Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Welcome to Alterra, the Devious Tyrant Free-Form RP. We hope you enjoy your visit.


You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free.


Join our community!


If you're already a member please log in to your account to access all of our features:

Username:   Password:
Add Reply
Abridged History of the Commonwealth
Topic Started: Apr 21 2010, 02:07 PM (568 Views)
Manuel
Member Avatar

OOC: This thread will be an OOC history. The Integralist regime presents the history in a slightly different way (which will be noted), but this thread will simply record what happened without that bias.

Table of Contents:

Discovery and the Colonial Commonwealth (1033-1796)
War for Australmarian Sovereignty (1791-1799)
War of Saltusian Independence (1800-1804)
The Planter's Commonwealth (1804-1920)
The Integralist Regime (1920-present day)
Edited by Manuel, May 5 2010, 06:24 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Manuel
Member Avatar

Discovery and the Colonial Commonwealth

Innse Chait was discovered by Manxman Kewin Mac Eoin in 1033, who claimed the North Islands for the fledgling Tarkkan Empire. Mac Eoin, a devout Catholic, was given permission to establish a colony on the island by the Royal family in 1034, which would become the city of Manxcaester. The colony adopted a Catholic charter, and minority Manx Catholics in Tarkka were offered opportunity to emigrate to the colony. By 1070, the colony, known now as Innse Chait and encompassing the island of New Sketis was relatively stable, and was producing self-sufficient levels of food. It had a population of about 600 at the start of 1100, and would grow to over 1500 by the end of the century.

Manxcaester was doing worse in 1200, and many colonists had begun to emigrate. The population decline was further reinforced by an especially wet season that ruined many of the colony's crops. Famine and disease brought on by the humidity helped wipe out nearly half the colony, until it dwindled to about 350 residents around 1210. At this time, Tarkka began to expand its colonial holdings to the mainland, which was now known as Saltusland. An infusion of Pictish settlers established Ealdcaester in 1245, on the mainland, under the Pictman Lord Drest Gurthinmoch. The associated trade with Ealdcaester was a boon to Manxcaester, at the time barely hanging on, and the population grew to several thousand in both locations.

The success of these two colonies led to the establishment of the Viceroyalty of Australmaria in 1302. Many Irish began to emigrate to lands beyond the Viceroyalty in an effort to escape persecution at this time. Piracy was a great concern over the Irish Free States that often conflicted with the Viceroyalty. They would eventually be incorporated into the entity, however, through military conquest. In 1603, the Viceroyalty was transformed into a corporate entity with benefits from the Tarkkan crown. It was under their governorship that the name Saltusland was established, and made a Commonwealth. Similar colonies were established in Muiricea, and the colonial era began in earnest. At this time, the population in Saltusland exploded. In 1613, the Commonwealth had a total of 130,000 residents. By 1654, the number would be over two million. Saltusland attracted Manx and Gaelic Catholics primarily, which became the core of the colonist ethnicity.

Saltusland developed very well for the next century, becoming incredibly wealthy and a major mercantile center. As it developed, many of the Catholic Manx wondered exactly why they were controlled by Protestant Tarkkans and forced to affiliate and respect the rights of pagans. Revolutionary sentiment began to stir in the colonies, and by the 1750s, become a serious problem for the Company.
Edited by Manuel, May 5 2010, 02:48 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Manuel
Member Avatar

War of Australmarian Sovereignty

coming soon
Edited by Manuel, May 5 2010, 06:22 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Manuel
Member Avatar

War of Saltusian Independence

As the War of Australmarian Sovereignty neared completion, and victory a distinct possibility, a National Assembly on the Constitution of the new nation was called into order at the “city of Brotherhood”, Bailebráithreacha, in the State of the Hibernia Plantations to decide the fundamental principles of the new independent state. While united by a common desire for independence from the Tarkkan Empire, divisions began to emerge almost immediately between the Saltusian Commonwealth in the north, and the southern Muiricean colonies.

First was the aboriginal question - to win their support, the Muiricean leadership had, despite Saltusian protests, promised various aboriginal groups the right to autonomy within their historic lands. Although the Maya peoples occupied lands given by the Australmarian Trading Company to the Commonwealth of Saltusland, they too participated in the war in exchange for the creation of a Maya state in southwest Saltusland. While the Saltusians disliked the idea of any aboriginal states, they were willing to tolerate Creek, Cherokee, and other indigenous nations outside of the Commonwealth's boundaries, but were steadfast in their refusal to grant any of the land legally Saltusian to the Mayans. At the time, as many Maya scholars would point out, the region in question had a population of less than two hundred white settlers and several hundred thousand Mayans. However, the Saltusian plantation owners saw the lands as a frontier, and the Maya, which they had enslaved for centuries already, as a form of on-location labor. The recognition of the rights of the Maya as a sovereign peoples threatened the institutional bondage they were subject too, even if only explicitly. The Muiriceans at the time avoided talks of abolition.

A second major issue that arose was in the establishment of a state religion. The Muiricean delegates, thinking of the Australmarian state in cosmopolitan terms, were decidedly more secular, and wanted to preserve the rights of all religious. The Saltusians, however, rejected that argument. Although they were willing to tolerate some broad freedom of religion, they wanted both the right to enforce Catholicism within their borders and for the new government to be Christian. Indeed, they were angry that paganism, the religion of the poor man, was being so vehemently defended by the majority Christian Assembly. The Saltusian delegation argued against the aboriginal and Muiricean delegates that a common faith was necessary to unite such a diverse nation. The argument was ultimately rejected, and a vote passed to ensure that the government of Australmaria would be secular.

Finally, a third major issue arose in form of government. The Saltusian political elite at the time favored a highly unitary republican state. They were staunch moralists, who felt it was the duty of government to maintain both civic and moral virtue. To this end, they believed in the creation of a centralized, powerful government with far-reaching powers - a belief rejected by the Muiricean and aboriginal populations in favor a more federal structure. Again defeated, the Saltusians began to wonder what government they would be forced to live under, and how it could even possibly claim to represent them when all their beliefs were being systematically crushed by what some regarded as a tyranny of majority. While the Saltusians, however, did manage to secure the right to the establishment of provincial religions by local governments, and the right to operate local governments as they pleased, it did little to quell the political disassociation that was being felt with the Muiriceans. Many politicians and philosophers in Saltusland began to openly debate the merits of union at all.

When the war ended in early 1799, the Assembly met again. At this time, a formal method of governance and administrative regions was necessary. It became clear that the Maya, with the support of almost every white Muiricean, and every aboriginal delegate would be given their own state carved out of Saltusland. Combined with the secular nature of the new government, and voices beginning to creep up about civil equality regardless of race convinced the Saltusian delegates and the plantation owners back in Saltusland that the new government would simply not represent their interests. By Christmas of 1799, the Saltusian government had made preparations to ensure that its interest would be defended, through independence.

In January of 1800, the Saltusian government moved the majority of their colonial militia to the border with the rest of Muiricea, along the Majestic River. Led by General Aedan Kelly, Liberator of Pitterweem, the militia prepared for a quick invasion and capture New Ulster. Doing so, the Saltusian government reasoned, would allow them to unilaterally declare independence with little issue. A strong show of force would demoralize the much larger Australmarian Army, under the control of the Muiricean government. In the few weeks prior to the invasion, military officials in Muiricea would note what appeared to be an epidemic of desertions by the few Manx and Picts who fought in their units, but believed the reason for the desertion was due to the political disputes in the Assembly, and a desire, after years of war, to return to their homes.

At the same time, Fleet Admiral Maccul Casmyn had been ordered by the Saltusian government to lead the Australmarian Navy, populated almost universally by Saltusians towards the harbor at Iverness, and await instructions. He was ordered to, without gathering unwanted attention; separate the ships loyal to Saltusland from those who might fight for Muiricea prior to the movement. This limited his options, as he would be unable to revoke positions or commandeer vessels. He did speed up the retirement of a few individuals, and promoted Saltusians, but was largely forced to divide his fleet in two. Francis Eremon O'Kelagha, famed Australmarian privateer, was ordered by the Admiral to travel to Baileminn to help guard the southern border.

Finally, Captain Graham Mylchreest was commanded to take a special team, known as the Rangers, into the Saltusian Australmarian jungle, and eliminate bridges and other roads as effectively as possible, to minimize the capacity of the Muiricean-loyal Mayans to attack white settlements on the northern coast. He established a fort called Hleohrof, today a small Saltusian town, in the heart of the Mayan territory.

With the bulk of potentially unloyal individuals now gone, and the National Assembly effectively stalled, the Saltusian government ordered the attack on January 12th, 1800. The attack came as a complete surprise to the Muiricean governments, and Aedan Kelly quickly overran the local militias. By March, he had de facto control of the province.

At Bailebráithreacha, the Saltusian delegates were quickly placed under house arrest, and interrogated for intelligence. They knew little, having been only told that independence was being considered, but otherwise uninformed of matters. Their only orders had been to stall the Assembly as long as possible.

Once occupied and residual insurgencies largely taken care of, Kelly began fortifying his position from the inevitable counter-attack. By March his fortifications were largely complete, and were focused on Aztitlan and Aontroim, which became his command center. Advance forces established fortifications ahead of the two towns, where the front would eventually exist.

While Kelly began to invade New Ulster in early January, Admiral Casmyn had begun the movement of his ships into Muiricean waters. His fleet, composed primarily of armed merchant vessels reinforced with heavier ships, travelled quickly to every international port in Muiricea. The Saltusian navy dwarfed the ships dispatched earlier under the command of O’Kelagha, who established the Muiricean Navy, and a highly developed and complex system of patrols helped the Saltusians enforce a total import blockade on Muiricea. While Muiricea was largely self-sufficient in terms of food production, the lack of refined goods helped hurt the morale of the civilian population. It was hoped that the population, unable to receive goods such as textiles or farming equipment, would pressure their government to accept Saltusian terms of peace. Whether or not this strategy had the desired effect is controversial, but the blockade did decimate the Muiricean economy for its duration.

Around Hleohrof, Captain Mylchreest was performing his mission with excellence. The local Mayan forces were disorganized. Most warriors by profession had traveled to the coast to serve with the Australmarian Army, and the small group that remained was not only disorganized, but composed of older men than desirable. Cut off from Muiricean support, the Mayan guerillas were ineffective in displacing Mylchreest from Hleohrof, and never reached the main front in the east.

By August of 1802, the war in New Ulster had moved little. Although outnumbered as much as six to one by a combined Irish and aboriginal Muiricean Army, Kelly’s men occupied superior positions, and strong supply lines ensured a steady stream of new volunteers, ammunition, food, and other vital equipment. The war was effectively a stalemate, as Muiricean challenges were rebuked without fail. In the Muiricean homeland, war weariness was beginning to rise, as battles against Kelly often ended with more than twice as many casualties sustained by Kelly. Superior numbers, however, promised to eventually overrun Kelly’s position, unless war ended quickly.

The war continued slowly until the Battle of Monacuan in December of 1802. O’Kelagha was a keen naval commander, and had engaged blockade forces under Casmyn for the last year incurring few casualties. At Monacuan, on the 13th of December, O’Kelagha achieved a major victory against Saltusian naval forces. Having punched a hole through the blockade, O’Kelagha, took advantage of the ability to ferry in thousands of Muiricean troops and supplies. Monacuan was a major harbor in New Ulster, and the center of the Saltusian occupation. By December 18th, the city was firmly under Muiricean control – the turning point of the war. The hole in the blockade lasted little, however. On December 19th, O’Kelagha had taken half his fleet to ferry in additional supplies for the troops. Casmyn arrived only hours after O’Kelagha had left, and won an easy victory against the divided fleet, restoring the blockade. His fleet now torn in half, with one half trapped in a harbor they could not escape, any attempt at reestablishing control of the harbor of Monacuan seemed impossible. On December 21st, the remainder the navy within the harbor ran out of supplies and was forced to surrender. Muiricean round forces, however, made it impossible for Casmyn to move additional troops in through artillery, and the city proper remained under their control.

Forces in Monacuan were able to attack Saltusian supply lines, hurting the ability of Kelly to continue to hold his position. One field fortification fell after another, starting in February, and Kelly was forced to retreat. Major defeats at Aztitlan and Aontroim reduced Kelly’s fighting force by one quarter, then another. By spring, Kelly had been forced back to the Majestic River, and the Muiricean Army began to prepare to cross.

May of 1803 was one of the wettest months on in memory for Australmaria. Heavy monsoons battered the coast, turning the region into little more than mud. The Majestic River flooded considerably, drowning several villages. Unwilling to let the Saltusians use the rain as a break to prepare their defenses, the Muiricean military attempted to press onward, attacking Kelly’s beachhead on the Muiricean side of the Majestic. Kelly’s 7,000 strong army was destroyed in that battle, taking over 4,000 casualties by the end of June. Kelly surrendered to Muiricea on June 16th, 1803, and was imprisoned for treason. The rest of the men were stripped of their weapons, and marched to a field some three hundred kilometers away to wait out the end of the war. Kelly would not survive, dying in prison of pneumonia he caught in May.

Despite these setbacks, Casmyn continued to enforce the blockade around Muiricean ports, and despite efforts by O’Kelagha, never again was the blockade effectively breached.

The heavy rains seemed to die down at the end of June, and the military began making efforts to cross. With the rains had come a torrent of disease, which battered the Muiricean Army. Pneumonia would claim hundreds of lives in June alone, and by the time the Muiricean Army was ready to ferry the river in July, the rains began once again. By the time the rains would recede in early September, thousands of Muiriceans had died, and less than 20% of the force was fit for combat. An artillery barrage across the river by Saltusian forces forced the Muiriceans to abandon camp. When October of 1803 finally emerged, it was clear that a Muiricean crossing would be impossible for until at least next year, assuming the force could recuperate enough of its lost strength. Both the Saltusians and Muiriceans established fortifications on either side of the river, and prepared for the other to make a move.

It became quickly obvious that any military victory would be all but impossible, after six months of waiting. The Saltusians had fortified the Majestic extensively, making any crossing suicidal. Without breaking the blockade, it would be impossible to land troops in Saltusland. Despite attempts by O’Kelagha to assault Saltusian shipping, the Saltusian economy remained relatively robust, and was out producing Muiricea by several factors of ten. A conscription law passed by Saltusland the year previous had also been widely successful, closing the huge number disparity between the two states. Muiricean generals realized that victory was all but impossible, and pressured their government to sue for peace. On the 20th of April, in 1804, the former Saltusian delegates under house arrest in Bailebráithreacha were permitted contact with their government for the first time in years. This contact was done to establish terms of peace.

The Treaty of Bailebráithreacha would recognize Saltusland and Muiricea as two sovereign states, with full rights of self-governance. Saltusland’s borders were to be those established by the Australmarian Trading Company – no Mayan state would emerge. Prisoners would be exchanged, and the treaty aimed to preserve the newfound peace eternally. Embassies, in an attempt to normalize relations, were to be established between the two states. The blockade would end, and trade would resume. The Saltusian state would pay some minimal reparations as an apology to the Muiricean people for the hardships they had suffered under the blockade.

Back home, Casmyn was a war hero. He was credited with forcing the defeat of Muiricea, and became legendary. He would head the new government of an independent Saltusland, and establish the first independent institutions in the country. Captain Mylchreest was made a general, and the Rangers forever immortalized as a component of the national armed forces that would become recognized for their excellence in special operations. This remains fact today.
[/b]
Edited by Manuel, May 5 2010, 08:35 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Manuel
Member Avatar

Planter's Commonwealth

In 1804, Saltusland had just established its independence from both Tarkka and Muiricea. Admiral Maccul Casmyn was chosen almost immediately to become head of state of the new Commonwealth, and was given near dictatorial power to unilaterally establish the country. He adopted the Constitution of 1804 after entering office, which was written by his brother, Kilian. The constitution established a legislature that gave a seat to established families from Innse Chait and New Sketis. The sixteen man legislature was headed by the First Citizen, at the time this being Camyn, but had little real power. The legislature was primarily concerned the needs of the large families that composed it, but it never became too despotic, taking care to meet the minimum needs of the poorer individuals on which the state depended.

The First Commonwealth placed a great deal of power in the hands of local magistrates. Liberal capitalism was embraced by the commonwealth though the planters often practiced strategic trade, particularly concerning their own products, with the rest of the world. At this time, Saltusland overshadowed Muiricea in both economic and military importance, and became the de-facto regional power. This responsibility was embraced by the First Commonwealth, which devoted a great deal of its public resources in the construction and maintenance of an advanced navy, and many early Saltusian ships were equal or superior to Old World designs.

The Commonwealth greatly ignored the rights of the Mayan people, and openly instituted an apartheid system which would last until 1910. Mayans had no property rights, and large plantations were established in historical Mayan lands. Mayan nationalism rose greatly during the latter half of the 19th century, clinging to heroes like Pacal Ah Ahaul, forcing the central government to begin the creation of an extensive land-based military. Railways were developed to connect the areas under Saltusian control at this time, to make them easier to travel between and thus defend, and the Mayan cities in the center and west of the country enjoyed almost de-facto independence from 1820-1900.

In 1887, General Kilian Ó Cairre, uncle of the later Integralist president, led the First Army Corps against the Mayans, winning major victories and making great inroads into the jungle. His style of fighting was wholly unique, and combined many elements of the Mayans own strategic doctrine with modern weaponry. He was hailed as a hero, though would later be arrested in 1899 for dissent after demanding an end to apartheid as a permanent solution to the "Mayan problem". This arrest would greatly influence his nephew, Alban Ó Cairre, at the time only 11.

In 1900, Tomas Lùtair was chosen to head the Commonwealth under a platform of limited reform. He promised to help quell the growing civil dissent against the oligarchic government through limited land reform on the mainland and a phased ending of apartheid. Apartheid ended officially in 1910, and the Mayans were embraced as residents of Saltusland, though citizenship remained beyond the realm of possibility. The end of apartheid, while a de jure reality, however, did little to stop the exploitation of the Mayan people by the large plantations, and ultimately came too little too late. In addition, a growing mestizo and white middle class were becoming frustrated with what they viewed as an ineffective form of government designed only to protect the rights of plantation owners. The Church also began to shy away from its support of the Commonwealth, demanding equal rights for all Catholics regardless of ethnicity, and with that support withdrawn in 1914, the Lùtair government lost its last vestiges of popular support. Alban would take advantage of all this dissent in 1914, founding the Integralist Party in Abernethy.

The unpopular entrance of Lùtair in the Great War only continued to undermine his legitimacy, although he pardoned popular hero Kilian Ó Cairre, who would return to lead the armies of Saltusland alongside Muiricea.
Edited by Manuel, May 5 2010, 06:23 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Manuel
Member Avatar

The Integralist Regime

Alban Ó Cairre was, in 1914, a recent graduate of the Abernethy College of Law, and the favorite nephew of a popular general. His status allowed him great freedom to study the ideologies of the world, and he felt himself drawn towards the radical right-wing ideologies that were beginning to emerge in the world. This led to the establishment of the Integralist Party with a group of twelve friends in 1914, though it remained little more than an unofficial club until the publication of its declaration in 1918. Alban Ó Cairre joined a seminary in 1915, and enjoyed it greatly, though eventually left to pursue politics. In the seminary, he met many mestizo and poor whites, and developed a charisma that would serve him well later. His association with the lower classes also gave him a populist heart, and he became resolute in his determination to change Saltusland.

In 1918, he published his declaration. It was firmly a declaration rooted in the radical right, and enjoyed the firm support of many poor white Gaelic citizens in Saltusland. The upper class continued at this time to act against Ó Cairre, and he was imprisoned in 1918 for seditious and treasonous acts. Riots in Abernethy lasted four days, though he wouldn't be released for several months/

During his imprisonment, the People's Front also published their manifestos, and their calls for Mayan and mestizo equality made them instantly popular among the non-white segments of the population. Their communistic inclinations won them many friends among impoverished whites as well, though Integralist history textbooks minimize the popularity of the communists to the Mayan people.

Ó Cairre was released in April of 1918, and immediately took a hardline against the communists. He established the Greenshirts, a paramilitary organization to combat communist militias, and through his opposition to the communist parties started to make inroads with the upper classes, who had begun to realize that revolution was all but inevitable at this point. In 1919, Ó Cairre was invited by President Tomas Lutair to become his Minister of Law, but refused. Because of this, he was imprisoned for three more months, from March to June.

Upon his release, Ó Cairre mobilized his Greenshirts to march from Abernethy to Ealdcaester. The march was highly publicized, and was one of the first events covered by radio coverage in Saltusland. Ó Cairre invited dozens of journalists to join him on his march, and the coverage was relatively favorable. In an opinion poll in 1919, he was the favored candidate of the people to lead the country, leading by the vote over the communists by about 5%, and over Lutair by several dozen percentage points, whose approval ratings had hit the single digits.

Once in Ealdcaester, the Greenshirts engaged in a policy of property destruction of leading communists and Lutair's supporters. Integralist textbooks do not mention this. Several dozen communists were outright publicly killed, including head of the People's Front, Ah Kin Xoc. Severe attacks on communist newspapers and authors greatly handicapped the movement. To this day, it has not recovered, though many former supporters have embraced the Socialist Party.

In December of 1919, the Greenshirts burned down the Legislature's House, killing a dozen representatives. Lutair began a major effort to combat Ó Cairre, but Kilian Ó Cairre, uncle of Alban, became a public supporter of Integralism in February of 1920, and led the army against Lutair. By March of 1920, Lutair's control was limited to the North Islands, while Alban Ó Cairre was the de facto leader of the mainland.

In April, terrorist attacks by a component of the Greenshirts called the 'Fifth Column' undermined Lutair's control of the North Islands. At the end of April, aided by his uncle and friends in the Navy, Alban landed on Manxcaester, and captured the city without firing a shot. Lutair's influence was now limited to only to New Sketis, and Alban renewed calls for him to stand down. The planters at this time withdrew support from Lutair, and elected Ó Cairre as the new President. He declined, demanding dictatorial powers, and a permanent dissolution of the legislature. In May of 1920, with Alban preparing for a full invasion of New Sketis, they acquiesced. Ó Cairre was now "Dictator of the Commonwealth".

Saltusian Integralism as an ideology adheres strongly to a sense of civic nationalism. It officially holds that Saltusland is one State comprised of two Nations united by a common Faith. Catholicism is a strong, and central, tenement of the ideology. It also encourages civic responsibility, through voting for the legislature. Voting in national elections is restricted to those who own property, as Alban believes that only those who are not dependent on another economically can vote impartially. This effectively shuts out many Mayans, who do not own their own property, but live as sharecroppers on large plantations. Local elections and government, however, do not share this restriction. Saltusian Integralism is a highly local ideology, and the central government relies on strong local governments to provide education and law enforcement, as well as represent the issues of their communities when called too by the central government. Unions are also a strong part of the ideology, and union membership is protected under many laws. Approximately 70% of the workforce, including Mayan sharecroppers, have union membership, and trade unions often play crucial roles in cooperation with local governments in providing and distributing social pensions. Union dues often replace the low income tax in many communities. The central government earns money through import and export taxes, as well as an extensive land value tax. It does not collect an income tax, reserving that right for local communities and unions. As a result, however, the national pension is very minimal. Several rights are protected by the Declaration of Rights [see my Factbook]. Finally, Saltusian Integralism is inwardly focused, and relatively pacifistic, compared to other ideologies of the radical right, though this may be more the result of Ó Cairre's personal persuasions than an actual component of the movement, as many of his cabinet and party are much more militarily-minded, and the relative neglect of the Armed Forces in the last twenty years is a highly controversial matter.

The Integralists have been primarily concerned with expanding energy and transportation infrastructure in the country. A new rail line cut travel time from Iverness to Hleohrof in half, by building a transcontinental railway. Uaxatan and other Mayan cities were connected to paved roads for the first time in 1923, and received electricity for the first time soon after. An extensive telecommunications program that lasted from 1921-1924 made the entire country connected to radio, and made every village with over 500 residents connected to a national telegraph network. A pension was instituted in 1926. The ferries between the islands and mainland were modernized and expanded, now making sixteen trips a day over three when Alban took office. The timber industry also expanded by several hundred percentage points under Alban.

The military, however, was neglected. One exception was the Air Force, which was created in 1933 in a joint-partnership with Idus. It is now, however, outdated.

Alban's foreign policy is very pro-Catholic. Saltusland enjoys healthy relations with the Holy Idusian Kingdom, and supported the Teutonists in Vexia. The government is also friendly with Muiricea.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
DealsFor.me - The best sales, coupons, and discounts for you
« Previous Topic · Saltusland · Next Topic »
Add Reply