ Only ~15-20% of men can vote
├ Irish excluded, workers excluded, women excluded
├ Labor movement growing (industrial working class demands rights)
├ Irish home rule / independence movement
├ Highland Scottish assimilation or autonomy?
Reform path: gradually expand suffrage → modern democracy
Conservative path: maintain property qualification → stable but increasingly unstable
Radical path: revolution? (unlikely in England — institutional tradition too strong)
V3: standard suffrage + labor rights reform chain, but with Irish/Highland dimensions
```
### 3. Colonial Empire Management
```
Not detailed here (separate colonial profiles) but key strategic decisions:
├ New England: growing, prosperous, increasingly self-confident → independence risk?
├ New Wales: French-majority → ungovernable? → grant autonomy? suppress?
├ India (EIC): profitable but morally questionable → reform or exploit?
├ Congo: quinine monopoly → how to develop? Belgium-Congo style exploitation?
├ Australia: invest in western settlements? compete with Song for east coast?
└ Overstretch risk: too many colonies, not enough resources to hold all
```
### 4. Technology: The Electrical Advantage
```
England's unique tech position:
├ Leads in ELECTRICITY (the Song's weakness)
├ Electric grid expanding across England
├ Telegraph + telephone networks (most connected country in the world?)
├ Electric motors in new factories (old factories still steam)
├ Radio experiments → military applications (radio-coordinated navy)
├ Can SELL electrical technology/equipment to Song (strategic leverage)
└ But: Song's steam/mechanical precision still superior in some areas
V3: England is the "electric superpower" vs Song's "steam superpower"
→ Different tech trees, different strengths
→ Trade relationship: England sells electricity/aluminum, Song sells precision machinery/steel
```
### 5. Language/Identity Management
```
The French question never fully goes away:
├ Norman-French nobles: loyal but culturally suspect
├ Huguenot descendants: loyal AND French → complicates "French = enemy" narrative
├ Legal system: still full of French terms
├ New Wales colony: MAJORITY French → is French the enemy's language or a citizen's language?
└ V3 flavor: periodic language controversies, cultural debates, identity politics events
```
## Flavor
### "We Choose Our King"
- England's elected monarchy is UNIQUE in this world
- A source of immense national pride
- "We're not ruled by blood — we're ruled by merit (of a sort)"
- Foreign observers: fascinated/horrified ("what if they choose badly?")
- Flavor events: royal elections (every 20-30 years), candidate scandals, election crises
### The Coal and Lightning Kingdom
- England = coal smoke + electric light
- London: first city to be fully electrically lit? (while Song cities still use gas/steam light)
- The visual contrast with Song's steampunk cities is stark:
- England: electric trams, telephone wires, clean(er) light
- Song: steam pipes, pneumatic tubes, brass gears, coal haze
- "Two visions of modernity" — England's electric future vs Song's mechanical perfection
### The Weight of History
- 400 years of being someone else's colony → now an independent great power
- National psyche: part pride ("we threw off the French yoke"), part insecurity ("are we really a great civilization or just France's runaway province?")
- French cultural influence is EVERYWHERE even 150 years later → architecture, food, law, some noble families' dinner conversations
- "English identity" is still a work in progress — defined more by what it ISN'T (French) than what it IS
### Cricket and Calculus
- English culture: practical, empirical, industrial
- Newton-equivalent established the scientific tradition → England's universities = world-class
- But also: sports, clubs, gentleman's societies, pub culture
- The English gentleman: industrialist by day, cricket player by weekend, amateur scientist by hobby
- Deeply class-stratified but united by a common patriotism forged in the independence war
## Relationships
| Country | Relationship | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| New Song | **Primary global rival** | Naval competition, Indian competition, Australian competition. Electric vs Steam. But also: biggest trade partner (mutual need). |
| France | **Old enemy** | 400 years of rule → independence. Highland Scotland still a wound. France rebuilding. |
| Germany | **Strongest ally** | Supported English independence. Trade partner. Shared Protestant culture. But: emerging naval/commercial competition. |
| Burgundy | **Old ally** | Small but loyal. Supported independence. Cultural bridge (French-speaking but anti-Paris). |
| Italy/Rome | **Wary** | England supported Italian unification but now Italy is too powerful. Mediterranean rival. |
| Ilkhanate | **Complex rival** | Indian competition. But: trade partner (Ilkhanate sells things England needs). |
| Japan | **Pacific rival/potential ally** | Both island industrial powers. Both naval. Compete in Pacific but might ally vs Song. |
| Jianzhou | **Client/friend** | England supports Jianzhou independence (weakens Song). Secret patron. |
| Kalmar | **Friendly rival** | Competed in selling arms. Vinland border near New England. Trade partner. |
| Aragon | **Former war ally, now distant** | Fought together vs France. But Aragon is Catholic/Mediterranean → diverging interests. |
| Ireland (internal) | **Colonial subject** | The empire's most volatile internal problem. |
|