As an EU5 player I have to say bohemia is OP pls nerf
TheHistoryMaster2520 on
I wonder why Czechia never Germanized to the degree that Mecklenburg and Carinthia did despite spending centuries as part of the Holy Roman Empire and later the Habsburg Monarchy
ZeitgeistWurst on
You mean the german speaking nations that proceeded to elect multiple bohemians as holy roman emperor in the following centuries?
Sorry, but where does this meme make any sense?
EnchantingAngel3 on
POV: You’re a Habsburg trying to explain why you definitely should be in charge of Prague.
BasedAustralhungary on
Oh, yes… the Electorate of the Czech Republic influencing Austria and Germany in the Europarliament
Das_Lloss on
It is almost as if german states care about a country in which a large Part of the Population is german (they actually dont).
>Because God’s Word was spreading, the evil envier from the days of creation, the thrice-accursed Devil, was unable to bear this good and entered his vessels. And he began to rouse many, saying to them: “God is not glorified by this. For if this were pleasing unto Him, could He not have ordained from the beginning that they should glorify Him, writing their language in their own script? But only three languages, Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, were chosen as appropriate for rendering glory unto God.”
The evil vessels of the Devil are, of course, German priests, followers of the Pilatian heresy, who hated that the Slavs embraced liturgy in their own language, while they, the Germans, didn’t even think of it. The pope, not a German, actually supported Constantine in this dispute, saying it’s ok to worship in any language you like. Unfortunately, the one who brought the message to Bohemia (actually Moravia, but Bohemia was an important part of it and would soon take its place in the annals of history) *was* a German, so the letter was forged to say that cool languages are banned and only Latin is allowed. This made promoting Christianity much harder in the non-Latin speaking land of the West Slavs, and greatly strengthened German influence in the region. Bohemia wouldn’t even get an archbishopric until 1344, being simply a diocese of a German archbishopric before that.
8 Comments
“You fucking hate me?!”
*looks at window**
“…grab him.”
As an EU5 player I have to say bohemia is OP pls nerf
I wonder why Czechia never Germanized to the degree that Mecklenburg and Carinthia did despite spending centuries as part of the Holy Roman Empire and later the Habsburg Monarchy
You mean the german speaking nations that proceeded to elect multiple bohemians as holy roman emperor in the following centuries?
Sorry, but where does this meme make any sense?
POV: You’re a Habsburg trying to explain why you definitely should be in charge of Prague.
Oh, yes… the Electorate of the Czech Republic influencing Austria and Germany in the Europarliament
It is almost as if german states care about a country in which a large Part of the Population is german (they actually dont).
1198? Try 850s! An excerpt from the [Life of Constantine](http://www.promacedonia.org/en/kmsl/kmsl_intr.htm):
>Because God’s Word was spreading, the evil envier from the days of creation, the thrice-accursed Devil, was unable to bear this good and entered his vessels. And he began to rouse many, saying to them: “God is not glorified by this. For if this were pleasing unto Him, could He not have ordained from the beginning that they should glorify Him, writing their language in their own script? But only three languages, Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, were chosen as appropriate for rendering glory unto God.”
The evil vessels of the Devil are, of course, German priests, followers of the Pilatian heresy, who hated that the Slavs embraced liturgy in their own language, while they, the Germans, didn’t even think of it. The pope, not a German, actually supported Constantine in this dispute, saying it’s ok to worship in any language you like. Unfortunately, the one who brought the message to Bohemia (actually Moravia, but Bohemia was an important part of it and would soon take its place in the annals of history) *was* a German, so the letter was forged to say that cool languages are banned and only Latin is allowed. This made promoting Christianity much harder in the non-Latin speaking land of the West Slavs, and greatly strengthened German influence in the region. Bohemia wouldn’t even get an archbishopric until 1344, being simply a diocese of a German archbishopric before that.