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# French Republic (法兰西共和国 / République Française) — V3 Start 1836
## Basic Info
- **Official Name**: République Française (法兰西共和国)
- **Capital**: Paris
- **Head of State**: President (总统 — elected, limited term)
- **Government**: **Republic** — but which republic? France has gone through ~70 years of post-revolutionary chaos:
- ~1765: Revolution. King overthrown. First Republic declared.
- ~1770s: Revolutionary terror? Factional infighting.
- ~1780s: Military strongman / Directory equivalent?
- ~1790s-1800s: Various authoritarian/radical governments cycle through
- ~1810s-1820s: Finally a STABLE moderate republican constitution emerges
- ~1836: The current republic is maybe ~15-20 years old. Still fragile.
- France is on its **Third or Fourth Republic** — previous ones collapsed in coups/crises
- **State Religion**: Secular (laïcité — revolution stripped the Church of power. Catholicism is still the majority faith but the Church has no political role.)
- **Technology Tier**: 2 (industrializing with continental resources — no English coal/iron, limited compared to England/Germany, but Paris is still a major city with electricity, railways, universities)
- **Population**: Large (~30-35M? Continental France is big with good agriculture)
- **Literacy**: Moderate-high (revolutionary governments pushed education as nationalist tool)
## Territory
### What France HAS (1836)
```
Continental France:
├ Île-de-France (Paris — still one of Europe's greatest cities)
├ Normandy, Picardy, Champagne (northern agricultural heartland)
├ Loire Valley, Berry, Auvergne (central)
├ Gascony, Aquitaine (southwest — wine, agriculture)
├ Brittany (semi-autonomous Celtic region, historically restive)
└ That's it. Just continental France.
```
### What France LOST (since peak)
```
LOST to England (~1685 independence):
├ England (the entire island — 400 years of Plantagenet rule, gone)
├ Ireland (English conquest)
├ Scotland Lowlands (English)
LOST in the Great War (~1760s):
├ Scotland Highlands (last foothold on British Isles — seized by England during revolution)
├ Mississippi west bank (New Orleans, Texas → English "New Wales")
├ Most North American colonies (independence movements, English-funded)
LOST to neighbors:
├ Low Countries → Germany (since original unification ~1370s)
├ Languedoc/Navarre → Aragon (since French collapse ~1250s-1300s)
├ Eastern Champagne border areas → Burgundy (independence war spoils)
NEVER CONTROLLED (but claims):
├ Burgundy ("rightful French territory — Capetian usurpers")
├ Languedoc ("historically French Occitan lands under Aragonese occupation")
└ Remaining North American French settlements ("our colonists, our language, our land")
= From the world's largest empire (England+France+colonies) → just continental France
= One of history's greatest falls from power
```
## The 70 Years of Chaos (1765-1836)
```
~1765: REVOLUTION
├ War defeat (Great War ~1760s) + financial crisis + Enlightenment ideas
├ King overthrown (flees to Portugal → then South America)
├ Republic declared
├ England gains independence, colonies break away
└ France goes from world's largest empire to a rump continental state OVERNIGHT
~1765-1775: FIRST REPUBLIC / Terror?
├ Revolutionary government — radical, chaotic
├ "Committee of Public Safety" equivalent?
├ Internal purges, factional warfare
├ Wars with neighbors? (Italy conquering Balkans, everyone taking advantage)
├ Possibly: executive changes every 6 months
└ Economy in freefall (lost colonial trade revenue, lost English coal/iron)
~1775-1790: ITALIAN WARS CRISIS
├ Italian Napoleon unifying Italy + conquering Balkans + North Africa
├ France joins coalition against Italy (with Germany + Aragon) → LOSES
├ National humiliation: France can't even win a defensive war?
├ Military coup? Radical government? Royalist counter-revolution attempt?
└ Each crisis brings a new government — none lasts more than 5-10 years
~1790-1810: AUTHORITARIAN PERIOD
├ Military strongman(s) take power (French Napoleon equivalent? But less talented)
├ Attempt to rebuild military, centralize state, industrialize
├ Some progress — railways built, factories established, army reformed
├ But: no colonies, no coal/iron (those are in England), limited resources
├ Eventually: the strongman dies/is overthrown → back to chaos
└ France is exhausted from 40+ years of revolutionary whiplash
~1815-1836: STABILIZATION
├ Moderate republican constitution FINALLY sticks
├ Learned from failures: not too radical, not too authoritarian
├ Current government: ~15-20 years old, still fragile
├ Economy: slowly recovering, industrializing (using continental resources — Lorraine iron?)
├ Military: rebuilt but not great (lost too many wars)
└ National mood: exhausted, humiliated, but determined to recover
```
## The Three Ghosts (三个幽灵)
France is haunted by three lost futures:
### Ghost 1: The Plantagenet Empire (金雀花帝国的幽灵)
```
"We once ruled from Paris to London. The greatest empire in Europe."
The Plantagenet era (1250s-1685) = France's golden age in national memory
→ English independence (1685) = the original sin / national trauma
→ Everything that went wrong traces back to losing England
Irredentist feeling: "England is rightfully ours"
→ Completely unrealistic (England is a Tier 1 industrial power with the world's best navy)
→ But emotionally powerful → nationalist demagogues use it
→ "Someday we will cross the Channel again" = fringe nationalist slogan
→ Mainstream: nobody seriously plans to reconquer England
but the WOUND is there and politicians exploit it
```
### Ghost 2: The Bourbon/Plantagenet Exile (流亡皇室的幽灵)
```
The king fled in ~1765. He's in South America (Portuguese territory).
The royal family is STILL THERE (descendants, 70 years later).
Royalist movement in France:
├ Mostly dead (70 years of republic killed active royalism)
├ But: some aristocrats, some Catholics, some nostalgics
├ The exile court occasionally issues proclamations ("I am the rightful king of France")
├ Nobody in France takes it seriously... except during CRISES
│ → When the republic wobbles → royalists briefly resurface
│ → "Wouldn't a king be more stable than this mess?"
└ V3: Royalist event fires during political crises
→ Player can: suppress (easy), co-opt (offer the exile a ceremonial role?),
or if desperate → actually RESTORE the monarchy (radical choice)
```
### Ghost 3: The Lost Colonies (失落殖民地的幽灵)
```
North American French colonies:
├ New France (Canada) — became autonomous/independent post-revolution
├ Various settlements → some English, some independent, some drifting
Three-way competition for the loyalty of French-speaking North Americans:
├ FRANCE (Republic): "We are the motherland. Come back to us."
├ ENGLAND: "These territories are in our sphere now. We liberated them."
├ LOCAL INDEPENDENCE: "We're neither French nor English — we're Canadien/Louisianais"
→ V3: French Republic tries to rebuild influence over North American French communities
→ Diplomatic plays, cultural missions, trade agreements, possibly supporting independence
movements in English-held New Wales (majority French-speaking!)
→ "If we can't have colonies, at least we can have CLIENTS"
```
## Core Gameplay: The Comeback Kid
### 1. Stabilize the Republic (稳定共和)
```
THE first priority. The current republic is ~15-20 years old.
Threats to stability:
├ Royalist conspiracies (fringe but real during crises)
├ Military coup risk (army has done this before, multiple times in 70 years)
├ Radical republican factions (want MORE revolution, not stability)
├ Economic downturn → blame the government → government falls
└ External shock (war, diplomatic humiliation) → government falls
Journal Entry: "Anchor the Republic"
→ Build institutional depth: independent judiciary, civil service reform, press freedom
→ Each step reduces "instability meter"
→ Once fully stabilized → unlock other journal entries (can't rebuild empire if government keeps falling)
```
### 2. Industrial Catch-Up (工业追赶)
```
France has NO English-quality coal/iron. Must industrialize with what it has:
├ Lorraine iron (border with Burgundy/Germany — limited but real)
├ Continental coal deposits (smaller than English/German)
├ Agricultural surplus (France's farmland is excellent → food exports fund industry)
├ ELECTRICITY: France can import electrical technology from Germany/England
│ → Leapfrog? Skip the steam phase (France never had Song-level steam)?
│ → Go STRAIGHT to electrical industrialization?
│ → "We missed the steam age but we can lead the electric age"
├ Chemical industry: possible (France has intellectual tradition)
└ Paris as innovation hub: universities, research, intellectuals
France's unique industrial path: ELECTRIC-FIRST
→ While Song is stuck on steam and England/Germany split between steam+electric,
France builds a purely ELECTRIC industrial base from scratch
→ Competitive advantage: no legacy steam infrastructure to maintain
→ Disadvantage: starting from behind, limited resources
```
### 3. The Francophone Project (法语区统一)
```
France can't rebuild a colonial empire. But it can build a CULTURAL sphere.
French-speaking populations outside France:
├ Burgundy (independent, French-speaking, Capetian dynasty)
├ Languedoc (under Aragon — Occitan, closely related to French)
├ North American French communities (New France/Canada, New Wales French-speakers)
├ Wallonia? (in Germany — French-speaking Low Country region)
└ Swiss Romandy (in Germany — French-speaking Swiss cantons)
The Francophone Project:
├ Not military conquest (France is too weak for that)
├ Instead: cultural diplomacy, language promotion, trade agreements
├ "La Francophonie" — a cultural-economic union of French-speaking peoples
├ Long-term goal: attract Burgundy into union? Recover Languedoc from Aragon?
├ Even longer: English New Wales has French majority → support their autonomy/independence?
└ V3: Journal Entry "Unite the Francophone World"
→ Steps: cultural missions → trade agreements → political union negotiations
→ Each step faces resistance (Burgundy: "we're NOT France"), Aragon ("Languedoc is OURS")
→ Ultimate success = France + Burgundy + Languedoc + maybe Wallonia = major power again
→ But: extremely difficult and slow. The realistic version of "reconquer everything"
```
### 4. Burgundy: Enemy or Brother? (勃艮第:敌是兄弟?)
```
France's most complicated relationship:
├ Burgundy is French-speaking → cultural kin
├ Burgundy claims Capetian legitimacy → dynastic rival
├ Burgundy is allied with Germany + England → geopolitical enemy
├ France designated Burgundy as primary rival during absolutist reform era (~1700s)
├ But now France is a REPUBLIC → the Capetian rivalry is IRRELEVANT
│ → "We overthrew our own king — why do we care about Burgundy's king?"
├ New opportunity: "We're both French-speaking. We should be FRIENDS."
└ But 400 years of hostility doesn't vanish because you changed government
V3: Burgundy relationship = core diplomatic gameplay
→ Hostility path: continue rivalry, try to conquer Burgundy (risky, Germany backs Burgundy)
→ Friendship path: offer alliance, cultural exchange, eventually political union?
→ The Francophone Project requires Burgundy → must eventually reconcile
```
### 5. Revenge or Acceptance? (复仇还是接受?)
```
The fundamental MOOD question for France:
REVANCHISM (复仇主义):
├ "We will recover everything we lost"
├ Military buildup, aggressive foreign policy, colonial ambitions
├ Target list: Burgundy, Languedoc, North American influence, maybe even England someday
├ Popular with: nationalists, military officers, unemployed youth
├ Risk: France is WEAK — picking fights = losing fights
└ Could lead to: another war → another defeat → another revolution → cycle continues
ACCEPTANCE (接受现实):
├ "We are a medium continental power. That's okay."
├ Focus on: internal development, industrial catch-up, republican institutions
├ Francophone cultural sphere instead of military empire
├ Popular with: moderates, intellectuals, businessmen
├ Risk: national pride wounded → revanchists grow → political instability
└ Long-term: the SMART choice but hard to sell to a humiliated nation
V3: Player must navigate between these poles
→ Too revanchist → war → defeat → government collapse
→ Too accepting → nationalist backlash → government collapse
→ The sweet spot: just enough national pride to maintain stability,
just enough pragmatism to avoid disaster
```
## Flavor
### The City of Light (Without the Empire)
- Paris is still one of the world's great cities — culture, cuisine, architecture, universities
- But the POWER is gone — Paris used to rule London, now it barely rules France
- "Paris is a museum of what we once were"
- The cultural output hasn't stopped: literature, philosophy, art, fashion
- French intellectual life: post-revolutionary, radical, innovative, self-critical
- "We overthrew our king, lost our empire, survived 70 years of chaos, and we're STILL here. That counts for something."
### Café Revolution
- French political culture: debate, argument, manifestos, café conspiracies
- Every political crisis starts in a café and ends in the streets
- The republic was BORN in cafés — and might DIE in cafés if the wrong ideas catch fire
- Flavor events: intellectual movements, political scandals, café plot discoveries, press freedom debates
### The Tricolor
- Revolutionary flag (tricolore equivalent) = national identity
- "We are the republic. We proved you don't need a king."
- Germany has been a republic for 470 years — but France's republicanism is PASSIONATE where Germany's is BUREAUCRATIC
- "Germans are republicans by habit. We are republicans by CHOICE — we killed our king to prove it."
## Relationships
| Country | Relationship | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Italian Empire | **Primary threat** | Southern border neighbor. Napoleon's empire is directly threatening. Italy took the Balkans, North Africa — could France be next? |
| England | **Historical enemy, current rival** | 400 years of ruling England → independence → permanent grudge. New Wales (French-majority English colony) is a sore point. |
| Germany | **Complex** | War ally (English Independence War) but also competitor. Germany supports Burgundy (France's rival). Trade partner but strategic rival. |
| Burgundy | **Brother-enemy** | French-speaking but hostile for 400 years. The Francophone Project requires reconciliation. |
| Aragon | **Rival** | Holds Languedoc (French-speaking). France wants it back. Aragon holds the Pope-in-exile (useful diplomatic card). |
| Castile | **Minor** | Iberian neighbor. France supported Castile in past wars. Possible minor ally? |
| Great Khanate | **Former ally, irrelevant** | Supported France in English Independence War. Now too far away and too weak to matter. |
| Portuguese S. America | **Exile court location** | French king is THERE. Awkward. Royalists use it as base. France wants to ignore it. |
| North American French | **Lost children** | French-speaking colonies/communities in English/independent North America. Cultural leverage. Francophone Project targets. |
| Kalmar Union | **Neutral** | No significant interaction. |
| Egypt | **Sympathy?** | Fellow victim of Italian Empire? Possible anti-Italian alignment? |
|