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SteamPoweredWolf β€” The British Archipelago 2032 by-nc-sa

Published: 2012-12-03 13:24:19 +0000 UTC; Views: 12358; Favourites: 73; Downloads: 57
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Description The shock victory of the Scottish Nationalists in an independence referendum held in 2014 emboldened separatist movements in the British Isles and beyond. Across the English channel, the European Union broke up under the strain of a vast debt crises, leading to the separation of Catalonia from Spain and the break up of Belgium and Italy. Seeing many new states succeeding, regionalist movements in what was left of the United Kingdom began to campaign more vigorously for outright independence.

Wales or Cymru was the first to secede and most observers expected Northern Island to follow However, in a hard fought referendum, the Northern Irish chose continued union with England, perhaps due to worries about dominance by their southern neighbour, Eire.

It was in fact the southern region of Wessex which chose independence. Following the return to office of a Labour government determined to shore up its support in its Northern English Heartlands, the Wessex Nationalists began to win seats on a platform of outright independence and an end to southern taxes going to projects in the North of England. After a the first Wessex Nationalist M.P's took their seats in the hung parliament produced by the 2022 general election, an independence referendum became impossible to avoid.

Wessex proved very successful as an independent nation, with a strong infrastructure which had previously supported London. This encouraged Northumbria and Kernow (Cornwall) to follow.

The latest nation to emerge from the break up of the U.K was Devon, which was until 2030 still part of England, but geographically isolated by Wessex. In a four choice vote, the residents were offered continued union with England, joining Wessex, becoming part of Cornwall or independence from all three. The disputed result saw Devon opt for independence by a very narrow margin of only two percent. England refused to recognise the result and still claims Devon as part of its territory.

Perhaps hoping to lessen the influence of what is still the most powerful Nation of the British Archipelago on their borders, Wessex and Kernow have signed a three way protection treaty with Devon. Although military intervention by England looks unlikely at present, the current armed conflict in the former Italian states may bode ill for the future.

(All done in Paint.net. Flags are those generally accepted as being the emblems of those countries or regions.)
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Comments: 13

WhippetWild [2016-10-03 22:20:37 +0000 UTC]

You said in artist comments "the Northern Irish chose continued union with England".

And now I will show this I saw almost two years ago, on a television show.

whippetwild.deviantart.com/art…

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fuckdenson [2016-03-19 11:51:10 +0000 UTC]

What is Wessex like then? is it left wing?

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SteamPoweredWolf In reply to fuckdenson [2016-03-26 15:07:08 +0000 UTC]

I think it would be socially conservative, but economically left wing. Β 

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Germanyisawesome [2014-06-02 22:19:11 +0000 UTC]

i wish

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WhippetWild [2013-07-18 21:46:45 +0000 UTC]

coolness. I read somewhere, the Isle of Wight, wants to be a crown colony like Isle of Man and the Channel Islands.

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Xanthoc [2013-02-18 15:25:15 +0000 UTC]

Great map and concept but awwwwww, I was hoping for an Ulster Republic or a united Eire.

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SteamPoweredWolf In reply to Xanthoc [2013-02-18 16:39:51 +0000 UTC]

Glad you liked it.

In this timeline I imagine that there would be strong political movements in Ulster campaigning for either an independent Ulster Republic or a united Eire, but their mutual antagonism leads to the maintenance of the status quo.

At least for now...perhaps it might change if I get round to doing the British Archipelago 2062? Do you think a second map would be interesting?

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Xanthoc In reply to SteamPoweredWolf [2013-02-18 19:33:41 +0000 UTC]

Very. Especially if England decides it wants to "reclaim Britannia". Also, if there is an Ulster Rep., then most likely Eire will ally with them, not invade seeing as now the British are gone so all is well in their eyes. But you could have them both begin to try and take the Isle of Mann.

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SteamPoweredWolf In reply to Xanthoc [2013-02-19 09:08:06 +0000 UTC]

Sounds fun.

Watch this space as they say.

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SuperAspergian In reply to SteamPoweredWolf [2013-03-29 21:29:33 +0000 UTC]

Personally I like to see Northern Ireland rejoin the Republic of Ireland as an autonomous region as a compromise for those (mainly protestants) who were against an United Ireland in fear of Catholic dominance, retaining their own government and legislative assembly.

Furthermore Cumbria and Yorkshire should be next to secede from England and then the Midlands to become the Freestate of Mercia with Birmingham as it's capital. What's all left of England is East Anglia, London, and the South-East which then Wessex annex these deserted regions to form their idealised version of which become dominated by the Conservatives, whilst most seceded states such as Mercia and Wales becomes mainly socialist. Scotland will however have trouble with separatist movements happening within their borders, especially the Highlands which is dominated by their Gaelic culture and the Shetlands and the Orkneys.

Sorry for any grammar mistakes.

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SteamPoweredWolf In reply to SuperAspergian [2013-04-02 12:29:50 +0000 UTC]

I like the way you think. The Socialist Republic of Mercia…now, that deserves to be included in a future map

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Breeblo In reply to SteamPoweredWolf [2014-02-06 00:14:36 +0000 UTC]

Can you make the new map?

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darklord86 [2012-12-07 17:36:53 +0000 UTC]

This is awesome, and I love the concept.

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