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New Large Crusades Map: 10/19/2014 21:01:51


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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I'm working on a Crusades map (roughly 1150 CE) at the moment which I expect will have 1300-1800 territories by the time it's finished. I'm fairly certain on what I'm doing, but if anyone has any suggestions, I'm open.

http://warlight.net/SinglePlayer?PreviewMap=37093

Edited 10/26/2014 21:24:17
New Large Crusades Map: 10/20/2014 00:19:01


NinjaNic 
Level 59
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Ooh, looks great!
New Large Crusades Map: 10/20/2014 16:34:37


alex23
Level 50
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In what shoudl be actual Spain, in the Kingdom of León, you set "Kingdom of Galecia", I searched if it was its English spelling, but it's not the case, you should write "Kingdom of Galicia"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Galicia

The map look really nice anyway, I hope I can play in it soon, nice work.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/20/2014 17:22:00


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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Yeah, I'll change the spelling. Unfortunately, it may not be ready for a while, because I'm trying to include all the land held by Catholic nations, Orthodox nations and Islamic nations. Because of this, I'm expanding the Catholic realm to include the Kingdom of Hungary and the Polish Kingdoms, the Orthodox realm to include Ethiopia, and the Islamic realm to go as far as Northern India.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/20/2014 19:24:53


MrOobling
Level 30
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With the cities, it seems you have chosen the major holy sites. At this time Byzantium was called Constantinople. Also, perhaps Mecca would be more suitable than damascus as it is the holy site for Islam? The map looks extremely good and I am looking forward to you releasing it.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/20/2014 20:11:56


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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Well, it would've been easy to choose which cities to do if this were during the Early Islamic Golden Age, because the centre of Islam and the capital of the Ummayyad Caliphate were both Mecca, but after the collapse of the empire, even though the Holy City remained Mecca, the seat of Islamic Power shifted outside Arabia to Egypt and Syria, so Mecca actually become largely irrelevant by this point.

Rather than using the centre of the religion itself, I've chosen to chose where the power of the religion resides, be it in the Holy City (In Christianity's Case), or not (In Islam's Case).

As for Byzantium, yes, it should be Constantinople. I'll change it.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/22/2014 23:30:41


Жұқтыру
Level 56
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Don't forget about the Northern Crusades. Christianity was spreading in all directions from Europe.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Crusades
New Large Crusades Map: 10/23/2014 02:04:33

6th Army Group
Level 52
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A great map! One of the best things is that I seem to never know what the HRE (roughly) looked like before the 1800s, so this is pretty cool. The cities are a neat and important addition as well. Good luck.

Perhaps you infused a spark of motivation for another mapmaker, Mr. Cyrillic letters.

Edited 10/23/2014 02:06:11
New Large Crusades Map: 10/23/2014 08:19:56


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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Жұқтыру: There's a slight problem with including the Northern Crusades: The map's running out of memory. If there's enough room to do it at the end, I'll do it, but I can't make any promises yet.

6th Army Group: Thanks for the support.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/23/2014 15:52:06

Elroi{IL}
Level 57
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Very nice map, successfully
New Large Crusades Map: 10/30/2014 22:21:56


҈ * TeeMee123҈ *
Level 55
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This map is looking awesome now! I'm a bit worried about distributions though, as when doing 1v1v1v1 or 2v2 city conflicts, Rome will obviously have an advantage in being able to expand with little disruption, whereas the other cities are all close together so will have trouble expanding. And of course, rome has easy access to all of western europe :D

Stepping aside from cities and more into the traditional side of the map, spain is an incredibly good starting point, as it is very dense and borders with possible enemies are easy to manage.

If based on looks and concept alone, this map would be absolutely perfect. As long as some clever distributions are worked out before the map's release, people will be able to have great games with it.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/30/2014 23:04:32


Жұқтыру
Level 56
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I don't know what your map will include when it's finished, but why did you include Ethiopia? It was generally as irrelevant as it can get when it comes to the crusades. Sure, it was Christian, but I don't think the Arabs interacted much with the Horn of Africa. Also, there's a large gap between Hungary and Bulgaria; I understand if you can't do the Eastern European countries, but I think you should at least include what's in between (Romania, I think?).

Edited 10/30/2014 23:06:27
New Large Crusades Map: 10/31/2014 11:24:44

Elroi{IL}
Level 57
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Why not Ethiopia? This map of religions at the time, Ethiopia is a Christian country.
You also also do Russia?
I have something to fix you in Israel, Tel Aviv subjects were established only ~ 100 years ago.
Tel Aviv where you can write Samaria, and instead of Netanya, you can write Jezreel Valley.
Rafah was not even really exist, write instead of Gaza, and Arad did not exist you can write instead of Arava.

Edited 10/31/2014 12:04:32
New Large Crusades Map: 10/31/2014 12:20:04


Mudderducker 
Level 59
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Very accurate I give you that, doesn't mean it gives a very strategic map however. The gap in Romania just looks weird, add something in there. Adding those three small kingdoms at the bottom of the middle east/horn of Africa is nice for accuracy not for gameplay, they are isolated but then leaving them out leaves a massive gap in the bottom east. What's happening with the east, you are drawing something there?. East vs west, you will have to see in the test games, this is the most important part of the map. Map is accurate and will be used for Crusader games, needs to be balanced east vs. west. Would have been cool adding boats maybe. General design and layout looks good though, good job.
If based on looks and concept alone, this map would be absolutely perfect.
A bit of an overstatement, no maps are perfect unless made by Ra.

Edited 10/31/2014 12:33:54
New Large Crusades Map: 10/31/2014 14:01:37


Belgian Gentleman
Level 57
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Still wondering why zxctycxz took a vacation.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/31/2014 17:36:03


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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I'm back guys. It looks like you're all a bit puzzled about my choice of which nations have been included, so I'll just explain. When I started this map, I thought I would've run out of memory by the time I got to Persia, but that hasn't happened (I've only used up about 3/4 of the limit with file compression). This means that I'll be able to add more, starting with the Orthodox nations of Rus', the Pagan Baltic, Romania and so on. If there's still enough memory after this, I can go onto Islamic India.

I included Ethiopia simply because it was Christian at the time, some of you picked up on that anyway, I think.

As for territory names, there's no real way of finding a consistent map of what individual territories were called at the time, so I've had to use Google Maps for a lot of it. If you have suggestions about changing territory names, as elroi did, you're very welcome to tell me.

But I have a few things to sort about before I get back into it, so I can't start right away.
New Large Crusades Map: 10/31/2014 21:58:55


Жұқтыру
Level 56
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Ok, it looks like it will be a pretty comprehensive map. Sterling work.
New Large Crusades Map: 11/2/2014 06:18:35


MrOobling
Level 30
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Some province name changes:
Jerusalem:
-Madaba - Al-Karak
-Samaria - Asqalan
-Jezreel Valley - Jaffa
Sinai:
-Arish- El-Arish
-Said - Farama
-Southern Sanai can just be condensed into one sinai province (it wasn't densly populated or rich)
Nile Delta:
-More provinces are needed at the delta (it was densly populated, rich, centre for trading and the capital for some caliphates such as Fatimid)
-isamailla- Isma'illa
-Cairo - Manupura
-Fayed - Sarqihya
-Suez - Cairo

The dominant caliphate in 1150 was the Seljuks who were based in Esfahan (modern day central iran). This was towards the end of the first crusade which is when christians were most successfull. They conquered Jerusalem and were occupying it so the muslim caliphates were not doing so well. The even conquered Tripoli.
New Large Crusades Map: 11/2/2014 11:37:02


zxctycxz [Ollie Bye] 
Level 59
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MrOobling: Yeah I'll change those names, but I don't think I can put any more territories there - http://imgur.com/xlijMkT - it's pretty tight already. If this were before 1092, I would be quite happy to make the Suljuqs dominant, but with the empire being divided after this date between the Rum Sultanate, the Emirate of Damascus and Persia. I may be wrong, but it doesn't look like they controlled any culturally significant cities either (other than the Syrian cities that belong to the Ayyubids by the time this map is set).
New Large Crusades Map: 11/2/2014 12:37:22


myhandisonfire 
Level 54
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I may be wrong, but it doesn't look like they controlled any culturally significant cities either (other than the Syrian cities that belong to the Ayyubids by the time this map is set)


That is just wrong. At that time in the middle ages the arabian world was much more prosperous, technologically advanced and therefore more densely populated than the western world. For instance the Kingdom of Sicily after the Norman conquest was more powerful that the Kingdom of Aengeland. Before the Conquest areas of the Kingdom were mainly Muslim or Byzantian, which led to its population growth.
Same goes for Al-Andalus in Spain. Under Muslim rule it flourished. Its economical decline came with the reconquista. Maghreb, Mauretania, Ifriqya and Egypt, all no exception. From Spain to India you had many major economical centers that dwarfed cities in western europe, all under Muslim rule.

In Spain:
Qurtuba (Cordoba) not as many people as under the Umayyads, reaching half a million, but still very important.
Qa'lat Garnata (Granada)

In the Maghreb:
Fes, with 150.000 to 200.000 inhabitants during the crusades.
Marrakech with 150.000

In Ifriqya:
Tunis (target of the seventh crusade)

In Egypt:
Cairo, 150.000 to 300.000 in that period. Very Important.

In Italy:
Palermo 150.000
for comparison:
Rome 20.000
Firenze Milan Genoa Venice around 50.000 getting more prosperous some hundred/ two hundred years later

In Western Europe:
Paris maybe less than 100.000, 150.000 hundred years after your time setting.

In the Seljuk Empire (persia):
Baghdad 250.000
Tabriz 100.000

That only were the major political and economical centres. Countless other Muslim cities were still bigger than most western cities.

Constantinople had around 250.000 at that time
And Jerusalem and Rome were only important as religous centres and symbols, not so much economically.



So if you think about important cities, with a few exceptions you think Muslim.


You have to understand how important irrigation techniques were at that time. There were times during the middle ages in which Japan managed to have a bigger population than whole Western Europe, thanks to advances in irrigation.

Edited 11/2/2014 12:58:25
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