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 Guten Tag! Or should I say Salut? (App. for Alsace)

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Clarimonde B. {A&L}
Clarimonde B. {A&L}


Posts : 1
Join date : 2016-04-19
Location : Go ahead and guess

Guten Tag! Or should I say Salut? (App. for Alsace) Empty
PostSubject: Guten Tag! Or should I say Salut? (App. for Alsace)   Guten Tag! Or should I say Salut? (App. for Alsace) Icon_minitimeTue Apr 19, 2016 3:31 pm

Name: Clarimonde Bonnefoy

Representative of: Alsace or Alsace-Lorraine

Gender: Female

Age: Around 3,516 but looks about 23

Brief personality: Clarimonde is a perfect mix of German and French. After years of being fought over by Germany and France, she has acquired aspects of both countries. She is unafraid of her sexuality and enjoys a glass of good wine at the end of everyday. However, her battle skills and tactics are flawless and she has a certain air of strict nobility. Clarimonde uses her beauty as a weapon to gain what she desires, or sometimes just for fun. Clarimonde claims she is French, but secretly is enamored by German culture. She is very sassy and is not used to being overpowered, not knowing what to do in that circumstance.

Brief physical description: Clarimonde is tall, standing at 5'9 with soft curves. She has long, blonde wavy tresses that fall just to her waist. Her eyes are a bright blue with purple accents. She normally allows her hair to run wild as a reminder of her prehistoric days, though she knows how to compose herself like a lady. After all, she was partly raised by France.

Brief history: The area was conquered by the Roman legions of Julius Caesar in the 1st century bce and had been profoundly Romanized by the time of the invasion of the Alemanni in the 5th century ce. The Alemanni, however, were conquered by the Franks under Clovis in 496, and Alsace became a Frankish duchy. Under Merovingian rule the area was Christianized and colonized.

Alsace was incorporated into Lotharingia in the mid-9th century and was united with the German territories of the Carolingians by the Treaty of Mersen (870). It was attached to what became known as the Holy Roman Empire until the 17th century. During that period its territory was divided into a number of secular and ecclesiastical lordships and municipalities, which remained significant until the French Revolution. The medieval period was also marked by the growing importance of its cities—e.g., Strasbourg, Colmar, and Haguenau, which, with the support of the emperors, gradually freed themselves from their feudal overlords.

Protestantism made important gains in Alsace during the Reformation, and Strasbourg, where the reformer Martin Bucer was especially prominent, became the centre of Alsatian Protestantism. That city’s Protestant influence was countered, however, by the resolute Roman Catholicism of the Habsburgs, who tried to eradicate heresy in upper Alsace.

French influence began to be felt in Alsace late in the 16th century, during the Wars of Religion. This influence grew during the Thirty Years’ War, when the Alsatian cities, caught between the opposing Catholic and Protestant sides and feeling their liberties threatened, appealed to France for help. The Peace of Westphalia (1648) gave France an informal protectorate over Alsace, and full control was established during the reign of Louis XIV, after the French had occupied Strasbourg in 1681.

In the 18th century Alsace enjoyed considerable autonomy under the French crown, and Alsatians took advantage of their status outside the French customs system to develop a flourishing transit trade. The administrative incorporation of Alsace into France was completed by the French Revolution (1789), when the area was administratively divided into the two départements of Haut-Rhin and Bas-Rhin, and its existence as a separate province was ended. The people of Alsace continued to speak a German dialect known as Alsatian, but the use of French spread among the upper classes.

From 1815 to 1870 Alsace actively participated in French national life. The introduction of universal suffrage (1848) and the building of railways helped to bind France and its eastern frontier province closely together. These links were shattered at the end of the Franco-German War (1870–71), however, when Alsace was detached from France and annexed to the German Empire. (For the history of Alsace under German rule, see Alsace-Lorraine.)

Following the defeat of Germany in World War I, Alsace was returned to France under the Treaty of Versailles, along with part of the région of Lorraine. During the interwar years, German influence remained strong in the two recovered régions, and in the early 1940s Alsace was once again annexed by Germany, for the duration of World War II. In the postwar years, however, French hegemony reclaimed Alsace, though some cultural ties to Germany remained.


Religious affiliation: Catholic, though believes in some Protestant values

Any special powers or abilities: Speaks both French and German fluently. She is an excellent weapon's wielder and expert.
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