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  • South America, Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand
    2026/04/16

    What happens when the center of the modern world shifts—not just in America, but everywhere?

    In this episode, we step beyond the Atlantic and explore how a French-led discovery of the New World reshapes the entire global system. If Christopher Columbus sails for France instead of Spain or Portugal, the consequences ripple across continents—from South America to Africa, Asia, and Oceania.

    South America no longer becomes a unified Iberian world. Instead, it fragments into a mosaic: French-influenced northern regions, a powerful Portuguese Brazil, and contested Andean zones where empires, resources, and Indigenous resilience collide.

    In Africa, French influence grows earlier along the Atlantic coast, especially in the west. Trade, forts, and later colonial structures expand—but without full domination. The continent remains divided, shaped by competition rather than control.

    Asia becomes a three-way chessboard between France, Portugal, and Britain. French presence is less aggressive than Iberian conquest, but more stable—built on trade, diplomacy, and long-term influence. India, Southeast Asia, and China all become arenas of balance rather than domination.

    And in Oceania, nothing is purely British. Australia and New Zealand emerge as contested spaces—Franco-British worlds where language, culture, and power overlap instead of align.

    The result? Not a world dominated by one empire, but a multipolar system from the very beginning. No single global language fully prevails. No single power defines the rules. Instead, modern history unfolds as a constant negotiation between competing centers of power.

    This episode reveals the deepest consequence of all: change one decision in the 15th century, and you don’t just redraw maps—you rewrite the logic of the entire world.

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    8 分
  • The World in 2026 in French America (1800–2026)
    2026/04/16

    What would the modern world look like if the Americas had grown not from Spanish decline and Anglo-American ascent, but from the long legacy of a vast French Atlantic empire?

    In this episode, we follow the world of French America from 1800 to 2026. At the dawn of the nineteenth century, the French Empire in the Americas stands powerful but unstable—rich in trade, cities, and influence, yet already shaken by revolution, colonial tension, and the growing ambitions of its own American elites.

    As the old empire fractures, new Francophone states emerge across North America, Mexico, and the Caribbean. Instead of one dominant United States, the Western Hemisphere develops as a complex network of French-speaking republics, federations, and postcolonial powers. The Industrial Revolution spreads through a different Atlantic world. The world wars are fought with a stronger Francophone-American axis. The Cold War unfolds in a more multipolar West. And globalization becomes less purely Anglo-American, with French retaining far greater global weight in diplomacy, culture, and power.

    By 2026, this is a world where France is no longer an empire in the old sense, but the historic center of a vast transatlantic civilizational sphere. The Americas are no longer defined by an Anglophone North and a Latin South, but by a broad Francophone presence stretching from northern industrial states to Caribbean societies and a great Mexican core.

    This episode explores how one royal decision at the end of the fifteenth century could have reshaped the entire modern age—creating not an American century, but a French Atlantic world.

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    25 分
  • The French Empire in America (1500–1800)
    2026/04/16

    What happens after discovery—when a landing becomes an empire?

    In this episode, we follow the rise of a world where France, not Spain, becomes the first great Atlantic power. After Christopher Columbus opens the western route under the French banner, discovery quickly turns into domination: island bases become permanent colonies, coastal outposts become cities, and trade routes become the arteries of a new French America.

    From the Caribbean to Mexico and deep into North America’s river systems, France builds a vast imperial space shaped by governors, merchants, missionaries, soldiers, and settlers. Plantation wealth, precious metals, fur routes, and Atlantic trade bind the New World to Paris, Bordeaux, and Saint-Malo—while French language, law, religion, and urban culture spread across continents.

    But empire never grows without cost. Alongside splendor come slavery, disease, violence, and the destruction of Indigenous worlds. The same colonial system that brings France power and prestige also creates deep tensions—between Crown and colonists, between wealth and injustice, between empire and the people living under it.

    By 1800, French America stands rich, vast, and powerful—but already unstable. Enlightenment ideas, colonial elites, enslaved populations, and regional identities begin to pull against the empire that created them.

    This episode explores three centuries in which France does not merely build colonies, but creates an entire Atlantic civilization—one that could have changed the language, power, and destiny of the modern world.

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    25 分
  • Columbus in French Service
    2026/04/16

    What if the New World had been claimed not for Spain, not for Portugal—but for France?

    In this episode, we explore a world where Christopher Columbus finds his patron in Charles VIII of France, and the foundations of modern history are laid in French, not Spanish or English.

    From the first landing, everything begins to shift. The Caribbean becomes the cradle of a French America, and from there, influence spreads toward mainland empires, trade networks, and new political systems. Instead of a Spanish-dominated hemisphere, a vast Francophone world begins to emerge—shaping language, law, religion, and identity across continents.

    The consequences ripple outward. Spain loses its path to global dominance. Portugal turns even more intensely toward Africa and Asia. England and the Netherlands enter a world where the Atlantic is already claimed by a powerful rival.

    Over time, a “French Atlantic Age” takes shape—an interconnected system linking Europe, the Americas, and global trade under a shared cultural and political framework. Cities, institutions, and entire societies grow not from Iberian or Anglo traditions, but from French influence.

    This episode reveals how one decision could have reshaped not just America, but the balance of power in Europe and the language of the modern world itself. Because history is not only what happened—it is also what almost did.

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    23 分
  • South America, Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand in the Shadow of English America (1500–2026)
    2026/04/09

    What if the greatest impact of Christopher Columbus serving England was felt not where he landed—but everywhere else?

    In this episode, we step beyond North America and explore how an early English-led global system would have reshaped entire continents. Because discovery was never just about land—it was about connection, power, and the birth of a new world order.

    In South America, the absence of a dominant Spain would leave the continent fragmented and diverse. Portugal would build a stronger Brazil as a regional giant, while France expands its influence in the north. Indigenous civilizations might endure longer, creating hybrid societies rather than disappearing overnight. The result: no unified “Latin America,” but a mosaic of cultures and powers.

    In Africa, earlier and stronger English influence would deepen Atlantic connections—and their consequences. Trade, migration, and exploitation would bind Africa more tightly to the oceanic system, reshaping states, societies, and identities. The Afro-Atlantic world would be even more central—and its legacy even more profound.

    In Asia, England enters earlier, competing with Iberian powers from the start. Trade networks, influence in India, and pressure on China and Southeast Asia would accelerate globalization centuries ahead of schedule.

    Even Oceania changes. Australia and New Zealand emerge earlier as strategic hubs of an expanding Anglophone world—not as distant afterthoughts, but as integral parts of a global network.

    By 2026, the result is a planet organized around a stronger, earlier Anglophone core—stretching across oceans, shaping trade, language, and power. But it is also a world carrying deeper historical scars.

    This episode reveals the true scale of one decision—not just changing a continent, but rewriting the logic of the entire world.

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    10 分
  • The World in 2026 in English America (1800–2026)
    2026/04/09

    What would the modern world look like if the Americas had entered history under the English flag from the very beginning?

    In this episode, we follow the long consequences of an English Columbus from 1800 to 2026. By the nineteenth century, English America is no longer a colonial experiment, but a mature Atlantic civilization—stretching across the North, the Caribbean, and parts of the central American world, shaped by English law, maritime trade, imperial institutions, and deep cultural ties to Britain.

    From there, everything changes. The struggles over slavery, abolition, industrialization, and self-government unfold inside a much larger Anglophone world. A powerful northern federation rises through trade, industry, and migration, while plantation regions and island societies wrestle with the legacies of empire and racial hierarchy. South America develops more as a diverse counterweight than as one continuous Latin sphere.

    The twentieth century brings world wars, a stronger Anglophone Atlantic bloc, and a Cold War led not by Britain and America as separate powers, but by a broader English-speaking civilization. By 2026, English has become even more dominant globally, Britain retains greater symbolic importance, and the Western Hemisphere is defined less by an Anglophone North and Iberian South than by one vast English-American legacy.

    But this world is not simply more unified. It is also more burdened—by slavery, colonial memory, and the enduring question of who paid the price for Atlantic power.

    This episode explores how one different royal decision could have reshaped the modern age itself—creating not a Spanish beginning followed by a British rise and an American climax, but one long and unbroken Anglophone Atlantic world.

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    25 分
  • The English Empire in America (1500–1800)
    2026/04/09

    What happens after discovery? Not just a landing, not just a flag—but the slow construction of empire. In this episode, we follow the world that might have emerged if Christopher Columbus had opened the Americas for England, and England had become the first great Atlantic power.

    From the Caribbean to the mainland, English America grows not as a late colonial project, but as an early oceanic civilization. Tropical islands become the first laboratories of empire—shaped by forts, governors, plantations, commerce, and violence. Sugar, tobacco, maritime trade, and slavery begin to transform not only the colonies, but England itself.

    As expansion spreads, the Crown, merchants, and colonial elites build a new Atlantic system. The Reformation crosses the ocean, regional identities take root, and North America develops in the shadow of an older and wealthier imperial south. By the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, English America is no longer a distant possession, but a vast and divided world with its own political ambitions.

    Would such a world still produce the United States as we know it? Or would several Anglophone powers emerge instead—different, rival, and shaped by a much older empire?

    This episode explores how discovery becomes domination, how colonies become civilization, and how one decision could have created an English Atlantic age centuries earlier than in real history.

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    27 分
  • Columbus in English Service
    2026/04/09

    History remembers Christopher Columbus as the man of Spain—but what if both Iberian powers had said no? What if the decisive yes came instead from Henry VII of England?

    This episode explores a world where England seizes the greatest missed opportunity of its rivals. From rejection to reinvention, Columbus arrives not as a visionary fulfilled—but as a man sharpened by failure, carrying an idea powerful enough to reshape a kingdom.

    An English-backed voyage would not simply change a flag on distant shores—it would transform the entire trajectory of empire. The Caribbean becomes the cradle of an early English America. Expansion moves faster, harsher, and deeper. Encounters with wealth, civilizations, and new lands accelerate England’s rise into a global power a century ahead of time.

    Meanwhile, Spain loses its golden foundation, Portugal turns more fiercely toward the East, and Europe’s balance of power shifts before it fully forms. Language, religion, and identity across the Americas evolve along entirely different lines—perhaps creating an English-speaking Atlantic world from the very beginning.

    This episode is not just about what might have happened—it’s about how close it came. Because sometimes, the fate of centuries depends not on inevitability… but on who says yes.

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    31 分