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# Greater Germany (大德意志 / Großdeutschland) — V3 Start 1836
## Basic Info
- **Official Name**: Deutscher Bund (German Federation / 德意志联邦)
- **Capital**: None officially. Federal Diet meets in **Frankfurt am Main** (compromise — neutral free city). Real economic capital: **Hamburg** (largest port). Cultural capitals: **Vienna** (south), **Cologne** (Rhineland).
- **Head of State**: Bundeskanzler (Federal Chancellor — elected by Federal Diet, serves until voted out or dies. NOT a monarch. NOT hereditary.)
- **Government**: **Federal merchant republic** — the oldest federation in the world (~470 years).
- No emperor, no king — NEVER had one. The only European great power without a monarch.
- Federal Diet (Bundestag): representatives from member states + free cities
- Member states have enormous autonomy (own laws, education, taxation, religion)
- Hanseatic cities (Hamburg, Bremen, Lübeck, etc.) dominate through commercial weight
- Southern states (Austria, Bavaria) are members but culturally different
- **State Religion**: None federal. Each state decides. North = Protestant/Reformed. South = Catholic.
- **Technology Tier**: 1 (Electrical pioneer alongside England. Advanced chemical industry. World-class engineering universities.)
- **Population**: Large (~35-45M?)
- **Literacy**: Very high (oldest university tradition in Europe, ~1500s+)
## Territory
### Core
```
Northern Germany (Hanseatic heartland):
Hamburg, Bremen, Lübeck — Atlantic/North Sea/Baltic ports
Hanover, Brunswick — interior
Cologne, Düsseldorf — Rhineland industrial belt
Low Countries (Holland, Brabant, Flanders) — included since unification
→ The economic ENGINE: trade, finance, industry, shipping
Central Germany:
Frankfurt am Main — Diet seat, financial center
Saxony — mining, manufacturing tradition
Thuringia, Hesse — interior industrial/agricultural
Silesia — mining, heavy industry (taken from Poland ~1675)
Southern Germany:
Bavaria — Catholic, traditional, agricultural + growing industry
Austria — Catholic, Alpine, border with Italian Empire
Württemberg, Baden — Rhineland south, mixed
Swiss cantons — included (German-speaking parts)
→ Culturally different but economically integrated over 470 years
```
### Vassal
- **Grand Duchy of Poland** (Gdańsk + Poznań): German puppet. Claims "true Poland" vs Great Khanate's direct-ruled Poland. Gdańsk = major Baltic port under German control.
### Colonial Empire (Chartered Companies)
```
All colonies managed by CHARTERED TRADING COMPANIES (特许贸易公司)
— NOT state-administered. The Hanseatic way: let merchants manage overseas territories.
Westafrikanische Handelsgesellschaft (西非贸易公司):
West African coast — Gold Coast, slave trade (now abolished), palm oil, ivory
Multiple trading forts/posts
Transitioning from slave trade to "legitimate commerce" (palm oil, rubber, minerals)
Karibische Kompanie (加勒比公司):
Caribbean islands + Central American coast
Sugar, tobacco, tropical goods
Some settler populations (German + mixed)
→ Companies report to the Diet, pay dividends to shareholders, fund their own security
→ State provides naval protection in exchange for commercial taxes
→ Model: historical Dutch VOC / English EIC but GERMAN and 300+ years old
```
### Ally
- **Bohemia**: Tightest alliance. Military pact, trade integration, joint research. Independent but economically intertwined. "Germany's Israel" — small, high-tech, indispensable.
## The 470-Year Republic
### How It Works
```
Federal Diet (Bundestag):
├ Representatives from each member state/free city
├ Voting weight based on: population + economic contribution (commercial tax)
│ → Hamburg alone might have more votes than several rural southern states combined
├ Passes federal law: trade policy, tariffs, foreign policy, military budget, infrastructure
├ Elects the Bundeskanzler (Chancellor)
└ Cannot override member state autonomy on: religion, education, local law, policing
Bundeskanzler (Chancellor):
├ Elected by Diet majority
├ Serves indefinitely (until voted out, retires, or dies)
├ Executive power: implements Diet decisions, commands federal forces, conducts diplomacy
├ NOT a dictator — can be removed by Diet vote of no confidence
├ Traditionally from a major Hanseatic city (Hamburg/Bremen/Lübeck chancellor most common)
└ Southern chancellors rare but not impossible (signals unity when it happens)
Member State Autonomy:
├ Own state parliament (Landtag)
├ Own legal system (North uses commercial law tradition, South uses Roman law variants)
├ Own education system (but federal university funding exists)
├ Own police/militia
├ Own religious establishment (Protestant north, Catholic south)
├ Own taxation (plus contribution to federal budget based on formula)
└ Some states are CITIES (Hamburg = both a city and a "state" in the federation)
= Something like: modern Switzerland × EU × historical Hanseatic League
= Running for 470 years → deeply institutionalized, stable, but also RIGID
```
### The Monarchy Question: Dead and Buried
```
~1370s: Unification. South wanted a king, North wanted republic → COMPROMISE (elected leader)
~1400s-1500s: Southern monarchists occasionally push for a king → fails each time
~1600s: After 250 years, even southern states accept the republic → monarchism dies
~1836: Nobody seriously proposes monarchy anymore
"Having no king" is a core part of German identity:
├ "We choose our leaders. Others worship theirs."
├ Anti-monarchist sentiment used against rivals: "France has its republic now?
│ We've had ours for 470 years. Welcome to civilization."
├ The merchant class sees monarchy as: inefficient, arbitrary, bad for business
└ Even Catholic Bavaria (which historically loved its kings) has accepted republicanism
after 470 years of it working reasonably well
```
## The Merchant Patriciate (商人贵族)
```
470 years of merchant governance created a de facto aristocracy:
The Hanseatic Patrician Families:
├ ~50-100 families that have dominated trade/politics for CENTURIES
├ Not hereditary nobility (no titles, no crowns) but functionally the same
├ Intermarried, educated at the same schools, belong to the same clubs
├ Control: major trading companies, banks, insurance firms, shipping lines
├ Dominate: the Diet (through commercial voting weight), city councils
├ "We are not nobles. We are simply... successful. For 400 years."
└ The contradiction: a REPUBLIC ruled by a hereditary merchant oligarchy
→ They don't CALL themselves aristocrats but they ARE
→ Workers see through it: "you say republic but you mean plutocracy"
```
## The Military Problem (军事弱点)
```
Germany's GREAT WEAKNESS: its army is mediocre.
Why:
├ 470 years of merchant culture → military not prestigious
├ No Junker class, no warrior aristocracy, no "blood and iron" ideology
├ Young men want to be: merchants, engineers, bankers — NOT soldiers
├ Military budget: adequate but not prioritized (Diet prefers trade infrastructure)
├ Military technology: equipment is modern (Germany makes it!) but DOCTRINE is stale
├ Officer corps: competent but uninspired. No tradition of military genius.
├ Navy: BETTER than army (Hanseatic naval tradition → protecting trade routes is understood)
└ Overall: a Tier 1 industrial power with a Tier 2 military
Compared to neighbors:
├ Italian Empire: veteran military, Napoleon's legacy, experienced officer corps → SUPERIOR
├ England: world-class navy, professional army → SUPERIOR at sea
├ France: large army, revolutionary tradition, centralised command → SUPERIOR on land
├ Great Khanate: huge numbers (if mobilized) → SUPERIOR in mass
└ Germany: would lose a land war against any serious opponent 1-on-1
Journal Entry: "Reform the Federal Army" (联邦军改革)
├ Professionalize: create a proper officer academy (not just merchant sons doing military service)
├ Centralize: federal army instead of state militias patched together
├ Doctrine: import military ideas from Italy/England/Jianzhou?
├ Conscription? (controversial — merchants hate sending workers to barracks)
├ Military-industrial: at least Germany makes excellent WEAPONS even if soldiers are mediocre
└ This reform faces resistance from:
→ Merchant class: "waste of money, trade is our defense"
→ State autonomy advocates: "federal army violates state rights"
→ Anti-militarists: "we are NOT France or Italy — we don't glorify war"
```
## Economy: The World's Oldest Commercial Superpower
```
Germany is not the LARGEST economy (Song is bigger) or the most ADVANCED (tied with England)
But it is the most COMMERCIALLY SOPHISTICATED:
├ Frankfurt Stock Exchange: possibly world's oldest, 300+ years of continuous operation
├ Hamburg Insurance Market: global marine/trade insurance hub
├ Deutsche Handelsbank (German Trade Bank): central banking tradition centuries old
├ Trading companies: chartered firms operating in West Africa, Caribbean, Central America, Baltic
├ Guilds → Corporations → Modern firms: continuous institutional evolution
├ Patent system: world's most developed (protecting innovation → more innovation)
├ Contract law: centuries of commercial law refinement → most reliable legal system for business
└ The result: Germany attracts foreign investment because its INSTITUTIONS are trusted
→ Song/English/Ilkhanate companies prefer to list/trade on German exchanges
→ "German commercial law" is the international standard for trade agreements
Industry:
├ Chemical industry (dyes, pharmaceuticals, fertilizer) — possibly world leader
├ Electrical engineering (alongside England — Germany pioneered some electrical tech)
├ Precision machinery (tradition from clock-making → industrial machinery)
├ Rhineland industrial belt: coal + steel + chemicals = "the Ruhr" equivalent
└ Heavy industry centered in: Rhineland, Silesia, Saxony
```
## The Workers' Question (工人问题)
```
470 years of industrialization = world's OLDEST industrial working class
Timeline:
~1400s: Early industrial workers in mining/textile towns
~1500s: Worker guilds form (within the guild system)
~1600s: Guild system breaks down → factory system emerges → worker exploitation begins
~1700s: First labor organizations, mutual aid societies
~1800s: Full-blown labor movement, socialist thinkers, trade unions
~1836: MATURE workers' movement — oldest and most organized in the world
The German labor movement:
├ Trade unions: legal (centuries of negotiation won this right)
├ Workers' party: exists in the Diet (but outvoted by commercial interests)
├ Socialist intellectuals: writing theory for decades → well-developed ideology
├ Strikes: regular, sometimes large, occasionally violent
├ Welfare: some (merchant patricians learned: minimal welfare prevents revolution)
│ → Germany may have the world's first social insurance (decades ahead of others)
│ → Healthcare, pensions, accident insurance — funded by companies (grudgingly)
└ The fundamental tension:
"Republic" = rule by the people → but WHICH people? Merchants or workers?
→ Workers demand: universal suffrage, not just propertied vote
→ Merchants resist: "giving workers the vote = giving them our money"
→ V3: THE core political tension of German gameplay
Could revolution happen?
├ Less likely than elsewhere (Germany has SOME welfare, SOME worker rights, centuries of institutional stability)
├ But: if economic crisis hits → merchant response is too slow/harsh → could tip into revolt
└ More likely: gradual reform through Diet politics (workers slowly gaining seats/rights)
```
## Core Gameplay
### 1. Military Modernization (联邦军改革)
```
THE most urgent journal entry.
Germany is a Tier 1 economy with a Tier 2 military.
If Italy or France attacks → Germany could LOSE.
Steps: officer academy → doctrine reform → federal centralization → conscription debate
Resistance: merchant class + state autonomy + anti-militarism
Historical parallel: like if the Netherlands suddenly needed a Prussian-grade army
```
### 2. Workers' Rights (工人权利)
```
Expand suffrage? Strengthen unions? More welfare?
The merchant patriciate doesn't want to share power.
But the alternative is revolution (and revolution is bad for business).
→ Gradual reform (German pragmatism) vs resistance (merchant conservatism)
→ V3: standard suffrage/labor reform chain but with 470 years of institutional context
```
### 3. North-South Balance (南北平衡)
```
The eternal German question: Hanseatic north vs Catholic south
├ Federal investment: more ports or more Alpine railways?
├ Religious policy: Protestant cultural dominance or true pluralism?
├ Political power: should southern states get more Diet weight?
├ Italy threat: southern states are on the front line → they want more military spending
│ (north: "that's expensive" / south: "Italian tanks are 100km from Munich!")
└ If balance fails → not secession but PARALYSIS (Diet deadlock → nothing gets done)
```
### 4. Colonial Company Management (殖民公司管理)
```
Chartered companies run the colonies — but should they?
├ Companies prioritize profit → exploitation, corners cut, local resistance
├ State oversight: Diet can regulate but companies lobby hard against it
├ Abolition completed but labor practices still harsh (indentured workers replacing slaves?)
├ Reformers: "nationalize the colonies, govern them properly"
├ Merchants: "private management is more efficient"
└ V3: company vs state governance decisions for each colonial territory
```
### 5. The Polish Puppet (波兰傀儡)
```
Grand Duchy of Poland (Gdańsk + Poznań):
├ German-appointed Grand Duke (German noble, not Polish)
├ Claims to be "true Poland" → propaganda tool against Great Khanate
├ Polish population: grateful for not being under Mongol serfdom? Or resentful of German control?
├ Gdańsk: major port, economically valuable, mostly German-speaking
├ Poznań: Polish-speaking, culturally resistant to Germanization
└ Journal entry: How to manage?
→ Germanize (assimilate Poles → efficient but backlash)
→ Maintain as propaganda tool (fund anti-Great-Khanate Polish exile movements)
→ Grant more autonomy (risk: Polish nationalism grows → demand real independence)
→ Release entirely (politically impossible — Gdańsk too valuable)
```
## Flavor
### The Boring Superpower
- Germany's biggest "problem" in V3: it's TOO STABLE
- 470 years of working institutions → no dramatic revolution, no succession crisis, no military coup
- Germany doesn't have Egypt's crisis or Italy's Napoleon dying or Great Khanate's serfdom time bomb
- Instead: incremental politics, committee decisions, Diet debates, compromise
- "In Germany, nothing exciting happens. And that's the point."
- Playing Germany is for players who like MANAGING rather than SURVIVING
- The drama comes from: external threats that a pacific commercial state isn't ready for
### The City of Cities
- German cities are ANCIENT and PROUD
- Hamburg: "Gateway to the Atlantic" — shipping capital of Europe
- Frankfurt: "Where money talks" — financial heart
- Cologne: "The cathedral and the factory" — culture meets industry
- Lübeck: "Mother of the Hansa" — the original Hanseatic capital, now a living museum
- Each city has its own character, its own pride, its own rivalry with other cities
- Flavor events: inter-city competitions, cultural festivals, trade fairs (centuries-old tradition)
### "Trade Is Our Sword"
- German national motto (unofficial): Handel ist unser Schwert ("Trade is our sword")
- The belief that commercial power > military power
- "We don't need to conquer you. We just need you to buy from us."
- Works great... until someone with actual swords shows up
- National anxiety (small but growing): "what if trade ISN'T enough?"
## Relationships
| Country | Relationship | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| England | **Closest ally** | Supported English independence ~1685. Trade partners. Shared Protestant culture. Both electrical/industrial leaders. But: emerging commercial competition. |
| Bohemia | **Inseparable ally** | 470 years of alliance. Military pact. Economic integration. "Germany's Israel." |
| Burgundy | **Friendly buffer** | French-speaking but anti-Paris. Germany guarantees Burgundy's independence. Cultural bridge. |
| Italian Empire | **Southern threat** | Napoleon's empire on the southern border. Austria/Bavaria vulnerable. Military gap is dangerous. |
| France | **Old rivalry, current caution** | Defeated France in English Independence War. France rebuilding → uncertain. |
| Great Khanate | **Eastern concern** | Declining but huge. Polish question links them. Germany sponsors Polish independence movements. |
| Grand Duchy of Poland | **Puppet** | Propaganda tool. Gdańsk = valuable port. Poznań = Polish headache. |
| Kalmar Union | **Baltic partner** | Shared Baltic Sea interests. Trade. Occasional friction over fishing/trade routes. |
| New Song | **Major trade partner** | Song buys German electrical equipment, sells precision machinery/steel. |
| Aragon | **Former Italian War rival** | Fought together against Italian unification (lost). Now: separate spheres, little interaction. |
| Ilkhanate | **Trade partner** | Silk Road terminus customer. German goods → Ilkhanate → Central Asia. No conflict. |
|