Are we only defining miracle relative to our timeline or could you make the map the alternate history of an alternate history where a country that didn't do well in that timeline does better in this map of an alternate version of that timeline.
Basically I'm wondering how tied to OTL this is.
Richard the Lionheart often fought pretty recklessly throughout the Third Crusade; let's just say he pushes his luck too far and he gets killed at the Battle of Jaffa where he seems to have been most at risk.
With Richard out of the way and without his negotiations and the ensuing truce is the...
In regards to the question of a kingdom, I'm going to guess that there won't be a chance of the Jacobite pretender being restored/being a choice on a referendum since he is German?
EDIT: Nevermind, I missed the above post.
But if Peter's sect is confined to the Jews there is only so much it can grow. Eventually, it will become irrelevant as Paul's church gains more and more gentile adherents.
I like crosstime idea, but in regards to Texas, it could still be part of the CSA yet still field its own team (I suppose it would be somewhat like the Scotland and England situation).
Which is pretty much what happened as after the initial Roman sea victories and the losing the fleet to a storm after the African invasion, Polybius does not mention corvi any more.
By the time of Drepana, the Carthaginians had been pushed back to a small foothold around Lilybaeum and had already decided to refuse to engage the Romans in open battle on land anyway after the disaster at Agrigentum. Rome can and did build a new fleet, and what can the Carthaginian fleet...
Well there were the two overtures for an Anglo-German Alliance by Chamberlain. Those would probably be a good starting point to work from to create this scenario.
Again very interesting, although I can't get a good sense of how large the Western Union is. In regards to the Confederacy, did it just take Arizona and New Mexico, or did Texas also leave the Confederacy?