lyonheart wrote:Hi JeffEngel,
This post is getting way too long!
I've detailed my thoughts on Silkiah's liberation years ago on previous threads, but we still don't know that much, not even the Grand Duke's name.
However he's been evidently tolerant of reformists besides the 'smuggling' that has benefited Silkiah's economy, and despite the inquisition's crackdown, there's been no word of eliminating or replacing him either, which implies he managed the above through sheer ignorance or incompetence since he or his father was appointed 27-28 years ago in 969 YoG.
Simple popularity, the legitimacy provided by constitutional government and the rule of law, and absence of critical need to replace him can account for that. Before the Sword of Schueler, Silkiahan and Siddarmarkian smuggling was tolerated because it was needed to make the mainland economy run. After it, Silkiah has been kept in bounds through fear. Even Clyntahn won't crush people he can intimidate well enough, and deposing monarchs would be an upsetting precedent for too many other much more important realms.
It may be he's in as much control of Silkiah as the Harchong emperor is of that empire, so its his ministers that actually have quietly supported these policies, covered by the corruption that's so systemic of the continental nations, too busy with their ill gotten gains to notice or care about any reformist rumblings that are discrete to start with.
We've got word from RFC to support a rosier view of Silkiah's government than that. From
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=6148&p=157924&hilit=Silkiah#p157924Silkiah was thoroughly corrupted by the Siddarmarkian example and rejected the Desnairian model. That is, the Grand Duchy has a constitution which limits the arbitrary powers of the aristocracy and enshrines the rule of law. This is one reason why Silkiah's economy has done as well as it's done.
In effect, culturally and politically, Silkiah is almost a demilitarized portion of Siddarmark, paying tributes to Desnair and the Temple Lands. It's an exaggeration, of course, but given its druthers, Silkiah would be Siddarmark's next province or at least junior partner.
OTOH, he might be popular because he ruled with such a wise light hand which the people know could have been far worse, given what they see in Desnar and Dohlar etc.
Or Harchong, the Temple Lands, the Border States... And I think you may be selling Dohlar short too. From the same RFC post:
By the same token, if you take a close look at Dohlar, you'll see that it falls into a sort of middle ground between the "standard" aristocratic model and the Charisian/Siddarmarkian model. The Dohlaran legal code is written and based upon both precedent and acts of Parliament, in addition to royal decrees, but it is also closer to that of Corisande, perhaps, than to that of Charis in that the great nobles' ability to circumvent the law undercuts much of the advantage of having a written law code in the first place. Nonetheless, the predictability of law and regulation in Dohlar explains the fact that even a relatively inept ruler like King Rahnyld could entertain the notion of cutting himself into a part of the Charisians' steadily growing wealth and power.
If Rahnyld were a bit brighter or if his ambitions leaned toward reform rather than commercial aggrandizement, he could have been a mainland King Silas or Queen Sharleyan. Dohlar's socially ready to move in that direction, given some pushing - if not for aristocratic inertia, a king who's a bit of a dweeb, and the Temple's likely reaction to a mainland Charis in addition to Siddarmark.
But with an aristocracy that's not so resistant to trade and doesn't have the horse and chivalry fetish of Desnair, and with the Temple's power waning, I do think Dohlar can make a soft landing of its surrender and turn into a genuine law-governed society with vigorous industry and trade. The needs of the Jihad and the easing of the Proscriptions are already turning it into a little dynamo.
...Turning publicly avowed enemies into quiet friends and allies is the real potential opportunity involved, which might as you say be a real encouragement to Dohlar, when the time comes to ditch the king and choose a regency that might include both Thirsk and Ahlverez, that accepts the minimal alliance demands; ending the inquisition and serfdom, religious toleration, etc.
L
Gorjah of Tarot betrayed treaties with Charis and participated in the same multipower attack on it as Dohlar did, out of irritation with those treaties, the moral and financial pull the Church had over him, and the prospect of a share of Charis' wealth. Rahnyld's nation has been in the fight a lot longer precisely and merely because it's on the mainland (the far side of it, even) and not an island Charis' navy can isolate.
Gorjah is now one of the highest nobles in the Empire, secure still on his throne, and leading a state that's actually doing better than it did before Armageddon Reef. For that matter, Cayleb as a liege lord is a whole lot more reliable, honorable, honest, and light-handed than the Church was.
Heck, after being the mastermind behind the early stages of the attack on Charis, and the longest running island enemy, Prince Hector of Corisande would have gotten a decent deal out of Cayleb.
Why do you suppose Rahnyld has to end up worse off than Gorjah? I'll allow that he's probably not as smart as Gorjah, and doesn't have an Out Islander's more detached view of the Temple. But he's also had a lot longer to have his nose rubbed in the fact that he's got as much respect and consideration for himself, his throne, or his people from the Temple as a Harchong serf has from his landowner. So I wouldn't be surprised if he's got the wit, finally, to say "screw this, I'm outta here!" about as soon as he
can break off from the Temple, though he may have to have the very idea spoon-fed to him.