[Eittlandic] Add lore for 19th and first half on 20th century
All checks were successful
continuous-integration/drone/push Build is passing
All checks were successful
continuous-integration/drone/push Build is passing
This commit is contained in:
parent
202b828d74
commit
accfd00be6
@ -354,12 +354,137 @@ England recognized its defeat, Eittland promised not to intervene on
|
||||
any side in the current rebellion of the American colonies (which was
|
||||
not the intent of Eittland in the first place).
|
||||
|
||||
After the independence of the United States of America, Eittland
|
||||
retained its status as a maritime hotspot between Northern America and
|
||||
Europe. Its ports of Kóparvall and Tvinnár, near Ðeberget and
|
||||
Hylfjaltr respectively, became the two major ports in Eittland, with
|
||||
Tvinnár generally favoured by ships coming from Europe and Kóparvall
|
||||
favoured by ships coming from Northern America.
|
||||
After the independence of the United States of America, Eittland not
|
||||
only retained its status as a maritime hotspot but also boomed as one
|
||||
between Northern America and Europe. Its ports of Kóparvall and
|
||||
Tvinnár, near Ðeberget and Hylfjaltr respectively, became the two
|
||||
major ports in Eittland, with Tvinnár generally favoured by ships
|
||||
coming from Europe and Kóparvall favoured by ships coming from
|
||||
Northern America.
|
||||
|
||||
*** Industrial Revolution and Constitutional Monarchy (18th century)
|
||||
By the beginning of the 18th century, Eittland begins to heavily
|
||||
industrialize out of a need for larger and more effective ports,
|
||||
requiring themselves lots of various machinery and base materials.
|
||||
Mines in Western Eittland became much more active, extracting primary
|
||||
resources such as iron, aluminum and other precious metals.
|
||||
|
||||
Due to a lack of coal in the Eittlandic island, the country had to buy
|
||||
it from other countries such as the United Kingdom, the United States
|
||||
or modern-day Canada. Coal stayed the primary source of power in
|
||||
Eittland for most of the century up to around the 1880s when Eittland
|
||||
found deposits off its Eastern coast. Oil extraction remains to this
|
||||
day a significant part of the Eittlandic economy, although in decline
|
||||
due to the deposits progressively drying up.
|
||||
|
||||
Industrial development mostly happen in Eastern Eittland due to its
|
||||
flatter terrain compared to Western Eittland. Primary resources
|
||||
extracted from Western Eittland were primarily brought to factories by
|
||||
boat; although the country pushed towards building train tracks, the
|
||||
eastern and western parts of the country remained separated due to the
|
||||
frequent eruptions of the volcanoes in the central part of the island
|
||||
cutting off any attempt to link the two regions.
|
||||
|
||||
Fishing also developped as a significant activity in Eittland, most of
|
||||
its products was sold within Eittland for its people and only a small
|
||||
portion became available for international market. Nonetheless,
|
||||
Eittlandic fish slowly built a reputation of quality and became sought
|
||||
after by Northern American and Western European elites. In 1895, fish
|
||||
and seafood exports represented 35.3% of Eittland’s exports.
|
||||
|
||||
In 1826, the country underwent a change in its government, going from
|
||||
an absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy. More details in
|
||||
[[file:/country.md#constitutional-monarchy][Constitutional Monarchy]].
|
||||
|
||||
*** 20th Century, World Wars, and Europe
|
||||
At the turn of the century, Eittland became an important hub of
|
||||
commerce between Europe and Northern America with its two major ports,
|
||||
Kóparvall and Tvinnár.
|
||||
|
||||
On August 22nd 1902, a billed written by the House of the People led
|
||||
by the Labourer’s Party is ratified by the High King. It gives women
|
||||
the right to vote in any election open to the Eittlandic people. On
|
||||
March 15th 1915, a second law written by the Labourer’s Party is
|
||||
ratified by the High King, giving women the right to be elected at the
|
||||
House of the People while noblewomen got the right to inherit the
|
||||
title of Jarl, making them eligible to the House of the Land. Quickly
|
||||
after, Kari Niallsdóttr became the first woman ever elected to the
|
||||
House of the People during the general election of September 1905,
|
||||
while Ása Sigríðsdóttr became the first woman to enter the House of
|
||||
the Land in 1934.
|
||||
|
||||
When World War I started, Eittland stated their neutrality regarding
|
||||
the matter and continued business with any country willing to do so.
|
||||
The only Eittlandic deaths recorded were three voluntary men of German
|
||||
descent who went to mainland Europe in order to fight on Germany’s
|
||||
side. Two of them died during the battle of the Somme while one died
|
||||
of an unspecified illness.
|
||||
|
||||
As it was largely unaffected by the Great War, Eittland became an
|
||||
important economic partner of the European countries affected by the
|
||||
war, especially in terms of reconstruction. This further cemented
|
||||
Eittland’s place in European economics. However, the country became
|
||||
affected by the Great Depression too. Some twenty thousand Eittlanders
|
||||
left Eittland at the time, fifteen thousands of them went to the
|
||||
United States while five thousands left for European countries such as
|
||||
Norway, Germany, the UK, or France. To this day, Chicago (Michigan,
|
||||
USA) is known for hosting the only significant Eittlandic population
|
||||
outside of Eittland, and second-generation Eittlandic immigrants
|
||||
retained their Eittlandic nationality despite most of them never going
|
||||
to Eittland.
|
||||
|
||||
In the years leading up to World War Two, Nazi Germany spent great
|
||||
efforts to develop a positive relationship with Eittland, mostly due
|
||||
to their fascination for ancient Nordic culture and Eittland being the
|
||||
only still pagan Nordic country. Eittland’s location would be also of
|
||||
great strategic importance in the Atlantic with such a central place,
|
||||
with the ability of acting as a relay between Northern America and
|
||||
Europe, or as a base of operations allowing for a much greater range
|
||||
of action. However, Eittland reaffirmed several times their will to
|
||||
remain neutral in any conflict. After war broke out in mainland
|
||||
Europe, the United Kindom, fearing Eittland joining the Axis, offered
|
||||
Eittland on January 23rd 1940 to join the Allies in order to not only
|
||||
benefit themselves from Eittland’s geographical advantages, but also
|
||||
avoid Germany to benefit from it. This proposal was once again
|
||||
refused, yet again due to Eittland’s will of staying neutral.
|
||||
|
||||
However, on April 3rd 1940, Germany launched a surprise naval invasion
|
||||
of Eittland, landing South of Hylfjaltr. This triggered an immediate
|
||||
military response from Eittland, fighting back as they could the
|
||||
German army. On the same day, Eittland called for help and joined
|
||||
almost immediately the Allies. Three days after the beginning of the
|
||||
invasion, British troops and ships arrived in Eittland, attacking the
|
||||
German army from the sea while Eittlanders attacked from land. The
|
||||
last German soldier surrendered on April 14th, eleven days after the
|
||||
beginning of the invasion. Eittland became then a base of operations
|
||||
of the Allies in the Atlandic, strengthening their position against
|
||||
German U-boats and other warships.
|
||||
|
||||
Fearing a similar fate awaited Iceland, Eittland suggested to the
|
||||
United Kingdom a preemptive occupation of the country by themselves.
|
||||
Thus, on May 10th 1940, the British and Eittlandic navies invaded
|
||||
Iceland, violating their neutrality. However, aside from diplomacy,
|
||||
this went without any incident, and while the British army left
|
||||
Iceland a year later, the Eittlandic army stayed for protection of the
|
||||
country.
|
||||
|
||||
Eittlandic ports played an important part in bringing US warships and
|
||||
war material to Europe, especially in the months leading up to D-Day
|
||||
and the different landings in the Mediteranean Sea. When the war ended
|
||||
in Europe and Iceland gained its independence, a referendum was held
|
||||
in both Eittland and Iceland regarding the potential unification of
|
||||
the two countries, as both were already close to one another both
|
||||
geographically and culturally. This however never came to pass, as it
|
||||
failed both in Iceland with 54% of the voters answering “no”, while
|
||||
64% of Eittlandic voters also answered “no”. They still however
|
||||
entered a close alliance, Iceland relying on Eittland for military
|
||||
protection while an economic alliance was made between both of them,
|
||||
inspiring the Schengen Area some decades later. It was thus possible
|
||||
for citizens of both countries to move freely between Iceland and
|
||||
Eittland and live in either country as any of its citizens would while
|
||||
goods could also be freely exchanged. Thus, in 1965, Páll Jónsson
|
||||
became the firts Icelandic citizen elected to public office as the
|
||||
Town Master of Eldheim in Western Eittland.
|
||||
|
||||
** Political Organization
|
||||
*** Kingdoms and Monarchy
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user