Peter2 wrote:Keith_w wrote: quote="Peter2" quote="Keith_w" quote="Peter2"]I'd just like to float one point: so far, the ICA and allies have been advancing over country where the bulk of the populace, or what remains of it, support them. What happens when they start to invade countries where most of the civilians believe the invaders are heretics?
I'm no expert, but I cannot think of an instance where an invading army has successfully occupied and held a significant amount of territory against an actively hostile indigenous population. There remains the possibility that the excesses of the Inquisition have alienated a large enough number of people to enable toleration (which may well be sufficient, given time (see Corisande)), but that's by no means a given.
The classic example is the Peninsular War (1807-1814). The English history books teach that Wellington won the campaign with the assistance of the Spanish people. The Spanish history books teach that the Spanish people threw off the yoke of the invaders with the assistance of the British armies. I believe that neither force would have worked without the other, but the Spanish version is probably more accurate./quote
For sure, and that's why the Spanish were in charge and not Wellington... ooops, yes he was. You will also please be so kind as to note that the Portuguese were in that battle as well. quote
Absolutely yes. Wellington's Portuguese Corps, led by Marshal Beresford and Major General Hamilton, was a very effective part of his army. But it was a part of his army, and not an independent force. And if you want to go into more detail, I believe that the Light Division had some attached Spanish forces for at least part of the war./quote
And the Portuguese were very effective. I was not suggesting that the Spanish were not involved, just that their contribution was not quite what you were suggesting they thought it was. Certainly the guerrilla war tied up many French troops which might otherwise have been used against the combined forces, but if it hadn't been for British troops and, quite possibly more importantly, British money, the French would have had free rein over the entire peninsula.
I agree to some extent, but there was constant low-level warfare against the French by Spanish irregulars during the whole war — a sentry here, a patrol there, a convoy elsewhere, and so on. There is a small article in Wikipedia about guerrilla warfare during the Peninsular War, which mentions the Battle of Arlabán, where about 1600 French were ambushed successfully by 3-4000 guerrillas. Furthermore, there is reference to French losses to guerrillas in both Arthur Bryant's and Elizabeth Longford's military histories of the Duke of Wellington ("The Great Duke" and "Wellington: The Years of the Sword" respectively).
I still suspect that in the long term (possibly very long term), the Spanish resistance would have made the French occupation of Spain insupportably costly even without the British etc. armies, whereas I doubt that the British would have been able to beat the French if they had had to operate in the presence of a hostile indigenous population.
All quite true, however, we aren't here to debate the peninsula wars, but to enjoy a discussion of the possible future of the Safehold series.