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The Darkhorn
07-07-2007, 23:53
I've just been on a read through the MTW archives and found two threads (there are perhaps more) on princesses and inheritance. These are some points/questions that I've gathered.

1) You must marry someone else's princess to have any hope of getting her family's land. Here's a question though. Must she be married to the actual king at the time (who dies)? I would think so. With a king and several heirs, how can you tell which one she married? I suppose you can figure it out by checking every one of them each turn until the wedding. Of course, this has never happened to me (inheritance). ~:pimp:

2) Did anyone ever find any definative info about your children born of a foreign princess (rather than local aristocrat) having better stats? :stupido:

3) I remember once reading somewhere that the only real consequence from inbreeding is your own sense of self loathing!! The related vices seem to be random any way. :girlslap:

4) If your king dies with no sons or brothers, BUT one of your generals is married to one of your princesses, does he have any claim to be your hier? I may be wrong, but IIRC I have heard of that before. :ballchain:

5) If your king dies without a MALE child (IOW, his heir is his brother), but he had a daughter married to another king, who may see his wife as the legitimate heir to her Dad's kingdom, is more likely to go to war with the knew king (his wife's uncle) to "liberate" her kingdom? :boxing:

Peasant Phill
07-09-2007, 07:54
1) I don't know if she has to be married to your king to work or if being married to the heir turned king is good enough. I can tell you that is it is rare to inherit lands and hard to do if you try it.

2) I doubt it. Marrying a foreign princess should wield you a better alliance with that faction than if you would just propose an alliance without losing an agent of your own (your own princess).

3) Yep, totally random or so they say. I haven't tested it though but others have.

4) That general won't become the faction leader directly unless, of course, your the HRE and he's the best general. He will however have a claim to the throne and might possibly lead a part of your former troops in the civil war.

5) Again, I doubt it. I don't believe the game is so complex. But if it by chance happens, I would be glad to roleplay it along.

History Geek
07-09-2007, 12:33
For me, this is quite a hypothetical subejct, as the implications are so rarely felt. This is my knowledge on the subject though:


how can you tell which one she married?

She'll always be married to the next heir in line: the crown prince / oldest brother


If your king dies with no sons or brothers, BUT one of your generals is married to one of your princesses, does he have any claim to be your hier?
I've heard the same, but never seen it happen. Likewise I would imagine in case you've blessed more than one general with your princesses that the crown would go to the first marriage.


5) If your king dies without a MALE child (IOW, his heir is his brother), but he had a daughter married to another king, who may see his wife as the legitimate heir to her Dad's kingdom, is more likely to go to war with the knew king (his wife's uncle) to "liberate" her kingdom? No.

I always only use princesses as loyalty-boosting attributes.

/HG

therussian91
07-09-2007, 16:29
4. No. I tried doing that in my Scottish campaign (it was VI) when my leader suddenly died, but it didn't count the general as an heir. So, no.

scowie
07-09-2007, 19:10
4. No. I tried doing that in my Scottish campaign (it was VI) when my leader suddenly died, but it didn't count the general as an heir. So, no.
In the past, some people have claimed it did work for them. Im betting it can work (just like you can gain another faction's territory), its just very hard to engineer.

I doubt it would work with any old general. It would probably need to be one with royal blood.

Im not sure how long "royal blood" lasts though. Uncles of the current king have royal blood. When these die of old age, do their descendant's have it? If not then that would mean you would have to marry a princess to an uncle!

Ludens
07-09-2007, 19:38
I recall a developer's post stating that marriages do not affect the chance on obtaining inbred vices, but I am not sure if he was refering to marrying a foreign princes or a nobleman's daughter. What I do know is that someone once experimented with this by marrying every crown prince to his sister in one campaign. He found not effect on the appearance of inbred vices after several centuries of dynastic incest.

History Geek
07-10-2007, 09:14
Im not sure how long "royal blood" lasts though. Uncles of the current king have royal blood. When these die of old age, do their descendant's have it?

Royal blood can be seen in the game as a fancy little crown to the right of the generals picture. Uncles have it, but when they die of old age, their "decendant" - that is the guy taking over the unit - loses the 'royal' status.

I can't see why it had to be a general of royal blood - marrying a princess makes you a part of the royal family.

/HG

Ironside
07-10-2007, 13:18
Royal blood can be seen in the game as a fancy little crown to the right of the generals picture. Uncles have it, but when they die of old age, their "decendant" - that is the guy taking over the unit - loses the 'royal' status.


Not fully, they're still somewhat of half-royals (they'll still lead civil wars etc) even after losing that oryal status.

scowie
07-10-2007, 20:42
I can't see why it had to be a general of royal blood - marrying a princess makes you a part of the royal family.
Any Joe Bloggs marrying a princess would have a very loose claim to the throne compared to an existing royal who's grandad was the king!

Martok
07-11-2007, 02:09
I can't see why it had to be a general of royal blood - marrying a princess makes you a part of the royal family.
In real life, yes. In the game, unfortunately not.

Brandy Blue
07-11-2007, 06:07
I can't see why it had to be a general of royal blood - marrying a princess makes you a part of the royal family.

/HG

Marrying into a royal family is not the same thing as having a potential claim to the throne. Phillip II of Spain married Queen Mary Tudor of England, and had no claim to the throne at all at her death. Even Catholics recognized that, and would have to back Mary Queen of Scots if they objected to Elizabeth I as a protestant ruler of England.

Likewise, Prince Albert (husband of Queen Victoria) and Prince Philip (husband of Elizabeth II) got no claim to the thone of Great Britan at all.

History Geek
07-11-2007, 07:21
Not fully, they're still somewhat of half-royals (they'll still lead civil wars ect)

Any general can lead a civil war, heirs and former heirs are usually the most inclined to do so, but the ability to lead a civil war dosn't make you royal


Marrying into a royal family is not the same thing as having a potential claim to the throne. Phillip II of Spain married Queen Mary Tudor of England, and had no claim to the throne at all at her death. Even Catholics recognized that, and would have to back Mary Queen of Scots if they objected to Elizabeth I as a protestant ruler of England.

Likewise, Prince Albert (husband of Queen Victoria) and Prince Philip (husband of Elizabeth II) got no claim to the thone of Great Britan at all.

I do not think that is true - they may be a very long way from the throne, but in the hypothetically case that - gods forbid - most of the royal family died they would at some point be able to claim the throne, as a member of the royal family.

Now for roleplaying issues, it wouldn't be any guy marrying a princess - only nobles could hope to achive that. As a king, your duty is to make sure your family is in charge, and a marriage is a very serious matter, as a future son-in-law needed to have some power to add to the family business.

And remember - this is the middle ages civil wars we're talking about, so it wouldn't matter that much for those preparing rebellion that they had a legitimate claim to the throne. Just a small excuse like a family connection will serve you just fine, as it has been several times in RL history. If this is the way the game works or not, I'm not sure.

I still need proof that you actually can have a civil war instead of a "game over" I think it was Caravel who mentioned it would happen one out of ten times, but is there a screenie or anything else out there to support this claim?

/HG

Ironside
07-11-2007, 11:44
Any general can lead a civil war, heirs and former heirs are usually the most inclined to do so, but the ability to lead a civil war dosn't make you royal

No, but I suspect the old coding about the generals are still in place, when the generals lived forever the royal blood never disappeared. And I suspect this is still true coding wise.
I tried to have a bizzaro campaign and get "King" d'Arc once, but it didn't work as every former hier that had ever existed had stronger claims than the best general in the French army (who was royally married).


I still need proof that you actually can have a civil war instead of a "game over" I think it was Caravel who mentioned it would happen one out of ten times, but is there a screenie or anything else out there to support this claim?

/HG

Only died out 2 times due to lack of hiers so I cannot say for certain for the player, but the computer has it (that's why it's hard to kill them off with assassins sometimes).

Your land (and the comps) can be inhierited by another faction without that faction dieing out though (suspected to be caused by a civil war occuring at "game over" but you land getting inhierited happens first, so you have no land and no troops on either side).

Caerfanan
07-17-2007, 15:06
5) If your king dies without a MALE child (IOW, his heir is his brother), but he had a daughter married to another king, who may see his wife as the legitimate heir to her Dad's kingdom, is more likely to go to war with the knew king (his wife's uncle) to "liberate" her kingdom? :boxing:
It would be historical.... I kind of remember something about a very, very long war between two european countries because of family matters...

Caerfanan
07-17-2007, 15:07
Not fully, they're still somewhat of half-royals (they'll still lead civil wars etc) even after losing that oryal status.
I think that the "being of the royal blood" background for the character stays (in his picture when you right click on his unit), while the 'potential heir symbol' disappears (on his unit icon).