@Kilomuse: Thank you! I will add some smaller islands around the main ones.
@Eswube: Thank you!
@Colo:
Thank you for your input Colo.
First off, the 'bathymetric' view is on the list, and I will get that down as soon as I finish the railway and road maps. Concerning the rivers, that is a good point and I did not think about that. I will work on that.
Second, the names. Let me show the history:
THE EARLIEST SETTLERS
The Denton Islands were first settled by the Polynesian people, around 1200-1400 CE, who first migrated from the Cook Islands. Around 1300-1500 CE, the Māori of New Zealand settled Denton alongside the Cook Island Māori.
THE BEGINNINGS
-In 1762, a British explorer by the name of John H. Denton explored the the islands. Upon reaching what is now St. Catherine, he ran aground, and his ship's foremast had snapped. After spending several weeks fixing the mast, Denton is preparing to leave as a feud breaks out between his crew and the Maori. Denton was among 4 of the crew members killed, and the rest of his crew sailed home.
-In 1773 and 1777, Captain James Cook, landed on the islands and claimed them for Britain. He also mapped the islands and named after John H. Denton.
-In 1792, the first British colonial settlers arrive on the Eastern island and create the town of Bristol. Later settlers come in 1798, 1801, and 1804 and create the towns Lock Haven, St. Catherine and Scipio Bay. Unfortuantely, not a whole lot of interest is given to the colonies so only a small number of colonists settle the islands, opting for the Eastern Island as their main island.
REVOLUTION
-In 1857, the settlers of Denton fight the British. They amassed enough help from the Maori and called upon the French to help. Due to the British involvement in the Indian Uprising, the Dentonites were able to defeat the British and declared independence December 14th of 1858.
THE GOLDEN AGE
-In 1856, the first constitution was drafted and a new government established, formally as the Republic of Denton.
-From 1861 to 1914, the Denton government offered land grants to anyone who would settle the country. German, Irish, French, Polish and immigrants from other European countries took up the offer, settling mainly on the sparsely populated Western Island, with Germans forming the cities of Komorn, Saalfeld, Crassna (later Fort Crassna) and Saarbrucken, the Poles creating the cities of Piaski, Susz and Lublin, the French creating the towns of Strasbourg, Lyons and Rhone (yes, named after the river) and the Irish creating the towns of Carrick and Castlebar. Surprisingly a large number of British came to settle as opposed to 70 years back, and formed the towns of Concord, Port Douglas, Port Sterling, Ellesmere, Westminster Bay and more.
-In 1910, Denton's second constitution was written up, and was basically an extension of the original consitution first drafted in 1856. This included the abolishment of the land grant, as the country had grown to nearly 14 million people, and the addition of immigration laws, created to keep the islands from overpopulating too quickly.
And here is the demographics:
Demographics
European - 87.5%
30% - German
20% - British
15% - Irish
10% - Polish
5% - French
2.5% - Czech
2.5% - Croatian
2.5% - Russian
Indigenious - 5%
5% - Maori
Other - 7.5%
7.5% - Other Nationalities
So basically that should give an idea on what the population comes from. Put simply, the land grants, much like what America did, is what attracted so many different nationalities.
Yes, McKinney is named for the suburb north of Dallas, and the country itself is named after my hometown of Denton.
I would also like to point out, that Innsbruck is Austrian and Cologne is actually German (original spelling Koln).
http://www.majhost.com/gallery/ezgo394/ ... ocales.bmp
The link will show where I plan on putting the island (at least for geographical reasons) due in part to the 'crunch' being formed by the S.E. Indian Ocean Ridge.
The red outline is around where the island is located. I am partially handwaving the location because I want to have the Maori (from Cook Islands and New Zealand) as the indigenous group, but I don't want to have mainly volcanic land (as I would in the South Pacific). I would rather have the islands be formed by plate tectonics.
The geography of the island, is nearly too perfect I agree (and that's what worried me), but I am thinking that the plate could push up on the West and Eastern sides of the island 'ridge', and slightly push on the center, giving it that large hump (which really goes from 0ft- 4500ft)(and remember that the terrain is set in 1500ft increments, so I cant model every little valley and hill).
I think that covers it..
Thanks for your input!
-Ethan
EDIT: Also, I would like to add that at the time Westminster Bay, Hythe Bay, and St. Catherine were the main Immigration gateways (not many people went through St. Catherine).
_________________
Salide -
Denton -
The Interrealms
I am not very active on the forums anymore, but work is still being done on my AUs. Visit the
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