England (Napoleon's World)

The Republic of England is a European country located on the island of Great Britain, across the English Channel from France. It's capital is London, and other major cities include Birmingham, Liverpool, Plymouth, Manchester and York. The country has a turbulent history since its humiliating defeat in the Imperial War, but since the mid-1960's has experienced peace, partially thanks to support from the United States of America. The country's primary language is English, and the dominant religion is the Anglican Church, although Roman Catholicism has always been strong, and recently Islam and Hindu are growing faiths in the public sphere.

Collapse of British Empire
Following Napoleon's successful Forty Days Campaign and the Surrender at York, the British Empire was immediately disbanded of all territories. The Treaty of Strasbourg partitioned the British Isles into three kingdoms; England, Scotland and Ireland, with Napoleon making sure the Irish knew that his support was fully thrown behind their fledgling state against English aggression. With the collapse of their once-mighty Empire and the devastation of their homeland, England became embroiled in years of internal conflict. The 1820's were a time of struggle and strife for the British, who found themselves with no allies following the Trans-Atlantic Alliance of France and the United States refusing to assist the dying nation.

Victorian Era and Position as Counterweight
The ascension of Queen Victoria to the throne in 1834 allowed for the English regain hope towards the reaffirmation of their power as a country. The Industrial Revolution radically changed the English economy and for a time, England was a competitor against the powerful Rhine-based Imperial economy. With semi-colonial holdings in the Caribbean and on the East African coast, and in Australia, England was the only European power moderately competitive with the expansive French Empire overseas. As the 19th century came to a close, however, Imperial power once more increased and the Japanese and Chinese flexed their imperialistic muscles in the Asian sphere, causing a decline in English colonial weight and in the English economy.

Revolution of 1909 and Socialist Revolution
Queen Victoria died in 1900, giving rise to Edward VII as the King of England. The English economy was in rapid decline, however, which caused a deepening unpopularity for the traditional nobility. The London Riot of 1903 was put down violently by King Edward, only further building his discontent. In 1909, the storming of Buckingham Palace by an angry mob started off the Revolution of 1909, sometimes referred to as the English Revolution. Edward fled the country first to Ireland, then in secret to America, before finally arriving in Australia and founding the Kingdom of Oceania.

Back in England, the fledgling Republic of England only drove the nation deeper into decline. The French Empire backed a cabal of industrialists who effectively bought the periodical general elections in Parliament, and every few months a new government came to power.

Finally, the English populace had had enough, especially from the constant violence in the streets from poor street gangs. As the dismal European economy in the late 1910's and early 1920's only grew darker, the Socialists - feeding off the teachings of Karl Marx, a German-Imperial philosopher - staged a coup in London in 1920 to take control of Parliament. The emergent Socialist leader was David Barham, who called for workers reform in the factories of England.

The Socialist Revolution lasted all the way into 1922, when Barham's government finally ended the instability and began safely instituting their Five-Year Goals for the fledgling English economy.

Socialist Rule and Irish War
Barham found an unlikely ally in Albert Bonaparte of France, who came to power following the Iron Revolution in France in 1925. With two strong, authoritarian powers across the English Channel from each other, the late 20's and early 30's were marked by economic success for both parties. The English economy was at its strongest in fifty years under Barham, who was suddenly and unceremoniously removed from power in 1933 by Francis Cumberland, a right-wing member of the Party.

Cumberland was not as cordial with the French; he saw Imperial influence in the British Isles as destructive to the independence and self-sufficiency of the Republic. Albert's son Sebastien, recognizing this tenacity, immediately advised the Foreign Ministry to back off of the English and disengage friendly relations.

In 1934, the clouds of war floated over Europe for the first time in decades. The world watched as the resurgent English Army postured itself for battle with the French, who were equally eager to flew their overhauled and modernized military muscles.

England invaded the Republic of Ireland on July 10th, 1935. Believing the Irish would capitulate, the English first sent a strong force to secure the Isle of Manx with which to control the field of battle more readily.

The Irish on Manx, however, were ready, and the English threw wave after wave of soldiers at the Irish who did not give up. The bloody Battle of Manx drew out into a two-month debacle and embarassment for the English Army, which finally broke the Irish defense on September 21st and secured the island, although a notable resistance remained for the remainder of the war.

England had lost almost 50,000 men to the Irish casualty of 11,000 on Manx; it was one of the most lopsided pyrrhic victories in modern warfare. The English Army landed in Ireland in mid-September and found itself fighting a losing war in the south of the country. Their allies the Scottish extended the Socialist Republic no help, and it was France, in fact, that came to Ireland's aid by invading not only the Irish but England herself.

The war would last in bloody stalemate all the way into early 1937, the year 1936 being one of the darkest in English history. The Irish, who had been bullied by England for centuries, gleefully extolled revenge upon the English army, and in the end England nearly a million soldiers to the bloodshed.

Cumberland was removed from power in 1937 due to his mishandling of the Irish War, and new Premier Neville Chamberlain took over and quickly brokered a treaty which left England gutted at the hands of the Empire and even the Irish. The "Appeaser" was deeply unpopular and stepped down in 1939 in favor of Winston Churchill.

French Civil War and Anarchy
Churchill began to implement more conservative socialism in his economic policies as he struggled to help England to recover from the disastrous Irish War. The Treaty of Belfast had created stipulations on reparations to the Irish and French, quotas on the size of the English army and the complete dissolution of the English Navy. England was made a protectorate of the French Empire and all its colonial possessions were redistributed to Ireland and France.

France sank into a bloody civil war of its own in the early 1940's, and Churchill sided with Sebastien of the upstart European Empire in the east. In 1944, on the eve of Sebastien's victory over the forces of his brother's remaining allies, Churchill was assassinated in Dover while visiting a shipyard.

His successor, Jonathon Trenton, was a woefully ineffective leader. In 1946, he was murdered by members of the Socialist Party and replaced with Francis Turley, an ironfisted leader who arranged for the exile of many of his more capable advisors due to their perceived insubordination. On January 8th, 1950, he stepped down as party leader after London and Manchester erupted into civil unrest.

The Anarchy, as it came to be called, was the bloodiest period in English history. Following the Irish War failure and the turbulent politics of the 1940's, when the country slid deeper and deeper into an economic hole, the Anarchy was a time when many cities were completely lawless. Policemen and governors alike were murdered daily, entire villages were massacred by roaming militias, and in February 1952, at the peak of the Anarchy, the abandoned Houses of Parliament were burned to the ground in London.

Throughout the Anarchy, France remained largely silent, choosing not to involve itself in "domestic English matters." The Scottish Army occupied parts of northern England to provide stability, but found themselves drawn into a lengthy insurgency conflict known as the Yorkshire Wars that lasted until 1955. Ireland funded the strongest of the militias, the English Worker's Army, as the instability increased.

It wound up being America that came to England's aid. Prescott Bush, at the time President of the United States, sent a 55,000 man strong army to secure Wales in summer 1952, arranging the move with members of Congress and both candidates in that fall's election. Bush's Wales Campaign was largely successful, establishing security along the Welsh coastline long enough for his successor, Russell Long, to send an additional 100,000 soldiers in the "English Adventure".

American forces found themselves in the same position that Scotland had; deeply embroiled in one of the most destructive civil wars in modern history. France's Civil War had been fought almost like a traditional war, with armies and leaders and by securing enemy territory. In England, there was no knowing who the enemy was.

In November 1953, American forces under General Omar Bradley secured London and, with their control of Thames and Barham Airfields, arranged for the London Airlift. French forces had arrived in England a few months prior to "help" end the conflict, but American leadership sensed that Emperor Sebastien sought to subjugate the nation and potentially annex it. The London Airlift helped keep the population of London safe as French forces surrounded London, sometimes even coming into contact with American units, but no violence was ever reported in this earliest of Cold War standoffs.

In 1954, the French capitulated and withdrew from England; Sebastien had his eyes on the Balkans anyways, and was already posturing for a war to secure his power in eastern Europe where he had made many allies during the Civil War.The American presence in London allowed for the creation of a secure government there headed by Charles Morgan, who organized the English Republican Army to retake control of Southern England. The "Morgan War" as it was called resulted in the reestablishment of a legitimate English state, although his success would not be finalized until the Siege of Liverpool to root out the last of the socialist remnant in 1956.

Economic Turmoil and English Constitution
Charles Morgan saw the American military withdraw in late 1955 when it was clear that the ERA was in control. England had just undergone nearly six years of anarchy, at a level beyond ordinary civil war. Almost eight million deaths had occurred during this time, added to the two million killed in the Irish conflict. England had thus lost ten million of its inhabitants over a twenty year span, crippling the nation. The country's economy was nonexistent; factories, farms and commercial centers alike had been devastated in the Anarchy. Villages had been wiped off the map, forests burned; the country had been laid to waste by its own inhabitants. Starvation was rampant and aid from the continent, Ireland and America was not nearly enough to keep the new republic running.

Morgan saw the opportunity to rebuild England into a true republic. Instead of the weak republic formed out of the shell of the Kingdom of England, and instead of the failed Socialist experiment, Morgan - who himself had been a powerful member of the Socialist Party - sought to build a new England, which defined itself not by its bygone glory but by its reconstruction out of the Anarchy.

"From the ashes we shall rise, like a Phoenix," he said in a 1957 speech to the new Parliament, which held its first meeting's in St. Paul's Basilica while a new House of Parliament was built on the site of the old one. The Phoenix Program was the name of his massive attempt to reinvigorate the economy.

With American aid trickling dry as a steep recession struck the US in the late 1950's, Morgan turned instead to Asia for support. The English presence in Singapore and the Oceanian ties to the old British Empire gave Morgan new allies. While he initially butted heads with Oceania's young Queen Elizabeth, they soon came to form a close and lasting friendship as the British expatriates helped England restore its economy.

In 1959, Morgan presented the English Constitution to Parliament, noting how the British Empire had no constitution and that both preceding republics had failed miserably without true guidance. Morgan promised that should the Constitution be passed, he would immediately step down as Prime Minister and await his formal election to the post by Parliament and a coming general election.

The Constitution was overwhelmingly passed, and was seen as a huge victory for the rebuilding of England. Morgan was also reelected overwhelmingly by Parliament to continue in his office.

The Stable Sixties and Cold War Alliance
With continuous funds of foreign investment and a surprising "baby boom" in the late 1950's and early 1960's, England began recovering sooner than expected. The Morgan government slaved tirelessly to provide construction projects which in turn provided jobs and income for the poor, largely displaced population of England. The "Reinvention" or "Phoenix Program" was an enormous success. As the American economy righted ship in the early 60's and hawkish President Hoover was in the White House, hundreds of thousands of American workers and soldiers headed to England to assist in the rebuilding of the infrastructure and to train the ERA into a modern army. The United States sold several hundreds of millions of dollars worth of military equipment to England, including tanks, fighter planes, helicopters and technology. While some feared an even bloodier Anarchy should Morgan's government collapse, Hoover's mindset was that he was earning himself a key ally on France's doorstep - few could deny that a Cold War had begun.

Morgan's Tories found themselves outmaneuvered by the Whigs in the 1966 general election; a surprising move, considering that Morgan was considered the "Father of the Republic" and a national hero. It as the local MP's that had created the trouble, however; corruption was vast in the smaller bureaucratic departments, even though Morgan was well liked. Donald Sutcliffe, who was the former President of the English Judaic Council, rode the election as party leader and became the first Jewish head of state in an industrialized country.

Under Sutcliffe, the "Stable Sixties" continued. In few other times in history had there been such an unfettered boom of economic growth and infrastructure projects. The Phoenix Program, when it expired in 1969 after a ten-year implementation, had returned England somewhat to the ranks of industrialized nations. Starvation had decreased by 80%, and while poverty was still a severe problem, the return to law to the streets of a country that had only fifteen years prior been gutting itself was hailed as a major achievement.

England's government also grew tighter with the Americans. Their traditional rivalry with France had resulted in being invaded twice in the past forty years; England was still very weak, and not yet ready to fully take on the might of the French Empire. President van Dyke, who behind his charismatic smile was every bit the Cold War calculator Hoover had been, established four permanent US Army bases in England, three of which were in the South, and built a permanent Naval yard in Plymouth and two Air Force bases in the London vicinity. He also built three missile silos outside of Dover which could launch short-range missiles with a nuclear warhead attached into France, and could reach Paris.

This made England a centerpiece of the Cold War standoff; French nukes in Quebec had finally been counteracted with American nukes in England. The detente, as Sebastien often called it, was now equal. And it gave England a sense of national pride; with a very powerful army required by the Sutcliffe, and later Minor governments, and mandatory conscription, England was prepared to defend their beloved homeland. They had truly arisen from the ashes of the Anarchy.

England as an Economic Power and Emerging World Player
Sutcliffe would be voted out of power in 1972 to usher in the Eustace Minor government - Minor would himself last until 1981. The 1980's were a politically turbulent era in England; Cold War tensions were at an all-time high, but the emerging economic clout of the English manufacturing industry and power as an exporter and trader made many English question their reliance on American protection and business interests pumping money in and out of their country. Pro-American governments such as the Tories (who changed their name to Labour in 1983) found themselves at odds with the more nationalist Whigs. General elections were held every few years in a confusing climate very similar to that of England in the 1910's.

Despite this, the private sector of England experienced a massive boom in the 1980's, largely due to the gradual easing of American control of the economy thanks to a severe, stagnating depression in the United States. England and Scotland grew closer together to mutually buffer against the powerful Irish economy, and signed a mutual protection agreement, finally bringing the long-neutral Scottish into the Cold War.In 1990 the Whigs were elected again in a massive landslide, with John Cleese as their party leader and new Prime Minister. The Nineties in England were considered a golden age of the modern Republic - the cultural, economic, political, and social prosperity was unmatched in continental Europe or the recession-ravaged United States. Cleese announced he would not lead the Whigs in the 1999 general election, and they subsequently lost to the Tony Blair-led Labour. Labour would in turn do little for England in its seven years in power; immigration became a contentious issue, as did corruption. The Whigs returned under David Cameron in 2006 and since then, England's continuing emergence as a regional power and global economy have continued, and are expected to continue well into the next decade. That the nation could have recovered from the darkest hours of socialism and Anarchy into what it is today is truly remarkable.

Prime Minister
The current Prime Minister is David Cameron, who inherited the position from Tony Blair with the Whig Party's massive victory in the 2006 election, ending seven years of Labour control. Cameron has, since that time, begun to develop England's economy to become competitive globally in the coming decade, building off of Blair's general ineptitude and inability to deal with issues such as immigration, foreign policy, corruption and economic competitiveness. The Whig Party's vision of England's future is as a European economic power to counter France's domination of the global economy.

Parliament
The Parliament elected in the 2006 election is overwhelmingly Whig, and despite minor losses in the 2009 election in northern counties, the Whigs still have comfortable control in Parliament. Like the Prime Minister (party leader), the Parliament goes into general election every three years, the entire body serving three year terms at once.