A Native American Peoples (such as the Sioux)
A Post-Colonial Power (such as Brazil or New Zealand)
A Mesopotamian Civ (such as the Sumer or the Hittites)
A Southeast Asian Civ (such as the Majapahit or Indonesia)
The Zulu or the Kongo
Israel
Austria/Austria-Hungary
Ethiopia
Poland/Poland-Lithuania
Sweden
Of course that Battle was significant, but you can't honestly tell me that one battle would've decided the fate of Europe. There's no way to know for sure, but the war most likely would've continued and either side could've still won.
Too many factors would have to be taken into account.
What stopped them from pouring through beforehand?
Geographically speaking, the Ottomans probably would've had a harder time after that battle, seeing as Vienna, Austria would've been completely surrounded on the North, East, and Western fronts.
But who knows, maybe it would've been a different map.
If the Battle of Vienna was won by the Ottomans, I'd wager they wouldn't start falling back (if they ever would) until they went up against the French or Spanish. They would have been able to take northern Italy and Germany, for sure. Possibly Poland and such. It would be hard for them, but I'd wager that central Europe would be predominantly Islamic rather than Protestant today if the Battle of Vienna hadn't been won for the Europeans.
I'll make an updated poll, now that we know all the new civs for G&Ks, and that Austria, Ethiopia and Sweden made it, so I think it's appropriate.
Done, made the new poll: http://forums.2kgames.com/showthread...-new-civs-poll
- Please read the first post before voting!
There may or may not have been a real person behind the myth. Or several. One common version is that he was a Roman-Briton.
Note that the difference between Briton and Britain is important. The mythic Arthur is generally called "King of the Britons", which is, of course, cognate with Breton. The Britons were celts. Confused yet?
Well, there's always the legal difference. There are laws that are UK-wide, but a considerable amount of law is separate between Scotland and "England and Wales" (as they were one polity long before the Acts of Union), including criminal law, tort law, marriage law, contract law...
So no, it's not a distinction without a difference. It's more like saying DC is part of Maryland (or Virginia, if you prefer) - it's wrong, and there are legal consequences to the fact it's not the case.
Alright fair enough. I concede the point. But my other point stands: none of this is worth getting upset over when people don't care to be specific about it.