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CK2 Dev Diary #95: Amending Africa

Greetings!

We’ve shown you plenty of map changes already, including updates to Russia, Scandinavia, and most recently Italy and the Alps. But surely, we couldn’t do all of these wonderful updates without looking at the continent that deserves it the most, right?

So let’s have a look at Africa.

You read that right. Africa is finally getting the love and attention it deserves! Northern Africa and Mali have long needed an update. Where counties resembled squares and rectangles more than anything else. But no more!

Let’s start with the northern kingdoms. The kingdoms themselves remain the same. Only Mauretania has been renamed to Maghreb, and has along with the kingdom of Africa been placed in the Empire of Maghreb. Mainly to break down the very large Arabian Empire slightly. On the county level, every single county has been repainted in order to place them where they should be and give the borders a much more natural feeling.

01_updated_maghreb.png


02_updated_k_africa.png


All in all, the new provinces and additional holding slots will make North Africa stronger than before. But to offer additional protection against aggressive Holy Wars from the major powers of Europe, we’ve increased the number of sea zones slightly in the mediterranean. The stronger realms of central Europe will now have to first conquer their way down to the coast of Iberia, Southern Italy, or go through Mallorca or Sardinia, before they will be able to reach the shores of Africa. This should give the realms in Africa some time before the Europeans attempt to make their way onto the continent.

As for Mali. The area has about twice the number of provinces compared to what they had before. This in turn allows for more than just the lonely kingdom of Mali to exist, which has been split into the three kingdoms of Ghana, Mali and Songhay. One kingdom for each of the major powers that inhabited the area during the timeframe of the game. They’ll all still be part of the empire of Mali, which is finally no longer the only empire with a single De Jure kingdom.

03_updated_mali.png


Here is an overview of the De Jure kingdoms:

04_west_african_kingdoms.png


Updating the existing parts of the map is not the only thing we’ve done for Africa however. Kanem-Bornu and the region around lake Chad is now on the map as well! The area consists of the two kingdoms Hausaland and Kanem. These consist of three and four duchies respectively and together form the empire of Kanem-Bornu. So not only do we get new rulers and titles to play with, but it allows both east and west to move across the continent without always having to expand north and, usually, through a Muslim blob that more often than not forms in Northern Africa and Arabia. Instead, you’ll be able to cross Africa through Ghana/Mali in the west, through the Sahara and the Fezzan corridor in the center, and finally through Wadai and Abyssinia in the east.

05_kanem_bornu.png


Let’s not stop there though.

To make Africa more distinct from other regions, a second trade route has been added to the game; the Trans-Saharan Trade Route.

06_trade_route.png


It requires either Horse Lords or Jade Dragon to be unlocked and functions very much like the updated Silk Road from 2.8. There is however, a certain twist to it. The base value of the trade route is very low. Granting next to no bonuses to the counties it passes through. What you need to do in order to benefit from it, is to control certain locations along the trade route and construct unique production buildings in established trade posts. To be clear though, these are merely special buildings within the trade posts just like you would upgrade a trade post on the Silk Road. These buildings represent some of the trade goods that historically had a large impact on the trade in the region. The most important of these will be the Gold Mines.

08_gold_mine.png


There are two Gold Mines located on the map, both of them in the kingdom of Mali. The Gold Mines will allow Mali to amass great wealth. Just like they did historically. If you would prefer to do it differently and take the mines from them, conquering Africa will very much be worth the effort. Not only will Gold Mines greatly increase the value of the Trans-Saharan trade, it will also grant the owner a large bonus to the county’s income. There will also be some flavour events that can trigger for anyone owning them.

Remember that what I’ve shown here is still a work in progress and things may be subject to change. Now, let’s wrap up the dev diary with some smaller additions.

We’ve renamed the West African religion to simply “African”, as to not exclude the newly added region around lake Chad, and updated the Patron Deities accordingly. The religion will also get a new set of shields for displaying the CoAs on the map.

african_shields.jpg


I hope that you look forward to these changes and the overall improvements for Africa!
 
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Black people were in italy as early as 1300's and after that during the 1800+ and onwards black people would visit and some even stayed.
I know, probably very few groups of people of almost every ethnic group came in Italy after the centuries due to its central position and its historical significance in ancient time.
I was just answering in a superficial and approximate way in a superficial and approximate debate.
Apart from Septimius Severus, Alessandro de Medici...

nd
To be Emperor in Rome you need Roman citizenship, that mean that Septimius Severus was a Roman of berber origins born in Africa from a Roman Colony.
But I got your point.
 
So I'm an idiot but where are most African Americans from originally and is it on the (new) game map?

That is an incredibly difficult question to answer. The answer below your question—that most African Americans are from the south and east of Mali—is in the right ballpark for the traditional thinking. However, genetic studies, better historiography, etc. has helped answer that question a lot. For example, many African Americans in the Baltimore area are originally Igbo (Ibo, Ibro, or other spellings) and, hence, from what today is southeastern Nigeria. Many African Americans hail from near the regions south of Mali, such as Asante, Oyo, and Benin kingdoms whose economies rested heavily on slaving. However, these kingdoms were not selling their own subjects! As with slavery across the ages and continents, they took slaves from other ethnicities. So the slight that Africans “sold their own people” has always been rubbish.... but I digress.

Basically, it is a hard question to answer is what I am saying in my own long winded way. Another example: when the Haitian revolt began many French slave owners brought their slaves to the American South. So this resulted in a whole subgroup of African Americans who were enslaved in not one but two areas. And when the British managed to block most shipments of slaves coming across the Atlantic in the early third of the 19th century slavers instead went to the SE of Africa and began bringing Africa s who had been caught by Muslim slavery around the cape and into Atlantic world. Some of them ended up in the USA, albeit a small minority. So while most everyone assumes it was one region, this heinous business was actually quite complex.

As for how this relates to the game: if they add the coast of east Africa south of Somalia and the south part of the ‘elephant ear’ then this might encompass the areas we are talking about (depending on how far south they go). I still tend to think that Angola, Namibia, and Congo will be left off the map, but in the time period of most of the game the political units that existed in this part of Africa were generally quite small.

I hope that is helpful. If anyone wants to know more perhaps we can start a thread rather than hijack this one. I would be happy to participate.

PS- no, you’re most certainly not an idiot. The only idiots I know are either afraid to ask questions or refuse to have their ignorance challenged because they think their misconceptions are unalterable truth.
 
Mostly Southwest Africa. Largely the coastal regions between what is today Senegal to Guinea. Because the in-game map doesn't stretch to the coast, a lot of this region isn't represented in game.

That said, your best bet might be playing in the southern or western portion of the Kingdom of Mali. Of all the regions in the game, modern day African Americans would most likely be able to trace their ancestry to those regions. Likewise, if you find any regions in the new update that have Yoruba culture, those would also be good. Genetic studies have suggested that around 50% of the overall ancestry of African Americans can be traced back to the Yoruba peoples of the region, with Mande (which already exists in the game) forming a smaller proportion.

Hope that helps with what you were looking for.

Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American_history#African_origins
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_Americans#Genetics

Good information, but at the risk of being ‘that guy’ there is one minor correction that needs to be made. The areas being described aren’t southwest Africa for the most part.

Southwest Africa is the area roughly of Angola and Namibia, while the regions in the links are largely in the ‘elephant ear’ of west Africa, along the southern coast. I know it sounds like nitpicking, but the southern part of west Africa is something like 1500-2000miles away from southwest Africa due to the shape of Africa. This is a very common mistake. Otherwise, great info., thanks for sharing— I should have done that with my post.

Edit: a few small additions....
 
Comment removed.

After I wrote my comment I read further and saw that some of my concerns were dealt with. I’ll leave it at that.
 
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Good information, but at the risk of being ‘that guy’ there is one minor correction that needs to be made. The areas being described aren’t southwest Africa for the most part.

Southwest Africa is the area roughly of Angola and Namibia, while the regions in the links are largely in the ‘elephant ear’ of west Africa, along the southern coast. I know it sounds like nitpicking, but the southern part of west Africa is something like 1500-2000miles away from southwest Africa due to the shape of Africa. This is a very common mistake. Otherwise, great info., thanks for sharing— I should have done that with my post.

Huh. Right. I guess that wasn't the most accurate description. You're right, I should have said the southern part of west Africa. Thanks for the correction!
 
Good information, but at the risk of being ‘that guy’ there is one minor correction that needs to be made. The areas being described aren’t southwest Africa for the most part.

Southwest Africa is the area roughly of Angola and Namibia, while the regions in the links are largely in the ‘elephant ear’ of west Africa, along the southern coast. I know it sounds like nitpicking, but the southern part of west Africa is something like 1500-2000miles away from southwest Africa due to the shape of Africa. This is a very common mistake. Otherwise, great info., thanks for sharing— I should have done that with my post.

Edit: a few small additions....
See, I would label Angola and Namibia as "westsouth Africa" and the coast south of Mali as "southwest Africa". It is probably a good thing I'm not a cartographer.
 
Mali is in West Africa, Angola and Namibia are in Southern Africa, 'southwest Africa' etc. aren't really designations that people use due to the shape of the continent. You've got North Africa, West Africa, East Africa, Central Africa, and Southern Africa (would be called South Africa but is not for obvious reasons), that's it, not as complex as it seems.
 
What is now Namibia was known as Southwest Africa during the colonial period. (I think it was a German colony before WWI, and administered by South Africa until it was granted independence.)
 
That's true, but that was the colonial name of a country, not a regional designation of the continent (which is what I thought the discussion was about). People don't call Namibia 'Southwest Africa' anymore, and haven't done so for several decades, but you are correct. To clarify when I said 'southwest Africa' etc. aren't designations people use (to describe the continent's regions), I meant in the *present*.