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Post by andremassena on Jun 21, 2016 2:18:39 GMT
Has Poland been accurately represented in European war 4? How was Russia and Prussia able to partition it off and suppress uprisings if generals such as Dombrowski, Poniatowski, Kosciusko, and sulkowski are accurately represented
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 21, 2016 2:27:23 GMT
Has Poland been accurately represented in European war 4? How was Russia and Prussia able to partition it off and suppress uprisings if generals such as Dombrowski, Poniatowski, Kosciusko, and sulkowski are accurately represented The poles led essentially rabble against crack Russian and Prussian troops. And they were dissolvedbin 1794, not 1798
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Post by andremassena on Jun 21, 2016 2:31:07 GMT
Has Poland been accurately represented in European war 4? How was Russia and Prussia able to partition it off and suppress uprisings if generals such as Dombrowski, Poniatowski, Kosciusko, and sulkowski are accurately represented The poles led essentially rabble against crack Russian and Prussian troops. And they were dissolvedbin 1794, not 1798 So Poland shouldn't be in that campaign at all?
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 21, 2016 2:32:31 GMT
The poles led essentially rabble against crack Russian and Prussian troops. And they were dissolvedbin 1794, not 1798 So Poland shouldn't be in that campaign at all? No, at least historically speaking
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Post by Frederick the Great on Jun 21, 2016 11:05:01 GMT
So if Easy Tech learnt "Geography from a PE teacher" does this mean they learnt History from a Math teacher?
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 21, 2016 14:52:08 GMT
So if Easy Tech learnt "Geography from a PE teacher" does this mean they learnt History from a Math teacher? I'd say they learned history from the Cafeteria lady, and English from the Janitor
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Post by Conrad von Hotzendorf on Jun 21, 2016 18:00:54 GMT
So if Easy Tech learnt "Geography from a PE teacher" does this mean they learnt History from a Math teacher? English from the Janitor I think you mean illiterate, redneck janitor
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 21, 2016 18:05:04 GMT
I think you mean illiterate, redneck janitor Let's hold back on derogatory terms. But yes, the illiterate janitor
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Post by Conrad von Hotzendorf on Jun 21, 2016 18:07:22 GMT
I think you mean illiterate, redneck janitor Let's hold back on derogatory terms. But yes, the illiterate janitor sorry, not meaning to insult anyone
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Post by andremassena on Jun 22, 2016 2:23:46 GMT
So if Easy Tech learnt "Geography from a PE teacher" does this mean they learnt History from a Math teacher? I'd say they learned history from the Cafeteria lady, and English from the Janitor "Although we have occupied the capital of the enemy, but the enemy...." -Murat
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Post by Józef Poniatowski on Jun 22, 2016 10:56:40 GMT
Has Poland been accurately represented in European war 4? How was Russia and Prussia able to partition it off and suppress uprisings if generals such as Dombrowski, Poniatowski, Kosciusko, and sulkowski are accurately represented Poland had altogether across all of Europe at any given time a grand total of at most 40,000 soldiers. Their enemies to either side, Prussia and Russia, could easily call up armies five times that number. The Polish lost because they simply could not keep any prolonged engagement without allowing terrible damage to their small army
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 22, 2016 16:05:01 GMT
Has Poland been accurately represented in European war 4? How was Russia and Prussia able to partition it off and suppress uprisings if generals such as Dombrowski, Poniatowski, Kosciusko, and sulkowski are accurately represented Poland had altogether across all of Europe at any given time a grand total of at most 40,000 soldiers. Their enemies to either side, Prussia and Russia, could easily call up armies five times that number. The Polish lost because they simply could not keep any prolonged engagement without allowing terrible damage to their small army And don't forget that the Polish system of government was rotting
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Post by Józef Poniatowski on Jun 23, 2016 23:34:42 GMT
It was rotting because of the external pressure. As one of the "new age" democracies in Europe after the 1791, May 3rd Constitutional Reforms, it was a percieved threat to every monarchy, and unlike France the Polish did not have the influence, size, or economy to enforce their sovereignty. As a result, the liberal and very unusual constitution (made by myself and my father ) was dissolved by the likes of the "ussians to either side and Austria. We tried to do good by our people (who had historically been given complete religous tolerance in one of the first democracies in Europe, mind you ) but we can't survive such a coalition against us
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Post by Jean-Luc Picard on Jun 23, 2016 23:43:09 GMT
It was rotting because of the external pressure. As one of the "new age" democracies in Europe after the 1791, May 3rd Constitutional Reforms, it was a percieved threat to every monarchy, and unlike France the Polish did not have the influence, size, or economy to enforce their sovereignty. As a result, the liberal and very unusual constitution (made by myself and my father ) was dissolved by the likes of the "ussians to either side and Austria. We tried to do good by our people (who had historically been given complete religous tolerance in one of the first democracies in Europe, mind you ) but we can't survive such a coalition against us I was referring to the pre-1791 commonwealth. If the Commonwealth's system had been reformed earlier, the first partition wouldn't've happened, and without a first partition, there can be no second
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Post by Józef Poniatowski on Jun 24, 2016 2:51:56 GMT
This is quite true, I was considering the Poniatowski era, because I have a slight bias towards it lol.
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