Civilization Wiki
No edit summary
Tag: Visual edit
(20 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Civ
+
{{Civ (Civ4)
 
|name = France
 
|name = France
 
|game = Vanilla
 
|game = Vanilla
Line 10: Line 10:
 
|startingtech2 = The Wheel
 
|startingtech2 = The Wheel
 
|uniquebuilding = Salon
 
|uniquebuilding = Salon
|uniquebuildingreplaces = Observatory}}
+
|uniquebuildingreplaces = Observatory
  +
}}{{seewp|France}}
==Civilopedia Entry==
 
  +
The '''French''' people represent a civilization in ''[[Civilization IV]]''.
   
  +
==Strategy==
Modern France has its roots in ancient Gaul. In the 2nd century BC Rome intervened on the side of Massilia (Marseilles), a Greek colony founded in 600 BC, in its struggle against the barbarian tribes of the hinterland. The result was the formation, in 121 BC, of the Roman Provincia in what is now southern France; between 58 to 50 BC Julius Caesar seized the remainder. For more than four centuries Gaul enjoyed the benefits of Roman rule, and many ruins of aqueducts and bathhouses still dot the French landscape. After 395 AD the internal problems of the Empire encouraged barbarian penetration of Gaul. By 418, the Franks and Burgundians were established west of the Rhine, and the Visigoths had settled in Aquitaine. The period of the Merovingian and Carolingian Frankish dynasties (476-887) frames the Early Middle Ages.
 
  +
France is well-suited to a cultural victory, but all victory styles are achievable based on game play. Louis XIV and De Gaulle are especially well-suited to a cultural victory due to the Industrious trait which boosts Wonder production. Louis XIV is the king though due to his second trait being Creativity.
   
  +
While the Musketeer is one of the weaker unique units in the game (and somewhat of a disappointment considering how Napoleon dominated Europe with his armies), the salon is France's hidden gem. The Salon is a great way to boost science while gaining culture. Build it as soon as possible in every city for the free Artist.
<p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; ">'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 11.0pt;font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">Following his ascension, the first Merovingian king, Clovis (481-511), consolidated the position of the Franks in northern Gaul. Clovis came to believe that his victories were due to the Christian God. Clovis' subsequent conversion assured the Frankish rulers of the support not only of the Catholic Church but of the majority of their own subjects. The Frankish kingdom reached its largest extent under Charlemagne (768-814), who united modern-day France, Italy, and Germany under his rule. After Charlemagne's death, his grandsons divided the kingdom into the three parts that have largely survived to the present. France was a divided kingdom for much of the medieval period, but power gradually began to accumulate in the hands of the rulers of the Ile de France region centered around Paris. By the rise of the house of Valois in 1328, France was the most powerful kingdom in Europe. Its ruler could muster larger armies than rivals; he could tap enormous fiscal resources; and the king's courts maintained royal supremacy. The history of France in the Late Middle Ages is dominated by efforts of its kings to maintain their suzerainty, efforts that, despite French advantages, were long frustrated.
 
</span>'''</p>
 
   
  +
Settle few cities in sublime locations and build powerful armies to protect your empire on the way to an easy and pleasant win under the French.
<p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; ">'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 11.0pt;font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">The Hundred Years War was an intermittent struggle between England and France in the 14th-15th centuries over a series of dynastic disputes, including the legitimate succession to the French crown. The war's turning point was reached in 1429, when an English army was forced to raise its siege of Orleans by a relief force organized by Joan of Arc. By 1453, England retained only Calais, which it finally relinquished in 1558. The French kings of the 16th century spent much of their time fighting the Hapsburg monarchs for control of Italy, while religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants led to a series of civil wars between 1562 and 1598.
 
</span>'''</p>
 
   
 
==Civilopedia Entry==
<p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; ">'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 11.0pt;font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">The ascension of the Bourbon line of kings beginning in 1589 brought renewed stability to France, and the country soared to some of its greatest heights during the long rule of Louis XIV (1643-1715). Under Louis, France became the artistic and intellectual capital of Europe. From his magnificent palace of Versailles, Louis was truly the "Sun King", the absolute master of all he surveyed. The French military was the most powerful in Europe at this time, known for the elite Musketeer units that served as the king's personal guard. France was so strong at this time that the other European nations kept banding together to stop France from conquering them - a pattern that would be repeated in the French Revolution.
 
 
Modern France has its roots in ancient Gaul. In the 2nd century BC Rome intervened on the side of Massilia (Marseilles), a Greek colony founded in 600 BC, in its struggle against the barbarian tribes of the hinterland. The result was the formation, in 121 BC, of the Roman Provincia in what is now southern France; between 58 and 50 BC Julius Caesar seized the remainder. For more than four centuries Gaul enjoyed the benefits of Roman rule, and many ruins of aqueducts and bathhouses still dot the French landscape. After 395 AD the internal problems of the Empire encouraged barbarian penetration of Gaul. By 418, the Franks and Burgundians were established west of the Rhine, and the Visigoths had settled in Aquitaine. The period of the Merovingian and Carolingian Frankish dynasties (476-887) frames the Early Middle Ages.
</span>'''</p>
 
   
 
Following his ascension, the first Merovingian king, Clovis (481-511), consolidated the position of the Franks in northern Gaul. Clovis came to believe that his victories were due to the Christian God. Clovis' subsequent conversion assured the Frankish rulers of the support not only of the Catholic Church but of the majority of their own subjects. The Frankish kingdom reached its largest extent under Charlemagne (768-814), who united modern-day France, Italy, and Germany under his rule. After Charlemagne's death, his grandsons divided the kingdom into the three parts that have largely survived to the present. France was a divided kingdom for much of the medieval period, but power gradually began to accumulate in the hands of the rulers of the Ile de France region centered around Paris. By the rise of the house of Valois in 1328, France was the most powerful kingdom in Europe. Its ruler could muster larger armies than rivals; he could tap enormous fiscal resources; and the king's courts maintained royal supremacy. The history of France in the Late Middle Ages is dominated by efforts of its kings to maintain their suzerainty, efforts that, despite French advantages, were long frustrated.
<p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; ">'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 11.0pt;font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">These intellectual developments, although significant by themselves, gave rise to a still more momentous change: the French Enlightenment. This movement was a cultural transformation based on rationalism, empiricism, and an amorphous concept of freedom found in the influential writings of figures like Voltaire (1694-1778) and Rousseau (1712-78). Compounding the situation was the bankruptcy of the French crown, which forced the king to call upon representatives of the people for additional taxes. Hence, what began in 1787 as a conflict between royal authority and aristocrats became a triangular struggle, with "the masses" opposing both absolutism and privilege. By any standard, the fall of the Bastille to the Parisian crowd in 1789 was a monumental event, a seemingly miraculous triumph of the people. But the French Revolution soon degenerated into a reign of terror and chaos. After a decade of violence and uncertainty, Napoleon terminated the bloodshed by overthrowing the French government in 1800, at the price of suppressing freedom altogether. In utter contrast to the Revolution, militarism became the defining quality of the Napoleonic regime. The French armies under Napoleon won victory after victory against all of the other great European powers, but decades of war led to the exhaustion of the nation and eventual defeat in 1815.
 
</span>'''</p>
 
   
 
The Hundred Years' War was an intermittent struggle between England and France in the 14th-15th centuries over a series of dynastic disputes, including the legitimate succession to the French crown. The war's turning point was reached in 1429, when an English army was forced to raise its siege of Orleans by a relief force organized by Joan of Arc. By 1453, England retained only Calais, which it finally relinquished in 1558. The French kings of the 16th century spent much of their time fighting the Hapsburg monarchs for control of Italy, while religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants led to a series of civil wars between 1562 and 1598.
<p style="margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-indent: 0.5in; ">'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt;mso-bidi-font-size: 11.0pt;font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">However, the revolutionary fervor of the French citizenry was undiminished by the Napoleonic experience, and led to further revolutions in 1830 and 1848. The latter revolution lead to the short-lived Second Republic (1848-1852), which was overthrown by Napoleon's nephew "Napoleon III" who instituted the Second Empire (1852-1870). Following defeat in the Franco-Prussia War, the Third Republic (1870-1940) was formed, which survived the First World War but collapsed in the face of the German invasion in 1940. After the war, the period of the short-lived Fourth Republic (1947-59) was succeeded by the Fifth Republic (the current one), adopted in September 1958 by popular referendum. Although shorn of its past colonial holdings and aura of military invulnerability, France today remains a major economic power and influential member of the European Union.</span>'''<span style="font-size:10.0pt; font-family:"Verdana","sans-serif";mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman"">
 
</span></p>
 
==List of City Names==
 
PARIS
 
   
 
The ascension of the Bourbon line of kings beginning in 1589 brought renewed stability to France, and the country soared to some of its greatest heights during the long rule of Louis XIV (1643-1715). Under Louis, France became the artistic and intellectual capital of Europe. From his magnificent palace of Versailles, Louis was truly the "Sun King", the absolute master of all he surveyed. The French military was the most powerful in Europe at this time, known for the elite Musketeer units that served as the king's personal guard. France was so strong at this time that the other European nations kept banding together to stop France from conquering them - a pattern that would be repeated in the French Revolution.
ORLEANS
 
   
 
These intellectual developments, although significant by themselves, gave rise to a still more momentous change: the French Enlightenment. This movement was a cultural transformation based on rationalism, empiricism, and an amorphous concept of freedom found in the influential writings of figures like Voltaire (1694-1778) and Rousseau (1712-78). Compounding the situation was the bankruptcy of the French crown, which forced the king to call upon representatives of the people for additional taxes. Hence, what began in 1787 as a conflict between royal authority and aristocrats became a triangular struggle, with "the masses" opposing both absolutism and privilege. By any standard, the fall of the Bastille to the Parisian crowd in 1789 was a monumental event, a seemingly miraculous triumph of the people. But the French Revolution soon degenerated into a reign of terror and chaos. After a decade of violence and uncertainty, Napoleon terminated the bloodshed by overthrowing the French government in 1800, at the price of suppressing freedom altogether. In utter contrast to the Revolution, militarism became the defining quality of the Napoleonic regime. The French armies under Napoleon won victory after victory against all of the other great European powers, but decades of war led to the exhaustion of the nation and eventual defeat in 1815.
LYONS
 
   
 
However, the revolutionary fervor of the French citizenry was undiminished by the Napoleonic experience, and led to further revolutions in 1830 and 1848. The latter revolution lead to the short-lived Second Republic (1848-1852), which was overthrown by Napoleon's nephew "Napoleon III" who instituted the Second Empire (1852-1870). Following defeat in the Franco-Prussia War, the Third Republic (1870-1940) was formed, which survived the First World War but collapsed in the face of the German invasion in 1940. After the war, the period of the short-lived Fourth Republic (1947-59) was succeeded by the Fifth Republic (the current one), adopted in September 1958 by popular referendum. Although shorn of its past colonial holdings and aura of military invulnerability, France today remains a major economic power and influential member of the European Union.
RHEIMS
 
   
  +
== Trivia ==
TOURS
 
  +
* The banner of the French is a yellow [[wikipedia:Fleur-de-lis|fleur-de-lis]] on a navy blue background.
   
 
==List of Cities==
MARSEILLES
 
  +
{{main|French cities (Civ4)}}
 
CHARTRES
 
 
AVIGNON
 
 
BESANCON (given to HRE in BTS)
 
 
ROUEN
 
 
GRENOBLE
 
 
DJION
 
 
AMIENS
 
 
CHERBOURG
 
 
POITIERS
 
 
TOULOUSE
 
 
BAYONNE
 
 
STRASBOURG
 
 
BREST
 
 
BORDEAUX
 
 
RENNES
 
 
Added in BTS
 
 
Nice
 
 
St Etienne
 
 
Nantes
 
 
Reims
 
 
Le Mans
 
 
Montpellier
 
 
Limoges
 
 
Nancy
 
 
Lille
 
 
Caen
 
 
Toulon
 
 
Nimes
 
 
Le Havre
 
 
Lourdes
 
 
Carcassonne
 
 
Cannes
 
 
Aix-en-Province
 
 
La Rochelle
 
 
Bourges
 
 
Calais
 
   
 
==Unit Dialogue==
 
==Unit Dialogue==
'''Language: The French units speak modern French.'''
+
The French units speak modern French. Corresponding English dialogue appears in parentheses.
   
  +
<div class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed">
 
Order000: Comme vous voulez! (Like you want!)
   
 
Order001: Allons-y! (Let's go!)
 
 
Order 000: Comme vous voulez! (Like you want!)
 
 
Order001: Allons-y! (Let’s go!)
 
   
 
Order002: Certainement! (Certainly!)
 
Order002: Certainement! (Certainly!)
   
Order003: Nous y travaillons! (We are working towards it or we are working on that!)
+
Order003: Nous y travaillons! (We are working towards/on it!)
   
Order004: Aucun problème ! (No problem!)
+
Order004: Aucun problème! (No problem!)
   
Order005:Considérez ce travail accompli! (Consider this job complete/done!)
+
Order005: Considérez ce travail accompli! (Consider this job complete/done!)
   
 
Order006: Très bien! (Very good!)
 
Order006: Très bien! (Very good!)
   
Order007: Nous sommes en route! (We’re on our way!)
+
Order007: Nous sommes en route! (We're on our way!)
   
Order008: Allons-y! (Let’s go!)
+
Order008: Allons-y! (Let's go!)
   
Order009: Vous pouvez compter sur nous! : You can count on us /rely on us
+
Order009: Vous pouvez compter sur nous! (You can count on/rely on us!)
   
Select000: Prêt pour l'assignation : Ready for orders / ready for duty
+
Select000: Prêt pour l'assignation. (Ready for orders/duty.)
   
Select001: à votre service! (At your service!)
+
Select001: À votre service! (At your service!)
   
 
Select002: Dites-moi ce que je dois faire! (Tell me what to do!)
 
Select002: Dites-moi ce que je dois faire! (Tell me what to do!)
   
Select003: Nous attendons vos ordres : Awaiting your orders
+
Select003: Nous attendons vos ordres. (Awaiting your orders.)
   
Select004: Prêtà l’action! (Ready for action!)
+
Select004: Prêt à l'action! (Ready for action!)
   
Select005: Quel est le plan? (What’s the plan?)
+
Select005: Quel est le plan? (What's the plan?)
   
 
Select006: Oui? (Yes?)
 
Select006: Oui? (Yes?)
Line 156: Line 80:
 
Select007: Vos ordres? (Your orders?)
 
Select007: Vos ordres? (Your orders?)
   
Select008: De quoi avez-vous besoin?(What do you need?)
+
Select008: De quoi avez-vous besoin? (What do you need?)
  +
 
Select009: Tous présents et dénombrés. (All present and accounted. (Kinda the military form))
  +
</div>
  +
 
{{Civilizations (Civ4)}}
   
Select 009: Tous présents et dénombrés : All present and accounted (Kinda the military form)
 
[[Category:Civilizations (Civ4)]]
 
 
[[Category:French]]
 
[[Category:French]]

Revision as of 20:15, 20 December 2019

BackArrowGreen Back to the list of civilizations in Civ4

Wikipedia
Wikipedia has a page called:

The French people represent a civilization in Civilization IV.

Strategy

France is well-suited to a cultural victory, but all victory styles are achievable based on game play. Louis XIV and De Gaulle are especially well-suited to a cultural victory due to the Industrious trait which boosts Wonder production. Louis XIV is the king though due to his second trait being Creativity.

While the Musketeer is one of the weaker unique units in the game (and somewhat of a disappointment considering how Napoleon dominated Europe with his armies), the salon is France's hidden gem. The Salon is a great way to boost science while gaining culture. Build it as soon as possible in every city for the free Artist.

Settle few cities in sublime locations and build powerful armies to protect your empire on the way to an easy and pleasant win under the French.

Civilopedia Entry

Modern France has its roots in ancient Gaul. In the 2nd century BC Rome intervened on the side of Massilia (Marseilles), a Greek colony founded in 600 BC, in its struggle against the barbarian tribes of the hinterland. The result was the formation, in 121 BC, of the Roman Provincia in what is now southern France; between 58 and 50 BC Julius Caesar seized the remainder. For more than four centuries Gaul enjoyed the benefits of Roman rule, and many ruins of aqueducts and bathhouses still dot the French landscape. After 395 AD the internal problems of the Empire encouraged barbarian penetration of Gaul. By 418, the Franks and Burgundians were established west of the Rhine, and the Visigoths had settled in Aquitaine. The period of the Merovingian and Carolingian Frankish dynasties (476-887) frames the Early Middle Ages.

Following his ascension, the first Merovingian king, Clovis (481-511), consolidated the position of the Franks in northern Gaul. Clovis came to believe that his victories were due to the Christian God. Clovis' subsequent conversion assured the Frankish rulers of the support not only of the Catholic Church but of the majority of their own subjects. The Frankish kingdom reached its largest extent under Charlemagne (768-814), who united modern-day France, Italy, and Germany under his rule. After Charlemagne's death, his grandsons divided the kingdom into the three parts that have largely survived to the present. France was a divided kingdom for much of the medieval period, but power gradually began to accumulate in the hands of the rulers of the Ile de France region centered around Paris. By the rise of the house of Valois in 1328, France was the most powerful kingdom in Europe. Its ruler could muster larger armies than rivals; he could tap enormous fiscal resources; and the king's courts maintained royal supremacy. The history of France in the Late Middle Ages is dominated by efforts of its kings to maintain their suzerainty, efforts that, despite French advantages, were long frustrated.

The Hundred Years' War was an intermittent struggle between England and France in the 14th-15th centuries over a series of dynastic disputes, including the legitimate succession to the French crown. The war's turning point was reached in 1429, when an English army was forced to raise its siege of Orleans by a relief force organized by Joan of Arc. By 1453, England retained only Calais, which it finally relinquished in 1558. The French kings of the 16th century spent much of their time fighting the Hapsburg monarchs for control of Italy, while religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants led to a series of civil wars between 1562 and 1598.

The ascension of the Bourbon line of kings beginning in 1589 brought renewed stability to France, and the country soared to some of its greatest heights during the long rule of Louis XIV (1643-1715). Under Louis, France became the artistic and intellectual capital of Europe. From his magnificent palace of Versailles, Louis was truly the "Sun King", the absolute master of all he surveyed. The French military was the most powerful in Europe at this time, known for the elite Musketeer units that served as the king's personal guard. France was so strong at this time that the other European nations kept banding together to stop France from conquering them - a pattern that would be repeated in the French Revolution.

These intellectual developments, although significant by themselves, gave rise to a still more momentous change: the French Enlightenment. This movement was a cultural transformation based on rationalism, empiricism, and an amorphous concept of freedom found in the influential writings of figures like Voltaire (1694-1778) and Rousseau (1712-78). Compounding the situation was the bankruptcy of the French crown, which forced the king to call upon representatives of the people for additional taxes. Hence, what began in 1787 as a conflict between royal authority and aristocrats became a triangular struggle, with "the masses" opposing both absolutism and privilege. By any standard, the fall of the Bastille to the Parisian crowd in 1789 was a monumental event, a seemingly miraculous triumph of the people. But the French Revolution soon degenerated into a reign of terror and chaos. After a decade of violence and uncertainty, Napoleon terminated the bloodshed by overthrowing the French government in 1800, at the price of suppressing freedom altogether. In utter contrast to the Revolution, militarism became the defining quality of the Napoleonic regime. The French armies under Napoleon won victory after victory against all of the other great European powers, but decades of war led to the exhaustion of the nation and eventual defeat in 1815.

However, the revolutionary fervor of the French citizenry was undiminished by the Napoleonic experience, and led to further revolutions in 1830 and 1848. The latter revolution lead to the short-lived Second Republic (1848-1852), which was overthrown by Napoleon's nephew "Napoleon III" who instituted the Second Empire (1852-1870). Following defeat in the Franco-Prussia War, the Third Republic (1870-1940) was formed, which survived the First World War but collapsed in the face of the German invasion in 1940. After the war, the period of the short-lived Fourth Republic (1947-59) was succeeded by the Fifth Republic (the current one), adopted in September 1958 by popular referendum. Although shorn of its past colonial holdings and aura of military invulnerability, France today remains a major economic power and influential member of the European Union.

Trivia

  • The banner of the French is a yellow fleur-de-lis on a navy blue background.

List of Cities

Unit Dialogue

The French units speak modern French. Corresponding English dialogue appears in parentheses.

Order000: Comme vous voulez! (Like you want!)

Order001: Allons-y! (Let's go!)

Order002: Certainement! (Certainly!)

Order003: Nous y travaillons! (We are working towards/on it!)

Order004: Aucun problème! (No problem!)

Order005: Considérez ce travail accompli! (Consider this job complete/done!)

Order006: Très bien! (Very good!)

Order007: Nous sommes en route! (We're on our way!)

Order008: Allons-y! (Let's go!)

Order009: Vous pouvez compter sur nous! (You can count on/rely on us!)

Select000: Prêt pour l'assignation. (Ready for orders/duty.)

Select001: À votre service! (At your service!)

Select002: Dites-moi ce que je dois faire! (Tell me what to do!)

Select003: Nous attendons vos ordres. (Awaiting your orders.)

Select004: Prêt à l'action! (Ready for action!)

Select005: Quel est le plan? (What's the plan?)

Select006: Oui? (Yes?)

Select007: Vos ordres? (Your orders?)

Select008: De quoi avez-vous besoin? (What do you need?)

Select009: Tous présents et dénombrés. (All present and accounted. (Kinda the military form))

Civilization IV Civilizations [edit]
AmericanArabianAztecBabylonianBByzantineBCarthaginianWCelticWChineseDutchBEgyptianEnglishEthiopianBFrenchGermanGreekHoly RomanBIncanIndianJapaneseKhmerBKoreanWMalineseMayanBMongolianNative AmericanBOttomanWPersianPortugueseBRomanRussianSpanishSumerianBVikingWZuluW
W Added in the Warlords expansion pack • B Added in the Beyond the Sword expansion pack