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World Building Notes

The Federation of the Holy Roman Empire

Rome in this alternate history had absorbed all of today’s Europe, a few parts of North Africa and some parts of the Middle East— not a clean cut of those countries, though. Its neighboring country was Persia (which, location-wise, was the Ottoman Empire in real history) and they were, among other neighboring territories, the greatest adversary of Rome. The official name of Rome as a whole was “The Federation of the Holy Roman Empire”. Due to how massive Rome was, it was split into two territories known as East and West Rome, ruled by an Empress (West) and Emperor (East).

Their relationship was tenuous at best, with West Rome being more religious and reserved than East Rome, a more secular, hands-on society. The lingua franca was Latin, and there were many attempts to make it the sole language spoken throughout Rome but it failed every time, so most Romans spoke at least 3 languages regardless of class. Rome also only had one state-sanctioned religion for hundreds of years, one where Occasus was the foundation of Rome’s principles, which was of course used as a form of control.

Since Rome was constantly at war with its neighbors, they needed a constant supply of men to keep the battles going, so women would be drafted after the age of 18 in the late 1300s, then the age of conscription for men was lowered to 16 sometime in the early 1400s.

Roman Names

Caius was born with the name Quintus, given to them by their mother for being the 5th child born. They’re usually called this at home in private especially if they’re in trouble, but their official name is Caius, given to them by their father. In real Roman history, however, (male) children were usually named after the month they were born in, not by the order of which they were born. In this alternate history, however, a cultural shift happened where the practice of giving children names after the order they were born in became popular among nobles due to one well-favored West Rome emperor in the late 14th century who had all sons bearing his name with a second name to signify the order of their birth. Naming their sons all the same name wasn’t that popular, however.

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