QuickTidal, on 24 February 2016 - 02:13 PM, said:
Maark, on 24 February 2016 - 01:15 PM, said:
It's not from thin air, it just seems like that at this point. Trust me, a better explanation will come.
Morgoth, on 24 February 2016 - 01:35 PM, said:
Cause, on 24 February 2016 - 01:08 PM, said:
Morgoth, on 24 February 2016 - 10:27 AM, said:
Macros, on 23 February 2016 - 05:10 PM, said:
Irritating characters and that god awful david eddings/ robert jkrdan trope of 'people from this town ALL act like this' but people from the next valley over have an entirely different set of characteristics.
Shallans an annoying tool
Not to mention how the king and his aristocracy can leave a feudal kingdom for ten years with all of their armies without any serious consequences. Ignoring the logistics of it, the power structure back in the kingdom would have crumbled long ago.
The logistics are explained by magic. The parshendi live on Gem city and Gems can be used to literally magic water, food and shelter out of thin air.
As for the power structure, the queen was left behind with a court and certainly many soldiers. Not so different than the kings of our own world going on crusade.
No, very different from that. Most rulers did not go on crusades for that very reason. The most famous crusader kings, Richard Lionheart and Phillip II of France left most of their army behind under the control of appointed seneschals. Richard was gone for four years and returned to a revolt lead by his brother. Phillip was gone for two years and when he returned to France he immediately started plotting to attack Richard's holdings on the continent. Richard, after all, was away.
Whenever the holy roman emperors spent too long fighting in Italy they were forced to return because of unruly subjects trying to grasp for power. An empy throne leaves too much of a power vacum.
Ten years is just nonsense.
Well...in later Crusades, yes. But in the early Crusades, especially the 1st and 2nd what Cause says is pretty close to true. Of the nine lords who lead the 1st Crusade, only 2 ever returned home, and both did so out of cowardice of being killed rather than trying to stop any usurpers to their titles at home. They were all far too interested in what they might grasp in the Holy Land to be worried about home. The only monarch who didn't participate was Henry IV in France, and he didn't go because he was late-middle aged, ill, and had an already unstable kingdom.
The 2nd Crusade was even worse for this, as counts and lords left their homes and families to not only fight in a grand Crusade (the first of which was...largely successful...minus the drawbacks no one was talking about), but there were established Crusader kingdoms to fall in line for, like Edessa, or Jerusalem.
The 1st and 2nd Crusade, you'll notice were small numbers of nobles, with large armies that they brought...but by the time of the 3rd and Richard and Phillip entered the fray, the amount of nobles involved were staggering. So they were able to come to Outremer and lead and show power, without bringing vast armies with them, because those armies largely existed in Outremer already. The 1st and 2nd Crusade didn't really have that luxury. So you're both right, but I see Cause's POV here.
None of the great kings participated in the first crusade. King Phillip sent his brother (he himself was busy dealing with several local rebellions), William stayed in England and Henry IV, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, was busy dealing with unruly vassals in Italy. The kings of Iberia were dealing with local wars and the kingdoms of Scandinavia and Rus were too far away.