Recent content by DrakeRlugia

  1. DrakeRlugia

    Consequences of No Restoration of the French Parlements?

    I definitely agree re: Calonne, though I think his reforms came a bit too late given the terrible shape of France's finances by the mid-late 1780s. He was essentially trying to plug a cork into a leak when the whole ship is almost entirely sank. But I think his views were at least the most...
  2. DrakeRlugia

    Anno Obumbratio: A 16th Century Alternate History

    Yes, that's very true. Between two and four million people were killed throughout the entirety of the conflict between 1562-1598. I suppose it also speaks to France's resiliency and their 'excess' population that they were able to suffer such losses in the 16th century and still go on to have...
  3. DrakeRlugia

    Anno Obumbratio: A 16th Century Alternate History

    Italy was also very wealthy and economically developed before the destruction and upheavals of the Italian Wars. Much of the northern / central city states relied on the contado, or adjacent rural lands to feed them. As these cities expanded however, these lands weren't always able to meet their...
  4. DrakeRlugia

    Consequences of No Restoration of the French Parlements?

    Yes, as Constantine says, the term Parlement can be confusing. The French Parlements were legal courts (essentially provincial appellate courts). They did not have any sort of legislative power, but held judicial power over a wide range of issues, especially taxation. The big issue following...
  5. DrakeRlugia

    Anno Obumbratio: A 16th Century Alternate History

    Honestly, it was not much more libertine than OTL. Not enough to press secularization forward, IMO. Libertinism could very easily go hand in hand with zealotry (Louis XIV’s court comes to mind; the riotous early years drastically changed once Maintenon came to power). France’s OTL population...
  6. DrakeRlugia

    WI: Maria Theresa of Austria married Charles III of Spain?

    This may very well be the case—but I think there was also a need for both sides to have such an alliance at that point in time. Certainly, Charles VI was doing whatever he could to ensure there would be recognition of the Pragmatic Sanction, while Elisabeth Farnese needed imperial support for...
  7. DrakeRlugia

    France gets Burgundian Inheritance, what now?

    I'll side-step 'how' France inherits Burgundy for now, since that's a difficult question and there's a variety ways for us to get there (heiress marrying the king/future king, line dying out, ect). The big thing is that any dissolution of the House of Valois-Burgundy will give the French claims...
  8. DrakeRlugia

    WI: Maria Theresa of Austria married Charles III of Spain?

    Well, it would be distinct branches—not all under one person. The French and Spanish Bourbons did not always walk in lockstep, and especially in the period after the War of the Spanish Succession they often were in conflict (see: War of the Quadruple Alliance, failure of the match between Louis...
  9. DrakeRlugia

    WI: Maria Theresa of Austria married Charles III of Spain?

    Maria Theresa, Charles VI's heiress, was at the center of his plans of what might happen following his eventual demise. While there were plans dating back to 1703 that discussed contingency plans if the male Habsburg line was to die out: mainly granting succession rights to Joseph I's...
  10. DrakeRlugia

    What if Japan was a colonial super power before the 19th century?

    For Spain and Portugal, yes. France's most profitable colonies in the New World were not it's extensive territories in Canada and Louisiana, but rather it's Caribbean territories. By the end of the Seven Years War, France gave up New France just to retain Guadeloupe and Martinique, as it's...
  11. DrakeRlugia

    WI: rice and rubber became cultivated in the Mediterrranean and Europe starting from Roman times?

    IIRC, the Romans were aware of rice, but it was mostly a luxury import. They imported Oryza Sativa from India, and there's some proof that it was also imported from lower Syria and even Bactria. Strabo talks about rice in one of his books, as does Horace. Even in the areas where rice had spread...
  12. DrakeRlugia

    Louis XV makes more of an effort to marry his daughters off

    Indeed. Victor Amadeus II was married to Anne Marie d'Orléans. His son, Charles Emmanuel was fairly fluid in his alliances: fought alongside France in the War of the Polish Succession, supported Maria Theresa in the War of the Austrian Succession, sat out the Seven Years War. His son, Victor...
  13. DrakeRlugia

    Plausibility check- Could France & French Indochina have been disinterested in Laos, crisis with Siam, and common border with British Burma?

    IIRC, the French found out quite quickly in the 1860s via the 1866-68 Mekong expedition that the Mekong wasn't navigable and would be useless in regards to facilitating French trade with southern China. The main issue is that rather than forget it, the French had high hopes that engineering...
  14. DrakeRlugia

    The English Charlemagne: A Plantagenet-Capet TL

    This is definitely an interesting idea to ponder Nuraghe, as you discussed in the other thread. I do worry about what might happen after Edward III, though: even if he manages to succeed to such glorious heights and surpass Charlemagne and becomes a new Augustus, it is worth considering what...
  15. DrakeRlugia

    Anno Obumbratio: A 16th Century Alternate History

    She actually does get married! But much later in life. I don't wanna spoil it, so I've left it off for now. I thought people might be happy about this. You're very welcome!
Top