Hesperia

HESPERIA; Part Fifteen; Interlude Mauritania

HESPERIA; Part Fifteen; Interlude Mauritania


Hesperia was Founded by traders far to the south in Africa. But this wouldn't have been possible except that a large portion of the Atlantic coast along the way was already under the control of Rome. When Rome conquered Carthage in the third Punic war they completely destroyed the city. The problem was that Carthage was were it was due to being a crossroad between African & Mediterranean trade routes. In Fact Carthage was simply the great Trading Center of the Numidian kingdom of Mauritania, which extends from the Atlantic to Algeria.


The Numidian kingdom came to an end under Juba I, In 46 BC who entered the fierce civil wars among the Romans on the [wrong] side of Pompey, and was defeated by Julius Caesar. Receptive to both Carthaginian's and Hellenistic Greek customs, the Numidians had splendid palaces in the Hellenistic style, Greek philosophers to counsel them, and temples dedicated to the Phoenician god Baal Hammon, sometimes assimilated into the Greek Zeus. In Caesar's triumphal procession, resplendent booty worthy of Numidian wealth and taste is paraded through the streets of Rome, along with Juba II, infant son of the defeated king.

Augustus, who emerges victorious at Rome after a century of war, grants Juba II the client kingship of Mauritania. His domain corresponds to a portion of the former Numidian kingdom. Reared at Rome, Juba II is a man of extraordinary learning, a collector and a patron of the arts. He marries Cleopatra Selene, daughter of the great Cleopatra defeated by Augustus. Copies of Greek statues adorn his palace, and he authors several volumes in Greek on a wide range of subjects, including a history of Rome, the antiquities of various nations, and research on language and the theater.

Unfortally, Ptolemy, son of Juba II and king of Mauritania, is murdered in Rome in 42 AD. The kingdom comes to an end and is incorporated into the Roman empire. Within four years, colony settlements with garrisons of soldiers are established in Mauritanian territory. These settlements extent down the coast along the Atlas Mountains, were ever there are watering spots, at the mouths of creeks, streams, & Rivers. Along with these settlements go Defense walls, Farms, & Irrigation Projects, and of course Roads. The Great Coast Road will extent from A Rebuilt Carthage [ The City was Needed, so the Romans rebuilt it in the 40's BC.] to Tangeirs at the Pillar of Hercules,where it turned south,

By 150 A.D. Carthage and Tangeirs are thriving and populous cities. Thanks to Their fine ports and strategic location, . By the second century, They Are filled with splendid buildings of Roman design, including bath complexes overlooking the sea. Numerous other cities in the region follow the Roman model. They have streets organized on a grid plan, a forum to serve as a civic and commercial center, theaters and amphitheaters for entertainment, and temples to the Roman deities Saturn and Juno, often erected on the sites of sanctuaries dedicated to their Carthaginian counterparts Baal Hammon and Tanit.

By 300 the Great Coastal Road Reaches to the End of the Atlas Mountains, to the Town of Remus, Where it encounters the Great Sahara Desert. This is also the end of the settlements till they resume on the other side of the Desert in Hesperia.

In 429 A.D. The Vandals, a Germanic tribe, invade North Africa from Spain. Their conquests are both brutal and swift, and they occupy Carthage as their capital. Although chaos reigns in the years just after they arrive, order returns in time, and Roman customs continue. The illiterate Vandals adopt the written Latin language, maintain country villas in the Roman style, and restore baths, theaters, and churches. While several Groups of Vandals pillaged down the Coast, all the way to Remus, By the time they reached here, they were more interested in Settling down.

During this Several groups of Refugees flee to Hesperia and for a while trade is ended. Within Thirty years trade resumes, thro with the ongoing collapse of the western Empire, It never reaches the level from before the invasions.

By 500 North Africa is in the hands of Vandal rulers, adherents of a form of Christianity called Arianism. The Vandals are few in number, however, and rely on the Romanized African elite to maintain local institutions. The Western Church based in Rome remains powerful, with the Latin language dominant. Cities founded under Roman rule begin to lose vitality, Several cities in the interior up in the mountains and along the southern border are abandoned, as the urban population dwindles and civic buildings fall into disrepair. Artists continue to work in the styles current before the Vandal invasions.

In 533 The Byzantine commander Belisarius leads an army into North Africa and conquers it for Emperor Justinian within a year. An edict of 535 establishes the power of the church of Rome over the region, although disputes persist over matters of doctrine and leadership. The Byzantine's assert their rule by restoring some North African cities and even building new churches, for example, at Leptis Magna and Timgad (ancient Thamugadi). Nomadic raiders on the margins of their domain, however, present a constant threat. The Byzantine's dismantle the ruins of Interior cities near the border and reuse the stones in defensive fortresses.

Between 644 & 656 Muslim Arab armies, under the reign of the Rightly Guided Caliph cUthman ibn cAffan, launch raids into and conquer parts of North Africa. And by 670 Under the leadership of Arab warrior cUqba ibn Nafic, Muslim armies conquer an area stretching from present-day northern Tunisia to Tangier (ancient Tingis) in Morocco, establishing the Umayyad dynasty in North Africa. Ibn Nafic founds the city of Kairouan [Rebuilds] (al-Qayrawan, Tunisia). In 711 the Muslims cross over to Gibalter and into Hiberia.
In 836 The Great Mosque of Kairouan is built (with additions 862, 875, and later) by the Aghlabids (800-909), a dynasty that recognizes cAbbasid suzerainty [Eygpt]. Although this monumental mosque's architecture reflects the influence of Umayyad Damascus and cAbbasid Iraq, various elements, such as the building's T-shaped plan, are distinctly Maghribi.

To the South along the Coast the Remains of the Byzantine Armies and the Vandal Tribesmen manage to hold out . Dispute a slow motion ongoing decline.

By the early 800's century, however, caravans between North Africa and the western Sudan, and Close contacts with Islamic Spain and trans-Saharan trade bring wealth to the region. The Area still considers itself as part of the greater Roman Empire, The Population is Stableizing, and thanks to the Byzantine's in the 600's, Some of the irrigation systems still work. If it can hold against the Muslims, it may just survive.
 
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Note that the Byzantines never gave up bathing, and their cleanliness is handed down to us today in the form of Turkish Baths. Bathing does nothing to protect you from plagues, though, it just makes you smell better.

I think this is one of the best and most interesting TL I have seen here, but you're going too far with the discovery of the cause of plague in the 6th c. There's really no way for this to happen without development of the Scientific Method that developed over 1,000 years later. In any case, it doesn't really matter to your TL very much. I would agree that you are underestimating the effects of tropic diseases on Roman settlers, which might have made development of a Roman city on the continent difficult until significant interbreeding had already occurred.

One other factor that could be problemmatic, although I would think it would just adjust the origins a bit, is that the Canaries and Madeiras were well-known to the Romans and Phoenicians. One of the groups, and I can't remember which, was the source of a plant that produced purple dye that replaced the shellfish source in Palestine. The name for the Canary Islands is actually the Roman name, and comes not from the birds but "Canaris", the large dogs that were native to the isles - a Roman expedition visited B.C.

As far as anyone knows, the Cape Verde and Azores were totally uninhabited, so those are free, but note that Cape Verde is unhealthy during the rainy season and is prone to crippling doughts that would have made the population of the islands dependent on other sources of food. It seems to me though that all four groups are close enough together and sea-based enough that contact would not be lost, particularly Cape Verde and the Gambia.
 
Abdul Hadi Pasha said:
The name for the Canary Islands is actually the Roman name, and comes not from the birds but "Canaris", the large dogs that were native to the isles - a Roman expedition visited B.C.
I thought the Romans called them the Prosperity Islands...
 
Answer

They were the Prosperity Islands, but they were renamed, after Remus, the largest town on the islands. Thanx for the Climiate Info, So we will move the shipwrecks to the african coast in the vicinity of the Senagal River. and have the Cape Verde islands discovered by Fishermen, In a Grandbanks fishing spot senerio.

I wasn't thinking of Cleanlyness as a no Plague, But more in the less Childbirth Fever, slighty less sickness, better medics, leads to more population growth, quicker adaption to west africa, Mode. ?Did that make sense?

We are dealing with a Frontier socitity. The Roman republic lastest 300~400 years, The Byzanitines lastest 1000. If the Byzanitines \Rome had collasped without the Ottomans\Barbarians, was there any internal groups that would lead it back toward a Republic. Or would we get Anarky, till some one else takes over?

I'm going have to have a part dealing with the Gov't, like my Religion section,
founding to 400 ruled by Roman governor with Hesperia Council [senate].
400-700 Senate takes over -700~800 Empire, Milatary rises in power, revolt, empire contracts back to senate , Milatary continues to grow, 1050 Jihad, Milatary takes over to fight, ???? Return to cilvilain rule, but its the Nuts & bolts of the thing.

This is going to take a while [ i hate homework] Rewrite Three coming up.
meanwhile a couple of parts i had already written.
 
HESPERIA: Part sixteen; New world

HESPERIA: Part sixteen; New world

Sometime between 670~680 Hesperia discovered The Trimaran, and by 700 was starting to us them to explore along the coast. In the 790's they contacted the Porto de Rio-ans at the mouth of the Niger River, and in the 840's, established a trading post, among the Kongo tribesmen. While the first Trimarans were simply several small canoes, fastened on either side of a slightly larger one, They grew as the Hesperians learned the art of ship building, By the early 800's the center hull on some ships were reaching 150~200 feet in length. The Ships were truly becoming ocean going vessels.

In 852, a Trading Vessel traveling out to the Remus Islands, was caught in a vicious Storm and driven to the southwest. For several days the ship rode out the Storm. The captain put out a storm anchor, and while unable to maneuver clear of the storm, the ship rode easy, and wasn't really in danger. On the Third day the storm died out and the crew sighted land.

The Captain knowing the return journey would be Northeast, decided to sail north along the new coast for time before turning east. Several hours later they encountered Fresh water at the mouth of a river so wide it took close to a hour to cross. On the bank of the river there was a village, stopping to refill the water barrels, the crew noticed the natives wearing Gold Bracelets, & neck pieces [and little else]. Immediately the Captain broke out some trade goods. Placing the goods in piles, and indicating the Native jewelry. The blankets were good, the Glassware was better, but best was the Bronze arrowheads. Seeing this several Crewmen placed some iron Knives, and axes out. As the Captain, and Crew gathered up their loot, the Captain was already planning the next Voyage.
 
HESPERIA: Part seventeen; Conquest vs Settlement

HESPERIA: Part seventeen; Conquest vs Settlement

In the period 400 AD thru 850 the Roman Province had gone thru many changes, Invasions by Vandals, Byzantine's, And several attempts by the Muslim Berbers. The area was focused on Survival, Supposily part of the Roman Empire, Latin was still spoken, & Christianity [Arianism] was the religion. All that was left was the Atlantic coast, and most contact with Europe had been lost. even the name had changed Mauritania was now maghrib in the Mediterrian north, and Morocco along the Atlantic Coast. Therefore, No one in Morocco was paying attention to the Raids and Settlements made by a new group of Barbarians, across Europe, From Constantinople and Sicily to France and Brittany the call went up to Heaven.

OH Lord , from the Terror of the Norse men, Oh Lord deliver Us.

Of Course the Norse didn't look at it quite the same way, They were simply looking for a way to survive on their poor rocky farms, and if there was wealth and good land, they wanted part of it.
In 840 when Hoald Svenson, took part in a raid on Spain, He noticed the Similarities, between Loot taken From many different places in Europe, All suppose to have come form the far South. Hoald decided to cut out the Middlemen, and go straight to the Source.

In 844 Hoald Svenson set out on the Greatest Raid, made to date. Some 9,000 men in 203 ships, Left Norway headed south. A month later the fleet reached Tangeirs. Hoald looked at the defensive walls built by the Romans, rebuilt by the Byzantine's, and repaired by Ibn Nafic. Dispute the feelings of his self & his followers Hoald decided to trade for supplies. This wasn't the goal of the raid, and Hoald wanted to save his strength. So resupplied, Hoald continued south.

It was now that Hoald ran into a problem he had never expected. When the Romans had sailed this way that had set up their camps one day sailing apart, and Hoald ships sailed at the same speed. As such every day there was a new town, some welcomed, Some traded, Some fought, But every day there was a New Green Fruitful Town. And most of Hoald's men were young men, interested in New fertile fields, without a large population to stop them. By the time Hoald reached the Town of Remus, at the edge of the Sahara, he had less than 50 ships, & 1,500 Men.

Three days south of Remus, Sailing along miles of miles of sand dunes, He was down to Twenty ships, At this point Hoald admitted defeat, and turned back north. Back in the Town of Remus, Hoald set up Court. Declaring him self {King of Svezia Nova}. He would spent the rest of his life, encouraging others from Norseland to move to his new Kingdom, and trying to get the men who had sworn to follow him, to Accept his Kingship.
 
DominusNovus said:
I thought the Romans called them the Prosperity Islands...

Note that places are frequently called more than one thing. Rest assured, the Canaris Islands were named by the Romans after the large dogs there; there are multiple sources to confirm that.

The capital of the Ottoman Empire was called interchangeably by the Ottomans Konstantiniyye, Istanbul, Islambol, Dersaadet, and Deraliye.
 
The south most city in my Morrocco. Where the Atlas mountians meet the Sahara. About 800 Miles south of Tangeirs and 800 miles Desert miles north of Roma de Sud
 
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