It seems that the late instability in Europe have not avoided Papal States!
At least we're not Spain, whose territories in and outside Iberia are exploding.
Hmmm, the Austrians are on the throne of the Empire once more?
We better throw some guarantees around, because I'm sure the Emperor will try taking Styria and Hungary back.
Nothing happens in three years of Pope Alexander IX's rule.
And then he gets sick.
As if on a cue, the Socialists appear in the Papal States!
Pope Alexander IX denounces the movement and begins suppressing this school of thought.
The sickness gets Alexander IX to early grave.
Habemus Papam! Yet another Clemens on the Papal throne.
Socialists are helping the Arabs, for sure!
Armata di Judea of course deals with them.
This is new, however.
We fetch the Army of Roma with help of our fleet to deal with Moisquitoan rebels.
Clemens XXV is assassinated! It must be the Socialists! (the other option is Bohemia, and I wasn't keen on fighting them).
Habemus Papam! Pope Pius IX is elected, and he is quite a good diplomat.
Even more rebels pop up in the recent years.
First a peasant uprising in Liguria, now this.
Cremona, and then Gorz become our cores.
That helps little with the rebel sentiment in the States.
Look at those percentages - and we're at 2 points of Stability.
We get a core on Iraqi-held province of Mus.
We go to war immediately.
Per standard modus operandi in dealing with Iraq, we take Mus, then besiege Sharizhor, the capital of the Sultanate.
The Iraqi try to relieve the sieged capital, but fail to do so. By December, peace is concluded, and we gain Mus.
The high revolt risk in our provinces, especially newly conquered Mus (which, despite being a core, has 10.50% chance of rebellion), convinces Pope Pius IX that a High Judge is needed.
Signor Cremona will help curb the seditious thought in our lands. Armata di Judea will also be stationed in the province of Mus to pacify the Shiite natives.
Out of nowhere, Tirol stirs rebels in Apulia and then Calabria. Pope Pius IX is swift to respond - and so is the Austrian Emperor.
Suprisingly, the moloch of 60-regiment Austrian Army beats us at Krain, then Gorz!
We temporarily retreat to Treviso, while Armata di Roma is marching forth. We shall double-team the Austrians.
What is this Austrian force made of??
There have been already TWO battles in Friuli or elsewhere, and they retreat, only to beat one of our advancing armies into retreat.
Treviso! Verona! And Mantua, then Verona
again and now Ferrara!
And the Austrians are still forming a coherent force, despite Duchy of Tuscany and Salzburgian troopers coming into the fray.
Okay, clearly, CLEARLY, someone has loaded the dice.
Not only we've chased Austrians all the way to the gates of Rome, they've BEATEN our attempt to stop the siege.
Fortunately, Armata di Ancona has beaten up Swiss and Polish allies of Austria who fetched their troops to Veneto region. Now we can drown the Austrian in Papal soldiers!
Victory! Victory is in the hands of the soldiers of God!
We did have to chase Austrians to Siena, then Pisa, but finally we've caught them unprepared in Modena, where they were annihilated.
Emperor Albrecht VI managed to escape, though.
Filled with rebellions of Naples, Sardinian and Sicillian nationalists, we get a nice pop-up for once.
We can start developing infrastructure in Mus, but the time limit of the game is approaching fast.
Finally, Austria agrees to a peace.
To cripple the powers of current and future Emperors, we have Albrecht VI revoke the only Reform in power.
Oh Lord, I am so happy! It is first ever time that I get this event and this modifier! Pity that it comes so late.
Peace returns to the States, but rebels, both revolutionary and nationalist, pop up with increasing frequency.
Does that spell an inevitable doom for the Papal States? Perhaps. With Pius IX, everything's possible!
At least in Iceland, everything is the same as it ever was.
Even their bureaucratic despotism thing. And if you wonder if we're doing Iceland next, then... no, no we won't.
We've been in Europe for way too many LPs now - it is a time for a change of scenery. What do you think about bamboo and chinaware?
And for the book-keepers out there - the second half of the list of Popes that
I've posted earlier.Conclusion: There have been much fewer Popes in the last two centuries!