Partially yes. It will mirror more so as the Portuguese and Native relations with intermarriages.Interesting, and very good news for the native American tribes. That part rather reminds me of what Maori-British relations were like in the nineteenth century. I don't for a moment think that there won't be problems, but it looks like it'll be orders of magnitude better for the tribes than OTL.
This is not a SI.Is this a SI fic or is it just a alternate history one?
Not a prediction but a question. What is Henry Frederick’s stance on slavery? As the 1619 project so loves to remind us, the first slaves were only brought to the Thirteen Colonies in 1619. If that can not happen than slavery and all its issues will never come to British North America.any predictions?
We'll see. Can't give to many spoilers can i?Not a prediction but a question. What is Henry Frederick’s stance on slavery? As the 1619 project so loves to remind us, the first slaves were only brought to the Thirteen Colonies in 1619. If that can not happen than slavery and all its issues will never come to British North America.
well at least in things he likes.An intriguing chapter, looks like Henry will be a serious reformer
Tbf, one can only improve the navy through seeing where its weaknesses are.I'm worried how Henry will rule, I mean the Royal Navy needs to be cleansed of bloated corruption but they way he wants war worries me, especially since James I was a somewhat pacifist but is how old Europe was...
I'm worried how Henry will rule, I mean the Royal Navy needs to be cleansed of bloated corruption but they way he wants war worries me, especially since James I was a somewhat pacifist but is how old Europe was...
Henry will definitely be somewhat of a warmonger compared to his father.Tbf, one can only improve the navy through seeing where its weaknesses are.
The Council will try indeed.Hopefully, the Council will try and curb their Kings warmongering into more productive areas. Maybe the colonies and other overseas territories? If nothing else, modernizing the navy seems to be a much more worthwhile investment then the army, given Britain’s geopolitical position.