This AAR uses EU3:NA v2.1 and later moved to v2.2.
Mod: MEIOU:NA v1.0 + some additions (I put the national idea's and the westernisation event from the Temujins' Ambition minimod for EGA 8 into MEIOU and eliminated any Luck factors except the extraordinary leaders and monarchs for 'Lucky' countries)
House Rules:
-No force vassalization of nations consisting of more then 5 provinces unless I have reached 99% Warscore AND the capital.
-No using the trick with the loans the AI can't pay back to get CB's.
It will be played with the following settings:
In times long gone, a famous man died at the Battle of Lechveld fighting the barbarian Magyars. Conrad the Red, ruler of the lands along the Rhine from Speyer along Worms and further north was the great grandfather of Conrad the Second, King of Germany from 1024 and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and King of Italy from 1027 to his death in 1039. Three others of the same line became Holy Roman Emperor.
Although the threads wear thin, the Counts of Rheinland-Pfalz, rulers of Mainz, Worms and Oberfranken trace their lineage back to these important men.
On December 13th 1476 a young man, Philipp der Edelmütige became the new Count. He was a strong man, with a strong will, but most of all, he was rather power hungry, not satisfied to just keep to the lands he had inherited from his father. Thus, his name wasn't really chosen well, was it? It wasn't the sort of generosity shown between two rulers though, rather generosity towards his people, whom he would count upon when he would fight the wars he planned.
This is what he started out with:
The Pfalz was a region where the power was decentralized, divided between the Counts, lower nobility and wealthy merchants living in the cities along the Rhine. Fed up with seeing how the lower nobility tried to steal power away from the rightful rulers, Philipp favored the merchants and went with their views on Free Trade.
A man dreaming of gaining power in the Empire, he would need soldiers, not merchants, to do the fighting. Thus he set out a plan to gain better troops and possibly get an edge over his enemies, or at least keep up with them.
Mod: MEIOU:NA v1.0 + some additions (I put the national idea's and the westernisation event from the Temujins' Ambition minimod for EGA 8 into MEIOU and eliminated any Luck factors except the extraordinary leaders and monarchs for 'Lucky' countries)
House Rules:
-No force vassalization of nations consisting of more then 5 provinces unless I have reached 99% Warscore AND the capital.
-No using the trick with the loans the AI can't pay back to get CB's.
It will be played with the following settings:
In times long gone, a famous man died at the Battle of Lechveld fighting the barbarian Magyars. Conrad the Red, ruler of the lands along the Rhine from Speyer along Worms and further north was the great grandfather of Conrad the Second, King of Germany from 1024 and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and King of Italy from 1027 to his death in 1039. Three others of the same line became Holy Roman Emperor.
Although the threads wear thin, the Counts of Rheinland-Pfalz, rulers of Mainz, Worms and Oberfranken trace their lineage back to these important men.
On December 13th 1476 a young man, Philipp der Edelmütige became the new Count. He was a strong man, with a strong will, but most of all, he was rather power hungry, not satisfied to just keep to the lands he had inherited from his father. Thus, his name wasn't really chosen well, was it? It wasn't the sort of generosity shown between two rulers though, rather generosity towards his people, whom he would count upon when he would fight the wars he planned.
This is what he started out with:
The Pfalz was a region where the power was decentralized, divided between the Counts, lower nobility and wealthy merchants living in the cities along the Rhine. Fed up with seeing how the lower nobility tried to steal power away from the rightful rulers, Philipp favored the merchants and went with their views on Free Trade.
A man dreaming of gaining power in the Empire, he would need soldiers, not merchants, to do the fighting. Thus he set out a plan to gain better troops and possibly get an edge over his enemies, or at least keep up with them.
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