With the Scottish
referendum looming, and as I near the end of re-reading John Julius
Norwich’s excellent three part history of Byzantium, I was
wondering how long a state can survive.
It’s an interesting
question in the real world, and also for fantasy, where countries
seem to often exist for X thousand (or even X tens of thousands)
years, which seems a shade excessive.
The oldest coherent
political structures in Europe are England and France. Using the
longest, most generously vague measures, they’re about 15 centuries
old. Countries which sound ancient, such as Germany and Italy, are
actually surprisingly recent (both less than two centuries old).
However, from the Act of Union the UK is just over three centuries
old, and France has altered (in boundary terms) beyond all
recognition, growing a fair bit and doing its best to establish the
French identity as the cost of Bretons, Gascons and so forth. It was,
of course, conquered last century by the Germans, and its present constitution began in 1958.
China is sometimes
considered to have effectively been founded by Qin Shi Huangdi in
about 200BC. One of the problems with trying to assert how old a
country might be is whether or not substantial political/border
changes mark a new beginning (in China’s case, the Communist party
coming to power). A clever chap elsewhere on the internet suggested
1,000 years or so for China’s age, based on current borders
established by Kublai Khan (although the Song dynasty was quite a bit
smaller).
The first Roman
‘Empire’ (as kingdom, republic and only then empire) lasted for
about 12 centuries (or just over five if we strictly take the
Imperial period as one nation). The Eastern Roman Empire (or
Byzantine Empire) lasted a little over 11. The latter fell entirely
due to military reasons (the city was taken by storm after its
hitherto invincible land walls were assaulted by cannons). The former
fell due to a combination of continual infighting, political
instability and military weakness.
It’s worth also,
briefly, concentrating on just how mighty the Western and Eastern
Roman Empires were. At its height, the Roman Empire (then singular)
held the entire coastline of the Mediterranean in its grip. It
stretched from partway into Scotland down to the deserts of Africa,
from the Atlantic Ocean to Jerusalem. The Eastern Empire lacked,
almost always, quite the aggression and militarism of the Western,
but it had the perfect city from which to rule, as Byzantium’s
famed Land Walls were invincible excepting only an earthquake and, at
least, the advent of truly powerful cannons. (It’s also worth
mentioning Rome fell with a whimper, whereas Constantine Dragases,
the last Byzantine Emperor, was killed heroically fighting to protect
his doomed city).
Turning to fantasy,
it’s not uncommon to have states be thousands of years old. But
this is a great rarity (depending how you consider states to change,
with borders and substantial political alterations, you could make a
case for almost no country in the world being so old, possibly
excepting Japan).
Consider also how we
view our own history. WWI seems a long way off, but it’s just over
a century ago that it started. WWII has a much stronger sense in the
public consciousness, but it’s still within living memory, and was
an unusual war in that the whole world was at risk from an evil
lunatic.
Two centuries does not
sound long. But it’s just over a little more than that which saw
America gain independence.
A thousand years ago
(1014) -
England was a Saxon
kingdom, to be conquered half a century later by William the Bastard
Byzantium was the most
powerful country in the world, led by the arse-kicking (but very poor at succession-planning) Basil II
Jerusalem had been in
Muslim hands for about four centuries (it would be about 80 years
before the First Crusade surprised everyone by recapturing it)
Spain was mostly in
Muslim hands
Italy was becoming a
collection of powerful city-states
The Normans invaded
southern Italy (they would go on to create the Kingdom of Sicily,
including the island and much of southern Italy as well)
In short, we would
recognise a few names but the whole world was very different. The odd
nation might last half a millennium, and a rare one might make it to
a thousand years, but the world isn’t some sort of static artefact
that remains more or less unchanged. In the last century we’ve seen
the collapse the British, Austro-Hungarian and German Empires, the
downfall of Imperial Russia, the collapse of Imperial China and
astonishing economic rebirth of Communist China, and the end of the
Ottoman Empire.
It’s nice to think we
live in a stable world. But we don’t. And if you’re trying to
write a more realistic type of fantasy, it’s worth considering just
how much borders change, and how short-lived countries can be.
In 2014, the UK’s
death knell may be sounded. For some, who identify solely as English,
Welsh, Northern Irish or Scottish, it will be of little emotional
impact. For others, who see themselves solely or primarily as
British, it may be heart-breaking.
Thaddeus
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