The Faraway Kingdom

Did New England not participate in the war at all?

And New Sweden was quite sparsely settled as I recall. So won't these new territories be mire lines on the map and the odd trading post?

Hmm, seems odd for the Irish to win here. Maybe I am too ignorant of the era but even in large numbers untrained mobs tend to lose to disciplined soldiers. And the English the Commonwealth soldiers have additional motive in at independent ireland means any continental enemy could potentially use it to invade Britain.

Also rumors would likely erupt quickly that this is some plot by Charles II to return to the British Isles.

1. It did, but only later in the war when England realized it might actually be a thing that they'd have to watch out for.

2. It was, but Carolina helped send in a few settlers. While that doesn't help much, they will be small changes until later on.

3. Yeah, you're probably right. But don't worry, Ireland won't survive for very long.

4. It sure will.
 
I'm guessing that in a few years time when the economy has settled and grows that the Protectorate will have a rematch with the Irish with perhaps sending large armies under the overall command of one Oliver Cromwell and that there will be massacres on the scale that will outpace the OTL massacres at Drogheda and Wexford? :confused: If so, will this result in large waves of migrations of fleeing Irish and Anglo-Irish (both Protestant and Catholic especially more of the latter) to Carolina? Also, what about the Scots? Will the Protectorate decide to force Scotland into union with it, and thus result in waves of Scottish migrations (both Lowland Scots and Highlanders) to Carolina? Please let me know. Thank you. :):):)
 
I'm enjoying your writing.
Will Sweden be sending more colonists?

Yep, they'll be forced to if they want to keep their new little bit of land. And thank you! :D

I'm guessing that in a few years time when the economy has settled and grows that the Protectorate will have a rematch with the Irish with perhaps sending large armies under the overall command of one Oliver Cromwell and that there will be massacres on the scale that will outpace the OTL massacres at Drogheda and Wexford? :confused: If so, will this result in large waves of migrations of fleeing Irish and Anglo-Irish (both Protestant and Catholic especially more of the latter) to Carolina? Also, what about the Scots? Will the Protectorate decide to force Scotland into union with it, and thus result in waves of Scottish migrations (both Lowland Scots and Highlanders) to Carolina? Please let me know. Thank you. :):):)

All those points are mostly right, it obviously won't happen exactly like that though. That'd just be stealing. :p
 
Chapter Eleven - L'amour Entre Les Pays
Chapter Eleven - L'amour Entre Les Pays
1656

Whilst the English were recovering from both economic and civil problems in their young nation, the French were sitting high and mighty. Inside the palace of Versailles, Louis XIV had simply watched as events unfolded in the British Isles. He seemed to have found himself another ally in the Isles. Ireland would prove as a worthy friend to keep a watchful eye on the former Commonwealth, now known as the United Protectorate (fully known as the United Protectorate of England and Scotland (or the UP)). Though Louis and his advisors were considering somehow forging an alliance with the Protectorate, the English still didn’t like them very much. Louis was still contemplating his options in the British Isles, and was going to attempt to keep an alliance with Ireland, and possibly even try to get Scotland to separate from the UP itself.. Though Louis knew the Protectorate could prove to be a much greater ally than both the Scottish and Irish kingdoms combined, he was still considering his options.

Louis’ biggest worry was still coming from the original Englishmen. Even if they had found a new home to call their own, the Kingdom of Carolina was a large threat and danger to any of their colonies in the New World. Any colony within distance of Carolina would probably just be absorbed by it, before any French ships and soldiers could leave the docks to defend themselves. That was, unless, he secured an alliance with the new nation. The colony in Quebec was not under any threat as of the moment, as the New England colony was still busy filling out from the flood of English colonists. The distance between the two colonies also proved helpful as well. The colony of New Netherland, and the Netherlands in general, could also prove to be a potential ally, though their sheer cultural and religious differences were proving difficult to be on steady terms. The bad taste in Dutch mouths’ left by the Catholics still lingered, and Louis knew it would be a while until they were on better speaking terms. Sweden was proving to be, along with Carolina, another big pain. New Sweden grew due to both its and Carolina’s victory in The Great American War, and both nations were a large threat to his colonies. Instead of trying to ally with Carolina, Louis believed it to be best to secure alliances with the colonies directly bordering Louisiana and Quebec. Jean de Lauzon, leader of New France at the time, was ordered to meet with Edward Hopkins, the leader of Connecticut. This time was around the time that New Haven merged with Connecticut itself, which meant that it could have been a good trade ally in New England. He would later schedule a meeting with the Massachusetts governor, but it would crash and burn.

Jean de Lauzon, colonial governor of New France.
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Odd that France would see Carolina as threat to its colonies. The Commonwealth with its string New England Colonies seems more of a threat. Carolina is still fairly weak I would think, and rather dependent on its Swedish ally to protect it from the Dutch and New England in a drawn out war.
 
Odd that France would see Carolina as threat to its colonies. The Commonwealth with its string New England Colonies seems more of a threat. Carolina is still fairly weak I would think, and rather dependent on its Swedish ally to protect it from the Dutch and New England in a drawn out war.

True that, but things can be misinterpreted across seas. The Carolinans build themselves up a lot more than they actually are. And the tides will turn on that soon.
 
Chapter Twelve - An Issue of Borders
Chapter Twelve - An Issue of Borders
1656 to 1657

Spanish Relations
Carolina and Spain’s alliance had increased over the past few years. King Charles II and King Philip IV had a few meetings with each other over the course of their lifetime. However, the thing that separated Spain from Carolina the most was the belief that they would capture and seize Florida. While they weren’t very powerful at the time, they could take over and secure the colony before mainland Spain could even respond. While England and the Netherlands might offer help to them, if only to help stop the Carolinian menace, it would surely be short-lived. So, Diego de Rebolledo, the somewhat corrupt governor of Florida at the time, decided to meet with Jacob Smith, a diplomat of Carolina. They planned to set an official southern border, even though they both knew they couldn’t really defend it. It would basically be for show, and doing it would demonstrate the loyalty Carolina had to their Spanish friends. Charles II didn’t want to sacrifice this, and decided to go ahead with the meeting.

The meeting was scheduled for July 15th, 1656, and the initial confrontation went quite well. Both sides were well versed in trickery, so the process of outlining a latitude involved much negotiation. Rebolledo suggested the border be set at the 34th parallel. He claimed that everything north of the original land set for the Virginia colony should belong to Carolina, while everything south should belong to Florida. Smith rescinded this, saying that Carolinian settlements were already below the proposed threshold. He then proposed the 31st parallel, claiming that it was the farthest north the Spanish would settle for many years. Rebolledo was easily convinced, but still saw opportunity for more land. They settled on a border at the 32nd parallel north. King Philip IV of Spain was satisfied with the outcome of this, while Charles was quite delighted. While most of the land was swampland, Smith had convinced Rebolledo that there were Carolinian settlements as far south as OTL northern Georgia. In reality, they had barely expanded past the original borders set for the Virginia colony by England in 1606.

England and the Dutch
The colony of New England had been overlooked by England for years, ever since Carolina declared independence. They had barely taken any action to expand it, although it did grow on its own at this point. They had used a good portion of their civilian ships as military ones in the past, and many were sacrificed in the Great American War. The population of the colony was around 23,000, while Carolina’s was over twice that. Meanwhile, the governments of the colonies within New England frequently squabbled with each other. Saybrook and New Haven were both quickly absorbed into Connecticut, while Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay frequently fought over the state of their governments. Plymouth became more and more conservative, while Massachusetts Bay became slightly more liberal. This would eventually highlight the differences between the two, and would result in the regions being separated for a very long time. New Hampshire formally received a charter from Thomas Fairfax in 1654, which separated the few settlements in the region from Massachusetts. The people living north of the newly chartered region were annoyed they were skimped out, and they wanted their own colony. Nonetheless, they wouldn’t get it for a long while. Meanwhile, the border between New England and New Netherland was poorly drawn, and even more poorly defended. The settlements made by the Dutch were scattered, but most were centered on the Hudson river. While there was never an official straight border set between the two colonies, it would eventually just morph into a shaky, poorly-walled border.

The colonies of New England as of 1657.
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So Carolina is a head of New England? Surprising.

I would think the continued Dutch presence and possible worries over Carolina and the Swedes would draw the English colonies together.
 
Uh... I'm a little confused here. :D

Whoops. Fixed.

So Carolina is a head of New England? Surprising.

I would think the continued Dutch presence and possible worries over Carolina and the Swedes would draw the English colonies together.

As for the population, I took the numbers from here and modified them a bit to fit the premise of the TL. And it would draw the colonies together, just not yet. A bunch of colonies just got absorbed, which means the balance of power changed quite a bit. It'll settle down in the near future.
 
Chapter Thirteen - North Sea War
Chapter Thirteen - North Sea War
1658 to 1661

Background
In 1655, Charles X Gustav of Sweden invaded and occupied the western half of Poland–Lithuania, the eastern half of which was already occupied by Russia. The rapid Swedish advance became known in Poland as the Swedish Deluge. With a Swedish victory against Poland-Lithuania in 1655, the war devastated the nation, losing land to both the Russians after their invasion and then to Sweden after their invasion. Sweden gained the Duchy of Lithuania from Poland, which turned Lithuania into a Swedish fief. The Polish king, John II Casimir Vasa, was forced to flee to Habsburgian lands in Austria. After a large portion of his regular armies had been either captured or killed in battle against the Swedes, Vasa hoped to find aid in the arms of the Habsburgs. Unfortunately, they only went as far as to hold him safe within their empire. Vasa attempted to reorganize his armies to fight back against the Russians and the Swedes, but failed to organize his armies in time. By 1656, he was forced into signing a temporary peace treaty with the Russo-Swedish alliance.

Fighting a Multiple Front War
During those two years of peace, quite a bit had changed in the political spectrum of Northern Europe. Brandenburg had become staunchly loyal allies to the Swedes, after they gifted Brandenburg the region of Prussia after their victory against the Polish. Vasa had finally been able to reorganize his forces, after being soundly beaten and humiliated by the Swedes and Russians. On June 16th, 1658, Vasa declared war and began his offensive on Sweden, in his attempts to reclaim Lithuania. However, he made little to no advance, as a majority of the Swedish forces had been prepared for the war that Poland would eventually try to wage. The Russians attempted to help, and joined the war on the side of Poland a few months later. They would only do this to keep the balance of power in check. Although the combined forces of the Russians and the Polish seemed powerful, they were stretched out much too far in this attack against Sweden. Transylvanian rebels began to rise up, as they saw an opportunity to gain new land. Poland was fighting on both sides of its country. The Russians, on the other hand, were having constant supply issues. As the lands they were invading from were being constantly raided by Swedish forces. These factors, along with an ally in Brandenburg, showed that this would be a long war between both sides.

In 1659, the Swedes would feel the pressure that came from fighting a multiple front war, as the Danes sought lands the lost to them in the Thirty Years’ War. To make matters worse for Sweden, the formerly Swedish ally of Brandenburg quickly jumped sides to the Danes, Russians, and Polish. This was because it also had a dream of gaining land from the possibly overextended Swedes. Though they felt the pressure for quite a few months, thankfully the Russians began to see the war as unnecessary. Too many large nations had joined the war, so their potential gain (which was getting smaller every day) was not worth the risks they were taking. Their dropping out of the war lifted pressure off the Swedes in the Lithuanian Front. While the war continued into 1660, the Polish called upon their allies of the Habsburgs to aid them in their war. The sheer size of the Habsburg-Polish-Brandenburg army began to push the Swedes back slowly in Lithuania. This and the damage being done by the Danes was bleeding the Swedes, and the wound was getting worse and worse. Thus, in an attempt to protect the heartland of Sweden first, Charles XI, after his father’s death, abandoned his position in Lithuania in favor of fighting the Danes. In the winter of 1660, Charles XI and his army made a daring invasion of Denmark. They marched straight to Copenhagen, and surprised King Frederick III and his armies’ with their pants down. The ships sent north to fight the Swedes were quickly boarded and taken over. Brandenburg quickly switched sides once more, jumping ship on the Danes. In the matter of a months, the Swedes had control of a large portion of the island of Amager, and were making headway into Norway.

Peace Declared
Brandenburg completely dropped out of the war in mid-1661, and agreed to give back Prussia back to Sweden (along with the northern part of the Hinterpommern), to ensure peace for the foreseeable future. By the end of 1661, the Danes were forced to surrender, and sign a peace treaty with the Swedes as well. Their treaty was much harsher, as they were forced to give the entire north part of Norway to the Swedes, along with their Indian port of Tranquebar. The Polish had officially finished their offensive in Lithuania in mid-1660, even though they were fighting well into 1661. Although they were able to capture a portion of Courland, the war was seen by both the king and his people as not worth it. Vasa eventually signed a peace treaty with the Swedes, in exchange for the portion that they were able to capture (which was most of it). Though the Swedes may have not ‘won’ on the Lithuanian front, they were undoubtedly the winner of the North Sea War. They had fended off the combined forces of the Danes, Brandenburg, Russians, Polish, and Hapsburgs in a single war, even if they all fought at different times.

King John II Casimir Vasa, winner of the Lithuanian front.
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Chapter Fourteen - Tug o' War
Chapter Fourteen - Tug o' War
Early 1663 to Late 1664

Cromwell’s Town
In the late-1640’s, a multitude of Cromwellian supporters moved south, founding multiple small towns along the coast. Most of these settlements died soon afterwards, with the surviving members moving back to their towns of origin. However, one of these towns thrived, and acted as a bastion of hope for supporters of the UP. In June of 1649, a well-known merchant named Joshua Bakersfield founded a town right near OTL New Bern, North Carolina. People flocked to the town, as it was well organized and had a well-built dock. Most of the other anti-monarchists weren’t well-versed in establishing new towns, so the city of Bakersfield became the ideal place to live for a lot of them. As time went on, the population jumped from 52 to nearly five hundred. However, the high taxes and frequent discrimination from Charles and the rest of the Carolinian government annoyed Joshua, leading him to near-insanity. It was officially an unorganized village, due to its staunch stance against the Carolinian government. After his death, he passed the ownership of the town to his son, Jacob. He was even more radical than his father, and organized some quite interesting reforms to the town. He quickly worked on making the settlement self-sufficient, and tried to get their only necessary imports from the colonies of New Netherland and New England (the UP itself had a trade embargo on the entirety of Carolina at the time). Charles was suspicious about this act, but didn’t have the power to do anything. As time went on, the small town separated itself more and more from the main government of Carolina.

On March 15th, 1663, Jacob did the most radical thing he could; he tried to start a war. The Bakersfield Constitution was a document written by the high ranking officials of the town. The document declared their neighborhood as “officially independent of Carolinian rule”, and called for “the establishment of an independent state under the autonomous rule and jurisdiction of the United Protectorate”. It basically declared independence from Carolina, which angered Charles very much. Just a few years earlier, he had made a deal with Spain over their southern border. With a newly independent nation to their south, it would ruin all of his plans. Not only that, but it would also damage his reputation with the other, much stronger nations (who he had tricked into believing Carolina was stable). He sent a small military regiment to secure Bakersfield, hopefully without causing a massive battle. It didn’t work. The residents knew this would happen, and decided to raise a small army of their own. But two hours and eight troops later, the “Massacre of Bakersfield” was over. The independent state, which had lasted for nearly eight days, was reabsorbed into Carolina. However, it did lead to a new act being passed soon afterwards. While the residents were still very much against the monarchy, they had no choice but to be subjugated to it.

Charter Act of 1664
Nearly a year later, things were turning out the exact same. There was frequent unrest in Bakersfield, which was growing in people by the day. The population was nearing nine hundred, which was nearly half the amount of residents as Charleston. It still belonged to the “Virginia Colony”, which meant that it might overtake Charleston and Jamestown for domination of the province. Speaking of the Virginia Colony, people still referred to the inner regions of Carolina as “colonies”. Charles I never had the foresight to officially abolish them, which meant that there was still individual rulers to both Virginia and Maryland, separate from King Charles II himself. He was fine with this, as they both got their membership in Parliament, and he still got to preside over the entire nation. However, the growing population of Carolina meant that it would be abnormal and strange to keep using colonial governments. The “Charter Act”, signed on October 16th, 1664, meant that Charles could create new states out of the former colonies. All colonies would keep their semi-autonomy, but would be officially renamed to provinces. The new provinces would each have a say in Parliament, but would all swear fealty to the king. The colonial governments were officially abolished (even if they were replaced with similar governments). While some provinces of Carolina considered seceding as a republic, they knew that it would result in conquest by the UP. At first, it was just Maryland and Virginia who had provincial status. However, Charles knew of the recent unrest in Bakersfield, and gave them province status as well. This mostly quelled the discomfort in the region, and gave them official permission to expand their province west and south.

A painting of Joshua Bakersfield, founder of the town of Bakersfield.
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Hm, so the Stuarts still have the opposition in their new kingdom. Still putting down the revolt establishes they can control the area.

But I expect Bakersfield has not troubled the Stuart dynasty for the last time.

Has Charles II married?
 
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