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kgauck
06-25-2008, 08:55 PM
Discussion thread for Population (http://www.birthright.net/brwiki/index.php/Population). If you would like to add a comment, click the Post Reply button.

kgauck
06-25-2008, 09:14 PM
I've gone back and forth on how to report populations, at various times using province level squared times one thousand, and at other times using province level squared times five thousand. Clearly, I regard 5kP² as the lowest plausible population density to allow us to assume things like Galleons, knights, and cities. However, aware that this is an issue of some controversy, I've been looking for a content neutral way to present population information.

Here is what I propose. We use the numbers as found in the Table 5-1: Province Level. However, we make the term "Population" a link to the page I've put under discussion. It states that the BR community is divided on the issue of how to interpret population numbers, and offers two common positions: population represents the number of people in a province, and this population is too low by a factor of five to ten. The solution is that we use the population figures from table 5-1 without stating whether these mean people or families. In general, we avoid clarifying the issue. Its normally not required. If a description calls for picking one or another, give both positions a statement.

This is consistent with our neutrality policy.

Thoughts?

AndrewTall
06-25-2008, 09:27 PM
I prefer a higher population, but that's because I prefer to think of a campaign with intrigue etc and that requires more people.

Leaving vague if the population represents adults, voters, taxpayers, hearths, families, etc allows considerable variation. The population does have a major impact on descriptions of towns and cities (a town of 1,000 is very different to a town of 10,000) and on army sizes - 5-10% of the population under arms has a sizable effect on PC battle impact.

But since we won't agree, the arguments have been regularly been rehashed, and the campaign needs for a points of light campaign and a renaissance intrigue campaign as so different I'd go for leaving it vague, but with some wiki pages commenting on various interpretations.

Sorontar
06-26-2008, 12:05 AM
To quote the wiki page of the BRCS section "Components of a domain":

Table 5-1: Province level provides a rough metric for determining the number of taxpaying human commoners in a rural province .... Table 5-1 also indicates the size of the largest settlements likely to be found in a rural province of the indicated level.

Many provinces have multiple urban areas so this means that the population on the table is really under estimating the province population. Where it becomes accurate is in Rjuirk provinces like Valkheim where the PS state that there is only one settlement. This means that all other communities in the population are just thorps (ie. a farming community that lives near each other) which I take to be 0-200 people.

For Valkheim (province level 1) it says there is only one village (Eriksgaard, which I give a population around 700 which could be 140 families of 5 people) but the original Jarl's estate (Varrik) is still occupied. So I take the estate to only have a small population (population 75, 15 families of 5). Personally, those numbers look too big for a village, even if we include farms that supply it.

The table needs to explain itself better. Is it saying that a province with 30,000 will have a small city in it (of unknown population), or is it saying that a small city will have a population level of 30,000 which is the same population as a level 6 province. I suspect that it really should be the first of those, but people (like me) have been misreading it as a bit of the second case.

Sorontar.

kgauck
06-26-2008, 12:23 AM
Most settlements in southern England had an average population of 500-600 residents. Those that got up to 1000 residents started to experience the social stratification we associate with town life. We're talking high middle ages here, pre-plague. If the Rjurik are to use the Medieval analog, (rather than Dark Ages or Renaissance) then 500-600 residence for a typical village should be common.

Rey
06-26-2008, 01:23 AM
Sorontar, you refer to BRCS combined with original material?

Does it say what a province level in terms of population means in RoE? Taxpayers or general population? I never found the word taxpayers there, so population means all the people to me, children and adults.

"Province (0), less that 1000 people. Widely scattered homesteads or tiny villages.
Province (1) to (3), 2000 to 10000 people. Thinly settled rural regions or one or two towns of 1000 people or less.
Province (4) to (6), 10000 to 40000 people. Settled farmlands with small industries. Major towns may have up to 5000 people.
Province (7) or greater, as high as 100 000 people. Densely settled, with well developed industries and major cities."

I agree that the table needs to be explained better. From this description I wrote it seems that the largest settlement would have up to half the province's population.

Sorontar
06-26-2008, 01:34 AM
The table I am working from here (don't have RoE on hand) is from the wiki but seems to match my copy of the BRCS. Sorry it doesn't format too well.

Table 5-1: Province Level
Level: Citizens, Largest Settlement
0: 0 Thorp
1: 1,000 Hamlet
2: 4,000 Village
3: 7,000 Small town
4: 10,000 Large town
5: 20,000 Large town
6: 30,000 Small city
7: 40,000 Large city
8: 60,000 Large city
9: 80,000 Metropolis
10: 100,000 Metropolis

I invented the numbers for Valkheim based on what communities seem to be mentioned in published material (the village and the estate), the fact it is a level 1 province and the fact that historically the aim was *not* to settle there (but things seemed to have changed over time, due to the existence of the village).

Sorontar
ps. strictly speaking I guess the table makes Eriksgaard a hamlet, not a village.

Autarkis
06-26-2008, 01:49 AM
What is on the Wiki jives with ROE:


Level 0: less than 1,000
Level 1-3: 2,000 to 10,000
Level 4-6: 10,000 to 40,000
Level 7+: 40,000-100,000



Level 0 provinces are wild, unsettled, or untenable, home to nothing more than widely scattered homesteads or tiny villages. The overall population is usually less than 1,00 people.
Level 1 to level 3 provinces are thinly settled rural regions, with small villages and one or two towns of 1,000 people or less. The population may range from 2,000 to 10,000 people.
Level 4 to level 6 provinces are settled farmlands with small industries. Major towns may have populations of up to 5,000 people, and the overall population ranges from 10,000 to 40,000
Level 7 or greater provinces are densely settled, with well-developed industries and major cities. Population may be as high as 100,000 people.

Sorontar
06-26-2008, 02:38 AM
Thanks Autarkis. In that case I certainly have given too big a population for Eriksgaard. If it is the main community in Valkheim, the province is only level 1 (pop. 1000),and a small town is considered as pop. 1000, then the population of Eriksgaard should be about 200 (40 families of five adults). That sounds right.

Hamlet = 100-200
Village = 500
Small town = 1000

So a province level 1 (1000) only consists of homes (5+ each) and hamlets (200)

Does that fit for you Kenneth and Rey?

This would make Varrik have a population of under 100 because it is not as big as Eriksgaard.

Sorontar.

Rey
06-26-2008, 09:40 AM
Sorontar, to tell you the truth, I don't know anymore.
Compared to Hogunmark's 200k on brwiki, Eriksgaard should probably have at least couple of k.

Rowan
06-26-2008, 02:36 PM
One thing that I have long found odd about most population descriptions is that province income, with the small exception of being able to host extra trade routes, increases linearly, while the population seems to increase exponentially. I have a hard time believing that higher level provinces described as more "urban" actually produce significantly fewer domain resources per capita than lower level provinces. In fact, the opposite would be true. As agriculture and division of labor becomes increasingly able to support cities and non-agricultural professions, the ability of a realm to handle building projects, administration, and military action.

This is why I don't like the tables. I would rather we list several alternative working rules and explanations under the "Population" section. I would like to include Kgauck's estimates of total populations in settled provinces (based on land area and geography), or come up with some rough abstract formula for such. Thus most provinces, even if only low level, would have populations around or over 100,000 people. Province level, then, is explained by a combination of factors, including administrative reach, control, efficiency, organization of society, and strength of the established connection of a regent to the land and his people. (The preponderance of low level provinces is explained by the effects of war and disputation, lack of administrative efficiency, corruption, contestation, weak or recently-changed rulers, etc.)

Those provinces that you wish to describe as "frontier" or "sparsely settled" would have a modifier reducing this total number of settled people. There may be other modifiers for proximity to rivers or coasts, to monster-controlled lands, cultural modifiers, climatic zones, etc. However, as has been mentioned, the actual population still doesn't matter all that much except to simulationists and those trying to describe what the setting looks like on the ground.

Rey
06-26-2008, 02:57 PM
There are small domains that can have either a relatively small, medium or large population. Same goes for large domains. There may be different reasons for every combination.
In the end, it doesn't matter how much population there is in definite numbers. Only province levels are important (for RP, GB, etc) and size of an active army (and extra troops you can muster in times of war, for resolving battles or maintaining law and order).
If we insist on noting the province's population, then province levels and population based on them need to be re-wrote because at this moment they don't support the theory.

kgauck
06-26-2008, 03:25 PM
The reason that the income doesn't keep pace with the population is because of the addition of ever more intermediaries who take the bulk of the income.

Consider a small province in which the regent is the primary land lord (this also assumes a small realm). the GDP of the province is a million ducats. Feudal dues and various fees amount to 84,000 ducats. This belongs to the regent.

Assume a larger province with a GDP of four million ducats. The regent can't supervise this (being a land lord is time intensive) so he has intermediary lords. They collect 340,000 ducats in feudal dues, and pass on 20% to the regent, who now gets 68,000 ducats. If our lord keeps some of this territory (the best estates, or those close to his capital) he can avoid some of these intermediaries and maybe make 135,000 ducats. Lets give him a town and call it an even 140,000.

In an even larger province, the intermediaries have intermediaries (welcome to the feudal system!) Now imagine a sixteen million ducat province with lords and counts collecting most of the tax before it gets to the regent. Lets figure you have thirty two lords each collecting 42,000 ducats, and then passing 20%, 8400, up the food chain to the counts, who in total, collect 270,000 (or 67,500 among four counts), who then in turn pass 20% up to the regent who then collects 54,000 ducats.

If the regent never held any land, but subinfudated all of it (like the post-Carolingians whose bureaucracy turned into a hereditary nobility) you actually make less and less as you get bigger.

You also make significantly less on people in towns than you do for people who farm. People who farm pay feudal dues (I'm assuming 1/12th here, but it can vary), and then up the food chain. Towns people are immune from feudal dues, so pay nothing. The city pays a fee for its charter, but its much less than what their feudal dues would amount to. On the other hand, they make stuff. So more population, which implies more townsfolk, implies more people who are tax exempt.

But the game also assumes this feudal network. Lets say I have the sixteen million ducat land, and I have only partly subinfeudated, so I make 336,000 ducats a year. What I do have is a bunch of men who are my vassals (in the strict sense) who will aid me when I call for it. So when I need a bunch of knights, I don't start making armor, buying horses, and training men to wear the armor and ride the horses and then do both at the same time while carrying weapons likely to throw them off balance, instead, all that money that my vassals were keeping went to support their vassals and so on down to the knights who already have armor and horses, and know how to manage both at the same time, and they are available in a pretty short time. So in addition to the supervision of my lands, I also get an army in reserve.

This is how you end up with the Birthright domain system.

Rowan
06-26-2008, 08:43 PM
Kgauck, that works to some extent, but what about levies? And as you have mentioned, the military resources are actually a part of the intermediaries, so their size would increase at a more similar rate than the overall per capita taxation of the monarchy. Even city states in Greece, Roman territories, and later European kingdoms could manage armies of tens of thousands. Now at a small scale, considering Anuire to be in size equal to only a small portion of France, the statistics work better. But if we want to dignify the game to the level of Anuire at least amounting to internal battles within a nation relative in size to France, (which seems to me to be a basic assumption given the tone of the game), then it doesn't seem to fit.

Further, the money available among the guilds and the tithes to the temples, at least that amount available in a pinch or when financing is needed, would increase along with the productivity of the people.

In any case, I think explaining province level in terms other than population gives the most freedom for varying styles of play with the least amount of contradiction and straining of the suspension of disbelief. For instance, many people rightly have a problem with the idea of being potentially able to raise the population of a province by tens of thousands in a year (two Rule Province actions being possible within a year). If explained, however, in terms of various administrative/organizational changes, the scenario that the rules allow becomes more reasonable and lets players mimic the historic meteoric rise of several great rulers in history, turning realms around in just a few years from weak, poor, and faltering to rich and powerful.

kgauck
06-26-2008, 09:22 PM
In any case, I think explaining province level in terms other than population gives the most freedom for varying styles of play with the least amount of contradiction and straining of the suspension of disbelief.

I absolutely agree with this, and have argued many times that province level is more than population, but also includes the effectiveness of the government and other variables. I have gone so far to argue that province level should be reflected as an administrative holding, and you either own a province or your don't.


But if we want to dignify the game to the level of Anuire at least amounting to internal battles within a nation relative in size to France, (which seems to me to be a basic assumption given the tone of the game), then it doesn't seem to fit.

Normally Anuire is presumed to have the size roughly of France. France normally raised armies of roughly 20,000 men. They could raise more for brief periods of time, but was in practice able to raise 20,000. That's 100 units of 200 men. That's hardly a stretch.


Further, the money available among the guilds and the tithes to the temples, at least that amount available in a pinch or when financing is needed, would increase along with the productivity of the people.

I assume that temples and guilds are faced with the same problems of intermediaries. Does answer this point? Or where you referring to something else?


For instance, many people rightly have a problem with the idea of being potentially able to raise the population of a province by tens of thousands in a year (two Rule Province actions being possible within a year). If explained, however, in terms of various administrative/organizational changes, the scenario that the rules allow becomes more reasonable and lets players mimic the historic meteoric rise of several great rulers in history, turning realms around in just a few years from weak, poor, and faltering to rich and powerful.

Absolutely. I might require a bit more time, but I defiantly agree. Both of my Birthright campaigns have been based on this as a central theme. The first half of the campaign involves conflicts with the powerful interests inside the realm, while barely able to deal with outside threats, and the second half of the campaign involves a unified realm able to go out into the world. Some of this involves getting accepted as the regent, but then it transitions onto bending the realm to your will despite the presence of other powerful figures in the realm who don't like the idea of bending.

The power of both arguments, the administrative efficiency argument and the feudal intermediaries argument allow you to basically do anything you want. And they play into one another. A very efficient administration needs fewer and/or less costly intermediaries.

Rowan
06-26-2008, 10:50 PM
I think we're in agreement on almost everything, Kgauck. I was just disputing the correlation of a realm's per capita power growth with its population growth, primarily because the intermediaries represent such a large portion of the nation's power when summoned to account--for military action or building projects, the two primary outflows of a realm's wealth in BR.

I also agree that an Anuire=France scenario works and results in an acceptable simulation. However, that would also have to mean that the population and land mass to support those 100 units is much larger than 2e BR demographics represent (with an overall average probably less than 10,000 people per province level, because of the number of low level provinces, and provinces of only 20-30 miles square). I've totaled these numbers up before and though I can't quite recall, I think the 2e demographics place Anuire's population somewhere between 1 and 3 million, whereas an equivalent Renaissance France would be an order of magnitude greater. So yes, 20,000 man armies works fine with appropriate demographics (though didn't Louis XIV manage hundreds of thousands, and a little earlier Spain had managed many field armies of 20-30,000? these still fit the late Renaissance analogue, I believe). 150,000 man armies for Michael Roele also works fine, just not under 2e assumptions that might leave the greater Empire with fewer than 10 million subjects.

So yes, under "Population" we should give several possible explanations for people to use, but in general we should divorce population from province level in our explanations of what province level represents and how it is increased or decreased.

kgauck
06-27-2008, 12:38 AM
After the military revolution, European states that labored to raise 20,000 men were routinely able to manage 150,000 man armies. Armies creep from 20,000 in the 1520's to 50,000 by mid century, and hit 150,000 by the early 17th century.