Difference between revisions of "Witzgall"

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Following Millith’s short reign, the army of the Witzgallian government rose up and declared mutiny against the entire nation. A war broke out, between the soldiers and diplomats. This war lasted for over a millenia, even though the Reich didn’t have an official leader. Leaders came and went, none having an influence on the war. They all became casualties in the neverending fued.
 
Following Millith’s short reign, the army of the Witzgallian government rose up and declared mutiny against the entire nation. A war broke out, between the soldiers and diplomats. This war lasted for over a millenia, even though the Reich didn’t have an official leader. Leaders came and went, none having an influence on the war. They all became casualties in the neverending fued.
  
===The Third Reich, Nationalism Reinstated===
+
===The Third Reich, The Rule of the Kings===
''To be continued...''
+
 
 +
In 1416, after the Military vs. State war, the government of Witzgall was reinstated. It is estimated by historians that between 350 and 1400 CE, over five billion men and women living in the Witzgallian Reich died. In 1416, Richard Ludwig came to power as the King of Witzgall, instating a monarchy government style.
 +
 
 +
Installing a peaceful government and a quiet public, which had almost zero resitance or hostility against the King. King Richard I created a new body of the military, known as the “Cellinisons”, which were actually sharpshooters. Using Italian handguns in warfare, the Witzgallian Reich quickly made itself known to the international community with its new face of battlefield style and tactics.
 +
 
 +
King Richard I led the Witzgallian Army into a new age of warfare, standardizing the handgun and the sword being the secondary arm on the battlefield for the new soldiers.
 +
 
 +
In 1424, The first mechanical device for firing the hand gun made its appearance on the battlefield. A civil war rose up in the empire in 1430, and King Richard I tried everything in his power to stop the rebels from ending his reign. He had grown rich and greedy during his time as the absolute ruler of Witzgall.
 +
 
 +
His life was ended in 1462, when his brother slit the King’s throat with a officer’s blade. His brother buried King Richard I’s body in the courtyard of Château de Dieu, King Richard’s most glorious castle ever built.
 +
 
 +
Richard’s brother, Johnathan Ludwig IV, took power as King John IV after killing his brother. Rebellions and riots quickly were seen in the streets, and Château de Dieu was sieged by the nationalist rebels. King John IV was shot by a crossbow while attending to his garden peacefully, dying by infection three months later, on June 6th, 1470. The public demanded the right to take place in governmental office and debates, claiming it was their right as Reichsmen (citizens).
 +
 
 +
When the Council of Generals denied such a right, they too were sieged by the public. The governmental building that once held the glorious council was set ablaze, and burnt down over a period of three days. The council members were rounded up by the military, who at this time was acting under a man who called himself “Bourbon the Invincible”.
 +
 
 +
Bourbon the Invincible came to power as the King in 1478, after eight years of rebellion and destruction of which he carefully planned out and created militant groups to act on his ideals of a united landmass, a utopian paradise for all walks of life. In 1480, Bourbon the Invincible began to draw up plans to conquer the land surrounding the Witzgallian Reich, claiming it was in Witzgall’s destined path and nobody else has the right to lay claims to the land.
 +
 
 +
His soldiers suited up and marched, meeting up with other Witzgallian military groups at the battlefront. Under Bourbon the Invincible, Witzgall grew nearly three times its size during King John IV’s rule. The army conquered the Constables, a cultured civilization which excelled in the arts. Bourbon the Invincible enslaved the Constables, and decided to have the Constable schools and education system preserved and integrated into the Witzgallian culture.
 +
 
 +
Slaves rebelled against Bourbon the Invincible, alongside the newly captures Contables, in 1492. Bourbon ordered strategic eliminations of threatening groups, shattering the slaves’ hopes of freedom from the persecution they suffered whilst in the empire.
 +
 
 +
In 1512, Bourbon the Invincible died of a heart attack after learning of his wife’s drowning. The slaves quickly took this opportunity of nationalistic depression and rose up, fighting against the military with all of their might concentrated. The man leading the slaves in the massive rebellion was none other than King Bourbon’s son, Christopher Fraue. Fraue led the massive amounts of slaves to their freedom in a large amount of battles, which ultimately ended in the defeat and crumble of the State’s control.
 +
 
 +
In 1540, the slaves won their freedom. However, this was short lived. Fraue was soon murdered, alongside his wife and daughter, on Easter Sunday in 1541. The slaves who had fought against the government were “put down” in massive genocidal assaults which lasted two decades.
 +
 
 +
On January 4th, 1566, Witzgall began its rebirthing process, trying to grow back into the economical and militaristic powerhouse of which it once was. Alongside the new governmental reforms, the Witzgallian Reich elected a new Fuhrer during the first ever publicly released elections. Winning by a landslide, Fuhrer Adolf Pacz became the new representative for the Witzgallian Reich.
 +
 
 +
===The Fourth Reich===
 +
''To be written.''
  
 
==Language, Races, Religion, and Currency==
 
==Language, Races, Religion, and Currency==

Revision as of 21:27, 13 March 2005

Witzgall
witzgall.jpg
Flag of Witzgall
Motto: "Ein Kampf, Ein Sieg!"
See Regional Map
Region The Kingdom of the Midlands
Capital Rote Stadt
Official Language(s) English, German
Leader Fuhrer Robert Hur IV
Population 2+ billion
Currency geld 
NS Sunset XML

History

The First Reich, The Crusades

The Witzgallian History begins in the year of 88 CE, or Common Era. Germanic Tribes, which were a combination of the Jutes and Ostrogoths, settled down in the landmass of The Midlands, and ended their nomadic ways.

The newly formed nation flourished as a Catholic empire, claiming that its Emporer (who, at the time, was called Johnathan the Great) was the absolute leader of the Catholic Church. Aimed at “purifying” the world and ridding the land of infidels (such as Jewish followers who denied Christ as the Messiah), the Witzgallian Crusades lasted for over a century, spreading bloodshed all over the continent on which it thrived.

Fighting for precious religious relics and warding off non-believers, the Crusaders were a powerful force of human mass that pillaged as they moved, killing any enemy leader with a beheading ceremony to end their treason against God.

After Johnathan the Great died on the battlefield, himself being a warrior for the Empire, in 102 CE, his son (Lord Augustus) took the throne and continued where his glorious father had left off. Lord Augustus was not a warrior, but instead an excellent strategist. He set his sights on the Holy Temple of Huvas, which was supposedly located deep within the vast jungles of Witzgall.

Anybody who stepped into Augustus’ path was slain by the large numbers of elite warriors who protected him in the name of the Holy, which gave Lord Augustus a reputation as a fearless and courageous man, who was said to be a prophet himself. Cardinals of the Church, residing in the Empire, were basically Generals within the army of Witzgall, giving orders to the soldiers to commit genocide on all infidels and non-believers, for they were doing Satan’s work by impeding God’s sacred search.

Lord Augustus died in his sleep in 143 CE, and his nephew Maximillion the Third, took the throne as the Emporer of the Empire. Maximillion decided to devide the empire into two divisions, the West and East. Feuding quickly began between the sides, mainly over the location of the Capital, which was filled with ancient relics and tributes to the most admirable soldiers. Maximillion reunited the empire under his control by having an assassin poison Archbishop Luther III, the ruler of the Western Empire.

Maximillion turned his sights to the Huvas, as Lord Augustus died before ever finding it’s resting place. Ordering over two million soldiers to search by any means necessary, the great Emporer waged war on numerous surrounding nomadic tribes, killing them without rest.

Dying in 192 CE at the age of 72, Maximillion had a statue in his honor erected in the governmental building within the Rote Stadt, which remains Witzgall’s capital today. The crusades ended when Lord Adolf Jugenz took power, and focused on state and governmental issues instead of religious conquest.

Lord Adolf began an age of militarism, creating a massive army of three million strong. The national population at the time was only seven million, making the military roughly half of the total general public’s size. This was necessary, as slave uprisings were a common sight in the empire at the time. Religious persecution continued strongly, yet there was no major conflicts in sight.

The Second Reich, The Dynasty of Matthew

The Crusades made up the First Reich in Witzgallian History, the beginning of its time. The Second Reich was an economical powerhouse, as well as a controversial militaristic dictatorship. Ruled by Matthew I, a man who shot Lord Adolf in the back of the neck during Lord Adolf’s dinner meeting with Matthew I (who, at the time, was just a reporter). Matthew I’s assasination of Lord Adolf was a highly debatable topic in the eyes of the public.

Some saw it as a new era of truthful politics, yet some saw it as cold blooded murder. The Council of Generals, the legislative and secondary governmental branch of the Empire, met to discuss how to appoint a new Emporer to oversee the Witzgallian Reich. Matthew I, a leftist reporter from the Witzgallian National Underground newspaper, was voted into office due to his views of economical stability and militaristic, yet democratic, governmental ideas.

What you will not find in the history books is the fact that Matthew I used his father, Luther III, a rich republican, to buy the “election”. He is reported to have paid over eighteen billion dollars to Councilmen in order to persuade the vote into his favor. This fact has just been noted within the last two years.

Matthew I revamped the military and instated a socialist republic. He did away with the death penalty, which at the time was used for numerous crimes (such as rape, murder, and treason). Stating that rehabilitation was better, Matthew I gave almost a trillion dollars to the judicial system of the empire in order to create new-age rehabilitation centers, to replace the prisons and correction facilities within Witzgall.

Matthew I was murder in his sleep by his own son, Matthew II. Stabbed eighteen times, Matthew I was laying in a pool of his own blood when the medical staff of the National Protection Agency (NPA) arrived to check on his condition. Mathew II claimed himself the Fuhrer of Witzgall, and began reconstruction of the dictatorship-esque governmental style of which his father did away with.

A full right-wingist, Matthew II believed in the occult and was a strong follower of the Aryan Faith, believing in a single, all-powerful “super race.” He believed the Jewish faith was created to demolish the moral of the “standard being”, and ordered all Hebrews and followers of the Jewish Faith to be imprisoned for high treason against the system. His soldiers followed his orders, arresting or killing every Jewish person within the empire.

Overtime, the public began to notice the cruel and evil eyes of their leader. They called for an uprising, an end to his reign as leader of the Reich. But Matthew II claimed to be God himself, in human form, and ordered his followers to kill the non-believers, the traitors to the Almighty.

The Christian Church denounced the Fuhrer’s claims. They believed he was being controlled by a demon, possibly Lucifer himself, who was trying to overthrow and demoralize the church system as a whole. The Fuhrer’s iron-fisted rule was coming to an end…

In 255 CE, Matthew II killed himself by putting a dagger through his left temple. His son, Matthew III, was only sixteen at the time of his father’s death. However, under law, he was placed into the office as Fuhrer of the Reich. An inexperienced soldier at the time, Matthew III would soon grow to be one of the most beloved leaders in Witzgallian history.

Matthew III started out his rule with the construction of the Great Wall of Witzgall, trying to stop the nomadic tribes’ assault on the powerhouse of Witzgall. Suffering from riots and uncontrollable militias within the empire, Matthew III had to act fast to quell the uprisings which threatened his rule and his life.

He built the military into a massive force of roughly ten million, and ordered the soldiers to patrol the walls and inner city streets at all times. The riots slowly declined as the death penalty was reinstated, and any offense relating to anti-governmental views was quickly backed by the punishment of torture and death.

Matthew III resurrected the ancient Christian church, reinstating the close relationship between the Church and State that existed in the times of the Crusades. However, instead of a militaristic relationship, the new era of Church and State living alongside one another was founded on the popular belief of trust and that the Christian faith would soon enough become the world religion, making Witzgall one of the most powerful nations in the world.

Expanding rapidly under Matthew III’s control, the Reich’s military began to become spread out and overused. Fighting battles nearly ever month, the military was exhausted by 280 CE.

Matthew III began to intensify training of new soldiers, and released the Jewish followers from imprisonment. He apologized to the faith’s leaders, trying to ammend the relationship and solve any and all problems.

Killed during a meeting with General Adolf Luthinthsia, Matthew III’s rule ended abruptly in 321 CE at the age of 82. The public called for the execution of General Luthinthsia, but the State had employed the General to kill the Fuhrer. The Council then did away with the Fuhrership, instating a democratic system into the governmental eye. The idealist behind this system was Colonel David Millith, an excellent strategist and church loyalist. He became the Chancellor of the democratic system, the representative to the new government.

His rule ended after only a decade. On December 25th, 330 CE, Millith was stabbed in the heart while attending Mass. His blood stained the Church of the Holy Saint John’s marble floor, and the stain stayed for an entire century, plaguing the church with its evil.

Following Millith’s short reign, the army of the Witzgallian government rose up and declared mutiny against the entire nation. A war broke out, between the soldiers and diplomats. This war lasted for over a millenia, even though the Reich didn’t have an official leader. Leaders came and went, none having an influence on the war. They all became casualties in the neverending fued.

The Third Reich, The Rule of the Kings

In 1416, after the Military vs. State war, the government of Witzgall was reinstated. It is estimated by historians that between 350 and 1400 CE, over five billion men and women living in the Witzgallian Reich died. In 1416, Richard Ludwig came to power as the King of Witzgall, instating a monarchy government style.

Installing a peaceful government and a quiet public, which had almost zero resitance or hostility against the King. King Richard I created a new body of the military, known as the “Cellinisons”, which were actually sharpshooters. Using Italian handguns in warfare, the Witzgallian Reich quickly made itself known to the international community with its new face of battlefield style and tactics.

King Richard I led the Witzgallian Army into a new age of warfare, standardizing the handgun and the sword being the secondary arm on the battlefield for the new soldiers.

In 1424, The first mechanical device for firing the hand gun made its appearance on the battlefield. A civil war rose up in the empire in 1430, and King Richard I tried everything in his power to stop the rebels from ending his reign. He had grown rich and greedy during his time as the absolute ruler of Witzgall.

His life was ended in 1462, when his brother slit the King’s throat with a officer’s blade. His brother buried King Richard I’s body in the courtyard of Château de Dieu, King Richard’s most glorious castle ever built.

Richard’s brother, Johnathan Ludwig IV, took power as King John IV after killing his brother. Rebellions and riots quickly were seen in the streets, and Château de Dieu was sieged by the nationalist rebels. King John IV was shot by a crossbow while attending to his garden peacefully, dying by infection three months later, on June 6th, 1470. The public demanded the right to take place in governmental office and debates, claiming it was their right as Reichsmen (citizens).

When the Council of Generals denied such a right, they too were sieged by the public. The governmental building that once held the glorious council was set ablaze, and burnt down over a period of three days. The council members were rounded up by the military, who at this time was acting under a man who called himself “Bourbon the Invincible”.

Bourbon the Invincible came to power as the King in 1478, after eight years of rebellion and destruction of which he carefully planned out and created militant groups to act on his ideals of a united landmass, a utopian paradise for all walks of life. In 1480, Bourbon the Invincible began to draw up plans to conquer the land surrounding the Witzgallian Reich, claiming it was in Witzgall’s destined path and nobody else has the right to lay claims to the land.

His soldiers suited up and marched, meeting up with other Witzgallian military groups at the battlefront. Under Bourbon the Invincible, Witzgall grew nearly three times its size during King John IV’s rule. The army conquered the Constables, a cultured civilization which excelled in the arts. Bourbon the Invincible enslaved the Constables, and decided to have the Constable schools and education system preserved and integrated into the Witzgallian culture.

Slaves rebelled against Bourbon the Invincible, alongside the newly captures Contables, in 1492. Bourbon ordered strategic eliminations of threatening groups, shattering the slaves’ hopes of freedom from the persecution they suffered whilst in the empire.

In 1512, Bourbon the Invincible died of a heart attack after learning of his wife’s drowning. The slaves quickly took this opportunity of nationalistic depression and rose up, fighting against the military with all of their might concentrated. The man leading the slaves in the massive rebellion was none other than King Bourbon’s son, Christopher Fraue. Fraue led the massive amounts of slaves to their freedom in a large amount of battles, which ultimately ended in the defeat and crumble of the State’s control.

In 1540, the slaves won their freedom. However, this was short lived. Fraue was soon murdered, alongside his wife and daughter, on Easter Sunday in 1541. The slaves who had fought against the government were “put down” in massive genocidal assaults which lasted two decades.

On January 4th, 1566, Witzgall began its rebirthing process, trying to grow back into the economical and militaristic powerhouse of which it once was. Alongside the new governmental reforms, the Witzgallian Reich elected a new Fuhrer during the first ever publicly released elections. Winning by a landslide, Fuhrer Adolf Pacz became the new representative for the Witzgallian Reich.

The Fourth Reich

To be written.

Language, Races, Religion, and Currency

To be written.

Language

To be written.

Races

To be written.

Religion

To be written.

Currency

To be written.

National Description

To be written.

Military

To be written.

Witzgallian Empirate States

To be written.

Related Articles

To be written.