- Joined
- Apr 28, 2021
Greatest Alternate History question ever asked.
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...Huh. I didn't know that Prussian came about because of the Teutonics.Languages do that all the time, but here we can blame the Germans the Teutonic Knights fought a bunch of wars and established themselves as the upper class and then made it more advantageous to speak a German than speak Prussian then the speakers of Prussian slowly switched to speaking German. A tale genuinely as old as time.
Yeah the last High Master of the Order, before the whole Reformation thing, was one Albert von Hohenzollern whose line would literally go on to reunite Germany....Huh. I didn't know that Prussian came about because of the Teutonics.
As I understand he was not really significant until the Bolshevik Revolution. People read some importance into him retroactively, but his contemporaries had no interest. Just happened that a particular wing of Russian revolutionaries that followed Marxism outmaneuvered the others and set the standard for what a revolutionary government looks like.I do have a question, what would happened to World History if Karl Marx never got interested in Politics and Economics? I do know a lot would change because his writings had quite the domino effect
To the Revolutionaries the real causes were opposition to taxation without representation, mercantilism and the violations of civil liberties (everything Britain was doing violated a sort of unofficial constitution the British had long lived under). Changing the form of taxation won't change the underlying principle. If the Colonies comply it avoids revolution since there's no British Crown violating civil liberties (note that these colonies were, as I understand, lead by their own people; I could be wrong but I think that when the Revolution broke out the legislatures just sacked their royal governors, there was a continuity of government). But if the Colonies refuse, and that's very, very likely, then you ultimately wind up with the same situation. What can Grenville do but collect the tax directly?Yeah the last High Master of the Order, before the whole Reformation thing, was one Albert von Hohenzollern whose line would literally go on to reunite Germany.
What if Grenville was more accommodating and simply told the 13 Colonies you need to raise whatever amount he was hoping to raise with the intolerable acts?
What if we had really cool Enlightenment-style limited war/war as sport of kings, but with modern technology?I don’t think then 18th century system will endure indefinitely. A lot of the military reforms for example were already in existence(if only in theory) and industrialization would lead to mass destabilization.
But if you head off the French Revolution, you head off so many things. At least for a long time.
Modern conservatism in the Burkean tradition never emerges, as a coherent response to the revolution, socialism-Babeuf and the Jacobins, and their heirs Hegel and Marx may never emerge or if they do it will be under vastly different circumstances. De Maistre and “reactionary” politics never develops coherently either.
The Enlightenment and anti monarchical sentiments remain parlor discussions by intellectuals, at least for another generation.
I don’t think there would be any reason for another big war in Europe in the 1790s, but I could be wrong. Conflict between the Russians and Ottomans may escalate again.
French interest in Egypt existed before the revolution(I believe once major French diplomat had actually explored the idea of a French conquest in the 1760s) but it probably doesn’t come to anything. Military reforms continue in the Ottoman Empire. Spain’s weakness is not revealed, and there is no reason why Spanish America should break away.
This isn’t to say something big won’t happen-a revolution might occur in Austria or even Britain. Or that many of the intellectual and political consequences of the French revolution would not still happen-if delayed and in another form.
I don’t think the 18th century order could survive mass industrialization and the discontent this would produce. The rise of the bourgeoisie as a class without the revolution may be less violent. Though in Europe-it may lead to violence as the aristocracy does not give way to bankers, merchants, and so on.
It’s honestly really a question of how much of history do you think is pre determined by larger impersonal forces(economic development, technology, etc…) and how much is based on contingency.
But like the rise of Islam, the French Revolution is one of those discontinuous junctures in history-from which everything before seems to fade into the background, and that which comes after is an open game.
Even delaying it a generation-could have massive ramifications for the outcome.
I’m curious though just on the military side of things if there would be last war of the 18th century, in the vain of the wars of secession of Spain and Austria.
That is a limited war fought over dynastic claims.